The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1919, Page 4

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Stchk Rae: PAGE 4. SUNDAY, MARCH 30, 1919. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! *0 ot of our national weave‘and tearing us! WHEN WE ALL GO BOLSHEVIKI | 9 x | with a lot of shoddy. arck, No D, as Second! Chin whiskers and eating tobacco; how that <___Kditor | combination appealed to our boyhood imagina | tion, and how up-stage we strutted on oor littic, : nate | native heath when we shed a front tooth and change. j could squirt corn silk juice almost as far as gra7.’- o the sat pap. 1 otherwise! And to our mind, even vet, there is a benignity, , |a homely dependability, aye a Christian friendli- ness, about the town squire, wtih his egg-sized cud nested down behind his whiskers. He was a plain, simple citizen who had in him no guile. Picture him in spats, with a cigaret! We hope the boys get back home before their manners are entirely corrupted, and they lose all taste for the native, humble pleasures of the coun- tryside. ae WE'LL. PUT ws THE POLICE UDIT BU: OF CIRCULATION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE per year (in B ). mail per year {In state outside of Bismarck) 5.00 »_by mail outside of North Dakota ............ 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) a ea About the only difference between the red flag THE FIRST WILD FLOWER OF SPRING and the old-fashioned black flag with a sin ai] and spring, even while the that the red flag hasn’ he northern roots of great oak trees,, of its convictions. the dead leaves for the st snow WITH THE EDITORS | THE REVOLT AGAINST TOWNLEY When state of: Nonpartisan league votes ex probation of some of the } , been forced upon ti It is the fi a charm that is x that are care’ luxurious houses. These sturdy American nosen work will go a Vigor in pursuing our c long way to bring success. Naturainess is alway both men and women. We’ big country for artificiality. Beauty of character will buil reputation so strong that all the storms of jeale stroy it. an appealing trait of ° ¢ little room in t There is radical equality in the desire to grab * China’s resources. WILSON'S LEAGUE OF NATIONS PLAN WON'T ane BRING PERMANENT PEACE, CHARGES per eae HENRY A. W. WOOD, ROOSEVELT SPOKESMAN THEY HAVE A SANE PERSPECTIVE Sitting on the sidelines and taking an impar- tial squint at the situation it sure does become in opposition to certain measures t evident that our returned soldiers aren’t at all Herald pas been opposed. spoiled by the adulation and praise showered upon t lined up on the s them and it is absolutely certain they’ve nct let: side of the controve but they are also advec: themselves be ruine dfor further work in the world ing certain other measures to which The Heraid is simply because they are heroes and have had the) opposed in whole or in part, and in respect to these biggest sort of experience that men can possi»i- measures we are on opposite sides. Paver i> That a revolt against the-Townley tyranny Right now they are displaying the most com-: would come was one of the certainties. Asa mat-° mendable attitude. They are all getting off ‘n=! ter of fact it has been in progress in some measure old uniforms and getting back into cits just 45/ ever since the Nonpartisan league was organized. quickly as the law allows. That old time stuff of The new situation is merely that the revolt has! parading around in the uniforms for days and) reached a wider scope than formerly and is being | weeks and rionths and even years after the dis-| | participated in by men whose position gives them charge is strictly nix these days. Now it’s the). wider acquaintanceship throughout the state, stuff to stow away the old khaki and not wear it) ang larger personal following than in the case of! any more, even on Sundays when the regular cali 1... conspicuous men who have thrown off the is made on the best little girl in the world wh» us! Townley shackles.Grand: Forks Herald: simply. crazy about the army. And, tco, right now our doughboys are dis-| playing an anxiety to get back to a job whi- speaks well for their proper perspectives and! general sanity. All of them, almost without ex- ception, seem to realize thoroughly that the war is finished and that it doesn’t have to be fought : over and over again on street corners and other! '¥° oF three of the measures enacted by the legis gathering places. They all seem to realize thor-| lature; he is against the whole program. He is oughly that there are big bunches of work to be| NOW the chief agent of big business in its effort done by them in the world, even though they have to keep North Dakota still in industrial bondage to} i performed a life’s work in a year or so, and they’ re| the Twin Cities. ie —— vinmen which we do not at in th questions they stand together just ; It Ties Hands of America Resin and Und Undoes Work of the Revolution( Says Noted Inventor; It Puts Rule of United States in Hands of Forei Makes Us Helpless to Defend Mexi¢ and Panama Canal. “DO YOU Rf LIZE that the eight ers and nations ‘ure our debtors and we the PAGr | creditors of all. and we would-be one = | creditor in the power of eight debtors? “ARE yOU WILLING to bind your- a navy cutiev it council” controled by the other gi by the powers of Europe and A: “ARE YOU WILDING thus to sur- _ render into the hands of such a coal: tion of European and Asiatic powers ithe upon which dépends ‘the f the United States? ou WIL LING to pind your- erica.’ 1 val of a » big and ia and Cen- TOWNLEY’S REWARD FOR SERVICE Attorney General Langer still claims that he |is a loyal friend of the Nonpartisan league pro- ‘gram. Each day some new fact arises to.give the lie to this claim. Langer is not simply against | to bind your- the follow 1 care. ki vers rests the < of Enrope and Asia to matters ing to Mey surrendering the Monroe Doc- “ARE YOU WILLING to bind your- es not to war in defense of uthern border or our canal zone out the consent of these powers RE YOU WILLING to ind your- at the other ves not to make war to prevent the minon interest | transfer of Magdalena bay or lower nationalization ; € ‘ornia to & foreign nution. if Euro- council” noted as th showing the rightest sort of spirit in being anx-| _ The latest development, the attack on the con-| in his great f inst us in the i ly | stitutionality of the bond *bill: ffi ¢| having ser) irman of f gir Pauama, peun and Asiatie powers confirm the ious to get back to it and in hopping to it heartily) pie ills, is sufficient: proof! erence on nal Preparedtns ‘DO You riy that the | title of the purchaser and refuse the| important in-| United States permission to fight? BY CONDO It may be true that Mr. Langer him-| nized soon after the outbreak of the) Puropean nations when they do get back. lof this fact. pean War. EVERETT TRUE Say, when it comes to clear thinking, hard | self does not openly sponsor this attack! it comes, | © Sue witalts- tn EVERETT! Come Here as rmony, as i fighting, ambitious youths, we'll stack our dvugh- “however, from his office, and therefore, with his. tically ever, beys up against the best the world has ever sen/ sanction. And it proves the deeply treasonable |G", * i. ne and win over ’em all, hands down! {nature of this self-seeking lawyer who claims to! against the a . = ‘be the “friend” of the farmers, for the farmers | If nations are suspicious of one another now, | looked to him, more, perhaps, than to any other sorbed Into what re Es what will they be when this morning-after right-| man, while the bills were.in caucus, for legal | Sears axe us 7 © 7 = s ré t reek of ages. eousness wanes? | guidance, and if the bills were lacking in any legal} “We threw off the yoke of the old ee technicality, why did he not advise them? pone eee an peas dsbare posers HIGH EXPECTORATIONS | The bills are, of course, constitutional. Mr.) and wonderfm political ideals. i Army canteen figures recently compiled show; | Langer is attacking them only because his new! “Now. as we are about to reap the, | harvest of all this by becoming the that 95 per cent of the enlisted men smoke; some} masters in the Twin Cities command it. Just a} greatest. richest country the world has| 80 per cent prefer the cigaret; the rest ling to} -| ever seen, we are asked to give it all few days before Mr. Langer came out openly an and tol kebowe & peeH nu tie. power the old dudeen, despite its many disadvantages; ayainst the men who had trusted and elected him/ of a super-stat as those who have tried to net an eight-ounce pipe | “Americans all are more than zeal- | he was closeted in St. Paul, according to the Dis- ous to do their full share in abating in a form-fitting uniform may testify. |patch, for a long interview with Richard Lilly,| warfare, and are, willing that th Where on earth have all the old time Ameri- | pecaident of the Merchants National bank of that} government enter inte gunibable katety cans gone? We refer to the generation that Par- city. Mr. Lilly refused to tell the reporter what} Loerie law 5 Re Ge Bak oil took of eating tobacco. ; was the subject of conversation. Did it have to| psitive they are NOT willing that) From colonial days the quid was the American) go with the attack Mr. Langer almost immediately | ee bags ia ag ee ae cheat brand. Our English visitors, who came over and) made on the Consumers’ Store company, coinci-| “Guarantee the territorial integrity | gazed upon our spittoons, went home duly im-| dently with the raising of that big fund by Twin intr the Corinee se easy pressed, and some of the brightest chapters in| Cities jobbers? Did it refer to this present at-| “Administer and. police distant for foreign books of travel of the day were those deal-| tempt to weaken the state’s credit, by declaring]! oe eee es - se, EI in. wi t the coi il of | 4 ing with the American back-woodsman’s ability to! the bond bills unconstitutional? Or was Mr. Lan-} other ation fe e a ral | “Jeo ei nt to ej the slyly peering rat in his corner 40 rods, ger perhaps engaged in borrowing the $1,000) their own immizration and labor laws or it feet, away? i which he so generously offers to pay anyone who| “Cease doing business with peopl What has become of the old fashioned saint,|can secure a contiction during his term of office pte pete Sasa see who sat in the amen corner and browsed on his} on the charge of illegal conspiracy against the! “Permit forefzn nations te Pointed cud through the service with nary one spit? Consumers’ company? he promth of the sity eat Reve 20) Can it be that the rural stoves no longer hiss At any rate, whatever their subject of conver-| “Abandon the protection afforded by through the winter nights? sation, Mr. Langer’s subsequent attitude has e eedoraules tne rieits es ‘a ee | Are the relative merits of fine cut, and honey proved that he and Mr. Lilly have very much in dew twist, and natural leaf, and cabin hunk no/ common—which is a sufficient commentary on his Jonger discussed by experts? “Joyal” as Mr. Lilly himself, and the kept press in _ Has one of our fine old pioneer customs gone, cjaim to be still “loyal” to the farmers. He’s as - Minnesota and North Dakota which obediently Py year's price to accept the decision of the} § MONDAY, ‘MARCH ‘31,1919 A CLEAR COMPLEXION Rudd Cieche “Seer at Ae bag { | Says Tr. ‘ones a Well-Known ; Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated | scores of women for liver and bowel | ailments. During these years he gave to | his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards? Olive Tablets You ‘will know them by their olive color. _ These tablets are wonder-workers on the iver and bowels, which cause a normal | action, carrying off the waste and poison- us matter in one’ "s system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dult »yes, pimples, coated tongue, ie, headaches, a istless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one | Edwards’ Olive "tablets a nicely for a time | Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the suc- | cessful substitute for calomel—now and itl then just to keep in the pink of condition, 1 10c¢ and 25¢ per box. “All druggists. j LS } “ARE YOU WILLING to bind your- f selves to stop doing business at the mmand of the powers of Europe and ja’ with any nation they may de- amine to punish, even, against our ' nd interes! | “ARE YOU WILLING to bind your- inister remote territories or Africa as agent of | European and Asiatic powers- “I AM NOT, and I don't believe my \ fellow citizens are. once they realize they will commit themselves to such a program by adoption of the Wiison- Nations? “WHO.IS <W HO Wi OU! LD GIy EB Go BACK K TH “ONDI FON ‘OF 5 SERVIEN- cY TO GRE AT BRITA or, for that matter. to any or all of the nations of the old world? ? Task anyone of you ‘SPORTING ; GOODS OF ALL KINDS. IS HITTING ON HIGH Mareh 31--Prices of prac- every class of sporting goods 10 to 50 per cent higher than recording to a schedule just ie of the largest manufac- The chief reasons advanced the 10 per cent war tax on sport- which recently became effec- Chica are fi in IMS x cturers declare that it was ition to reduce .prices on a sumer sof articles but that theowar yt made this i ‘icable. Since } 1915 prices have: increased snore than 100 per cent on-a majority of articles, Baseballs and bats ‘are about the only sporting goods articles Which have not been increased in price this year. One -Chicago-avuthority said: pri on these would have been reduced -had the war tax not Veen levied.) Instead! of reducing the price manufacturers com- promised ‘by maintuining last ‘year's figures. The biggest: increases: are in sport |} shoes, baseball cateher’s masks. glove: ! and mitts.” Golf clubs will average: 5! vents higher and gol balls will: cost 10 cents nore. Dealers declare that no reduetion in y be expected maul the war pr cit or removed. Following is: i artisan of this with ‘figures’ of 1918: 91810 cents to $2; 1919, Basebali 10 cents to HH to to $10; ico and our canal zone, ; 19 50; 1919 $1 to ball lov tll leather )—1918, 50 cents to $6: 1919, $1.10 to $7.50. Catcher's mitts, (all leather)—1918, $1 to $12: 1919 $1.10 to $16. Baseball bats—1918, 25 cents to $2; 1919, 25 eents to $2 Golf balls—1918, 50 cents to $1; 191e 60 cents to #1. | Wooden golf «clubs—1918, $2 tp $6; 1919, $2.50 to $6.25. Iron golf clubs—1918, $2 to $3.50: 1919, $2.50 to $4. “BOLSHEVISM IMPOSSIBLE” IN U A. The Lit- Americans are remitided ‘by .[erary Digest this week of the “remar- kable warnings. from high official sour- ces” this radicals: are. organizing in this country ‘with “one object only. in view, namely the overthrow of the gov- ernment of the United States by means of a bloody revolution and‘the estab- lishment of a Bolshevik Republic.” In the same article, in striking. contrast to these warnings, The Digest presents the opinions of numerous editors who say that nothing of the kind is pos- sible. The article is peculiarly signi- ficant when one remembers how univer- sal was the opinion five or six y ago that war between ‘the civili sible. Vote for John A. Lar- son and John P. French tomorrow. RHEUMATIC PAINS Quickly Eaced By Penetrating Hamlin's Wizard Olt A safe and harmless preparation toj relieve the pains of R eumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back and Lumbago is. Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. It penetrates quickly, drives out soreness, and limbers up stiff aching joints and muscles. ¥ou will find almost daily uses fo- it in cases of sudden mishaps or ! cidents suchas sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, bites and stings. Just’ as re- liable, ‘too,\'for’ eatache, toothache,- ¢roup and colic. Get it from druggists for 30 cents. If not satisfied return the bottle and get your money back, “ Ever pate ty or have sick “Sepdach e? tions of the world was no longer pos- + 7 > “4 Pa oo “4 y Bey ‘ ‘ ‘ oi a whe a) ‘ }

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