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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THE BISMARC K TRIBUNE GEORGE D? MANN G. LOGAN PAYNE ~ ORK, } Ave. B. Marquette BOSTON, 3 .; MINNEAPOL! MEMBER OF ASSOC PED PRESS Pre; titled to the use ee fit not otherwise | ally makes it. pi ublished | | | Every year si also the local news hereir eae 5 Ali riyhts of publication o wlso_ reserved. MEMBE Si AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION JON RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Beit 7.2 | of flannels again Mathes pac yee ete cee y mai! per year (In Bismarck); ; mail per year (In state outside of Bismarck) 5. rn mail outside of North Dakota ............ 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) EES a = GET OUT FROM BEHIND THE MASK OF COLDNESS A little girl was trying on a lot of ne t know it isn’t this season, that’ pap hobbles out bean poles. y dresses and her face fairly shone with happiness and sat- ive 3 Hild iF A ¢ boys and girls of the neighborhood begin | vo F yours any Fred, isfaction. Child like she wanted every garment The | more et smgreiy : aS to come home from school together. > Fean't sang “How happy your little girl looks and how eas- ily pleased,” said an observer to the mother. “No,” answered the mother, “ e has not yet learned to hide her fe hind a mask of indifference.” | satisfied with ourselves and it will make those| once more. =3| About us infinitely more happy. WELL, IT FINALLY GOT HERE > Well, after fussing around for a few weeks 3: | Spring finally got here. Just about the time you have given up hope of | i pecial dispatches herein are €ver seeing an angle worm face to face, and when, sifid Was quite casuzl, ima says that if she has to patch those oldest set‘ _morning and there’s the sun a shining, not a and winter kicked clear out of the state. The first sure enough spring day; when you} jelbow on the mantle! The blood flows a bit faster; rheumatic grand-| , The office seems mighty stuffy and tiresome. | Mother leayes the ktichen work and putters around in the place where the bulbs ought to be, | were trembli but usually are not. } 4 The smell of old rubber and rags and burning } got some things to tell 5 weeds arises, and green things pop up out of the! FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1919. The momentary pani But she felt curiously limp) | passed. 1 ad not of relief and party begin- ‘lief was the} or had cl. But when. i apalse to rash} with a mixture she saw her 2 kup. The | stronger, untii the front ed for the last time. eems like it takes spring a bit jdid, she had a wild | longer to thaw out and get on the job, but she fin- font and) calladdek (that last. pair, of if guests. \ When Fred came back into the draw-| jing-room, and she tried to spe: |her teeth were chatter matched it. vid Howard Collier ked, “that they’re tht g out here for a year, if they « ta house tha what they want she'll die, why you wake up some ': » get cloud in the sky, some warmth to the air, the rob-| He said. don't know Yes, ins and junkos and wrens and bluebirds and larks |e ied eset and tinier creatures just singing their heads off, | lifeless again, just been he- fore she sent him and jhe turned from he} A frautic expression took her hid. for a moment, [sigh and the statem very tired she thc to bed. “But, az: to the back yard and sorts the! most going to freeze right hard again! 's a real day. it she woulk nst her will, nst her jj > moved the ‘At that he rounded upou t jhave to for a while. }and to her horror, His his lips | plunged | she ynds he he commanded, “Tre it down, wonderful nor its in- The power of havit is either her v thi: t's true. How often we are tickled most to ground, and from bare trees’ limbs like magic. | action, thnesthes sora ehose vat: death by a favor or a new suit or someth Aye it is magic. | forded any indigation of what was be : Ty Su oti 4 ffo- ing within her. comes i 0 : The resurrection and the life; the annual rex) ‘Sesafd evenly. “Oh, nof. to-night. minder that death is as transient as life, and that|Fred. You're tired and blue. and Vm that pleasur not wish to appear de at how are those who try to ple know they are eeding if we do not pat t on the shoulder or smile at them for + er cease, Gone. hings rise in an Let us be ¢ And too, ness and of service. to buy 50 feet o cto rsomstie ‘THE THOROUGHBRED” By Henry Kitchell Webster > THE THOROUGHBRED. been thix mor Zzyaee AMred Bigir, 2 1m t one spoke we industrious ~ Beer WhO sp = tots, factoriez, forms of wzrebouses, marke! His wi of the refinements of the surface, somewhat manner toward her hu ~ when she factories mirrored face ness, ab wat Ss an old hs are ruit | hated’ to be ruffled but was finding certain impulses of her own undermin- | = ing her serenity. Jealousy was one of! them. The story opens with a di scription of a scene at one of t Parties in which both busband and wife are on the verge of serious mix- understanding. and set them to work - apet rose colored + There had come within thé last fe months, and within a r of th marriage, 1 change in him which mude this attitude of hers all the harder maintain, Something seemed to be un dermining that quiet confidence in hiv ® self which, when she had first met bin had been his most distinguished chay acteristic, She knew, of course, that he had business worries, due to the conditions created by the outbreak of the war. But then, the war had af. fected everybody. All their friends | groaned and joked about their poy affected an extravagant ignorance to where their next meal was coming) 4, though ne could al forces flow and ebb and flow again bu A reminder that decay is but preparation for ew birth, and that from the rich earth the buried fe epics Se oes now! visiag, what he did.” ‘of course. her looks, cold and metallic There's no tell- | all edges, somehow. ing what might happen. {good having a ‘Scene, when we might \be getting a good-night’s sleep instead.” “A good night's sleep!” he repeated. “T wonder when T had one last. I've re vi i iforgotten. Well—I'm through !” ore vivid liviag dress. She sat down more suddenly than se it, a reminder that we have was her wont in making such move- se att , y? ments, gripped the arm of her chair, f hose and a new baby buggy!) tea 2 Joa at him with an uneompre: eee} | hending stare. the recognition of this fact ht her none of the mild cool ela- have felt. It almost exasperated aps, responsible » took when the to) discussing these days rahams’ divor Per- i d her to put edge enough into her voice so that all the table stopped to listen, and presently joined she echoed. “Through He jerked his hands from his pockets and flung them out in a frantic ture, ges- m through with this,” he shouted. " this damned And then instantly, “I'm I beg your pardon. You're quite right not to like scenes. I'll try to do better. Here's | the fact that concerns you. I'm broke aig, {completely broke. I'm at the end o che sata. | my string-sthe end, that's all.” eorge Graham very? “oy dropped back limply in her chair. whim at all, an is going to. 1 see what there Her.-e bont Three . + < vat. ye “Tn -rrilsly he married her, Dora’ G Linney Ss @ raving bea Look at he I don't, think it’s so very sur- hell I* “Oh, I'm not on his side, I pr liked d hardly fitted with tears, serry, old man.” The words, especially the last phrase | hadn't quite the right ring. That wi £ = : inevitable. Because the terrible pang ) or three voices took issue with | that had gripped her, when he shouted { ben /elinaltaneount What was the! that he was througtt, had been the de- spas clause in the! jieg that he mega£ he was through rvice for. if not to cover with here-couldit endure her. any + Did she seriou ‘Jonger—had fallen in love with some * rather solem: one else. It was not a reason |Carter) that wife's loss of her beauty | pelief, Just something that hurt in- justified her husband in being unfaith-| rolerubly. parte Be | On the other hand, business fail Celia ‘But Dora—why Dora was{to happen to anybody. She didn't and her looks. were Dora. | preci understand the nature <of t George Graham married. | them, nor, to tell the truth, why they knew it. Dora knew it.| were taken so seriously. People went » wasn't like an ordinary girl. She! on somehow. Not quite the same for professional beauty, . She|a while, Sut not so very differently. r pretended to know ing.| They gave up going south in the win- he never tried to abdtise people. ter, perhaps. The women went about knew she needn't bother to in cabs, i d of having a limousine ure on the . of their own, and if one had a good it’s her fault ¢ memory, one remembered their But certainiy it isn’t) frock she just isn’t the person he} Jt would seem harder to face. no . that’s all.” Oe after that horrible alternative BACK ACHE | she’ didn’t | for something hard and! like that. And whats from But they. all went ion living. tore she saw: him 4 she suid wouldn't have mattered, had] gimber Up With Penetrating: as far as she could see, in just abou nee of their And during jt jeen engulfed, as she'd expected it} Hamlin’s Wizard Oil : the. qamie.old_ way. all those, hours wer g4% 46 be, in the confusion of dinner-table | a el ki There was no reason to suppose that | » and chatter, | A harmless and effective prepara- Fred was any hirder hit than the rly to her | tion to reli the pains of Rheuma- others, | Indeed, he talked very much of the Jess about hard times than the other men did. He had. two or-three times lately, looked pretty solemn over bills, to be had asked, with no jocul: undertone, how much she'd paid: fe that rose-colored frock, und had made of the same dull sense this should be so, And voice went on sound! nd her sintle 1 probably have be signs more seriously wa impressed anywa fact that she s due to the her words were followed, and pointe felt sift, ; jthe Jess | commanded under her breath. Instead of that, to her consternation, tism, Sciat Lame Back and Lum- bago is Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. It pen- etrates quickly, drives out! soreness, and limbers up stiff aching joints and muscles. You have no idea how useful it will be found in cases of every day there somehow, by 4 moment of dead silen 1 whieh they veritably seemed to echo. | omething inexplicably kept her from | woking at her husband. And} iaition—inexplicably, | Q queer noise like an audible shudder,| As a mutter of objective fact, she | 45° that if she didn’t look; ailment or mishap, when | i over an offhand remark of hers about! knew sin good form | out, she'd ery, right ther before inept | need of an immediate healing, anti- the possibility of twiding in their car her right, being «| #! wene, She, of all people!| septic application, as in gates i for a this year’s model. did not offer She flashed round on Carter Worth | sprain ypeuiees cuts, burns, bite: or. That she had not tiken any of these of her powers. | jing. “Oh, don't be so solemn,” she} Get it from druggists for 30 cents. 49) If not satisfied return the bottle and naething silly. “It’s your turn, pposed all husbands | Wupress ; | get your money back. made themselves unpleasant on the} Worthington, on her left t She couldn't have told afterward a constipated or have _ sick subject of domestic expenditure. Her |fown bachelor, who, on coming into! whether he had obeyed her or not. But! fea Just try Wizard, Liver married friends of longer standing|!is iihertianee fifteen years ago, had | trom some quarter or other the talk} Whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30 seemed to accept this convention quite} (uit work and devoted himself to the| started again. She got her breath | cents. &s nteed. light-heartedly, and burlesqued a lively |ST@eeful evasion of matrimony—that | terror over the effect of all of their|he should betray an uneasy preoe , more ornamental purchases on tl eupation with what she was saying tol respective husbands. Besides, Celia | Howard Collier, while Martha role Jat his left, flirt with Was t him, knew she wasn’t extravagant, reall. ing her prettiest to It couldn't be that that plunged h and should fairly husband into the brooding melancholy | SMtch the smallest straw of an oppor- | that seemed to envelop him whenever | {nity to turn back to her, was an in- | clacuiiatances ‘pave.it. A chance. | dication worth paying attention to, | | FROM RHEUMATISM | cause the melancholy was there. Many _ a time she'd surprised a hagard look, Almost any man will tell you that Sloan’s Liniment almost a despairing look, in his eyes. | means relief that all but bronght the tears to her own. And the impulse that came to get her arms around him tight, to tobe told what the trouble} ~ was—all about it clear down to the trol, going to pieces, crying. making pera unpleasant little fool of her- always restrained her—had up to to to-night at any tate. She'd always In order not to brusk—bullied For practically every man has used ft who has suflcred from rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of - joints, the results of weather exposure, Women, too, by the hundreds of thousands, uscit for relieving neuritis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick headache, Clean, refreshing, soothing, economical, effective. Say “Sloan's Lini« meat’ to your druggist. Gct it todays Sloan’s| Taniment Kalls Pain 30c, 0c, $1.20 © tees Paeateensaescenstecceeea ny @ragged him off to the theatre or a four of bridge with the Calvins around LANPHER| $5.00 means very little when given in exchange for so meritorious an ar- ticle as the Lanpher Hat —The important thingis that the Lanpher is’ as_ “e she ant “| cleaned up, I was out about a hundred j And it’s no; sfavas because mine was ple | | id no, she didn't mean that. iures were phenomena that were likely { shops cai he had for a moment contemplated was forgotten. th him just now was to get quieted down; get him to realize t after all, the pillars of the world had’ fallen. | But the passion that had caused his} joutbreak seemer already to have sub- Isided. HeSvent tothe smokng-table, ed out cigar—a big expensive ar, af which he smiled) in a wry shion—and lighted it. o you Care anything about de- ; “Or will you just min a jump us mt the thing toa de him 1d like to hear she suid, “unless you'd rather of course,” for toatight, about i about ft urless. forget He echoed the word forget hiver, but immediately bega apperrance of composure, sto H n't see that ics been. my. | There's nothing, now that T think back pever it, that T could“have di differ. ntly, unless Td were coming ont. 1 risks that weren't ihe le: vult. j1 did Mow in fifteen year before that, on a regular w ne of those inventions tha ‘fegily sure to make your fornme and never does, But I conld jafford to lose it then, and I figured | the lesson T Jearned was cheap at the | | price | But thet hasn't anything to-do with {the situation I'm in now... ‘Fhe thi (that’s really ¢ ippled me happened j after the war. Tw | that big Waters-Macdonald contract, jWhen they went into bankruptey as {dry and clean as a lot of old bones \'They’d have been on thin ice, I sap- pose, even without the war, but no- {body suspected that. When that was thousand dollars, and there wa er business ta get itt There was nothing doing in our of Work, of course, for months, | The} whole hi Was paralyzed—dead. | But we all) thought it was goin to} pick up soon and the thing to do seem- ed to he what everybody was doing.} sit tight and wait for the squall to blow over. It meant paying out money | all the time, of cour: at all, just the 1 ntage of being; there, ready to do business at the old |stuhd when there should be some busi-| ness to do. n't any } with. } line ness “I got together all the money I {could, mortgaged this house for what it would stand—yon knew about tha and waited. | Well, that's what been “doing ever sine I've ' I've | had a few good prospects to tease me along, but nothing—not~one thing, do you } understand, has ever come through. {Over and over again, I've been the low bidder of half a dozen normal bids, and lost the job hecause somebody had made mistake—gone wild, bid | twenty or thirty per cent, too low. “I suppose it’s just. my luck evening up. I used not to believe in luck. That! 1 good. When I saw men go/ smash, T used jto think that, somehow or other, it must be! LONG WEAR AND. ECONOMY year I purchased a ‘standard ; make of shoes, and in sixty'days the . | soles were worn through.’ I had them! re-soled with’ Neolin Soles-—which lasted me six. months in the same service that. wore out the other soles in two,”| writes E. A. Lancaster Lancaster & Company, jewel Greeneville, Tenn. Mr. Lancaster’s experience ' with Neolin Soles is not unusual. Millions | of people can testify to their long wear | and economy. To reduce your shoe expense, buy Nedlin-soled shoes. You ; can get them in many styles for every member of the family. Nedlin Soles are created by Scienci to be comfortable and waterproof Bs well as long wearing. Good repair y them. They are made by The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, Ohio, who also make Wingfoot Heels—guaranteed- to outwear all other heels. Neolin Soles Trade Mon Pes, perfect a hat now as formerly. ee) HA TS 3 y stually Known how } POOMOCCEIETEO COLE TE OE ROL OOSLSIOEOE OR OUO DOE EESULLELEDILELODODOLELELELELOLELOLELOEELOIITOPOOOR , fox no retarn |. to lier hips ;to ask; what ‘the but she. hosifated ‘over Well, T Know better Se here’ be | reasot te an toes eronhon| Sneed It couldn't he anything pte ? B on the © do with her—could It? Ret Oe (To Be Continued.) i heir own de now, Thou leniy of peo for what he know about OPEL aera DO DODDDOTOOOIOE PORE RIO DOLD LO LODE IEEE LES > \ PHONE 274 FEEL RIGHT DRESS RIGHT Dry Cleaning & Pressing Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailors We Call for and Deliver PHONE 274 / BIG $30.00 SUIT SALE NOW ON Very Latest All-Wool Styles Made-to-Measure | Spiro & | Sa Company : Guaranteed Tailoring PHONE 274 PHONE 274 Opposite Postoffice VOOOPOIOOLED POLED LEDELOLELESESILIDILELELLELOLELIIIOLLELDIOSTISODIIOOD IS When you need New Glasses CES ‘ = NOU FOR SAFETY’S sake it is a good thing to have on hand an EXTRA PAIR of: Glasses. you have. y You ‘may break the one pair > Maybe vou need entirely NEW Glasses. « ‘Come in and let us examine your eyes and fit you yith the proper Glasses. WE GUARAN' TEE YOU SATISFACTION Folsom Jewelry Style-Value-Variety They are all here. To give you a little more style; more wale and more things to choose from than anyone else—that's what we’re here for. 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