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APRIL 5, 1919. STOMACH UPSET? “PAGE 4 THE BISMARCK TRIKUNE BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE \ —— SATURDAY EVENING: LETTER vast accumulations of pwealth Ike @ hurricane. It may threaten the very} existence of ‘the republic. ~The peo-} the divine. Under the Stars and Stripes no vio-| linist has attained so high a goal as Maud Powell.! Enterec at the Postoffice, Bisriarck, N. D., as Second ; g ‘ ae i * ple are patient and long. suffering, a ChasnMette, The Victor people, who are not given to making By Justice J. E. Robinson Lae there is an end to: their endur- Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. GEORGE D. MANN - ~~ - > - = 7 Editor| mistakes, have selected her as the only woman in- i Ae Witness, Charles I, James IL, ‘Edwards’ Olive Tablets | ee POGAN NE C Wy ome ls A { | < XVI and the reign of terror, | av ded ork, rns veut Ae SC OMGaC Marquette eh peeg at 10 pak Hed Seal recone oe ne April 4.1919. The evils of society.) as much as the railway companies. Aj “on. remedy aid cafeguard is to. un-| That's what thousands . of ee NEW YORK, Viftr 4 Bard huge and discriminating Victor clientele. She is! ine cause and the remedy, that is the/few dig packers, grain dealers. imill-| 44" (ye conditions which induce pov-| sufferers are doing. now. Inst St; DETROIT, Bldg.; BOSTON, 3 Win Ridg.; MINNEAFOI Kresege to patch up a Lumber Exchange. the liver {ing companies have made immense taking .tonics, or trying fortunes by exploiting the producers. | they are Strang nd discontent and the amassing | erty c sive wealth, While we fight| poor digestion, classed with Elman, Heifetz, Kreisler and Zim-j question. me ‘MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS balist. “To say that she plays as well as a man|_ In a pamphlet of twenty-ope pages.! al this there is no denying. Indeed | Of exces Danes ‘ ; q of the ailment — clogg + : - A } ' i *, | for det abroad, we must noti veal cause . The Associated Press y entitled to the use . . As _|Mr. Brown, a distinguished lawyer of the process of amassing and exploit: | 70" Gemocracy Boroat. it \'e | and disordered bowels, for publication of all news v edited to it or not otherwise| V. ould be to flatter all the men in the world,” says] Minneapolis, maintains that the great-| ing has gone to the danger limit, and] pula beens on a homiesamnel0 | "Dc: Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the eredited in this paper and .lso the local news published| Walter Anthony. And when this famous artist] est and most menacing evil of the day) yet Mr. Brown denounces only the! te evercis Fer toeekan which reaches | liver in a soothing, healing way. nen : be eir. is Socialism and Bolshevism. Mr. spread of Socialism and the outlook| tHe exercise of B the liver and bowels are performing their comes to Bismarck, The Tribune is confident th :t into the pockets of the people. “TE is) Tit ical functions, away goes indigestion Brown says not a word concerning} for a cyclone of Bolshevism and de. i y | y e s al } i palize that the war is nigh time to gealize that the v and stomach troubles. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are . : x : i the capital city of North Dakota will receive her|the cause or the manner of curing! struction. alsu_ reserved. vils it S ded, to stop the waste of wealth and bad taste in your TIEMBER AU. TR. 7 CIRCU ION ute ‘ 3 those evils. He mistakes the effect] During the late war on the other| CNet, fo slop ‘he wae a If you have a ‘ x EMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CE Re EATON as her genius merits. for the cause. It must be that he has| side of the -Atlantic, there may have]! Vindictive or politic | prosecutions. mitt tongue coated, appetite poor, Daily by carrier per year ......+2+++ $7.20 —_—_—— 10 bump er cauenlty: nee ol ead been some excuse for advancing rail- os LN dies Seen devthecpatriolien of | lazy, don't-care, feelings No esr et - iv il i "9 20 p rians ici ie cause of Socialism ani ‘olshev-i way rates from twenty-five to fifty be sd its veee | energy, troul Be ty mail pee Year (in Barer of Bismarck) 5.00 f eae aie ss the most efficient means ism anf to ve found in the srtremes on per cent, and of that we say nothing. ne EON cae angle Teeerd foriuye you should take Olive ‘Tablets, the sub- ily i i eesecveseess 6.00, Of making it Budapestilence. twealth and want. ese do exist in} Eut now, in this year of peace, five : apni : smocracy of | stitute for calomel. Daily by mail outaide of North Dakota s £ mee every clime and country, anq undet| months after the end of the war, it| -et Us have peace and democracy of] “De” Bawards’ Olive Tablets are. @ THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) wealth and indus! urely vegetable compound mixed with blive “oil ‘You will know: them by their olive color. They do ae work without ipi or pail Mi STPINE: Che or two at bedtime for quick Felief, 80 3 can eat what you like. “€t 10c and 25c per box. All druggist . " < every form of government, except per-/ is rather amazing that those in con- We are tired of war, but not too tired to stop} haps New Zealand. where they allow} trol of the national government oe ee , neither millionaires or paupers. Of) stiould still persist in attempting to the westward march of organized murder. course there is a Hmit to the wealth) maintain shel illegal and Reece = ; | of the world; when if fey saprure it}rates in defiance of the laws of the \{ | citi i y al e rest can take only what is' states. However, our supreme court THE COMING OF MAUD POWELL | A good citizen is one who hopes for the best, jefe, which is nothing. When the fow| has just held that the Se pera That Bismarck and the Slope country are to/ prepares for the worst, and grins regardless of the|non-producers are permitted to cap-|laws and they may not be disregard-| have a week from next Wednesday (April 16), an' event. ture’ a ranousand: times mre hae a emmey must be given full force! opportunity to hear Maud Powell, one of the | sand times less than their share. The|” In all matters of local concern with- world’s five greatest violinists, is due to a most} —_ So far, army officers at the trial haven’t found destruction of the poor is their pov- jn its borders, the state is a sovereign) commendable enterprise and enthusiasm upon the; anything pro-German about Captain Weisgerber pps ENfofierr erty and the destruction of the rich | power; its laws and its courts are in! ig their excessive opulence. ino way inferior to those of the fed TRUE COMFORT . rte « . . C! . vi le cons mn S- which has done so much for music in this-section! with food) jconyentent for me, lest I} lative power not forbidden the states You cannot buy more practical comfort: and | ; 5 , 7 ‘be full and deny thee and say who is!or delegated to the national govern- : eee d Senes of North Dakota. , i Our statesmen have a marvelous faculty for} shelter than is built into this Oakland Sensible the Lord; or lest I be poor and steal] ment is reserved to the states respect- and take the name of my God in|ively. Still the greater power is ever| vain.” What has caused the snread/encroaching and trampling on the! of Bolshevism, lawlessness and devas-| rights of the lesser power, and it alll tation; what was the cause of the|leads directly to tyranny, anarchy and merits, not only that her concert may be made at The allies have a third of a million troops LD eee a ee ced tatteot the ne: Pea thongh ee aeate STORRS: least self-sustaining from a financial standpoint,| Russia. That is:‘too many if we don’t mean busi-|man empire and the recent world! may seem remote and far away, under but in order that we may convince the managers! ness, and too-few if we do mean business. war? i It was dochings only the ex-| prevailing conditions it may. cross the| hen se tists that North Dakot: Ras tremes of wealth and want and the) ocean and spring up in a hundred pla-! ig other great artists tha aeNas | dog in the manger policy, When the|ces and spread like wildfire. As it has learned to appreciate good music. The-reason Austria doesn’t become a convert And North Dakota has learned to do that. It) to communism is because she has observed that poor and hungry multitude grow tired|done in Russia, it may dissipate the of looking at and guarding a mass is no longer quite the thing to admit that one is a! one of the articles of the ereed is dog meat. HOW “lowbrow” musically. There is no excuse for it,| of wealth: which the spoilers cannot Win ahs thanks to the development of the phonograph RHE aval at iISM That Bismarck and the Slope’ may enjoy more of these oportunities, it is most important that; Madame Powell receive the reception which she} recognizing the need of a lock on the stable door Flee thathoran Kes beenistolan: Six Sedan. It is self-heated; it is especially roomy’; it rides easily over the roughest roads, and throughout it is completely and substanti- ally equivped. z eat Sedan, $1630; Coupé, $1650 was Mic 1 for wire wheel equipment, $75 CORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N. D. hope to use, they may break away all restraint and like a gurging flood carry in their-wwake de&th and de- struction. There is over a large clas Histcry looks down the long corridor of the « Us * i F A z of spoilers who reap, where they have - B which today brings to the most isolated homestead; ages and smiles at sight of statesmen who think | not sown and gather where they nave ‘ EGINS a a shack all that is best and most beautiful in music,’ national boundaries can be permanently fixed. not strewn. In Rome. in France, Rus-| phe excruciating agonics of rheuma- s sia, in every other country, and even in this land of liberty, the rich have made slaves of the poor. Under the Federal constitution the black man had no rights that a white man was bound to respect, and the poor was much the same as the black. After the Civil war Abraham Lincoln saw the corporations and exploiters en- usm are usually the result of failure of | es bi : ( ‘ the kidneys to expel poisons from the : = system. If the irritation of these uric and which permits the humblest of us to command | the services of a great galaxy of artists whoa very! The I. W. W. would be rid of the employer, “the few years ago could not have been assembled in! one enemy of labor.” And then everything would one company by the most potent of the world’s’ be lovely if we could only persuade our stomachs monarchs. to abolish that empty feeling. “When one is as familiar with the tunes of the; id crystals is allowed to continue, in- curable bladder or kidney disease may result. Attend to it at once, Don't resort to temporary relief. ‘Tha sick Kidness must be restored to health by the use of some sterling remedy whic . will prevent a return of the disease. aiid : GOLD MEDAL Haarlem en : e i 2 ed 6 p Get some N masters as with the tunes of the street, they are) We grow rather weary of these timid Ameri-|ine turers. Se te et Rape Oil Capsules immediately,._‘They have aS 3. en oe : Pas i is . sh pm; . af 98, al he ys of Ii! rount- ™, Oy . found to be just as pleasure-giving and vastly | cans who are forever dreading the time when tie time of ehattel slayEty Binge leap thousands ioe sulferers ‘from shew: : Rs * a » \ . stip teh? Aen ae s we eee ae z ay en J way corp 8 matism, | ack, ‘lumbago,. sciatica, more interesting ; while their charms sink deeper Japan or Siam or some other runt will jump ON|}een given empires of land and bil- fall stones, gravel ed other affections { and last longer,” says Madame Powell. | us and wipe up the earth with us. lions of aoliars, ae that they nor nave of the, eutnese liver, stomach, bladder . ; . . fe | a tenth. part of the wealth of the na- ¥ i ‘ That, really, is the secret of good music. Good} > tion, and in addition they have made ~jaity:-will attack the: pelsonarat once, music stands the test of time. Trashy tunes tickle! Let us look at the matter sanely, and realize themselves hundreds ot malillons, Ike} 4 the soothing healing oils and herba 4 ina irritate at G anv. by a treachery grea g our late:James Hill, Jay Gould, Van-| will restore the inflamed tissues and 4 for the moment, then pall, finally irritate. And/ that Germany, by a treachery greater and blacker dorbilt.’ Harriman and others, ‘The| crgane to normal health. * good music need not be intricate nor complicated.| than any of her past achievements in baseness, is | bankers," money changers and usur-| - All otters are initiations. autre iSome of the world’s greatest masterpieces are so, about to turn the tables on the world. ore, te Cee cated bout GOLD MEDAL jo,on, tie box. Three e Pee eet rae ‘ ) wehiefly because of a chaste simplicity which ap-| — Lriacnaind ss actiet neuees ‘ : rn “peals to the most uncultivated ear, but coupled | Little Rumania stood alone against the Hun ‘with that simplicity is a majesty and a virile soul, and thus won the privilege of standing alone which give them life eternal. against Bolshevism. But doubtless she finds con- i The violin is the most human of all instru-|solation in the fact that we sympathize with her, igments. In the hands of an artist it approaches] as we did before. hi ttn mettmmnnrenemnemnfe! And: yuu could rely on me not to, do 4 1 ’ ] anything that would make it harder. J vt ) ;é 9” fy sen understand don’t you?” Beal Hi He was not looking at her while’he 2 [| spoke, but she, to make it impossible y B j|for him to do so, pulled her chair le] . around so that she could lean both q y Henry Kitchell Webster {areal 0 thee, the cout Teen Hey i she suid in a stifled voice, “I sa ve Author of i I do. I'm beginning to get the| Hea he Real Adventure,” “ ai “ene”? Wie idea, I think.” Her eyes were dry now ee ”” “The Painted Scene,” Ete. i : cheeks were burning. | “The Bey j ac that the man I married was =e. “ ‘, able to give me a house like those and i »| all the clothes I wanted, and a motor, sald, Sone or two just possible, sjund so on. That was a purt of the voice dropped and dulled a little, “And| marriage service that the minister I suppose if I wanted to take them.|didn’t read. But it was understood I would. But I don’t. I’ve had all I} just the same. can stand.” “And because that was your con- She pressed her knuckles against her} tTact, you wouldn't tell me how things THE THOROUGHBRED. ‘Alfred Blair, a man of whom every one spoke well, self-made, steady and industrious, was a contracting engi- neer who specialized in grain eleva- tors, factories, and certain other forms of warehouses, factories and markets. His wife. Celia, was fond of the refinements of life, and, on lips as if that could still their tremb- the’ surface, somewhat aloof in’ her (ling, and tried to gulp down'the lump manner toward her husband although she was. deeply in love with him. She 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 de-! scription of a scene at one of thei Parties in which both husband and/ ‘wife are on the verge of serious mis- understanding. | | SYNOPSIS OF 2nd INSTALLMENT | 'y OF STORY 1 A crisis has come in his business affairs and Fred discloses the fact to Celia in so blundering a way that} she infers that he expects she will! want to get a divorce on some pre text that he might offer. She is great- | ly insulted. At last he broke the silence, “There's | nothing more to tell, really. I stood the siege as long ay I could. It's a re-| Nef to have got to the very last day,} and I have. This was it. It’s been —hell, the waiting, the—hoping. Be- cause, of course, every time the post- man came in, every time the phone} rang, it might be something. Only, it| never was. I’ve been—half crazy; lately. That accounts for the—man-' her you objected to. Well, it's over,! thank God. I've got to the end.” “But—but,” she stammered, “things don’t end, Fred. They have to keep going somehow. You can’t just—stop.”. Her face whitened then, and her mouth dropped open with a blank horror, over -the realization that there was a way by which a man could just stop. Was that what he meant? She tried to hide her terror. “It can’t be so bad as it looks to-night. Z . There must be something you ¢an do.” | “Get some more money somewhera jon it, a | first.” in-her throat. The tears were brim- ming out of her eyes and trickling down her cheeks, but she thought noth- ing of that. After a while she man- uged to say: ‘But—but what ure you going to do, | Fred?" “I sotd the car to-day,” he informed her, “for enough to pay the couple of people T have kept at the office, and the rent I owed down there, and the telephone bill. They came to-day to take it out. I paid up, but told them to go ahead and take it. So there's the end of that.” But you! What are you going to du The words were a ery of undisguised terror that brought him around. He stood for a moment looking into her face. “Oh, not hat,” he said. you're a 1 of. I've treated you badly enough already, without that. It’s bad enough at the best, of course, for you, but they'll be | something. ‘There’s the house. The equity in that is worth something, if vou can realize nd the furniture and so ¢ Perhaps—" He shook his head as if perplexed by some memory he couldn't quite get hold of. reut it furnished for enough to pay you, And your jewelry might help tide you over juntil—” “Tide me over!’ She squeezed the tears out of ber eyes and stared at him. “Why are you talking about me? And— what do you mean about having treat- ed me badly already? Tell me that “Not what ‘Oh, that’s plain enough.” he said. “It ought to be plain enough to you. False preter —not up to specifica- tions. It’s just what you were saying at dinner’ to-night. The man you married amounted to something—a “Perhaps you could! were going withsyou, or ask me to economizesssr: usecyouonever: did— never, neyer—never once, so that I understood” that you meunt anything by it. Why, you didn’t even joke about being poor now on account of the war, the way the others did. That w: your way of living up to—specifica- tions, I suppose you’d say. You just let me go right up to the very last day— duy when they cume to take the thle- phone. Oh! And ‘then ‘you tell: me it's over, “And now, if: 1 understand what you've been suyliig, you’re showing me how I can pick up what’s left out of the wreckage and scuttle back, home to father and mother and—and—this was what you meant about doing anything I wanted—that I should get a divorce from you on some pretext that you'd furnish me, and—and try my luck again. And—and the jewelry would tide me over until I could find some- body else who'd weet the require- men ‘There was u silence of minutes after that. He stirred two or three times us if he meant to speak, but gave it up. Her way of putting the thing made it impossible for him to admit that she had taken his meaning correctly, but the essential truth of what she had said prevented Nis denying it. (To Be Continued.) Clean up! Have the rubbish hauled away. Phone Wachter—62. Old Resident Given Up by Physician “Given up. by five doctors, my only hope an operation. I rebelled on gut- N ting me open, as I am 75 years old. “*The-Call of the Road’ When you take the highway this spring you want a cat that permits you to enjoy your outing. Tt must take the roads effi- ciently and with comfort, operate at low cost and inspire pride in its appearance. Model 90 is just such a car. The appreciation of 600,000 Overland owners has built up manufacturing methods that make possible the unusual value of Model 90 at its economical cost. Naturally, there is a tremendous,demand for the Model-90 car this season. By 4 a | @o you mean, to tide me over?” comfortable, prosperous, solid and re-] A neighbor ‘advised trying Mayr’s eer H She eee with a nod. “There liable sort of chap. Well, as you say, Wonderful Remedy for stomach ; must be ways.’ I’m not that man. That man’s finish-} trouble. 1 got relief right away. I i ‘ e “There's a way,” he said. “Myjed. He's gone, and I can't play his] had not eaten for 10 days and was LAHR MOTOR SALES COMPAN Y ‘mother’s little bit is all in my hands.|game. It’s no use. I haven’t® the} as yellow as a gold piece. I could have Bis k Pod could take that, and if the luck|nerve for it. I haven’t the sand. I’m} lived only a fed days but for this Be marc era ea North Dakota iia a © ehanged within the next few months} good for twenty-five dollars a week,| medicine.” It is a simple, harmless = 2 5 Peg Rea soar i BIE Tit Tttrocises intentoces asa] agtable in some othe: ehap's Obtce| Ai maces, from she Intestinal treet Se aay ee eee nt ah Teele 4 “mnrde that suggestion. ‘ and allays the inflammation which Come to our store 3 She colored. “I meant possible % wayal che sald. A tne “o tumed away and arth A - aeee on eatertecstsee tos seesseusaias ie