The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 17, 1919, Page 4

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‘PAGE 4. THE BISMARCK TRIKUNE Entere: it the Hoatertice Bismargk, N. D., as Second ass 4) GEORGE D. MANN” - - > = r G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPA NEW YORK, Viftl Ave CHICA(:O, Marquette id é x St.; DETROIT, Kresege 410 Lumber Exchange, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS a i ely entitled to the use for puulication of all news ¢ edited to it or not otherwise ed in this paper and also the local news published he vir. \il nights of publication of special dispatches herein are Biso veserved. 3MBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION §' .SCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Dai by carrier per year ........+++e00 2 Dai: by mail per year (In Bismarck) ............ 7.2 Day by mail per year (In state outside of Bismarck) 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ... 6.0 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) GiB ———— YES, THE WORLD IS GETTING BETTER | The world is getting better everywhere except! here, where we are. It is getting better here, only we don’t notice it; we're too close to see it. Go back to the little town with which you were familiar say 15 years ago—most any town. It has a new tapestry brick station, the streets} are well paved, “no spitting” signs are conspicu- ously displayed, bubbler fountains on the public! square, there is a new public library, several good} Bliy.; BOSTON, 3 Win Ridg.; MINNEAPOL1 i siasm for the angelic nature of speculative child- \hood, is far from being a thornless plant in the {and a naivete that would be wonderful if it could} communication and extension of intelligence thru the printing press are giving the world the facility by which the people of one part can observe the to their own part. THE SAVAGE ERA EVERY MAN PASSES THROUGH Maiden, aunts, and poets and bachelor philos- ophers frequently sing of the golden years of cherubic childhood. School teachers and mothers have their enthu- hood tempered by the rigors of experience. The truth is that childhood, specially boy child- garden of love. The tender little seedling more frequently takes on the aspect of a stinging nettle than of the tender crocus. It more occasionally has the odor of the skunk| cabbage than the perfume of the violet. j Babies frequently—doubtless your own, dear} madam—are utterly dear. : Babies up to the fourth year, that are healthy and well born, have an appealing cuddlesomeness, only last. buildings have’been erected along the main street, | nearly all the-old store fronts have been replaced | with a broad expanse of plate glass and in all the} show windows are well arranged and well lighted | displays of goods, indicating that the town’s peo-! ple are buying more and better of all the useful things of life. Yet ask any native who hasn’t*been out ot town within 15'years and he wWill’tell’ you that it is} getting Worke—tuch worse." ’ ; The improvements in this town have come So} gradually that the inhabitants have not noticed | them. And this is about the way with the world in| general. | We of this world do not improve ourselves and , our surroundings at one fell swoop. Usually man first improves the food that he eata, then his clothing, then the furnishing of his; house, and then the house. | With a better house he demands paved streets, | water works, sewer system, electric lights. | ‘The merchant is’ quick to see that there is a’ demand for better goods and carries a better stock | of géods. The exhibition of this better stock has an edu- cationalieffect in creating a desire and raising the purchasing standard of the whole community. : | With a better individual life the spirit finally, extends to better administration of ‘their public) affairs, and on down to the fundamentals of com- mpnityzeconomics. _ | e world is getting better. It cannot be conceived that our present attempt at civilization will be a failure; for transportation, i | | | | i i ( I! ‘THE THOROUGHBRED” Bu Henry Kitchell Webs Author of x “The Real Adventure,” “The Painted Sce An even twelve hours ago she had| waiting hours for received the second-hand — clothing | and indulging. in dealer for the purpose of selling him| about her—sounde her clothes. It had been a day sure etough. An ampler day, not ‘only in| hutise two or: three the-anatter .of! material activities, but}no word from-her, in. its-emotional content. than any she | wis tow? nid, remember. The. people she'd en ntered had seemed more real and} e@ and human than those her old r paths had brought her into casual con-| jation, where she tact with. Twas coming shruig When had any of her conventionally | in about nine, made aeyuaintances Mpposition you spontaneous vlow of. fri ss from | place that at her that she'd felt) when » found \ Larry Doyle building a fire in her} to await there unt stove, or when the salesman up at and get her. This, of course to do. A stree her to the station Shield’s bad told her where his moth- er bought her kitchen things? The emotions hadn't all been ros, though, by any means. There had be an-instant of cold terror just at the end of the day, when, confronted by that, gin-reeking exp read. in his look that » and alone. She had moved briskly ov and. thrown open a window upon the f 1 busy street, and with that protec what you'll want had felt safe enough. But the me breath of that kind of peril had nev blown upon her before. Oh, ibeen a day. She was xo tired. as she made her way to the corner drug-sture to eall up | mark, she knew the house and tell Fred ‘where she was | him a bit for and that she was on her way home. | suddenly, that the mere exertion of walking al- | coneludi most: brought tears. But even fatigue | ridiculousne couldn’t lessen the triumphant sense of | the things achieved adventure. been: » None of that, naturally. got over the | up, like Jane Aus telephone to her husband, and his own | ing an hour and a counter-t in another trunk it had |can-leate in the a minute of t tone of poignant anxiety—he had been |to the proprieties—because her nus-| (7) SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY - BRINGS SURE RELIEF GOLD MEDAL Haar- the poisons. New surely follow. has been restored thot tmnennttnttmtimttnnomet nite | to her. He had called up her mother’ n't come home alone trom a And then, quite absurdly, he told he ck. “If you haven't, you'd she had | better get at it now, because everythin’ to do it to-morrow, She needn't have made that last re and she didn’t blame} jamming the book down the way he did. by way of ¢ the conversation, Only. the | he'd been doing to-day, and} nigh to-day, § i] Rect Take stiee or four eve: e healing oil soaks into the cell lining of the kidne iste en your normal vigor for a while to keep yourself i i- ins | tion and prevent a return of the a Don’t wait until you are i Spiting. Beart takin SOLD Rta “i ipsules today. cheerfully refund your But from six to sixteen the least said the bet- ter. : hq s through his savage era then, } i The man pas: ‘just as the races did. | They boy has the gem of all good things in} him; but they are having a tough time breaking ; the crust. i . So, he frequently displays more of the Adamic and profit by the failure and successes of another! part and make example for improvement each; BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUN THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1919. traits than he does ‘those t#at should set apart; beings, “a little lowerthan the S f Boyhood is barbaric.in its ini i fering, its callousness, its'selffShivess?”’ | Boyhood is going through its evolution, push-| nce to suf- ethical plane is a sharp declivity. Parents whoj understand this, and who keep their patience and | hope unsullied through these growing years, will! not only keep the snow off their thatch, but they! will probably save an odd boy or two from utter revolt against all social custom. | Trotzky has ordered his navy to attack the allies, and this is the first intimation that he has'! a grudge against his navy. The commission on constitution of the German} national assembly: has; abolished the state church probably becauge of-the failure of the state Gott. 7 : A lot of the pecple who are telling us what will happen if peace is delayed will be bitterly disap- pointed if it doesn’t happen. ‘A good diplomat ‘is ohe who can conyince the world that the other fellows are the wicked schem- ers who are delaying things. eo —nnnmnee | band could escort her home, nettled | her a little. Their meeting. when sh at half past nine or. so, much better, He flung the door open for her as she cume up the steps and greeted her with a, “Wherever in the world have you been {| She » a limp little laugh and \ “Where haven’t TE been! My, Pm got home, idi't work ter ne,” Ete. front her from walkiug off, yell a disposition to do, ‘we've got to have a talk.” “AIL right.” she said, “but came on out into the kitchen and talk while I eat: Pohad lunch about three at ‘Larry Doyle's, but that’s all since cuffeeithis morning, I'm starved | Her manner both disconverted and exasperated him. He had been pre- ‘ed to mect terrible emotional stress- tragedy. He felt pretty tragic him- elf. But nothing of that should be al- lowed to apped From now on his dealings with ja should be marked by _ gentlenes y. And. if she'd been th pewilder- “dd up for, found him exactly that. he cried out: duce is Larry Doy And ‘e have you been—all her to come home} all sorts of terrors “1 merely Guerulous times, but they 1 Was that where sae naturally again, ane! eo be at hout expla- |! was, and that she; ht home now; would this time of night! il he could come iit} she finally decided : ar that woutd take ran right puzzled over “ve been all the West And Larry: Doyle var, Wait. till you've seen him!” He said, “Celia, 1 can't do it—treat the thing in that manner, i mean. Here we are at the end of everything, and you're acting as it it were plans for a week-end to the country. This. | is our last chance to decide anything, jand—and I want to talk about it ser- jiously. You rt so angry with now as you make you you thou; not in that offensive w T want you to consider going back to your father and mother, Not to get rid of me, bur te wait. Oh. can’t you sit down and | listen 1 the time he talked she had been ing away steadily. and his last ex- mation was provoked by her getting ‘up for a raid on the cake-box. “I'm listening.” she said. with her ; Mouth full. it must be admitted. Then, with an effort. and a little bit more clearly: “But it isn’t any use, Fred. You agreed to the flat. didn’t you?” “You won't be able to find one that you'd be willing to live in. for any ‘rent I can afford to pay. You've no idea what it would mean; the things you'd have to put up with, the neigh- {bors you'd have. the hardships.” | “I don’t suppose [ do know them all.” jshe admitted. “but I've found a flat and rented it for twelye dollard” 1 month. It’s off North Avenue, right near Humboldt Prak.” She recited the She frowned, a little of 4 id said by way Bis violence, bw \e £ your closet and by — to-morrow trunk with ke with you to to the flat, and put the rest of the stuff that Ruth says wej ttic, TL shan’t have a he notion that. after he would finish tin heroine, by wait- half as a concession day, 's and drive: it life and health. wil continue treatment at half wande p West Side, not i knowing : / She revit the add once more, j added Harold Bachman, who will appear with his “Million Dollar | |Band”, at the Auditorium this coming Friday and Saturday night! and Saturday matinee. the afternoon? Glooming around li the heroine of Hast Lynn that address down, F dinner--some sortvot. a ing to be ready there to-mor Do write} w night, cand [don't want you and stood watching, while he, like an automaton, wrote it down, ‘Then. be- fore he could get his wits. together —and'she had plenty of time, for they were very. theroughiy® ? scattered —she “En simply so dead tired and sleepy T can feel my drains slipping around inside my head. I'm going up to bed: Good night.” % ; (To Be Continued.) The Million Dollar Band will give dance Friday night and Sat- urday night after the show at} the Armory. ! PEOPLE'S FORUM «KEEP ’EM AT HOME Editor. Tribune: 4 > Dear Sir: ° Will you please make gestion through the me puper to owners of i dogs and pigs to make some arr? ment to keep those animals at home | during the spring and summer months at least. I have heard a great many complaints from citizens, of dogs tip- ping over garbage cans, also running thru freshly made lawns, gardens and flower beds. If we are to main- tain our reputation for civic pride we shall need the co-operation of every- one interested. Yours for a better, cleaner, more beautiful city, including front lawns, back yards and well kept gardens. ,A CORRECTION Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N: D. While I appreciate your kindness and your sentiments as expressed in the article printed in the Tribune this afternoon, and carried in wire dis- patches to other cities; and while I thank you for the promotion in the military rank you have unwittingly given me, I-wish that you would make a correction. 3 I am not a lieutenant, nor was I connected in any way with a battalion adjutant’s office. In the newspapers throughout the state, the title lieutenant has been coupled with my name. I seek no com- Don’t Suffer From Piles Semple Vackace of the Famous Pyramid ic ‘Treatment Now Offered ree to Vrove What ft Will Do for You. jing through age-old evils to development, and its} What do you think I've been doing all | mission to whi ale [| peel | PRESIDENT CIVIC LEAGUE. | *|nor do I wish to sail under any false —EARLE H. TOSTEVIN. colors. 415 1 wk Pyramid Pile Treatment gives quick relief from iiching, bleeding or protruding p: hemorrhoids and PA Z Prvamid In Certainly Ving and Works Such Wonders ho Quickly, auch rectal (roublex, in the privacy of your home. 6) CAnts & box at all druggists, Take no subsutite A mingle box ofien relieves, ree num~ ple for Trial ina in plain wrap- | per, if you Kena eaupon pelow, FREE SAMPLE, COUPON street and number to him. “You'd bet- ter write it down,” she added, “because it’s where you live. I’ve been buying furniture all the afternoon.” Then, as his look of perfectly blank id iP with 1 CAPAPASY, ERA Oprsine Hae, Beempets Wet id end wie 8 Bree sample 9 pyvtmtl vise Breptment, ip pain wrapper, PAPA 92777 vette reyr rye RENTALS. We have calls every day for houses. Let us know what you have for rent. CITY INSURANCE AGENCY, | best,” | | ich Iam not entitled, i | i | | Phone 220R | Sealed Tight Kept Richt lis MR. BURLESON THE 7 CHAMPIO: “One of his friends lieves that “Mr. Burleson is says The Literary Diges i |week at the beginning of article in ijwhich the general press comment of jthe country, Republican and Demo- ieratic is surveyed, {iment one “might e: that the postmas ‘his bit,’ if not ‘h ‘Gonstipation and Di 35 Dosrs 5 g exe Exact Copy of Wrapper. | mail servic N “JONAH”? | telegraph sys 3” be-| utilities, destroy “doing his | pr igest this | js “NOTICE * best,’ to wreck the ,4-15-tf ASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Worn, Cantal Sagar Wintergreen Ahelpfut Remedy for Use For Over Thirty Years feverishness anti OF SUEEP ths old shoal AtOmon THE cenTaun cor ny NEW YORK city. EPT secret and special and personal for You is ~WRIGL in its wax-wrapped air-tight package. A goody that is worthy your lasting regard because of its lasting quality, WRIGLEY S ICY FRUIT CHEWING GUM , vipple the telephone and tems, kill the mevemen : vovernmerit ownership of public fovitiess det the liberties of the nd discredit the Wilson admin- | All drinking water should be F this | boile i! further notice, iiy inter, rather, DoHed Will Se vACKHOUSE, -general is doing. | Health Officer. “po a \ { ws a s Setar

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