The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 1, 1919, Page 4

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‘PAGE 4. THF BISMAR( K TRIBUNE Seated ae borin sate Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second “i Class Matter, GEORG: D. MANN : - - - 2 Editor a G. LOGAN PAYN NEW Okin, lifth Ave. | Bld,.; BOSTON, 3 Winte Bidg.; MINNEAPOLI 810" Lumber livchange: MISMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS tated Press is e.clusively entitled to the use for publication of all news ¢ edited to it or not otherwise eredite, in this paper and\aiso the local news published herein. Vii vivhts of publication of special dispatches hereim are | also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ScwsuurlivN RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Ly carrier per Year .ssseeesseseee Daily Ly mail per year (In Bismarck) .. sovese 7.20 Daily by mail per year (In state outside of Biamartk) 5 00; Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ............ 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) <y> —— SEW ON, LITTLE GIRL, SEW ON, FOR THIS! IS YOUR HOME SUPREME Little girl, stitching happily at your trous- seau, God made the spring for you. It is your Supreme Hour. Stroll under the stars and breathe | i i; good business, your perfect joy—the bliss of drifting down the great current of natural law. Sew on, little girl. All the romance of the} ture, thank God for your function in life—greater than organizing trusts or winning wars. Consider your Elaine’s romancé began at a thousand-dollar-ball.’ Mary, a Red Cross nurse, whispered “Yes” France. Possibly your own first true lover’s-kiss! followed a movie. \ou are all the same—sisters, who have woman’s faith in man. a complete failure—ends in divorce. Let this fact not. weaken your resolve nor cloud your hopes. Be sure that you have the right man.| Be sure that you and he really know each other— that there is no pretense, no masquerading. falls a soldier crossing the seas. All is not sun- shine in married life. Nor all clouds. Think not \size at the start. of the one woman in nine whose romance ends in a divorce court. Eight women of the nine find mar-| riage a success. With you and with your mate] rests the choice. ei Both: of you!» Believe in life. Believe. in Tho-| \ mans; with . allowance: for their handi \human beings. That is the most priceless -o§ life’s| ‘the fire loss ‘was xate.was reduced! | gifts. . Let no,cynicism—no plue-vitriol philos phy —eat like acid into your heart and _ soul. Married. | happiness! WY AbWve, i8'a’state of mind. - Stri thafX¥at staté rot slip away. , mah? oe 5 | ‘Séiater Hitdicock éabléd’ ‘Wilsp that! : tirecountry now favors the leaguézy e too, and we know as little about it as Hitchcock Slaughter of the Jews by Ukrainians doesn’t indicate so much hatred of the Jews. as love for what the Jews have in their shops, WITH THE EDITORS CHEAPER TO KEEP CLEAN It calls for putting everything Swing into line and heed its Take a tip from old Mother Nature. not want Mother Natuer to outdo us in dressing Clean Up and Paint Up. Look around the premis ~}of carpentry work not only will make things look r, but will add years to their wear. You will possibly also want to make things last a little jlonger by doing a little painting here and there. Cleanliness, sanitation, beautification, conser- vation and safety are all synonyms. {bolize good citizenship, and good citizenship is These things reduce fire insurance rates and fire losses, increase property values, re- move unsafe buildings, make cleaner alleys, yards fiuman race centers on you: Mothérs of the fy-|and homes, develop more attractive and. safer ; homes and places’ of business, and produce a com- es spirit that permanently assures a cleaner, fer, healthier and more attractive city. Such.a it, when once well: started, is contagious. in! | practically refurnishes! the entire town. As a matter of fact, from the standpoint of economy, it is cheaper to keep things in repair and looking well than to allow them to go to waste. Uncle Sam—your Uncle Sam in Washington—, Also, it is cheaper to keep well than to submit to has a message for you: Very,recent figures show! Conditions which spell sickness. that.one out of every nine Amefican marriages is| | keeping clean is the practical solution of commun- ity sanitary problems. Spring calls for painting. through lack of painting is greater than the annual Cleaning up and painting is a long | step toward fire prevention. This rids homes and Ahead of you lies a greater adventure than be-| business houses of accumulations of rubbish that are liable to start fires and are menaces to a com- munity. Remember that all fires are! the same At the same time, the alleys should be cleaned; fences and sheds should be re- paired ; vacant Jots should be cleaned and tin cans, ‘| paper and dead weeds removed, ve Hartford, Camn., instituted a-clean up cam: 3, as paign and then: ‘it stayed claen. The following year, duced .$86,000 and the death er cent. hTe ‘result in Boston was that the: following year ‘there were’ 1,003 less ve! fire alarms, and from a health standpoint, ‘it-was declared to.be the best year iin the history of the Sew on, little girl, working with your trou | ity, Ea seau. Yours is the happiness of the butterfly and) thepeiner ‘bird—you have faith in life, faith: in’ Spring is here. in apple pie order. ooeee $7.20 | 0g s and see where a bit isters of the engagement ring. be Cleaning up and It carr be done. The annual loss loss by fire. This work alsacean be carried on ‘inside of the house. >Painting or varnishing scratched furniture stlonger. [t.also fills the.cracks s lurk;d ,dand makes it sanitary. Its Seats to paiht than_ not. —Dallas (Texas) | makes the wood amtholes where gi important. amined at once. Fo EXPERT, OPTIC his sat CHARGE. a ened vision is many times responsi- See Clear} ble for other ailments—nervousness, head- aches—and accidents. And yet it is more easily remedied than almost any other disorder of the human sys- tem if given prompt attention. Do not neglect your eyes—they’re Tf your child is nervous, backward in school or complains of headaches, have the eyes ex- Bookkeepers, school teachers, needle v workers, confining work should have their eyes examined often. Examination and consultation here free. Glas reasonable prices. Large variety of all sty es to choose from. We do our own grinding. om Jewelers students ,or others who use their eyes on s accurately fitted to your needs at most BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE If she could have said that she'd figure in their weekly accounts, and} it cost, had» come | sked nor explained. have saved herself some bitterly un- where the mo happy weeks; could have said it aloud, \trom was neither that is. She did say it to herself al-|Celia went on keeping accounts, it! most word for word as I have reported may be said, but she no longer ae THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1919 , a OE a it. But she couldn't say it to Alfred. anced them. And why? Well, she knew why. Be- |’ cause she believed he wasn’t telling | h teeth inclined to chatter, wa “Oh, what's the use, Fre You asked me that just the other night. You don’t need to worry about me. It won’t do any good in the first place, and there’s no need of it, in the se ond. Of course, if this summer ke: on very hot, it won't be easy. This place gets like an oven about three} in the afternoon, but I can go out inj Where. . Youre the one to worry about | ie tie got the letter he had an really. .You’ve looked awfully tired and pulled down the last week or two, |!8¢¢_ her. ls it dreadfully hot in your office? | He said, rather gruffly, that he was | three or four days led, her to believe | jot it, The thing that made it possible, of course, to go-on like this from day to! his true dreams and hopes >to her, {day was that a crisis was clearly com- What she did say, with the kind of jing. When Major March had yawn one makes when he finds his Pleted his tests, and driven his {gain, and informed her of the something would have to hap-| jpen. If the tests were successful, | “land the bargain a good one, and Alfred) i jdidn’t) tell her then—! som THE ELEVENTH HOUR Just six weeks after Celia took her! two thousand dollars to Major Maren | —six weeks and one day,.to be pre- cise, bringing it upon a Tueedey along | Her husband’s manner for the pas all right, and she waited’a good long |it wus about due. It had been etig-| 5 jmatic portentous of something—any- | fay aay aiahes catia ‘tant, Whee jhow, a manner of visibly’ suppr’ Well, then, the thing Celia had re- lexcitement, during the brief pe garded, when she/first saw its sprouts appear, as a noxious weed of sus- picion, grew straight and tall and hard in fiber, until. it was a great tree—a vertible oak of conviction. ‘The cou- viction was that her husband, by'| means unknown, had recovered his} former prosperity, or at least a good concealing the fact from her, was a failure to trust ‘her—a fear that, given the chancé, she would go straight back to the hard, artificial, pretentious life he had hated so, The conviction was fed and watere, by nothing tangible enough to be call ed evidence. Indeed, when bits of evi-|& dence or opportunity to collect bits! of evidence came her way she delib-|2OPeS. made possible. They showgd. prectsel crately shut herseyes. to “them. “The what I knew ‘they would Buté th bargain we were able to drive on th strength of them. fact of prosperity was legibly stamped on him, that was all; the way he said things, his tricks of speech, the color of his ideas. o ica}, (Of course. The eagles. would have Wm Tf she had. been: fanatically logical, made a meal of me and left little but |i bones, But in Rlair’s office, «seated! jabout his broad mahogany board, where we have been rooted for the | " + Pa “olia a . {past four days, with important peo-, didn't belleye Inthe new. Celia at all; ple clamoring for audience with him as many women are, the life would have been impossible to her. Because the logical implication of his fear was that he had never believed her— regarded her merely as the old on ors.’ All, her guarantees of good faith) the finding ‘and furnishing’ oft the flat, the joyous acceptance of ‘his* poverty, the passionate renunciation of her old self, had availed nothing. } She did. ride. aut>to, that logical terminus sometimes when she was alone, but the sound of his ‘step on the stairs always brough ‘her back to two quite simplé:.facts: that s in love with him and that he w: love with her. No asbestos fabric mere ideas could withstand the white! heat which ‘those two facts together; generated. So, though she was in-| was able, in some mysterous way, to {when she had seen him awake. had been sta) and even on Sunday he had gone jabout nine o'clock, to clean up some! jextra work, he’d said. tangle of contradictory emotions, fee ing that good news. would have | . ha 2 a for {much bad in it, and bad news so much part of it; and’ that his reason for that she hardly knew what to hope for. It contained news at, all events. ¢ H good, evidently he could lie better on pal than viva voce), “that my tidings, a dings, are superfluous, Bul ‘as con: will accept them. | The thing has come out beyond my gratulations, you St on other affa! i dee Conte tack ce cee cont ies an Olymp an ns nce, as to! ing of! ti you liver having a sallow complexion — dark rings‘ ng dawn fown even She tore open the envelope in g “L haven't a,doubt,” “March wrot Not the tests, which your faith | “That was all your husband’s doing, | it has- be easy to Ir \ ar Yoout FnoweDr. Edwards’ ’ Olive Tablets secret of keeping 9 ng is to feel i gto tin bowels: y there's no need of under.:your eyes — pimples —'a ‘bilious dignant — tormented—humiliated, she [look in in “your face — dull: eyes with: no | Your doctofwill:tell: you ninety. per cecenk of all sickness comes ‘from irl snatch some hours out of the tweity-. active bowels and liver. four of pure happiness with him. | Sne punished nim in various ways; rubbed tle drudgery of her domestic efhal into him if:subtle ways that pound liver and: bowels, which he gave to | | Ohcealed the infeht behind them.: a well-known’ physician: Dr. oes be! Ohio, ected ‘a vegetable com: | ie with olive oil to act. on,; his @ patients f for For. example, one“HMot night when he Olive” "Tablets, the substi- Seek home he found she hadn’t cook-' ae "tor Hawes: are.gentle in their action ed any supper, lyet always effective, They bring about | “The stove before and the dish that exuberance of spirit, that natural water after,” she said, “was too buoyancy which should be’ enjoyed by | much.” If he didn’t mind, they’d go everyone, by toning up the liver and clear: round to Larry Doyle’s anu gev sume- | ing the pa of impurities. thing. “Out to a restaurant for din- have? Let’s see. Sweet-breads, sous cloche, and hearts of lettuce with Thousand Island dressing, and a peach Melba. Doesn’t that sound good?” He winced at that, then said: “All right. Come along. We'll go to the Blackstone instead of to Larry’s, and we'll have exactly that.” “The Blackstone!” she flashed .at him. “Do you think I’d be seen there in any of the clothes I’ve got?” Then, over the acute misery in his face, she repented. She hadn’t meant it. She'd been edgy all'‘day, waiting for somebody to dig her claws into, | and it happened to be he.’ She'd love to go to the Blackstone. She thought a lark that they flagrantly couldn’t afford was exactly what they both needed. As for clothes, of course hgrs were all right, So tyey went and had a thoroughly good time. -And when Altred paid the} bill Celia. pretended jto be looking an- other way. The-entertainment cut no} i | i | | i} BIGGEST BARGAIN NO. 5 160 acres north of McKenzie. We own this’ ourselves—40 acres in crop—can break practically every acre—some surface stone, but splendid soil. Can sell this for $3500.00, subject to a $2000.00 mortgage due in 7 years—the bal- ance can be paid us almost any old way to suit the purchaser. FOR SALE—New , modern 5- room bungalow with water, sewer, hot-air furnace, full ce- mented “basement, ‘hard-wood floors, electric. fixtures, on 50 foot lot facing east, in east part of the city. Price $3100.00. Terms reasonable, FOR SALE—Several good mod- ern bungalows in east part’ of city ranging in price from | $2700.00 to $3500.00 to be sold on reasonable terms within the next thirty days. All good in- vestments which are bound to increase in value with the street car line extending up 10th St. F, E, YOUNG REAL ESTATE Room. 15-16 First National Bank Bldg: OPPOSITE N. P. DEPOT You will know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tab | i ner!” she mocked. “What shall. we lets by their olive color. Yox. All druggists, THRUP KING fon hl Jen Cant pa EASP! Mammtn Bachapest Bese 8c Entn~Two rar iS¢— LMAMMOTW PACKAGES AND Cantons, eee temtnenee—ks | and] wiser men. “THE THOROUGHBRED” Bu Henry Kitchell Webster Author of “The Real Adventure,” “The Painted Scene,” Ete. (Copyright by the Bobbs Mervill Co.) Even T managed not] ing basis. |to grasp, at least not so that it show- when Alfred announce] the mini- ‘mum which we would accept as a trad- CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That “ALGOHOL~ 3 PERG ( be ; | Ginitating theTood by Regula : i {ing thetomachsand Bowels fj It ‘Thereby y "Promoting Digestion ‘ 4 Cl Morphine n ape yor Nancoric] pega te POR q Alx Senna chelle Sulla Bre a Fi ar \ Winteryrren Flavor i Anelpful Remedyifor \ | Gonstipation and and Feverishness a! lil Loss oF SUPEE “resititing therefrom:1n° inal foo} FacSimile seSimite Signatare natre of sae off | big Puan sen nee a ‘months old 35 Doses — 356 "Exact Copy of Wrapper. ust watch your {Jam PRICES io, 1919 Eas ‘SOLD Arn are all agreed upon. ‘To Be continued.) 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