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PAGE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE He io hm ee ee a SE ESTE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Becond Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - - - - Méiter Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, CHICAGO: - - _DETROM, irquette Bldg, - : - enge q ” PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, : - : Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise ited in this paper and also the local news herein. Kil rights of publication of special dispatches herela are also reserved. ULATION MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIR SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year ..... ° 7.2 Daily by mail per year (In Biamarci) iy Daily by mail per year (In state outside of Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ..... THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1878) 2 oo AS TO THE BARTENDER—WHAT ABOUT HIM? Now that it is all over or about all over, let us say something good and truthful about the bar- tender. As an institution he existed in the supply of a demand. He did not create the demand—he was pretty much like other clerks and salesmen and even tho what he supplied had a negative effect upon those he served. The bartender was always courteous. If he was not,courteous he did not remain a bartender very long. He was a good fellow when those he served demanded good fellowship. The bartender saw humanity at its best and worst. He was often bored to extinction by the talk of some that he served, and he had to use infinite tact and patience with others when they were in their cups. ‘ Bartenders as a rule were not drunkards, they were about like other men in other lines and who found that they could not do their work and hold their jobs in a total or semi-inebriated state; and the best of them, through horrible example no doubt, did not drink at all.’ ss ; All those whom the bartenders served were not drunkards—in fact a very large majority of them were not. : The drunkard or a down-and-out was never a desirable patron, and even though the saloon as an institution may have been responsible for their state. : Drunkards always have a way of getting.drunk in one saloon and then going into another and ex- hibiting themselves and their state. A very large number of those whom the bar- tender served were prosperous, intelligent, some were even learned, and not infrequently men of large affairs. The bartender came in intimate and frequent contact with these, always to a point of acquain- tance, and often to actual friendship. The preference and wages of a bartender by a saloon proprietor was frequently a matter of the bartender’s acquanitance or the amount of trade that he could attract to a place. The bartender has two assets that would ably fit him for numberless lines of business, One is his courtesy, the other is his acquain- tance and his ability to make acquaintances, In a good many of the large cities that have been dry for a year or more, ex-bartenders in bet- ter class places were actually sought by life insur- ance and the larger real estate agencies as sales- men, and largely by reason of their acquaintance. Then again by reason of their acquaintance, courtesy and dexterity in handling glasses and drink mixing devices, the down-town drug stores and other places with large soda trade are finding it more profitable to employ ex-bartenders at a higher wage than persons of less experience, that the ex-bartender can handle the trade faster, with greater efficiency and satisfaction. It is our guess that after a very short period of readjustment, that the bartender will find himself in much higher service of society, and with a much larger degree of prosperity to himself than in the occupation of his enforced abandonment. SUPPRESSION OF FREE SPEECH Every individual bit of real information re- garding what is going on in Russia shows that Bolshevism has resulted in less freedom, instead of more freedom, except for the Bolshevist leaders and their mercenary army. In view of the cry of the Bolshevists in Amer- ica for “free speech,” the situation in Russia is all the more startling. , In “A Letter to American Workingmen” by Lenine, published in the Liberator of January, 1919, Lenine makes the following statements: While the old bourgeois and democratic constitutions, for instance, proclaimed for- mal equality and the right of free assem- blage, the constitution of the Soviet repu- diates the hypocrisy of a formal equality of allhumanbeings. * * * Since we here are concerned with the task of over- throwin gthe bourgeoisie, only fools or trai- tors will insist on the formal equality of the bourgeoisie. * * * Our Soviets haye taken over all usable buildings in the cities and towns out of the hands of the rich and have placed them at the disposal of the workmen and peasants for meeting and organization purposes. In an article in the Bolshevist organ, Pravda, BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNB republished in the Liberator of September and October, 1918, Lenine said: The nearer we get to the complete mili- tary suppression of the hourgeoisie the more dangerous become for us the petty bourgeois anarchic inclinations. And these inclinations cannot be combatted only by propaganda and agitation, by the organiza- tion of emulation, by the selection or or- ganizers; they must be combatted by com- pulsion. The following decree, issued by Zinoviev and published in the Bolshevist organ, the Northern Commune of Sept. 13, 1918, shows the conditions |under which meetings may be held: 1. All societies, unions and associations —political, economic, artistic, religious, ete.—formed on the territory of the Union of the Commune of the Northern Region must be registered at the corresponding Soviets or committees of the village poor. 2. The, constitution of the union or society, a list of founders and members of the committee, with names and addresses, and a list of all members, with their names and addresses, must be submitted at regis- tration. 8. All books, minutes, etc., must always be kept at the disposal of representatives of the Soviet power for purposes of revision. 4. Three days’ notice must be given to the Soviet, or to the committee of the vil- lage poor, of all public and private meetings. 5. All meetings must be open to the representatives of the Soviet power, viz.: the representatives of the Central and Dis- trict Soviet, the committee of the poor and the kommandatur of the revolutionary po- lice force. 6. Unions and societies which do not comply with those regulations will be re- garded as counter-revolutionary organiza- tions and prosecuted. . Reading this decree in connection with the declaration of Lenine, it is easy to see why there are no public meetings of protest against the Bol- shevist rule. This decree reminds those who knew Russia in the past of the suppression of free speech under the czar. : Light is shed upon the results of this decree by a quotation from Pravda of Aug. 6, 1918. (Pravda, according to Max Eastman of the Liberator, is the “Bolshevist organ.”) A passage reads: ra Kazan, August 4th. The Provision Con- gress of the Soviets of the peasants has been dissolved because of the absence from it of poor peasants AND, BECAUSE ITS *” gpATE OF MIND IS’OBVIOUSLY:COUN- TER-REVOLUTIONARY. If a Soviet Congress is dissolved because it does not agree with the Bolshevist rulers, what: chance would an ordinary meeting stand? Evidently, “freedom of speech” in Russia means freedom to praise Lenine and his associates. ——{_+—— NATURE LOVING AT. A DISCOUNT The affection for the shy, more or less, things of the wild wood is likely to be somewhat curdled by a too frequent contact with said things. We kno wa city man who became a farmer. A farmer in a mountain district where the grouse and the chipmunk and the bigger squirrel and the chicken hawk and the screech owl flourished. And fora time he was all enthusiasm over his close touch with nature. Especially was he proud of his chipmunks; cute, striped, little frisky fellows, who had no fear, who invaded’ his shed, and. then his kitchen and kept him company with unfailing frolic. : In time he wondered why the bottom of his scratch feed sacks so quickly merged with the top. One day he endeavored to put on a boot, that had been standing on the back porch for a week, and, inside, he found two quarts of chicken feed. He did a bit of figuring—like this: If one chipmwnk, in one week, in one of a dozen hiding places, can stow away four pounds of feed, worth four and a quarter cents a pound, what will forty chipmunks do.in forty weeks? The answer appeared to be that nature might be cute and all that, but she was too durn expen- sive for his income, so he secured a divorce, with- out alimony, and now chipmunks no longer frolic in his boots, nor do moles, and shrews make of his garden a camping ground. Nature, you understand, is a wonderful institu- tion, and we are not saying a thing against her; but the old dame has a lot of children that have expensive tastes, arid those who become wedded to her do well to remember this, and regard with sus- picion a lot of hungry guests that will come to visit their respected relation. FRONT!! Burleigh county returns must be a bitter dis- appointment to Townley’s local chambermaid. Doubtless the league head will seek elsewhere for an efficient political bell-hop in this bailiwick. The view the south is that the Fordney bill will save our infant potash industry at the ex- pense of our ancient cotton industry. Vorwaerts calls the peace terms a greater crime than the war. The terms are merely, i geny, come home to roost. Our record in the war causes us}] the conviction that native-born Ami too much common sense to be inter propaganda. : PRESIDENT OF AUGUSTANA TO SPEAK IN CITY Dr. G. A. Anderson of Rock Is- land, IIL, to Address Swedish Lutheran Conference The Bismarck district of the Swed- ish Lutheran church will meet this evening at the Swedish Luth- eran church, Seventh street and Avenue D, Eight ministers from the district are expected to be present. Dr. G. A. Andreen, president of the Augustine college and theological seminary, Rock Island, Ill., will de- liver an address in the American language. All are welcome. EDUCATOR’S DUTY TOWARD GROWING CLASS PREJUDICE "|Should Remind Both of Contend- ing Group of Their Solidar- ity, Says Pedagog Milwaukee, Wis., June 30.—Addres- sing the deans of women of the Na- tional Educational association in con- vention here today on “Responsibility in Group Consciousness,” Margaret 8. McNaughton, commissioner of element- ary schools of Sacramento, Calif., said: “The increase in the price of farm lands and of farming machinery, the crushing of small mills and factories by those erected and operated by large corporations, has worked the separa- tion we now know between the two classes :the capitalist owner that was never a workingman, and the worker that knows he will never be a capital- st, “Efforts to bring the two classes into unity by inducing workers to subscribe for stock in the corporation for which they work have, in many instances, been successful, but, numerous as have been these successes, they have had little effect upon the great mass of workers and of capitalists. “Great gains have come to labor and through labor ‘to;'the nation, as a re- sult of the class consciousness of workingmen. In the old days, it was only here and there that some man more strong, more skillful, or with larger business capacity than his com- rades rose by good fortune from the ranks of the ill-paid hired men to the ranks of the employing class; but now, by unity. of effort, aud class co-opera- tion, all workingmen have advanced to a higher standard of living than was possible fifty years ago. “Today, however, this Class con- seiousness menaces, the prosperity of civilization. Wisely led it has the pctency of becoming one of the highest constructive forces. mankind has ever exerted ; but ill-directed it is portentous of industrial disturbance, civil discord and ruin, , 1 “As education did not cause this class consciousness, nefther ‘can: it sef it aside. Our. responsibility in connec- t:on with it theréfore begins and ends with our duty as educators to con- tinually remind both the contending groups of their solidarity with the gen- eral interests of the community and of the nation. That solidarity is the base upon which rests alike the pros- perity of both capital and labor. Each side must be brought to understand be- yond all doubting that in their con- flicts there is a point beyond which a victory would be to the victor as dis- astrous as to the defeated. In every struggle for existence, . co-operation wings more than rivalry or triumph. However . beneficial economic group consciousness has been in times past or may be when wisely lead in the fu- ture, it will cease to be beneficial when- ever a group loses consciousness of the higher claims of the community in which they live and of the nation that protects their lives and property, edu- cates their children and gives them the dignity of citizenship. “The group consciousness of women seeking redress from further con- tinuance of ancient wrongs should have a consideration all its own, It is not a narrow issue like a community con- selousness or a race consciousness or an economic consciousness. It in- cludes the whole orb of life. It is men- tal and moral as well as physical and material. . It is at once a politics, a philosophy and a religion, It is spirit- ual as well as temporal. It appeals to the bosoms as well as to the business of humanity, If it could be summed up in one word that word would be ‘Sustice.’ ” DICKINSON WILL HAVE POST SOON Veterans Plan to Organize Amer- ican Legion. Wednesday Dickinson, N. D., July 1.—After Wednesday evening, Dickinson will have.a local post of the American Legion of War Veterans, as on that evening about 100 of Uncle Sam’s fighters will weet in the Dickinson armory and perfect an organization. An invitation is extended to all of the soldiers, sailors and marines of SoS CASHIER IN 7 MONTHS Considerable interest has been aroused in the rapid rise of Mr. Max Buechler, recently promoted to Cashier of the Fredonia State Bank. Only 7 months ago he started there as bookkeeper and Asst. Cashier after completing a course at the Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D. Only thor- ough training can account for such quick promotion. All eyes are now on Mr. Law- rence Hanson, another D. B. C. graduate, who has recently ac- cepted the position of asst. cash- ier of the First National Bank of Leeds. Write to F. L. Watkins, 806 Front ‘St., Fargo, N. D., for in- formation about summer courses. —Publicity..._ TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1919. fzed oil Delightfui to obtain slender figure. GET THI EASILY NOW The sale of Oilof Korein isinereasing. It is a vegetal- compound; safe, harmless and reliable. Korein 7 System is proving itself a wonderful weight reducer, dorsements. The Many en- eliable druggists sell Oil of Korein. Many persons have reported anaverage weight reduc- tion of five to sixteen pounds monthly through the Korein No Outside Line Shows Size Before Reduction ‘100 CASH Guarantee this vicinity to make application for membership Wefore that date so as to; get in as charter members. Besides’ the work of organization and election of officers Wednesday, it is expected that arrangements will be made for club rooms ‘and meeting quarters. Officers will be elected as follows: _ Post commander, ‘vice com-, mander, finance officer, adjutant and chaplain. Major J. M. Hanley will be here from Mandan, to assist with the work of organization. All veterans who are _ interested should make application to either Lyall B. Merry or F. J. Flury and have their names listed. The annual membership fee is $2.00. Belated oe of Slope Boy’s Death cee é Mott, N. D. Jul ROA telegram bearing the sad news that Waldon 8 Johnson, a former Mott Jad has been Women Made Young Bright eyes, aclear skin and a body full of youth and health may be yours if you will keep your system in order by regularly taking The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles, the enemies of life and looks, In use since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal om every box accept no imitation jo Re-tire?, (Buy Flow to melt away” is the expression o: $100 Guarantee in each box, that you will reduce at least a pound every week, or your money back! et a prolong your life. Keep this only once or twice a year because Korein 7 System is so well known and 80 widely recommended that it is its own best advertising. Get Oil of Korein at the drug store; or if for any reason you prefer to obtain Oil of Korein direct from head- quarters, send a dallar hill. or money order, or stampa to Korein Company. Station F, NEW YORK, N. Y. Sold by busy druggists in Bismarck, including. Joseph Breslow; Finney’s Drug Store; John Cowan; A. P. Lenhart; and all leading druggists everywhere in North Dakota and America. KOREIN COMPANY, {city, from the government stating that yeame T System. Physicians recommend it. Fee g, ho starving, no strenuous exercising. Delightful, steady riddance of adiposity. ‘The ray druggi Oil of Korein For convenience, Oil of Korein comes in tiny cap- eules, easily swallowed. Positively no thyroid, no purgative; no salts, nothing drastic or objectionable. A wholesome, genuine reduction remedy. Get a box of Oil of Korein at the drug store. Follow the siraple directions of Korein 7 System weigh yourself and use the tape measure before starting, Keep g record of daily reduction, ‘Reduce 10 to 60 Pounds FREE BOOK. We publish an interesting booklet, entitled Reduce Weight Happily.” which we will send (in plain wrapper) postpaid upon request by letter or post- card. Tells the best way to regain normal figure, sprightliness, better health and vertisement and show to others. We publish it NB-299, received by his parents,’ Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Johnson, who reside north of the the brave lad was killed in action in the Chateau Thierry drive on July 18, 1918, It. will be remembered that early last summer Private Johnson was reporied in the daily newspapers as missing in action since July 18, 1918 His par- ents did not give up hopes 1n@ each day looked for better news, However, none until last week when the sad hews was received announcing that be} had made the supreme sacrilice for his country. AGITATORS SEEK TO DECEIVE MEN ON WAR BUREAU to Returned Soldiers, Sail- ors and Marines Ensign Bell of the Bismarck Sal- vation Army is advised by Major W. J. Beels, provincial secretary that Major General John B. Reynolds, rep- resenting Major General Wood, has requested the cooperation of this or- ganization in connection with a cer- tain class of returned soldiers, sail- ors and marines, who, it has been reported, are in need of assistance but have been persuaded by agitat- ors to stay away from the bureau for returned soldiers. Major Beels states that it is the desire of military authorities that the men who have fallen into this trap be given to un- derstand that the above-named ‘bu- reau exists for their benefit and that the seven war activity organizations are cooperating with a view to sup- plying their actual needs. The U. S. employment bureau here joins with Salvation Army Issues Warning! numerous users, Outside Line Shows Size Before Reduction — ment, clothing or other assistance to make their wants’ known. A Coated Tongue? What it Means ‘A bad breath, coated tongue, Bad taste in the mouth, languor and debility, Mie are usually signs that : the liver is out of order. Pror. HEM- METER says: “The liver is an. organ secondary in importance only to the heart.” We can fj manu fac- ture poisons within our own. bodies y which are os deadly as a snake’s venom, The liver acts as a guard-over our well-being, sifting out the.cinders and “shes from the general, circulation. A blockade in the-intéstines piles a heavy burden upon the liver. If the intestines are choked or clogged up, the: circulation’ of the blood becomes poisoned and the system becomes loaded. with. toxic waste, and we suffer from headache, yel- ‘ow-coated tongue, ‘bad’ taste in mouth, nausea, or gas, acid dys- pepsia, languor, debility, yellow skin or eyes. At such times one should take castor oil or-a*pleasant laxa- tive. Such a one is made of May- apple, leaves of aloé’and jalap, put into ready-to-use form by. Doctor Pierce, nearly fifty. years ago, and DP the Salvation army in speaking to re- turned service men needing empley- PHONE 475, NON-S 31x4 34x 4% = Other Sizes in Proportion 206 Main St. BIG TIRES—EXCESS MILEAGE BISMARCK, N. D. , told for 25 cents by all druggists as Dr. Piezce’s Pleasant Pellets, * KID FABRIC = $29.95 $43.35, ¥ ‘ » ro ae me 5 ’ A tle | | | ry 4