The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1919, Page 4

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PAGE 4 * BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1919. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN - - - - - ‘SBéiter Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, CHICAGO : : : DETROIT, larquette Bldg, . - - Kresge Bldg. aay PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, - - - __ Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Preas is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise eredited in this paper and also the local news pubiished herein. All rights ot publication of special dispatches heres are reserved. s hi MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year . $7.20 Daily by mail per year (In 126 Daily by mail per year (14 stave vuvoiuy OL sunnarck) 6.00 Dajly by mail outside of North Dakota ......--++++ 6.00 . THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1878) “We, the People vs. the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, es- tablish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the bless- ings of liberty to ourselves and our poster- ity, do ordain and establish this Constitu- tion for the United States of America.” That preamble to our constitution tells it all. For the first time in history a people united for defense, and liberty, for domestic tranquility, and to establish justice. On this day, when we memorate the wisdom of the forefathers, and renew our allegiance to the nation, it is well to get back to essentials, and understand what our job is as American citizens. This people, for we are a people, indeed we bid fair to become a distinct race in another hundred years, grew from the formless womb of time into a power because it was born for service, and liberty, and justice, as well as for protection, trade advantage and the other material aims coun- tries thrive for. From the first blood-stained trails of our na- tion’s liberty ; from the bitter frozen paths of the colonial farmers soldiers, to the gas craters and stinking trenches of Flanders, America’s sons have died first for liberty; for an ideal, to overthrow despots, and to bring security and prosperity and, above all else, equality before the law, to all men. This is the first nation that tried the Utopian experiment. It is now the oldest nation, maintaining the same form of government, in the world. For the past generation we had forgotten some of these things; our Fourths were so safe and sane that they brought no message, as they did when the colonials heroes still limped over the countryside or when the veterans of Jones and Perry refought their battles at the town tavern, or when the blue and gray-clad fathers told their sons of the charge and counter charge, and assault, and repulse, and renewed assault of the four years when brother fought with brother, and father fought with son. But today, just escaping from the shadow of a world dominion by the Hun, today our eyes see more clearly through their tears, and our hearts beat to a higher measure, since so recently they leaped to the alarm of the death rattle of rapid fire, and the volcanic roar of the enemies heavies. Let us once more renew our allegiance to the simple faith of our fathers. In a world of confusion, of nations struggling in the birth pangs, and gasping in the death throes; in the finite madhouse, where all seem crazed, and where wild vaporings and futile imag- inings and brutalities of all degrees mark peoples and kingdoms alike; let us, in our own haven, hav- ing done our duty to humanity, and left the sacri- fice of our first-born on the altars of Europe; let us, in simple faith, bend the knee before the ark of our covenant, and resolve that as a people unit- ed, we will fight on for justice, for tranquility, in our common defense AND TO SECURE THE BLESSING OF LIBERTY TO OURSELVES AND OUR POSTERITY. The final peace terms made Heinie mad enough to fight again, but he has excellent control of his temper when dealing with anybody his size, JUDGES AND LAW In March last a case which attracted wide at- tention came before Justice Darling, one of the high court judges of England, on appeal. A soldier, on going to the war, had turned over to his wife’s care $3500, his life’s savings. While the husband was fighting for his country the wife became infatuated with another man, made pres- ents out of the money to him, then went to live with her paramour and was posing as his wife when the husband returned from the war. The lower court had sentenced the woman to prison for 15 months on a charge of larceny and the paramour for 12 months for receiving stolen property. Justice Darling overruled the sentences hold- ing that at the time she disposed of the money the legal presumption was that she was “living with” her husband and therefore she committed no crime. The other day in Cambridge, England, Lieu- tenant Francis Wright, M. C., and his brother took sub-Lieutenant Desmond B. Kinahan out into the woods, stripped him, chained him to a tree, tarred and feathered him in what the British term “American fashion” and then turned him loose. He says if Kinahan had been a full sized man he would have thrashed him and then shot him but as he is a runt and a coward he and his brother, who lost a leg in the war, determined on tarring and feathering him. Kinahan, they say, had been associating with Mrs. Wright, had been warned and threatened and once had given a written pledge to keep away from her but persisted in visiting her. Therefore the brothers determined to take the law into their own hands. A judge who strains the law and defeats the spirit of it brings the law into contempt. All England rang with the echoes of Justice Darling’s decision. Now comes an injured hus- band—a soldier—who tars and feathers the de- stroyer of his home and for that act he may go to prison or be cashiered. The law is not justice when a jurist, through a technicality, works injustice. The judge who de- =|cides as did Justice Darling promotes lawlessness by bringing the law into contempt. Incidentally, while the British are aghast at the method the Wrights employed to punish Kinahan and they characterize tarring and feathering as American it is no such thing. It is English and was English centuries before Columbus was born for it was the method Richard of the Lion Heart used in dealing with thieves and possibly it ante- dated that great Crusader. LET THE SON CHOOSE Along about this period of the year a good many fathers are concerned in the matter of what their boys are to become in the way of a business or profession. The fathers are usually more concerned than the boys. : A father should not discourage a boy in be- coming what he wants to become. We as fathers cannot take out of our sons’ minds what the Creator has put into them. Up to a certain point of development a boy is a sealed package—sealed by nature—as to taste and talent for a life occupation, and the package may not contain the father’s desires. The life histories of the world’s leaders in every field of endeavor are filled with denials of what their fathers wanted. For instance we read of a father of a great poet designing his son’s education for the law; or the head of an international industry for the min- istry; or a famous musician being brought up by his father, to enter trade. A father’s desires and ambitions for his son either have the effect of failure in his whole ca- reer, or else the son’s will and ambition is fired by parental opposition to a realization of success in his own life’s ambition. : , But the risk of failure is always too great for a father to assert his ambition in what his son is to become. : Our first duty as a father is in seeing to it that our sons have healthy bodies. After that it is a matter of general education, and then special education for the son’s self chosen’! career, or education that will enable him to search for and find himself. : The whole basis of our future progress, as in- dividuals and as a society, is in good health and education. All our reforms have their basis in good health and education. A boy’s first ambition may only be a stepping stone to a final attainment. . In the matter of choosing a business or profes- sion for our song, there need be but one self-im- posed injunction— Let nature alone, A boy with a healthy body, the honest desire to serve and the power of thought and mental discip- line which general education will give—his parents need have no anxiety for his career. His success is’ assured and the processes by which he finally attains it'are as natural, as un- knowable and strange’as how bones form in the egg. “s ‘ The allies now have heavy artillery of hitherto unrevealed yyower, Uncle ‘Sam is a big gun of that sort, \ ! It is largely because Arnerica leads the world in construction that foreign-inspired radicals urge a polizy of destruction. : The Austrian people are clamoring for union with Soviet Russia. If they get it, they will wish themselves back in the dirying pan. The American Federation of Labor has refused to endorse Soviet Russia. Lenine’s only hope is the American Federation of Loafers. Canadian soldiers attacked the police station at Epsom; probably ‘in retaliation for the Epsom salts fecl them by the medical corps. Senator Knox’ is afraid the league will’ be a super-government. In that case it will be able to check the criminal activities of super-men, While Wilson is on that speaking tour to ex- plain the peace treaty, we trust he will explain the co‘aference definition of freedom of the seas. Government will turn loose its surplus stocks With care, in order not to injure business. Is busi- yess so much more important than the consumer Lieutenant Wright has been summoned before a military court to answer for his conduct, i. knuckle meet? ‘Who is straining every move to make tongue and Papert ect Fe? aay Nagy Ma Wiss 3 LAH Geng THE FOURTH ON THE RHINE TRAVELING. MAN Tanlac Built Him Up. “T have gained fifteen pounds since I commenced taking Tanlac, and since my health failed five years ago, it is /the only medicine that has done me a particle of good,” said M. M. Miller, a well known and popular traveling It was an ambitious task the makers of “The Birth of a Race” set for them- selves, but they succeeded with it, and the result is a’trufy great photoplay that showed at. the Auditorium las: evening. The aim was to. show the struggle and triumph of democracy throughout the ages, with the great war as the latest and most: vivid phase. To do this, they divide their picture into two dis- tinct parts. The first half is historical and dates back to the creation of the world, The second-half is a modern drama of the recent war. The two parts are very different in treatment and effect and the wonder is that each is excellent of its kind. Great credit should go to John W. Noble, the director of this production, the story, George Frederic Wheeler and Rudolph De Cordova. They have shown an ability that’ amounts to genius. Their skill, their sense of dra- taroughout the entire picture. The play contains the scene of the conference of the German war lords at which war is planned. <A visitor, repre: ter his plea for peace. who in costume and bearing resembles history of humanity from the time of creation to the present. The stories are set forth of Noah and his ark, of the deluge, the enslavement TRULY GREAT PHOTOPLAY IS SPECTACULAR FILM “BIRTH OF A RACE”, SHOWING AT AUDITORIUM and to his associates: in the writing of , matie values and fine taste are evident | senting the common people, asks to en- story This stranger ,lumbus, the signing of. the Declaration the Christ, tells to the war lords the ‘pation proclamation among them. But) of the! ton is credited with y and Ferdinand Pinney : animated subtitles, The k of each. is wonderfully fine. The staging of the scenes is mas ve photographing them unusual lighting effects have been obtained and beauti- ful tinting has been employed, so that the scenes look less like photographs than paintings. This, together with the fact that the players act with dig- nity and grace and that the costumes and groupings are artistic, makes them |far better than the usual historical or allegorical pictures iii photoplays. The scens in the life of the Saviour are well handled. The Christ is played reverently and artistically by Philip Van Loan. Anna Lohr is beautiful and dignified as Mary, His mother. In fact, u long list of names of players who do good work in the historical part of the , picture could be given if. space permit- ted. % | When the kaiser finds nothing worth | considering in his visitor’s recital, his; attention is called to America‘and he is ned that this land-of democr heck his ambitions. H troduced a number of ‘scenes from} —the landing of Co- _Herbert O, Carl '{he photogr Ka of independence and Lincoln ema vis unmoved. Then comes an; ion and the modern story fol- the juterm’ lows. After this highly artistic and solemn salesman for the Northwestern Man- ufacturing and Milling Co., who lives at 302 North State street, Aberdeen, . S. Dak. SN “[ don’t believe any man on earth Rat INS) ever had a worse case of stomach y trouble than I did.” continued Mr. Miller, “and I know I took enough medicine during that five years, :o cure a dozen people, but I never got any relief until I got hold of this Tan- lac, Everything | ate would sour on my stomach, and this would cause gas to form so bad that the pains I would have would almost kill me. I was in so much misery that I couldn't sleep at night, and would have to walk the floor for hours at a time. I lost in weight from two hundred and forty- five pounds to one hundred cud sev- enty, and finally got so weak and run- down that I was not able to work more than two days out of each week. “Several of my friends spoke to me about Tanlac, and recommended it so highly that I decided to give it a trial and I am here to tell you, that you will have to go a mighty long ways to find a medicine to equal Tan- lac. Why, I can eat anything I want now, and I never have a sign of in- digestion-or stomach trouble of any kind. My strength has come back to me, and I am getiing my weight back in a hurry. I feel as well in every way as I ever did in my life, and I never lose any time from my work at all. Yes, sir, I certainly can recommend Tanlac, for I know from my own experience with it that it is one medicine that will do all they say it will.” Tanlac ts sold in Bisr Breslow, in Driscoll by N. H. Barrette and in Wing by F. P. Ho- man, Advt. CRAIN SUCCEEDS LUEHRS AS AUTO REGISTRY CHIEF E. P. Crain, an N. C. Macdonald hang-over, has succecded A. W. al Sanaa —s from the audience, It is played with great sincerity and vividness, While theatr ‘alism is avoided, the story iS Tuehrs as registrar of the automobile dramatic. There is no flag-waving to department of the state highway provoke applause, but the incidents commission. Mr. Luehrs, one of the chosen are realistic and appealing. most popular members of the official There will be a performance this ev- staff at the capitol, has gone to Far- ening and two shows July 4th, includ- go to be secretary of the state mill ing a special matinee. and elevator association. Fiery Itching and Burning of ° kin Is a MostCruel Torture Sure Speedy Relief in S$. §.§.j This good medicine has stood the test of 50 years as the greatest blood purifier known. It is guar anteed entirely free from minerals of any kind. The. experience of others. has established the unfailing merits of S. S. S, and there’s no question about the wisdom of your giving it a thorough trial. All reputable druggists sell it. If in doubt as to your case write to Medical Ad- visor, Swift Specific Co. Dept. 54 Atlanta, Ga. Why suffer from these persistent tortures when it is so easy and costs so little to do as thousands of others have done_and get relief through S. S. S.? It is now well known that eczema and other skin troubles come from impure blood. By giving the blood a thorough cleansing you not only get sure and speedy relief but you also build up the system and renew your vigor and vitality. AUDITORIUM ONE NIGHT ONLY Jews, the career of Moses, the saving pageant there was danger that a mod- of his peole, the Roman times, the ern war story would prove an anti-| birth of Christ, of His trial and cruci-|climax, Such is not the case in this fixion, These biblical stories are por-jpicture, thanks to the e: len trayed by a series of remarkable photo-'the drama chosen. The plot is simple, } graphs, aided by animated and decor- but avoids the conventional and is pre-| ative drawings for subtitles, Each sented with many human touches! scene is more beautiful than the other. | Which brought laughter and tears Children Cry for Fletcher’s WOOO AX SOO AAAAAANH The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of sand has been made under his pers Lt sonal supervisioa since its infancy. le / Allow no one to ccceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and “‘ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle wits and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. . What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Caster Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its ege is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipativa, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. Toe Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA Atways Bears the Signature of é ‘In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THe CENTAUR COMPANY. NEw vouK CITY. rT \ NO ONE WILL BE ONE OF THE RARE TREATS OF THE THEATRE—A GREAT ACTOR AND A GREAT PLAY DIRECT FROM Same Company—Same Production CURTAIN 8:30 SHARP SEATED DURING THE ACTION OF THE PROLOGUE 18 WEEKS vucarns, cuicaco eee J \ IN HIS. _ FASCINATING, THRILLING: 0 G, THRILLING. MASTERFUL IMPERSONATION « OF + Ts EN IN ~THE- Founded on Katherine Cecil Thurston’s Novel 1 Year in New York PRICES: 55c TO $2.20-———_—_INCLUDING WAR TAX Seat Sale Thursday at Harris & Co., Stationers BY JOHN HUNTER BOOTH 4 Months in Boston 4 Months in Australia

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