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ovER < THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - * 6 G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, PAYNE, BUENS AND SMITH MEW ZORK, - - i - __ Fitts Avé. Big. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to thé use otherwise | for publication of all news credited to it or not im this paper aud also the local mews published All rights of publication of special dispatches hereiz are reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per yew Daily by mxil, per year ( Deily by mail, per year (lo state outsi Deily by meil outside of North Dakote.. JHE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER, (Established 1878) CHILDHOOD among the E: markable discoveries. The Eskimo is honest. Laws are few an out wit nd by) tice is dealt impa Jeaders. they are ni Nature Children are never 1 picked on and fussed with and pampered. is gl ] chance. The 10 child does nut grow up spoiled and 1 law-abiding member of the wilful. He he tribe, do. his shai the rights of others. At a t of the work, respectful of the be reared in e wilderness. erican children car primitive simplicity of the But American parents can learn from Es parents: | ‘That have personalities of their own; that int nce is dangerous; that a good ex: and unvarying kindliness, educate more « than stern rules and mueh preachment r child 4 chance! Give yc We can’t expect much incre: in production | while everybody is eager to stop work and hold , a conference, PEACE ON THE STAGE Actors and managers h. ched an agree- ment which satisfies both sides and restores to the public the joys of the theater. It came just in time, because present tertaining and novel among the dreary list of in- dustria! conflicts, would have become a hore if not a hardship. | The actors’ strike supplied fun-makers with’ material, Stage folk seem to the workaday world like butterflies, and that they should be profoundly disturbed about their rights is amusing to many ;| that they should have their commonplace strug- | g for a living seems strange somehow. The) strike gaye us a revealing glimpse behind the} That people of the theater work hard ina pro- | ion always precarious is not realized by oc That they serve an important social purpose, even when their en- | tertainment is of the lightest, few are willing to admit. Statisties of the New York health department show that the death rate last winter, when influ- r ned by keeping plac of amusement open. Figures from many citie were fully compared and checked, The danger | of infection in public gatherings was more than offset by the encouragement of morale, Natur-| ally, the rule has its limits, | But diversion and distraction are indispensable, | To be healthy and sane we must have pleasure. A) chorus girl or @ minor comedian may, be doing 4s | much to help humanity behind the footlights as | 4 bacteriologist bending over his microscope. f sional patrons of the playhou se ena Was raging, was THE PRIMAL IMPUL Going home from the theater recently we stopped before a dazzling window that exhibited one of those super gowns, Draped on 4 beautiful, almost breathing, wax figure the gown shimmered and scintillated; no man can hope to attempt its glories, it was a regu- lar vampire gown, with black jet and deep rose shades, and giving plenty of room for the back and free swing, | i} shoulders to have fr | After while we noticed that there was another breathless spectator, A tiny, misshapen woman, drawn back in the doorway shadows; slopped over| shoes, ancient straw hat, wispy hair; something in the way of a dress, that served to make her more dull and drab, Butt here was the old old light of adoration in her eyes, and no grand dame ever felt more kinship to her robes of state than did the huddled bit of drabness in the shadows, Personally we hold that Eve never wandered unclothed about the Garden of Eden, For as much as 20 minutes she may have in- vited sunburn, but by that time we bet she had found a chalk cliff, and powdered her nose, Ten minutes more would suffice to squeeze the vermillion from a blushing rose and incarnadine her lips, j If she didn’t pencil her eyebrows inside of five minutes more we miss our guess, And then she set to work making her a gown, and no miserly fig leaf sufficed, be sure of that, rike, which was en-|y, s/or a helpless dependent on the charity of his child-|] jwhich people whose ineome has heen advanced by | printed’ thi “THURSDAY, SEPT.'18, 1919. | at, and party gown, and giltislippers) and no seer | THE EXPERT jman ever had to develop her native sense of the) | desirability of modish gowns, and the latest in kid) ppers, With white rhinestone buckles and a silver | | inlay on the bottom of the heel. | | As well say the devil give the lily its good) \Joks, or touched the shrinking cheek of the rose | with his crimson bunch. | If one-half the world doesn’t know how the| ;otber half lives, it can get the movie habit and | find out. | | Evidently it hasn't occurred to the senate that 1 - « * * | Europe will reserve the right to interpret its in-| i terpretations. greatest part of the yellow peril is the fact | h on what the average | | | Day it becomes more evident that this | great country being ina thing that wa. idea is to deci re destiny of the world) to raise up men who can outtalk anything) WITH THE EDITORS iH A LONG DISTANCE SHOT. KO MASK ‘ Aid Lepistat | FER THAT L Lae ew BIRD ‘ 2—SOENTERTIE * Mine Engineers and * Owners to Take Up Property Taxation Will Hold Meeting at Chicago : Next Week With Government Officials Represented isome sort of an institution on the ‘at the proper time to establish a Home vuth side” ’ jat Bismarck for the friendless children n ¢ertain}it gathers up over the state as yet no the }one has been authorized to gather nt |funds for the same. is wholly witb- |t who has recently accepted a po- . Wh t is true that |sitien with the Society has been ap- ty for the Friendless proposes |jinted to the North half of the State neverth in that y e wer and opportunit th sin and purpose h the pas year he gives up a mez of that capital less he can show a cc ngs, in |b education or some form of equipment which gi him a stronger hold on the future he has started on the road to bankruptcy, the bankruptey of life. Each year passed without substantial gain finds him a measure of his youth, gone and nothing on th other side of the ledger to compensate for the lo: The young man and the old capitalist are peey's, Bach | envy the other and frequently does, for each o L Ith expressed i Lor iets! pate Oe the ealaatiar fer yen pity the old man who,jtion of the bureau, In addition the | his money and invest it mining engineerg will hold important; es i | {discussions on coal supply, H ening of life a handi-! Ss yi|| PEOPLE’S FORUM ea WHO WAS RESPONSIBLE? Bismarck, N, D., Sept. 17. ting gain in sav mine valuations ishing tax laws for the; vill take into account the | of the mining industry. | is being held at the re-| t of the commissioner of internal, Me C a package in fact, is a capitalist with his we different terms. But he: through the ne et tO Say y, finds himself in the wi capped wage earner in compet —— J ren or the public. gut that, the unthinking will say, is every man’s ee skh » | Edtor, private business, “Let a man be as much of a spend-j pear ‘gir: thrift and a fool as he plez it is his own funeral ; | I would like to inquire about some-} ‘i tenchod Righ et jthing, I have heard that Townley,| Hy Ve DOn Oey. tight there is where) wna has heen convicted and sentenced the unthinking make a mistake, It IS somebody’s|for disloyalty was inyited to he a mem- ake ao Att, . Bes Jer of the reception committee to re- It does make a difference to society | ccive our President bere in Bismarck, One of the reasons|on September 10, It has come to my . . . . . tee tha 3 e talking about attributed to soaring prices is the abandon with tig Peat Pane, eae saath hate I was a recent-member of the A. ¥, with my service in pe France ‘and am a» Citizen and a busi- The merchant may ‘‘soak|ness man in Bismarck and would like fo inquire who was responsible for snch an inyitation to Mr. Townley, a Gisloyalist, to be bere to receive our RS a package else busin 2 business, as well as to the individual, and nde war wages ‘‘throw’’ their money, They buy articles without asking the price, on” the profit because, with people in an undiserim- inating frame of mind, he ean get it. The way to get on in the world is not to increase ete leoi pee epi getaineer the standard of living witheach new advancement in|to our Army Chief and_the men who income, thereby living up to the limit of the income, |¥¢re Ee erNis rk but to take the increase and set it aside regularly CHAS SPIRO, against the future—against old age when the capital ener ALA: of youth is gone, ‘lo buy a home on the installment| Editor of Bismarck Tribune: lan is to inerease the ability to save against the fu-|,2%, etiention aig bee cs en 20 y plan is to y to ga g greming confusion relative to the es: ture. Vor it is gradually ridding the family income|tablisment of a “Home” in Bismarck of the burden of rent, ‘lo invest in good securities for frlendlese euilivens nasa nen Ay: 8 certain person is; soliciting funds for ix not only to save money already accumulated, It is to enlarge the flow of the accumulation. That is why the movement of women’s organiza- tions in St, Paul to induce the adoption of a budget system in every home, the first essential of which will be to set aside a certain amount of the income before the family expenses begin, is of large public importance, That is also why the ’Own Your Own Home’’ movement means more to America than the mere private business of individuals, Further to en- courage this movement, Senator Nord of Interis- tional Falls proposes a state aid plan whereby sal- aried workers may obtain long time credit from the state for financing the building of homes just as farmers are aided, through the federal land )ank, to carry mortgages which will be in friendly, non- profit-taking hands, That is the way inflated price conditions finally will be tethered to earth, We cannot have settled social conditions while society lives on the bunghole plan, spilling out the whole of its income as fast as C a package NOW sn YourLabyssinile | TE The poycl Motherhood explains, why ~ Morree's Foren Is a veritable Jalm, for the nerves; an intensely ps ageraung application that softens ihe tus.ies, relaxes servous in of the delicace organ. am involv umity, aid pre Maybe her little story was that the serpent showed her how to dress up, as well as the delights of fresh cider, but the facts were that she was born with a well defined mental image of a picture quicker ane AuiVERY, ch retlect) M, Me “ is used vacerpally, abort \c all Drugatses, ” at buuklet on Matheshood wud Buby free, Et bRegulatos Coy Pept F-8, Atlanta, Oa, it is pumped in, To stop that flow is not to rémedy the H, C, of L, at a stroke but it is to take a long distance shot which, in the end, is the only shot that will make a killing —St, Paul Dispatch, Mr. E. E. Barn-| before the war ° | | ’ THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! a DOCTOR ADVISED HIM 10 TAKE IT A. F. Roberts, Successful Cattle Deal- er Gains 16 Pounds In 60 Days Taking Tanlac “One of the best doctors in Colo- jrado advised me to take Tanlac, and it has not only overcome my troubles but I have gained sixteen pounds since 1 began taking it sixty days ago,” |said A. F. Roberts, who lives at Rocky | Ford, Alberta, Canada, a few days | BO. | Mr. Roberts is one of the largest | cattle dealers in his section of the | country, and before moving to Canada | a sho: ime ago, he had spent most | of his life in Colorado, U. S. A. | | “I can now understand why Tanlac | enjoys such wide popularity both in Nae Gace Canada and the United States,” con- | tinued Mr. Roberts, “and since it has | done me so much good, I know that it | lis a very dependable medicine and | \deserves all the praise that is being | |given it. For the past two years I v * 416 > have suffered from stomach trouble, jand when I commenced taking this | Tanlac, it was almost impossible for |me to retain anything I ate, 1 was | very nervous and never got a good | nights sleep, and finally got so weak and rundown that I was hardly able > to get about. IJ often had dizzy spells, | and was bothered a great deal with constipation. ‘My physician certainly knew what | By | he was doing when he prescribed Tan- |lae for me, for it has done the work | | for me, as 1 am as healthy and strong } now as | ever was in my life. In fact | it has done much more for me than I expected it would do. I have a fine | | appetite and everything I eat agrees | with me perfectly, and I never have . |the slightest sign of stomach trouble | of any kin I am no longer bothered with constipation, nad never have | those dizzy spells any more. I have regained all my strength, too, ana that nervousness has left me, nad I ‘can sleep like a log every night. In fact, I am simply enjoying perfect health again, and I give Tanlac credit jfor it all.” Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jos. . a Breslow in Driscoll by N. D. and J. H. Barrette and in Wing by F. P. Homan. Advt. |and should not be confused with this |notice. An extended: “release notice” / will be given to the press of the state later this week, relative to Mr. Barn- : bart. Yours truly, GEO. B. NEWCOMB, Pla aN Supt. Society for the Friendless i and State Humane Officer. | | tf | | | | | during the war