The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 4, 1919, Page 6

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ox ‘) "BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THURSDAY, DEC. 4, 1919 letters. eodore Ro children during than twenty | are included t | wrote to friends or relatives | | about the children. He began to write to them in_ their early | childhood, and continued to do so | regularly till they reached ma. | turi . ... Long before th | were able to read he sent them what they called “picture let- ” with crude drawings of his own illustration of the writ- ten text. Deep and ig love of chil- dren, of family was the domina his life. The chil } an old-fashioned the White House. In_ several |. letters, descriptions of these fes- ; tivals will be found. | Through all his letters runs his ine stible vein of de All the quaint s that quain' humor. the comic aspects pigs and others of that of the guin | the large menagerie of pe | the children were alway | ing; aul the tr Ss | the saddle-horses — these, to- gether with every item of house- | | | hold news that would amuse and | | | cheer and keep alive the love of home in the heart of the absent | boys, was set forth in letters || which in gayety of spirit and || charm of manner have few equals in literature and no su- periors. No matter how great \| the pressure of public duties, or | how severe the strain that the trials ang burdens of office | placed upon the nerves and spir- | | its of the president of a great nation, this devoted father and whole-hearted companion found time to send every week a long letter of this delightful char- acter to each of his absent chil- dren. | + in eae i The strong, vigorous, exalted | | Koosevelt, who was then assistant sec- character of the writer stands |} THEQDORE ROOSEVALT—~ & isn’t he a jolly looking father? brought her out to the camp, and she fifty feet high. seoosevelt's COPYRIGHT, 1919 BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS. water. The other night I-hung up my hammock in my tent and in the middle of the night there was a terrific storm, and my tent: hammock came down with. a run. The water was running over the ground in a sheet and the mud was kneedeep; so I was a drenched and muddy object | when I got to a neighboring tent, | where I was given a blanket, in which Lrolled up and went to sleep. There is a funny little lizard that | comes into my tent and is quite tame | now; he jumps about like a little frog and puffs his throat out. There ar grounddoves no bigger than big spar- rows, and cuckoos almost as large as} crows. Youthful Bible Commentators. (To Miss Emily T. Carow.) 1 Oyster Bay, Dee. 8, 1900. The other day I listened to a most amusing dialogue at the Bible lesson between Kermit and Ethel. The sub- ject was Joseph, and just before read- ing it they had been reading Quentin’s book containing the adventures of the Gollywogs. ; Joseph’s conduct in re- peating his dream to his brothers, whom it was certain to irritate, had struck both ‘of the children unfavora- bly, as conflicting both with the laws of common sense and with the advice given them by their parents as to the proper method of dealing with their own brothers and . sisters. Kermit said: “Well, -I think that was very foolish of Joseph.” Ethel chimmed in with “So do I, very foolish, and I do {not understand how he could have done it.” Then, after a pause, Ker- {mit added thoughtfully by way of ex- |planation: “Well, I guess he yas sim- ple, like Jane in the Gollywogs,” and Ethel nodded gravely a confirmation. It is very cunning to see Kermit and Archie go to the Cove school to- | | gether. They also come down and chop with me, Archie being armed ; with a-hatched blunt enough to be HisChildren Joseph Bucklin Bishop: jters in this city. |vey. covering the cause of many deaths and partly because they ‘thought they detected Calvinistic traits in the bear's character. anirtendaena ame CARELESSNESS AND LACK OF FIRST AID KNOWLEDGE CAUSE MANY FATALITIES ‘Minneapolis, Minn... Dec. 4,—Care- lessness and lack of knowledge of first nany fatalities by the Bureau of }° Aid. of the: North Division of the Am- rican Red Cross, Which has headquar- “It has made a sur- n hunting accidents, : “At this time of the year,” said one of the officials, “when the woods ace as full of hunters as they are of game, fre Women Made Young id are given. as the cause of a gr rat y irst Dright eyes, aclearskinand abody 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, i bladder and uric acid troubles, the enemies of life and looks. In use since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. th Gold Medal. bo: took for Med ectept ne imitation men are ready to shoot at the mere moving of a leaf, and the toll of lives is enormous.” A campaign: of caution, care in yenturing on thjn.ice and proper choice of boats, ate r¢commended. — OSS Now Is a Good Ti ' To The Trouble Is in the Blood. Summer: catarrh, with its nause- ous discharge, stuffed up- glands, difficult. breathing, and summer colds, is bad enough, but the worst of it is yet to come if you neglect to check the growth that is form: ing tc attack you with ten-fold greater power during the winter. That's why it is so important to treat catarrh with S, S, S. during warm weather, Changing Conditions 6 Jt is now “after the w changing. Far-sighted people may It is now: gn. established: fact that catarrh isin the. blood and that lotions and salves do not.give relief| The experience of: others has proven that S,.S.-S, strikes 's¢ the root ofvthe trouble. - Waste no time in this mattet, for itis ‘of the utmost importance.’ Write to: our nd edieal ee about your gene ress Swift ecific ar” and conditions are try to predict. what the future will bring, but'they know that-a substantial bank balance is the best safeguard for any and all conditions. ht nov that m it s safety. a good tiae to start building the re- “The Friendly Bank” The Bismarck Bank ~~ Bismarck North Dakota suitable for his six years. He is aj most industrious small chopper, and! the other day gnawed down, or as the | children call it, “beavered” down, a misshapen tulip treé, which was about aw it all—the men drilling, the tents jretary of the navy, in association wi revealed in these as in all the | {leonard Wood, organized the Reg-/in long company streets, the horses other letters, as well as the iment of Rough Riders and went into | bcing taken to water, my little horse | cheerful soul of the man which ||camp with them at Tampa, Florida. Texas, the colonel and the majors, remained throughout his life as ||Later he went with his regiment to | and finally the mountain lion and the pure and gentle as the soul of | Cuba. | jolly little dog Cuba, who had several the child. Only a short time be- On May 6th, 1898, Theodore Roose Fine Names for Guinea Pigs. (To E. S, Martin.) Oyster Bay, Nov. 22, 1900. Mrs. Roosevelt and I were more touched than I. can well say at your y ghts while she looked on. The moun- } fore he died, he said to me, as_ | | velt’s resign i ‘we were going over the letters and planning this volume, which is arranged as he wished it to be: “I would rather have this book published than anything that has ever been written about | regiment of Rough Riders which had ||rallied about him. In his auto- | |biography, he mentioned the hea j;tugs he felt in parting with me.”— | youngsters. | JOSEPH BUCKLIN BISHOP. | | press m that his father was going | * (hunting, “Daddy,” he implored, asi a he clung to his father’s knees. “Bring night, for it happened alw | night when we took the horses out of e a o S 8 &, B - 8 i THE LETTERS | In the Spanish War. | BLE At the outbreak of the war with; It | Spain in the spring of 1898 Theodore | darli | to have @ mile from camp. There are nearly | , Stutty with Cold rd & RELIEF WITHOUT QUININE \ % Bayes ORC ase Fi Pr gies Ne Vom FF he Don't ste and spufflin Compound” til three dos y Stuffed-up! ! A dose of “ ken € en usualy cold and en known and costs | drug stores, Tt! t-dose opens your elo 6; tastes nice, no, Is and the air pa Aberdeen Angus Dec. 16, 1919, at Aberdeen, S. D, 2 ATEN SUODTUNNOMACUNGE UNDE SAGET AE RN We will sell forty-five cows and five bulls December 16th, 1919, at Aberdeen, S. D. Heated pavilion. : Closing out entire herd of breeding cows on one farm in this sale. mit’s and Ethel’s days and four nights on the cars com- | 9 . z higa One toddler had the im-'ing here from San Antonio, and were |i. the choir and is captain of his dor- thi \Sides’ the not much more than a! , but it is very cross and} sending us your book with its char- acteristic tnsertionand above ell weigh . A _|the. little extract from your boy’s pied in Ker-| note about Ted. In what Form is and men, four |Your boy? As you have laid yourself ’. open, I shall tell you that Tedd sings I wa: y much int We were all, ho’ ‘ laa Gene cated 1 wel mitory football team. He was awful nee ‘and oer Abty tee homesick at first, but now he has won ‘ays to be at his place in his own little world and he is all right. In his last letter to his mother in response to a question about his clothes he answered that they were in good condition, excepting “that one pair of pants was split up the middle and one jacket had lost a + Linea . sleeve in a scuffle, and in another pair ene corre ere at pants he had sat down in a jam of the army and navy; the older Pie at a cellar spread.” We have'both fought in the great Civil War, Missed him greatly in spite of the ntury ago, and now they fact that we have five remaining. g to Cuba to war against Did TI ever tell you about my second amiards. Most of them are in; Il boy’s names for his Guinea but. our croagh-riders ji They included Bishop Doanc; Our camp is on a great flat, Johnson, my ‘Dutch’ Reformed soil without“a tree, though Pastor; Father G. Grady, the local pout are pines and palmettos. ‘Priest with whom the children had but there are Scrapped a~speaking acquaintance; ¥ well, | Fighting Bob Evans and Admiral ‘and of Dewey. Some of my Republican sup- ut to /Porters, in. West Virginia have just sent me a‘small bear which the chil- dren of; their own accord christened Jonathan Edwards, partly out of com- pliment to their mother’s ancestor, t, and I do not eccet ose ates GET SLOAN'S FOR Just one trial convinces you Sloan's Liniment helps drive away. rheumatic twinges HY endure pain when you know Sloan’s Liniment will relieve it promptly? It couldn't remain the World’s Linimert for 38 years if it wasn't highly beneficial in relieving rheumatic aches, tiff “joints, sore muscles, lumbago, neuralgia, strains, bruises, exposure to weather results. Penelrales without, rubbing, leaving no etained skin, clogged spokes: mussi> A pain end dehe liniment that ing what it is meait Get a bottle today and keep AMidruggists,; ‘Three sizes Si40. if o% he cars to feed and water them. Mother stays at a big hotel about y thousand troops here now, be- i mm the warships re of my thi: eral w: now and every- le, for we may have - The cows, many of them with calves by side, are large in good breeding flesh, ‘several of them sired by Grand Champion: bulls. The bulls in this offering are outstand- ing. Eric Lad K. comes from a family of show yard fame and isa sire of show animals. Send bids care of Dakota Farmer, P Aberdeen, S.D. — ' re UMUSTUORSGASUOUSHNESURAUANNDASOESOCEUONGUOSCSENEAACOLANEAUSOSNENANONECAUANSOGUSUESSUHNNIONUEED A A ES --W. H. COOPER, Auctioneer Ellendale, N.D. so. This,is only a line, to tell-you all how much father loves you. The Paw- nee Indian drew you the picture of the little dog, which runs everywhere round the ship, and now and » then howls a little when the band plays. | i Near Santiago, May 20, 1898. DARLING ETHEL: I loved, your little letter. Here there are. lots of funny little lizards that run about in the dusty roads very fast, and then stand still with their, heads up. » Beautiful. red cardinal birds and tanagers flit about in the woods, and a aes the flowers are lovely. But you never{ 5 Heep it handy Hurley’s Orchestra - Playing the Latest Dance Hite—Any Size’ Orchestra Furhishes ‘ 514 8th St, P lone 180K C Cc saw such dust. Sometimes I lie on the ground outside and sometimes in the tent. I have a mosquito net be- cause there are so’ many mosquitos. Camp Near Santiago, asi _ July 15, 1898. DARLING ETHEL: ‘hen it rains here—and’it’s very apt to rain here every day—it comes down just as if it was a torrent oe Sale ‘ per cent discount on all Hard- |, Ware and 20 pei seni-on all Stoves JOHN BORTELL'S 200 Mai Reduction of Stock before the w a package during t and a package NOW ‘SO DOES THE PRICE! ar he war ) “ » ) j iia ce | } 1] i i q 7) i ; i if J ws ) 4 4 he ‘ 4 a

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