The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 22, 1919, Page 4

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, playing conti ‘ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBU THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE well read the recent report of an official who in- a western city. a | i | | iEORGE D. MANN, - - : 3 Editor} One beggar, who played an accordian, was Foreign Representatives known as a millionaire beggar. } Formerly a pro-| G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, eee in the state school for the blind, he took | CHICAGO, : - ‘DETROIT, i RNC Reo cava é ikon Marquette Bldg. hi ¥ Kresge Bldg. | up begging, because it enabled him to support him. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH jself in the style he desired; a hint for some pro- NEW YORK, © .~ eden te we een Ave, BUG: fossors elsewhere, mayhap. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ee io Nats Sel egi me Ce The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the uso) _ [lis average “earnings” are $30 a day tor publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise time of the year he takes in as much recived in this paper and also the local news published)... than eight hours. Every winter he spends rein. @ 5 ee ft # All rights of pubsication of speciat dispatches hereia are jn California, he we tailor-made also reserved, _|shirts, lives ina hotel suite, and generally com- and this us $50 in suits, silk L UE OT Te PAY Sot LS Oe jports himself ina tashion hardly considered beg 'garly, ‘ Daily by carrier, per «$7. Daily by mail, per r Un Bisma % Daily by mail, per Un state out ck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dako! THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER And so on down the lines tt humble beggar on the list was getting $10 a day, and he was merely a one-legged panhandler, the most The pity of it are supported by » pegnies and div The poor know what it mea and they share their o suter, © public perai workers VALUE OF LIFE How much is human life worth? m anty mea t when they ean Under moder ng and charity conditions r the persistent r costs street. beg- ong us proves that they gh no nece fc for Inter Bulgaris sence am tional Peace. The value of fe to Turks, Greeks, Japanese, Serbians, R several other countries These figures represent the of human life.” The tot lives lost in the world war is 7 000,000. It would have been co t Russia and the Balkans were worth as much as it is in the United States ty. of us to give to relieve uble tt f our great cy TIDE HAS TURNED For some years many good people south of the Canadian border viewed with alarm the risi tide of American emigrants seeking new ho and fields in the Dominion. Canada's notable ac vertising campaign and her che Uncle Sam no end of uncomfortable hours. But the tide his turned. More people are ing this way than going that. Official fi made public by the government tion from the United States to fiscal year to have been 003, wh less than for the ye Americans citiz against 36,000 for the preced During the street. Lots of people whe their hands clean r hearts clean. » lands re particular about keep ort to keep th This is a democratic country, and even dignified egurts hum the once popular air: “Keep the home s burning.” ; ‘anada f was Tents and Log Cabins Were the Only Buildings Then in Exist- j ence and the Few Observed the Day Once it was difficult to distinguish between a uxury and a necessity, but it isn’t now. Anything you buy is a luxu With a Families | by that row « {There had been a sawn Tatadi al the Postottice)’ BlatanrekN.1D. wa iGecond vestigated the financial status of the beggars of HOPE IT ISN’T A WASH SALE ** : : a , . N. D, CHRISTMAS IN 1873 WAS A VASTLY ose DIFFERENT CELEBRATION IN THIS | CITY THAN WILL BE HELD THURSDA MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1919 ® at ca ee eet | Johnson Had to Sit Up All Night Long Could’ Hardly Breathe — Ten Years’ Trouble Ends After He Takes Tanlac same neem themn then SA eaten ttt ated tte ett mentees ‘Afver taking. Ti 1 feel better n I have in years,” said C, P, John- a sWitchman for the Twin City Traction Co., who lives at 2511 Twen- ty-fifth avenue, South, Minneapolis, Minn., to a Tanlac representative re- cently. 10 yoars I suffered with the worst sort of stomach trouble,” he continued, “Et had a very poor appe- tiie and could hardly eat a thing and j what little I did manage to force down would sour and gas would form and press against my heart. so I could hardly breathe, and often 1 could not lie- down on acecunt of this and would have .o sit up all night long, and I would bloat terribly, and have awful cramps. f had pains in the small of “ my hack and my head ached nearly all the time, and I also had the rheu- matism something awful in my hip {joints that hurt me yo I could hardly | ‘ read’ s ch about Tanlac I not see much improvement in my condition, but I kept on taking iv until I -had taken’ three bottles, when I began to get a. great deal becter, and after it once started to help me it gave me quick and lasting results. My appetice is good and 1 can eat anything I want without suffering any bad after effects. ] am never troubled with gas or have any difficulty in breathing. The pains in my ‘ack and the rheumatism in my hips have all stopped, and I never know what it is to have the headache now, I am s.ronger and have more energy and my work does not tire me any to speak or, and [| sleep betcer than I have in | year: Tam a great believer in Tan- Jac and never miss an opportunity to tell others about it.” Tanlac sold in Bismarck by Jos. Brelsow, in Drisccll by N. D. and H. Barrette and in Wing by H. P. Homan.—Advi. * PORTS CORNER * . EERE UE ee —v HOW BEAUTIFUL THIS WORLD WOULD BE, “des of the older inhabitants. Those were happy days in Bismar yi Mr. en believes some ef those d: Y were better than the present ones ile others were considerably wot ain's Word was his bond and it wa By Clara Garnier. The loitering clouds passed slowly Below the sun so bright, And it whispered a message That set my heart aflight for a short distance. v a still a serious problem and it was -s worth full yalue. Gambling} They gathered in great ma: 4 thought wise to me: too far ye} there aud seme of the others so- Forme: in different shapes, he center of civili as embodied | ¢ led vices; but graft, broken prom-| And brushed against each other summer ef that year, but it did pree +6 x jtieally no work because of the exces abims erected the | ™ tents deceit were short lived. Guns | And sent the:r fragrance great, st common sight and their owners; The sun then smiled sweetly 1ouse them with unerring aim.) There was a sp: le in his eye, en necessary. Tf a man wanted a He “seemed to say, “You're annoyed.” grants left Canada for the United ; Dancing Party at the Capitol) i. i aru stake on Christma no ques-| At the system in the sky. ; Soria t6 ERAT: i 3 ee 1 ant ions were asked but h was] these 22,441 were Americans who w Come to think of it, the federal treasury might; Hotel ea M Hloaded up from: slender And| I bowed my head and wondered, as well foot the bill for carrying freight as to foot | back to their old home after ; } - the bill for carrying mail. atmosphere : Td MOC Se Se ee ee — SS . Fand up-to-the-minuie improvements i : SATA a Rae beet : + {the growth of Bi from Ch MILKED TO MUSIC eryone seems to be glad that the Missouri! nas ists. to Chr 1919. But in H. M. Harvey of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., cont to be spanned by a substantial wagon bridge spite of this chanze from a muddy rontier town to 2 t y theresare still) ing, well y: sin the eapjtal earl that musie will induce a cow to give more milk ¢Xcept Lafe Twichell. Mr. Twichell hails. from | than ‘shé Ww if not ne Fargo, which explains a number of things. people who remember 13 a s Fefore even the railroad reaches soothed. Tests have been m w Sites Tints: and Holstein cows, and th oO eon —emnenmmemeomeeeaené | Ir one respect Christmas, 1873, was! dry, gave more n jwhe came to the little frontier town} fhe credit so extended was ney cither traveled overland from up the ) i Falls. 1 u serving the da the nsual ev rounding giant tumbleweed brus Lstill grows en the p r vio low beautiful this would be, at in this} If people were so thoughtful marck has As to smile occasionally. Jlate. pect tnged with the Yegen thin’ all events ea “S$ NEW HOME 2. the mother of Dr, Fannie that clay was hauled frem| And there smiled prosperity rvey’s farm in that winter of] In the water of truest blue, hAvas turned into bricks the; The crees swayed: towards me » molded int And sent out volleys of bough, The Tribune’s| “Welcome: here, my child, Sorrow is af the past.” from > I rowed down the river pknown at that In my little birch canoe, wattion, but the p necers intent on Shest they could w toms went into the s fields and “hyonght “in thé grew and here to a) the bu iPh IST3 wh followin: summer and we that will he hi hout four or ti » These [Tome yo... That building 1 ‘he pnrpose and child was the beg x of {he modern Tis-|I bowed my head and wondered wer in those davs the diver nd Imost wiped ont by} How joyral this world would be, het ween Was ov ated phonog: : Qther cows were and gave from 10 to 12 per cent 1 their usual volum The se of living proble in every heffCoop mig’ breakfast eggs. A piano in the pigpen r duce larger slices of bacon. CENTER OF LIFE Atter all, the home is the center of poor indeed ihe who h of the Christmas season greater s tions. In Europe, right now, 100,000,000 people are threatened with vation. Wi I i mind, let us look into our own ter how grave the outlook may : unerringly see things might be Father and mother, ten char sit under the evening lamp, ¢ big problem when one of ti things high!” And it is trut From Johnnie’s shoes to Mabel’s food to fuel, from rent and ta back again. And wages don’t up with mounting expenses. But at that happiness is bound to radi the American home. Mother smiles. ter It wa air that Christm the few yho live to ome of th rried out o trickle of bloo. s the floor. y But after the dance while a more social at { 1 the big room in the; s the music from ih » quickened the pulse: nd the spirit of Christ- » barriers that might SIO Father doesn’t give up. They have the restin: and the imilar to what Christmas, 1919, prom! in ball on the wide prairie th < 5 oe 8 2 ises to be compiarati Dakota has done a bit of artistie scourging of the sisted of Main street payed deop in secti 57 of >» sta ponsti i Q 3 | V section 67 of the state constitution and there: | esate: gol t aia alleee bl hall tak frect til the Christm after) some youthtu embly shall take effect unti shot and killed ducks idling away thei ntion of either regular session or special) ,,THE OLD CAPITOL HOTEL however, that the section does not cover bills) from the woods along the river bot these bills become effective as laws within ten| Christmas by a dance who. to Mr. Langer speaks of house bill No. 60 as a mere ancers were sometimes it a tissue of authority to pass such a bill | “aut on curist ¢ , jin the beaux were dressed in th id functioning powers, a ‘‘scrap of paper.’ i i ect a Capitol hotel = = : é » doy empowered to make special session bills into) One of those mus’ . under the mere phraseology of section 67. cha a raw! : partisan league legislature on house bill No. 60! ed by those fe est indoor playground at this season of the year. usually begets others if the first succeeds. Let} pore on Chri dier in the kitchen. Gertrude is learning to cook test. Let us assume also that the Nonpartisan| he 1 3 | “younger set” im those early ¢ Kids are comforts, the stars of the great in-/ sume in the third place that the Nonpartisan! SETS RTE See is unable to pass 2s emergency acts certain meas-! is u esto be, Phe day was warm cnot thee oe ee eee | for te youths of that day to indu ISN'T IT GREAT TO BE FREE? reached to the very heart of the se Attorney General William Langer of North ment just as © jeember weather, an league legislature of that state in an} Bismarck on Christms ion that house bill No. 60 is a direct violation) gust in dry weather and mud in wet weather, Where Main and Foart't fore null and void. {of ground which used to fill with wa ction referred to states that no act of | fter every rain and either in 1873 apa Nimrod whose name is forgotten today , 1, unless two-thirds of those voting in both) ji Te ees tgieitigne south and senate declare an emergency. It makes} wara. 2 The. center of the city’s life was n. House bill No. 60 lays down the dictum, | old Capitol hotel built of logs hé 2 a jtom. It was here that the f1 passed at the recent special session, and that all/men and women of 1873 celebr: _ a strictly days, whether or not they received a two-thirds | dance s vote. ive fiat seeking to nullify a perfectly plain, (S Were not so social and ional inhibition. The legislature, he says, | the hall feet first and marking thei or to make it.operative. ‘In doing so, it makes of} to be the earliest ( hcistamls iit ‘hose the constitution, to which alone it owes its exist-| "ive today can remember, the E finest and dis) »d themselevs w: sarcasm he voices his disillusionment | 57" it the doctrine of nullification having passed | mo: i try sixty years ago along with slavery. poli auatbar ing is flawless that if the legislature | of the dance have existed. l-fledged laws within ten days, it is equally em-} LEWIS ON THE B powered with reference to bills of regular sessions | yo.i< “one of th ers of : One high-handed proceeding like that of the cy var ot thet and their playmates. And the home is their gr No There were Mabel is playing mother in one corner. John is us assume that the North Dakota supreme court y_ families camping out in another. William is being a ustains this bill as legitimate under constitutional | ), mong the hest near by. And little Jim may be riding his dad’s eague Iggislature respects section 67 as appdying! jemner well the dance the foot for a horse. to all bills passed at regular sessions. Let us as-| th Y : doors, and tough times make them seintillate wi league legislature, in the next regular session—if Sie ili. y rfej f+, - - + sen ie a brilliancy that only a surfeit of rich could dim. | it control that body as it does the present one—| year ot N iG is nts and log eabins inferming! PROFESSIONAL BEGGARS ures it seeks to put over with that status. What,| atone Main stre nd stretehed north Being by nature kindly, and being by nature’ in that case, would prevent the governor from call-|#! south from the main thoronghfar: aes being py nature lazy, it follows| ing 2 special session at the close of the regular ses-| at we easy prey to the wiles of the brazen sion, and the legislature from doing by majority | beggars who need no alms; while we let the ones| votq what it had failed to do by two-thirds vote! CASTO R IA who do need help starve and freeze in forgotten immediately before? | For“Infants and Children isolation because their pride prevents them bar-| Truly. a Nonpartisan league legislature, at the| in Use For Over 30 Years ing their hearts on the winter streets. | beck and call of Townley, Mills, et al, is a wonder-| Corb pec Those of us who have the beggar habit might | ful institution—Minneapolis Tribune. | Signemre & / 1873, which seems} hy the eld Capitel echo end re-echo with their merriment were the O'Le: il | daught : | the ties white children bh ‘the! city if not ams but on starting i) t SO eee inte Woke aq othe) LETT ' i { | If we could banish all this selfishness, isastrous fire which destroyed al And wear a welcome key, of the business locks in the ith the exception ‘of The Trib- heme, the civie advancement (has been continuous and uninterrupte?, the eal and the imitati Hooked, PURST YUL I started to walk homeward Through scented growing grass, And what came to my attention Was robins in their nest, and mother robin de by side, you see, WI | conversed and encouraged each other, | And hugged their babies three. | Smyrna Candy Co. fit bowed my head in sorrow, } ! nd oh! this thought came to me, | George John it ~ 404 Main Street e were like the robins— , q live in harmony, Candies 40c Pound Put up in fancy Gift ¢ Boxes I Teor lightly | When Sua scenanoe But «welcome, and greetings poured At night. in my apartment I bowed my: head in prayer, And asked the Heavenly Father, To bless wherever gentleness dwells My heart was filled with sadness, ded the women. Amons | vatde the hewn tubers of | (TTT | Fesher ry fam, ns Who Vived where the now stinds, TP. Davi the United States a y whose sister taught the n Bisma Russell Ma tol hotel, John: | Dunn, whos in, Was one of j nin this! Tom Me | le lawyer the OB I was still sojourning Along the dusty road, When n Mrs. EOP, Qu the yery fi . Tem Van Netfen . Williams, the prc By Condo NIGHT AT THE MOVIES, WHEN THE VICCAIN |NQULTED THE HEROING, THE HERO GRABGED ; joy behi BY TUS THROAT LIKE THS ANO --—— Yet there was joy behind it all, HIM For the experience I met that day Was worth more than gold in store. When the sun smiled so sweetly, Like an innocent little child, And the trees bowed and welcomed Nature's love will never die. And then those little robins They sahd an they caressed, Through this burdensome journey In this cottage I found rest. { Why had everyone been so kind I ked, could not rest my weary bones, My mind was so perplexed, But ah, now, I got it. Nature's love is near and wide, We cannot seo for blindness With Sxeshtiono to the — pessimistle side. We celebrate Thanksgiving Given for some purpose, so they say We do tho same on Christmas And every holiday, Whae shall wo in thanksgiving For Naturo's pitty wo have all time, You can do on that day that's coming . Bhat will answer this Vite rhyme, SANO GRABSED HIN BY THS “THRoat ! YES, (ES——GO ON Wy coe hristn day Is coming Sant nek {8 very thin, This is our chineo to fll it, ‘Donation is just tho thing, You can denote to committeos Who have this work in hand, Or, do your work individually, Be a child of Uncle Sam, What, an opportunity! That's open to you and me, Let's see just, how merry We can make this Christmas bd. URINE * Wholesome, Cleansh Refreshing and Heal >» Lotio—Murine for Ri FoR AUS] >> Hes ene REC U > ion Itching and Burni: Your EYES cr the Eyes or Eyelids: ‘2 Drops” After the Movies, Motoring or will win your confidence. Tara Shes Bota ag dae EE Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago ‘ rod t t ° t 5 + S s , , \ vie | oan ’ ‘ , ne, » Be he : i 4. ' be . %. 438 be a woe ‘at , a

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