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a SS pases bi ae , had just: announced qj upp ids ; :|néminate ‘Eugenie ,V. Debs and Kate Richards) “THE BISMARCK TRIBUN ‘ Watered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Secoud|ings. Republicans may hold to discuss and plan Class Matter GHORGE D. MANN,, ie a eee Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, CHR, eter te - DETROIT, Marce..- Bldg. : 2 - -Kresage Bldg. ¢ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEY -roRK, : bd * - Fifth Ave. Bldg. see. EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS “The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in ‘:'s paper and also the local news published herein. “All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. , MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year ... «$7.20 Daily by mai), per year (In Bismarck) . 7.20 per year ({n state outside Bismarck). Daily by m. Daily by mil, outside of North Dakota .......- 118 STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873), > COME THROUGH WITH A SMILE Contained in ‘ese two Lincoln faces is a world of sug.,.stion iv mortal man who’ must face é trouble, hardships, sorrows, any or all of the unpleasant things of human life. The one picture shows Lincoln.as he appeared when first elected President. It is the face of a man looking earnestly, honestly, stead- fastly into a prob- lem he must solve, a load he must carry, an effort he 7 must make. A vis- ‘itor at the White House, during the time when. hope >| stirred feebly in hen, First Elected northern hearts, President. wrote: * “The lines were deeper in the President’s face than. when I saw him in his own home, the cheeks more sunken. They had lines of care and anxiety. For eighteen months he had borne a burden such as has fallen upon few men . ... with bowed head and tears rolling down his furrowed cheeks, his face pale and wan, his’ breast heaving with emotion, Lincoln passed through the room.” It was a moment of defeat; of disaster, of death. Later on the same Lincoln is “disciplined”, by Charles A, Dana “for’his habit of joking.” Other visitors at the White House told how the President met them, laughing like a boy. The White House was in a state of feverish excite- ment, he said; one of his boys’, had come in inat morn- ing to :cil: him thal the ent*had‘kitténs; and now. the other Lincoln — ( vere those Who coudemned Linevin for his habit © of’ joking.” They believed Lin- con. didn’t take things = serieusly wanted im to ban- enougn. They “sh smiles from his face. He didn’t. Ard history ses —*kKKq_SSSSS down thai Lincoln Lincon—A Few Days Before was 2 better Presi- His Death. dent, a greater man, because he mixed smiles with sorrows, jokes with burdens. The other picture from a photograph made a few days before his death, shows ‘how well Lin- coln could smile after years of carrying a nation’s war sorrows and problems. He came through it all with a smile. The very last moment of his life found a smile ‘an his face. The theatre audience turned toward the presidential box, where the assassin’s bullet had reaped its harvest. Only one in all that house “heard nothing, saw nothing, thought nothing. ! . His head had fallen quietly on his breast, his arnts had relaxed a little, the SMILE WAS STILL ON ‘HIS LIPS.” One wonders if Europe couldn’t get on her feet quicker if she could get over the idea that Uncle Sam will serve as wei nurse. Science does wonderful things, and some profes- sor may yet isolate the germ of the common ur epidemic form of greed. The dations hated soviet Rus caey be+ gan to need the things grown in soviet Russia. t Editor! voluntary) and in the final analysis the/presiden- BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE _ A SECOND CONVENTION There is no law restricting the number of meet- for party victory. All of them are more or less tial preference primary will register the will of the Republicans. The Tribune believes that the decision of the convention promoted by Senator Porter J. Mc-] Cumber and Gunder Olson, Republican ‘national ‘committeeman, ‘should have satisfied the mem; bers of the party, but it has no quarrel with the men who ‘will meet here next week. Regd Let us hope out of the deliberations of these tw conventions some effective plan will be evolved to send a simop pure delegation to the Chicago convention June 8. The Tribune ‘proposes to lend what support it can to the ticket selected January 28. It is thor- oughly representative of the party and is com- posed of men whose Republicanism is above re- proach, Gunder Olson is deserving of another endorse- ment. He won over William Lemke, sub-director of the Nonpartisan league, four years ago. No one can say that he is even tinged with the red peril that menaces North Dakota. : It. would make for party harmony and simplify the campaign, if the Republicans who are to meet here February 17 endorsed , the ticket named January 28. But in.any event there need be no acrimony or strife. The campaign can be fought out in a‘friendly manner, leaving the party in- good form:;to grapple with the Nonpartisai league in the June. primaries. A Daniels says the next president will not have a drop of reactionary blood in.his veins.: Boy, bring us a sample of Hoover’s. Z| And, of course, you realize that if Wilson had consulted the senate the peace conference would still be waiting for a decision. Government has found “grave unrest” among farmers. Rot. Next it will be telling us about the menace of dissatisfied. senators. The Poles have ceded Teschen to the Czechs in exchange for the’ privilege of taking something else that doesn’t belong to them.” Bak hee | WITH THE EDITORS: | oe one THE KANE INCIDENT The action of George Totten; and, Robert Muir in requesting the resignation of President Kane, of the state university,'is one which yill be-‘con- demned by the thinking pepple of the. “state. President Kane has. shown himself to be an edi cator of ability and:the sitplé fact ‘that he re- fused to bow the knee to .the ,sogialistic regime now handling. thé! affairs’ of the state. should be no reason for his being marked for beheading. Pro- tests should be made against, this: outrag s_New Rockford State Center. wah By : 4 TYPICALLY SOCIALIS “The fact that the national Socialists ‘part O’Hare for president and ‘vice ‘president of _ the} United States is the greatest indictment that |i could be hung over the heads of the Socialists. |! They are nominating for the highest offices of || ‘the ind a man and a woman who were disloyal to thgir country when their loyalty had a chance to test itself, and are now in federal prisons serv- ing sentences imposed upon them by_ regularly constituted tribunals of that country for their disloyal acts. The Socialists, by seeking to make martyrs of Debs and O’Hare, prove conclusively that as a political party they are dangerous to. the best ideals of this democratic government. No polit- ical party, other than one dominated by radical idealists, would dare attempt put in the highest officé of the land a man imprisoned for disléyalty to his country in war time. Of course the social- ists will say that Mr. Debs was moved by the courage of his convictions in .opposing the war, yet Mr. Debs nor any other socialist,‘could keep the huns from their own doors merely by preach- ing social ideals to the militarists, It took more than, socialistic ideals to wreck the militaristic yoke of Kaiserism, and American guns and. Amer- ican men found ‘it necessary to ‘tackle the job. Mr. Debs and Mrs. O’Hare, if they felt that they were not disloyal to their country in opposing the sending.of men to Euro e;jused. mighty. poor taste |‘ in opposing their government’ in such: a’ time, and their fellow officials manifest more poor taste at this time by seeking to nominate these two dis- loyalists for the presidency and vice presidency of the United States. The socialist party lost the opportunity of its lifetime during the war by not throwing its strength with the fighters of the world to crush the thing that had crushed social- ism in Germany for centuries. The socialists were willing that somebody else do their fighting for them, and Debs and O’Hare are now paying tne periaity tur chat viearions warfare.—Devils Lake Journai. Said é ee ere neem | Sas WHS FEBRUARY 12th _ SHEE TR ? Awe pa are | ae ABRAHAM LINCOLN—NEW INSIDE VIEW | Foremost, Living ‘Lincoln Student Tells.How and Why Lincoln Became the Greatest Man of | Bie His Time and One of the Really Great Men of All ‘Time | | | . : | have been made on BY JUDGE M. WANAMAK ER Lincoly, AS 5 Of the Supreme Court cf Ohio. i s (Editor's: Note: ; Judge Wa er -has for years: mide study of Lincoln in. the si his dife,. .Hé has written, one of the Jatest, and best, approved? val- 1 {of Lincoln... God: Almighty see! hausted al} nature’s inside ' equipment of written or spoken ibout the the “outst y littl of | and -over aj Study it, Assimil- |} ate, it—to u dtp: ' ‘Commandmént 3. “Put it in langu- i, { &8e plain enough forjany, I knew a Wt fo “comprehend,” Simplis ‘and ms,to have | trength of speech. He get i chiefly resources on ‘the! from «the »Biblé, Bunyan’s: Pilgrim's Lincoln, ‘Thére| Progress, Aesop, De Foe, the diction= umes on. Lincoln,® entitléd: he | was little left for outside finish. hary. , CMe ra eee Voice of “Lincoln,” published by! The y of how:Lincoln developed Lincoln’? avoided superlatives and Charles Serib Sons. have | his. me and | pollys 1. the ‘simple requested" Judge . Wanane! to; hew he them | shoré wore oun hitched prepare this brief mary for'the u benefit of jour reade olds §, La story as he did in A distinguished and successful busl- hess man once said to:me: “E was born to a Condition 1 would Not! accept: 1 clianged, it.” ” Ti re “E could not sleep we 2 Wrote the rution of ndependene and our great It) was’ pectiliarly ‘the? r of Abraham Lincoln, Born in a Kentucky. cabin that-was | thought for any ‘Doy, doorless, - floorless and window! prehend. truly he was Humility’s child, but ‘he became Humanity’s man, how? 1am fever eas How did he become the leading ja thought, auitiL I ver of his bar, the part f ite, the orator of his people and the statesman of his age? Herndon, his Jaw partner for more than 16 years, knew him most intim-|statement, but he d wrote of him; ' heart and all of his mina | pupil. > despotism | What furni old, his four. gre man when f’thought: TP hi not. satisfied until 1 He was his own What a, teach psults, ively to He lived and acted sdard of reason—that. home ef principle the in man, It is, from) this point Mr. Lincoln must he view- ed.” Thousaids of volumes have beeit written, tens of thousands of specches te Commandinent 1, idea until passion of the hum the game until Commandme: in, action, should be of peculiar in- dterest to. all Americans, young and Lincoln himself tell this nomination to -the presiden more ‘pertinent part is as follow: to, When 'T got on such a hunt for an: idea; unti} To had caugnt it; and oyer and over again, 5 it in language ¢plain'senough ‘as; T This: was a kind of passion with me, and: it has’stuck by me; for whén TE am handling leader of | uorth, bounded it south, bounded it and bounded: it, zl Lincoln’ was a student in school but six. months, according to his own Tout. of school all the rest of his life, | m This brief interview hes to the student, young and commandments to knowledge and, reason, 1 had caught it.” “aptured. to an active verb. speech, wt 1860, bounded it south, ‘bounded! it +} bounded it wes' i Thig. sound a’ lesso in’ geogrepl 1 language of the sur became a surveyor at: 25, surveyed lots and, lands, so. alsd) he} suiveyed ideas, with, the cliart and) although [trict ad got A. was had. repested it until Thad put I‘knew ‘to com-} situation, its s primary principles, can. be appropri- ated and assimilated and then plied | by ze” Amer have bounded it]s the key to his hich made him west.” he placed as man, as lawyer, as debat us leader, as statesman, This: enabled him to understand men and ‘es, for he sur d them both before he pronounced judgment, Lincoln was a man of passion two primary, © paramount pass was a. student. teacher—his own What ja pupil. “Hunted for an The iter that pursues submitted t ML out ‘in God's. of conscience, “If was there he first tried out the of all his clients, 1€ was there he first: tried A OD “Repeated it over BRUARY TWELFTH, 1809 Es BY EDMUND VANCE COOK A squalid village set in wintry mud. A hub-deep ox-cart slowly groans and squeaks. A horseman hails‘and halts. He shifts his cud ' And speaks— “Well, did you hear? Tom Lincoln’s wife; today. The devil’s luck for folks as poor as they! Poor.Tom! Poor Nance! Poor young one! born without a chance! t “A baby in that God-forsaken den, That worse than cattle-pen! Still, what are they but cattle. Cattle? Tut! A critter is beef, hide and tallow, but Who’d swap one for the creatures of that hut?« White trash! small fry, Whose only instinct is to multiply! “They’re good at that, ‘ And so today, God wot, another brat! A puking, squalling, red-faced, good-for-naught Spilled on the world; heaven only knows for what. Better if he were black, Copyright, 1920, For then he’d have a shirt upon his ‘back, And ‘something in his belly, as he grows— More than he’s’ like to have, as I suppose. “Yet there be those F Who claim ‘equality’ for this new. brat, And that damned democrat Who squats today where Washington once sat, He'd have it that-this Lincoln cub might be Of even value in the world with you and me! '“Yes, Jefferson, Tom Jefferson. Who but he? Who even hints that black men should be free. That .feather-headed: fool would tell you, maybe, A President might: lie.in this new baby ! In this new squawker, born without a rag To hide himself! Good God, it makes me gag! This beggar-spawn Born for a world to wipe its feet upon : A few years hence, but now More helpless than the litter of a sow! ‘ And—oh, weH! send the women folks to Nance. Sih er 2 eso Oe wn Ae ee, Poor little devil, horn without a chance! See Gettysburg i Commandment 4. “Bounded it north, i a » | Croup when ‘ap ‘ap.| freely from the cliest. .. THURSDAY, FEB. 12, 1920. If You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why itys that so many prodacts that ure extensively advertised, all at once. drop ont of Sight and are soon forgot ten?” The reason is: plain—the article larly to a medicine,” aration that ‘has Teal, parative sens almost sells* itself, as like an endless chain. system the “Yemedy-is recom: mended by’ those whovhuye been bene: fited, to those who aren need of it.) A prominent druggist ‘ays “Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swampt-Root, a preparation To have’ gold for many years and never hesitate to! recom: mend," for in almost every > case ft shows excellent results, as many. of No other kid- D large a sale”. d testimony. of, thousands: ‘who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer's; Swamp-Rout is due to the fact. so many people claim, that {t fulfils almost dish in overgoms ing kidney, ving bladder ‘ailments, corrects urina ubles ‘and neutral izes the uric i h causes phéu- Iso méntion The Bismarck Tribune. Lyrge, and | medium. size bottles for. sale at. drug stores. s <e of slavery. If thé court ce. decided —agalust (bin that was the end. of the whole matter. Ig it :decided in, his: favor, he then took the cause to the court. of rea Here his personal likes’ and dislikes were garded,” Notli- ing but the substantials of; fact yrea- son, and right and the public good were to be considered. SoH The design. of this brief. article is to stimulate a further study of .Lin- coln into the sub-oil of his mind and conscience, To that end T suggest ‘a. further outline along intellectual and ethical lines, as follows: Say a trip. with thought tr Stoppitig at these seven great statio of. his’. life—stations that he stopped at and studied every situation with ‘which he was" 'con- fronted for action; out the of ¢ Lincoln’ on: shis 4. Definition, 5 5. jonstration. 6. Dedication, . Democracy a An analytic ‘as well as. syhthetic study of Lincdin at the seven stvtions will give us a better understanding of, the warty td woof .of the man. which he daily wove into his personal, professional and public’ conduct. © .* - + PEOPLE'S FORUM| + <@ HOME REMEDY FOR PNEUMONIA: The following poultice has ‘been ,a life saver in many cases of pneumonia. Chop finely ‘six: oniens and put them: into a large spider.over a hot‘fire, add! al enough to’ form: j horoughly! Jet oe ten, am! mn. large / sh to. cover eyo teas Hota nivbears In 10 minutes thus confinue ‘rehi of “dinize i Usually two three appli¢atyong WIL be'suffidient' ‘to start perspiration; , Mrs. Mb 4 The Pictorial Review for-Jul = GIRLS! DRAW A / MOIST CLOTH)” ‘THROUGH HAIR Let “Danderine” save your hair and double... its beauty Oh,. girls, "such an abundance pf thick, heavy, invigorated hair; a per- fect mass of wavy, silky hair, glori- ously fluffy, bright and so easy to mafage. 1 Just moisten a cloth with’ a little “Danderine” and carefully draw ‘it through your hair, taking one small strand at.a time; this magically re- ~ moves all dirt, excess oil and grease, but. your hair is not left brittle, dry, stringy or faded, but charmingly soft, with glossy, galden gleams and’ tender lights. The youthful glints, tints and color are.again in your hair, “Danderine” is a tofic-beautifier. Besides doubling the beauiy of the hair at once, it checks dandruff and stops failing hair. Get delighiful Dan- derine for a few cents at any drug or toilet counter and use it as a dressing and invigorator as told on bottle. did not fulfil he promises of the man- ' ufacturer. Thx applies more particu: n statements ‘and in na i \, wie P ie ‘ ‘ oe é a, ’ . t " t i | i if ~ i « | oe PEN | ae \ - oY 3 2 ‘ \ \ s a4