Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
s Pana rar er erren anre Sou ar} i i y » Love THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE eth Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second the stars, Class Matter. \erange. earth is a speck of dust alongside an GEORGE D. MANN ‘ Editor, Faas Foreign i TT rf ENDLESS vorel, 2) G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | In two weeks Germany adds 3,629,000,000 paper cEoAS0 DETROIT | marks to the enormous number already in circu- Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. |" PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ‘lation. NEW YORK - -__Fifth Ave. Bldg.) tne total is around 105,000,000,000 marks — MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS iy date ona s y The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use ae for every man, woman and child in our coun for republication of all news dispatches credited 2 ie oF BR ee es in this paper and also the local’ 40 marks added to circulation in the two weeks All rights of republication of special dispatches herein | are twice as many as German’s total circulation are alto reserved, 0 before the war. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION What will be the number constituting the SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE " traw that will break the camel’s back? Daily by carrier, per year. «$7.20 ' Daily by mail, per year (i arck) . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........ | ' eS i j INHERITED | In 1601,.when Shakespeare’s plays first came HE BISMARCK’ TRIBU hfs all that counts. Compared with some ott THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) named Rivington. from the printing press, London had a printer) Later he became a book pub-; Sasa \lisher. Handed down through the family, father SEE SCIENCE BAFFLED |to son, for 320 years there has always been a German scientists recently caused a sensation | Rivington member of a publishing firm. in the international jewel market. They claimed| Business inclination often is inherited. they had solved the problm of manufacturing Navigators and fine mechanics usually are diamonds cheaply. bred, ndt made. Now the word is passed through the diamond} It crowns a father’s career, to see his son step trade that it costs more to produce the German | into the old man’s shoes and carry on the work. diamends than to mine the real ones from the’ j clay blow-pipes of extinct volcanoes. | . Sir William Crookes succeeded in making arti- EDITORIAL REVIEW ficial diamonds by crystalizing graphite under | great pressure. But the diamonds he made were small—worthless as gems. : ‘ So the value of your diamonds is safe—for the! present. Some day chemists will produce dia-| monds and gold artificially, cheaply. That will! , be an fnteresdng period to live through—more| 4 legacy of $25,000 by the widow of Mark interesting for the spectator than the participant. | Hanna to the cook who had served her thirty _ {years or more, has ‘been given extended comment lover the: country and highly commended as a Comment =dhigx.column ma may not express the Bee ee They are’presented, here in order-that. our seaders.may.have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. INFLUENCE OF THE COOK CUCKOO We do strange things ‘in, this country. Rail-', . ; ; Fi rohdu for inetance—)-puaratiteed: ‘by law: rates| fire out for domestic services are rare indeed, | . ‘ that make certain for them a definite and fair rate and the particular onePlately) Tewarded: as the of profit. servant of a public man who was a President’s 3 4 4 J ,.|best friend and the dispenser of his patronage, Railroading, of course, is an important basic! came into public notice during the McKinley ad- industry. We;all suffer when the railroads are’ ministration because of her genius for preparing in “bad shape. : | corned beef hash. But raising corn also is an important basic in-| ' We say genius, because good cooking is all that dustry. |Burton calls it. in his “Anatomy of Melancholy” So is all farming, all manufacturing, all human; “an art, a noble science.” Nothing else has so labor. direct, constant and enduring an influence on men, Do they get a guaranteed profit? because while it is taken as a_rule without especial No, Rollo. jgratitude and as a matter of course, its loss up- Why, Uncle George? a the pipeaais ete none ns nue a 5 . sefa| Pleasure of living and doing into discontent an wicca © production operates under a casi? futility. It is no exaggeration to say that behind ithe greatest intellectual achievements of men |stands the good cooking that gives them regu- ‘larly the vigor of properly nourished-bodies. All familfés are neither able to find nor to employ good cooks, and so it happens that the great ma- ene jority of American families are served food pre- become law. within a few. months. : ipared by their mothers. We may say without The public hopes so. The debt is over-due. ‘fear of successful contradiction, that the great men The bill would give. veterans their choice of | of our generation in all walks of life built up the cash, paid-up insurance, vocational training, farm| bodily and mental qualities which made them fam- or home aid or land settlement. This isn’t a/ ous through the good cooking of their mothers. “bonus.” Don’t call it such. It’s adjusted com-| The use of David Garrick’s epigram by Smith pensation—back-pay for services rendered at an|in “The Compleat Housewife” as a conclusion ar- unfairly low wage. |rived at by men who are not blessed with a good The name is unimportant. If it were labeled,jcook, even at home, is fully justified. We “adjusted compensation for railroads,” the bill| quote it: probably would go through Congress so fast Bar- ney Oldfield couldn’t stick to the wheel. ; _ CERTAIN ‘ A National Commander MacNider of the Amer- ican Legion hears from the politicians that the adjusted compensation bill for ex-service men will “The waste of many good materials, the vexation that frequently attends such mis- managements, and the curses not unfrequently bestowed on cooks with the usual reflection that whereas God Me bihimeat, the devil PEARLS A small speck of sand gets inside ‘an oyster, | starts irritating. This aithoya’ the oyster, like sends cooks.” na : cinder in your eye. Theoyster secretes chemical! : é ne substances, covering the sand wtih many coats. | If the devil sends wasteful and inefficient cooks, That..makes the pearl. |surely Heaven itself gives us our good ones. We Japs are, fooling the oysters—opening them, |!earn that the royal families. of Europe not ‘so deftly inserting sand, producing artificial pearls. |"UMerous now as formerly, never allowed the edu- ! ‘cation of their daughters in the art of good cook- |fitting and deserved, bequest,,.Good cooks who| But leading jewelers in Maiden Lane, New York, announce that these artificial pearls lack lustre and can be*easily distinguished from the real thing, by an expert. isk If the Japs perfect their process, pearls will be cheap. Then no one will want them. Why do we all havé a mania for collecting rare things? UNKNOWN ~~ Studying astronomy is like all -deep.stuff. It teaches you that education is only a process of in creasing knowledge of what you don’t know, nevei carn know. Man learns nothing. He merely extends his horizon—enlarges his comprehension of his ignor- ance. What is water? Two parts of hydrogen, one part of oxygen. All right, what are hydrogen and oxygen? No answer. The divine wisdom of the Creator is, hidden| from us. We gradually increase our comprehen-| sion of our ignorance. That is called progress. METEOR Talk now of digging up the biggest meteor that ever fell on earth. “Digging several miles down into the earth is easy—to talk about. This meteor fell in Arizona several ‘thousand jing to be neglected. If a princess is thus trained, jhow important it is that alli American girls, prin- cesses of the Republic, Should likewise be edu- jeated in this fundamental necessity of every ‘home, whether that home is a palace or a hut! | Yet there is much neglect of this in homes of lux- jury, and girls are permitted to grow up in the be- lief that it*is a menial employment instead of “a ‘noble science.” : At schools for young ladies domestic science, including the prover combinations of foods in imeals, is how taught, and doubtless is a desirable study to master. But it is a “finishing” touch, lby a thorough practical course in a home kitchen. There is no true humiliation so complete and hope- less as that of the young wife whose ignorance of the art of cooking is betrayed in an emergency, i jof doubtful utitity, unless it has been preceded | | BY DR. WILIJAM E, BARTON Greatest Authority on Abraham Confined to Lompoc, Cal., her bed by'a broken hi u | wise bearitig lightly the weight of her 93 yeaf®, the one surviving sister of Ann Rutledge sat propped up among her pillows and talked to me about the youthful love of her sister and Abraham ‘ ‘Lincoln. . told’ me of life in New Salem when Lincoln, a raw-boned young fellow of one-and-twenty came into town on his flatboat. She told*me*how the boat became how Lincoln moved about in the wet and finally got the boat over the dam, how he came ashore and liked New Salem so much he returned and made it his home. ti She talked to me-reely and I wrote it down as she talked. Then I read her what), I;had.,.written and she signed it without glasses. Sarah Rut- ledge,Saunders, is young at 93. “From my knowledge.t can add little to what already ‘has been told,” ahe aid,-“and much of that is inaccurate, faanaing some statements attributed to me. ? Ma “T have read ‘an extended newspaper account of Ann’s funeral, in which I am reported to have said that I sat insLincoln’s lap during the funeral, and that he sobbéd and his frame shook with grief. ‘As a matter of fact I have no recollection of the funeral. “But if 1 did not sit in Lincoln's other’ times. F was the baby of the family, and he was kind to the ‘baby.’ “I was born in the Rutledge Tavern in New Salem. Oct. 29, 1829, the young- est child of. James Rutledge and Ann Miller Rutledge. I am the only child of the family now surviving. I-was not quite six years old when Ann died, Aug. 22, 1835. “T have little personal knowledge of the love affair of Lincoln and my sis- ter. But I have heard much of it from my older sister, Nancy Prewitt, and from my mother, who spent her last years with Nan. I can see Sister Ann as she sat sev f she was the seamstress of the family, while the other:girls, Nancy and Mar- garet, aided mother in: the general housework and care of the tavern. “She taught me to sew, and I re- member her patience with me, as well as her: industry, and kindness. ~All Liked Lincoln / ed boarder and we all liked him. He could not sing very well, but he liked sonie songs very well. We had, and my-nepliew still hag/ a copy of the eld | Misouri . Harmony* There was a song in it calfed ‘Legacy’ which ‘always excited -Lincoln’s mirth. | “He was friendly with all of us girls land while I knew that he cared es- pecially for ‘Ann, I have had to inter- | pret what I saw’and knew of their re-; j lations in the light of what my mother and my sister, Nan, later-told me, | “One thing that has been told is wrong {and I should like to correct it: That is that Ann died of a broken heart or that she was torn between her af- ‘fection -for Abraham Lincoln and the love she is alleged to have plighted {previously to John McNamar. “There is not ‘a, word of truth jn it. | Whatever affection Ann ever had for MeNamar, and ‘that may have been than has been represented, ended when she learned that he had ceme to New Salem under a false name, Mc- Neil. My father never trusted him, THE LITTLE SISTER OF LINCOLN’S SWEETHEART : i MONDAY; JANUARY 9, 1922 ir nal put’ every “one” catia’ her “Aunt Sallie.” She was living with hay son, James Rutledge Saunders, a | chelor, at Sisquoc, California, when she suffered the fall that broke her hip. She is now in a private home for the care.of invalids, at Lompoc, | California, t | (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) \ i 5 OUI ate ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS . By Olive Barton Roberts STATES SHE'WAS _DISCOURAGED BY MANY FAILURES Saint Paul Woman Says. Her “Experience Is Almost Beyond Belief “I am fairly convinced that-Tanlae has added years to my life,” said Mre. < "lit Lee, 1087 Payne Ave., St, Paul, Minn. “I was thoroughly discouraged af- ! a 4 e, 1 | Everything: was’ quiet for a f€W |tey two years repeated failures to find | minutes. !was the most important on account of jhaving helped to build a big bridge jand the second kite had claimed the {same honor because. as he said, he had discovered electricity. : | Then the Fairy Queen said quietly, “You are both as foolish as you can jbe. You might just as well say that discovered anything to relieve my stomach “the first kite had insisted that hej trouble, and I must admit I had little taith when I began taking Tanlac. It has done, ‘however, what everything else I tried failed to do. “Tanlac gave me an‘ appetite, put my stomach ,in first-class condition and brought me new. strength and en- ergy. I never felt better in my life than I do now. It is almost unbeliev- one: of Columbus’ ! America. p “Instead of being glad that you were to the world you are Now use it all ships by your vanity. Her mind still is perfectly clear. She stuck on the dam at Rutledge’s mill, | lap at the funeyal,'I sat there many‘ ng from day to day, for | “Lincoln was'a big, tall, kind-heart-' ae a SARAH RUTLEDGE SAUNDERS AS SHE LOOKS TODAY. |awkwardness and called his’told plain ' Abe.’ shared their (stings Hutwheyi were all but other- | Democrats, whilé:‘we;" their cousins, | ‘were Whigs. We liked Lincoln’ the’ 1 reasons for; which the Cameron girls disliked him. | ' “Ann was light-complexioned, her During her sickness her | * was cut, and mother kept it, for | "s. After a. time the moths j better for some pol. auburn, and we had to,destroy it. “She had blue eyes, and was slender, It's and not very: robust. All our memor- jies and traditions of her. are of aj sweet and beautiful character. “Ann did not die at New Salem, Be- fore her death, my father and mother moved from the tavern to their farm ian Sand Ridge, seven miles trom New 'Salem,:and a mile from the Concord cémetery where Ann was buried. Bus- iiness at New Sulem did not prosper, as had been expected.” My father and his -nephew, John Cameron, had in- vested heavily in the future of that (little town, and its decline was a ser- ‘ious embarrassment to father. | “I do'not know by what means John )McNamar acquired title to father’s rm.,,It has been said that he bought iit after*Ann’s death as a matter of ‘sentiment. John McNamar was not a ‘sentimental man and he acquired the title before. the death of Ann or my father. ‘ . : | “His alleged love for the memory of my dead sister was not: sufficient to induce him to shelter Ann’s widowed ;mother in the home which she had helped to build. “That was :why mother had to take ; her family of fatherless..children and ‘move to a. new home in Iowa. He turned , mother -out: “We -had a hard itime, but at length we made a home there. Mother died in the home of my sister, Nancy Prewitt, in Fainfield, | Towa.” Atter this fashion did the sister of {Ann Rutledge, talk to me, growing |more animated as she talked. We would chat for a while, and’I would then withdraw to an adjacent room and ‘write down what-she had said, giving her time to rest a little and to think ‘ ot other things, “Sarah Rutledes Saunder: EVERETT TRUE “T do: not kot thd their: father | he sign i hair. ‘run along, both of you, for neither ‘of, yeu deserve one bit of credit, | “It was the men who thought of ‘using you, who were the great ones. And they never thought of biting off ‘one another's noses. - z | “Shame on you both! I shall not ; Punish you this time, but if I hear of lany more trouble in my far-off palace, ip shall have Buskins send you back to; |a toy store on the earth and take_a lit-| }tle of the importance out of you.” { { The important kites shivered and‘ ‘hung their heads. | | “All right, your majesty,” said the |first kite, “I'll be good. And I may} 8 well confess that I didn’t want to imake that trip across the river. I nh was afraid that I'd fall into the water, | iT,wouldn’t have gone at all, only the ‘wind caught me and I had to go.” | “And I,” said the second kite, fol- i lowing his companion’s example, “will jhave to tell you that I was afraid of | ‘the’ storm with all ‘the lightning | ; around, and didn’t wat to go up into | }the clouds at all with the key tied on}{ me. The wind did that, too.” “Honest confession jeverybody,” smiled the Fairy Queen.|: :“Im proud of you both now.” i (To, Be , Continued.) (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) | i | | Today's work is DAWDLE. i pronounced—with accent on ‘ the. first. syllable. “ It means—to idle, to loiter, to waste | is good for) 4 able that a little medicine could make such a big change in such a short time.” Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Joseph Breslow and by leading drug- gists everywhere.—(Advertisement.) _-fiAutg)dpailroad's greatest enemy,” says an official. “Yes, but when at- tacked“by an auto a train Wins. Bowlegged are not boldlegged. Money talks,:but. not as much as we talk money. The Nansen Ski Club will have a log race. At the present writing no ‘hisBants have entered. ‘A bird in good in worth two in bad. o—-— = Women worry about their age; men about the age of their auto. | LEARN A WORD | aseloruretr fe EVERY DAY |! French are building houses with Bae = ap | Straw. Peasants who live in straw houses should not. keep cows. . Wonder if these grammar sharks ever heard an owl say “whom?” Pictures of spring bathing suits al- most bear out our forecast that they dle. like a child. {would be belts and suspenders. Companion word—Dawler. It’s ‘used like this — “Instead of If you want to make a girl believe working, the workmen dawdled about! you, tell her she is pretty. all day.” pide ae i | TODAY oe. heats Beloved, now: are we the sons of} God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that when He shall appear, we shall be Uke; Him; for we shall see Him as He Is, And every man that hath this hope time. i It comes from—old English, to tod- is pure—I John 3:23, The sweetest hours are those to duty | wed, Whose hours both great and small. Are close-knit strands of an unbroken} thread, .- Where love ennobles alt. —Elizabeth Barret Browning. Wieringer, Holland, mer crown prince has gained the com- | panionship of the little girls of this sketches of the children. Doctors say it is possible to judge 13 person's health by the state of his BY CONDO district through his talent for sketch- | gressional “bloc” ing. ‘He amuses himself by drawing | heads together. Huggins’ unswapped ball - players shave something to worry about when \ A THOUGHT FOR i ‘we resume trade with Russia. | % ‘ All optimists should keep their front teeth brushed. “why have women no mustaches?” lectures a Detroit woman. Nobody ever saw grass on a race track. Thrilling part of a movie is where in him, purifieth ‘himself, even as He | People eat peanuts the loudest. Sensation of the opera season is a fellow named Chaliapin. But imita- tors of Charlie get monotonous. Good chorus girls are a matter of j form. Every, German child born owes 40,- EXILED PRIN FE DRA Ws; {00 marks, so you can’t blame the lit- n. 9.—The for-| tle fellows for kicking. It is interesting to learn that a Con- s formed by putting Bill against women smoking sug- gests “Lips that touch the cigaroot shall never rest beneath our snoot.” hould you ask a girl to asks a subscriber Depends ‘ dances. ‘English Hounds To Hunt in Germany, Coblenz, Jan. 7—Hounds from HOW CAN YOU STAND THERE AND CHAW DOWN THAT SANDWICH WITHOUT WING A Brre TO WOuR DO] z= | though he had business dealings with him. |no. matter how lofty her financial rating may be. It is ‘an ignoble ignorance, a degradation, for a} woman not to know how to cook; and one which, ?/ unexplained “The story that Ann continued absence, to {love him during the three years of his and so gave ‘died because she was grief-stricken may never be a regular requirement for her to.y,'tno conflict of opposing affections, sooner or later, will embarrass her grievously. It! only half of her heart to Lincoln, and! | | England are to be used this winter by ‘allied army officers to hunt deer and \boar in the wilds of the Rhineland in occupied Germany. Hunts are to be held twice weekly under auspices of |the Coblenz Hunt Club, organized re- {cently with Major Henry T. Allen. commander of the American Forces in |Germany, as president. Wild boar -and deer are said by hunters to be particularly plentiful this season on preserves in the occu- pied territory. This will fix my cold ALWAYS keep Dr. King's New Discovery handy. It breaks up hard, stubborn colds and stops the paroxysms of coughing. No harmful drugs, but just good medicine. All druggists, 60c. ‘jcook, but she can neyer be the efficient and ac- jcomplished manager of a home or of a mansion, \if this essential branch of her education has been neglected. Young men of the desirable sort, it may be re- years ago. Big? It made a crater nearly a mile marked, always favor the young woman who can long... The rim of the crater is known as Coon)Prepare a palatable meal, other things being any- Butte. Where did this visitor come from? Many such, out in space. Egotistically, man believes that the |where near equal. A wife who cannot cook is al- ways a potential liability. — Chicago Journal of |Commerce. jis wrong. | “If she ever loved MceNamar, that love was ended before she gave her promise to Lincoln. Lincoln loved | her sincerely, and she gave to him un- | divided affection. 4 Lincoln No Ladies’ Man. “You ask why Lincoln, who first on ‘his arrival in New. Salem boarded at |the Cameron home, did not make a ;Match with one of the Cameron girls. | Perhaps one reason was that Lincoln was not a man whom all women liked. The Cameron girls. made fun of his} ‘| New Disco 9, Dr. King Ss | For Colds and Couglis ‘Stubborn Bowels Tamed. Leav- ing the Is unmoved results in | health destruction, Let the gently i stimulating Dr. King's Pills bring to i ua regular, normal bowel function- | ing. 2Scents. All druggists. | PROMPT! WONT GRIPE Dr. King’s Pills S— — t+ ee,