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i run a gasoline motor without oil as to YOUNG bride writes with the f > dispense with this ‘courtesy Iubricant following complaint: “My hus- " that does away with friction in the band’s older. brother, who is we had several months to spend in re- MONEY IS WELL” EXPENDED Substantial’ Truth In Statement: That Courtesy Is Worth All the Expendi- ture Involved. Just as we have absorbed: the in- formation, from one writer that cour- tesy should play a prominent part in! every business transaction: because it | costs nothing, we ran across a bulletin of the Standard: Oil.company. of Call- fornia which states that $1,000,000 was invested in telegraph tolls last: year to‘ transmit ajsingle word—“Please.” So courtesy does cost something, the Philadelphia Record observes, If search we might find the basis for an estimate that courtesy in newspaper advertising alone costs several million dollars. But whatever the cost, It fg worth it, Courtesy, cordiality and‘ sincerity are three big factors in the success of an advertisement. People like to do business with dealers whose messages radiate good will, a friendly spirit, a desire to please.’ During the. recent holiday rush some stores suggested that the purchasers should carry small packages home with them in- stead of having them delivered. The Proposal was put forward in the same way in which one asks @ favor of a friend, and it proved very effective. | Suppose the stores had sald, instead: | “Positively, no small’ packages deliv- ered”—can you imagine the result? The money that the business men of. the country spend on “please” in their advertising and elsewhere, is an in- vestment that ylelds handsome cash dividends. One might as well try to contacts of human relationship. FIT MATE FOR FAMOUS SCOUT Wife of “Buffalo Bill” Frequently Ac- companied Him on Expeditions Filled With Danger. | Louisa Smith’s first encounter with | William Frederick , Cody, later and mo! pularly known 9s “Buffalo | exceedingly informal. Cody , brought ‘to the Smith home | by a mutual friend and before he had | even beep introduced was the aston- | ished recipient of a resolute slap on | FIVE MILLION DOLLAR LOSS swept through a whole block ‘west of Boulevard. 15-story office building of the Chicago, Burling! THE RIGHT THING ot the _ RIGHT TIME poe ByMARY MARSHALL DUFFEE WHEN TO.READ. | What do you read?—Shakespeare. making his home with’ us, insists on reading his morning -paper at the breakfast table. This is annoying to me and I feel that it is an act of dis- courtesy to me. Although ty hus- band himself ‘does not do it:he says It is quite all right for his brother to do so. What do you say about it?” , It is so usual for our busy husbands and fathers and brothers to read the paper over their breakfast, often be-| cause they feel that is the only time: they have to. do so, that it would be unfair to say that they are thereby doing vs an act of discourtesy. How- | ever, I do agree with you that it !s not very good manners. Where one was entailed and 010 life lc 2 st when fire, thought to be of incendiary origin, Chicago’s “loop” bsiness district. At left is the Austin Building of which on'y the framework was left standing. ney Railroad, gutted by. the fire. ton & Q the mouth from Loulsa, a punishment Goeg not have the excuse of reading | which soon grew.into love. Their mar- , the paper because it is the only op-| riage took place’shortly after and their portunity. to do so at breakfast then life together was extremely happy. Lit is less pardonable than otherwise. Mrs. Cody proved an {deal wife for’ re 4¢ ss quite clear that the reading | a great many of hig/trips and enjoyed patience then there is even less ex- |the Chi company “Buffalo Bill.” She was with him on y . destroyed And mp); tuated by curiosity and im- destroyed an raiser x suffered since the confl Burlington and recor 5,000 wer Stocks CHICAGO’S DOWNTOWN BLAZE guited thre Quincy Railroad, shown here, destroying the made jobless by the worst fire Chicago has ration that destroyed the whole city ~in 1871, * R. P. Oglesby delivered, the lecturer | them as much as he did himself. In- trepid’ and daring, there was no ex- for her to-go on. Mrs. Cody, outlived her husband, as well as all of sher children, latter part of her life, spent in re-; tirement in the West, was lived in: a dream world, populated by her loved ones. ; f i = N Adorable Shams, i In the’course of-a lecture on “Early | English Renaissance Architecture, and Some Practical Considerations,” which remarked that. “sham” was not a nice cuse for it. The fact is that with many families mealtime is the only/ penition which apneared ico Sangerous | opportunity for friendly leisurely in-!aigo have outstanding roles. . ‘Then tercourse and where- one person! there are others, such as James Har-| tonight ‘i’ east portion; colder to- chooses to put a damper on that spirit | rison, well known juvenile; Walter | night, Tuesday generally fair. and ,the he is acting in a decidedly unscclal Miller, Charles Graig. and also Huntley manner. | If a person breakfasts alone that is, ‘another matter, Then he may read the paper for companionship. So in| a hotel restaurant when you occupy; a table by yourself you are not show- | ing bad manners; to do so though it} you must eat at a table with other | persons éven if they are strangers to; you, you are not showing very much ; politeness 4f you prop the paper up {| paper ; Gordon, whose striking figure, has graced more than one Cabanne suc- AUTHOR TELLS , HOW HE SPENT PRIZE OF $40,000 Stockholm, March 20, — Anatole France, the French author who won the $40,000 Nobel prize for literature The Austin Building, almest entirely razed, is shown at left. Pictrte shows view west on Jackson In the rear is the}, story office building of and,.records of other firms were ther with light snow this afternoon or Weather Conditions A low pressure area covers the Lake regipn and rain or snow has been general from the Mississippi valley eastward. The weather continues un- settled, pver the Great Plaing but no preeib(tation of consequence has oc- curred over that section. »“fempera- tures' cbritinue moderate, except in the extremé‘1orthwest, a reading ‘of 2 be- low zéro being reported at Edmonton. ‘ ORRIS W. ROBERTS, ° Meteorologist. TWO ARE DEAD BY OWN HANDS Frank Conley and Oscar Anderson, both of whom attempted guicide, are dead. Mr. Conley died at the home of his brother, about eight miles north- west of Sterling, Saturday, and Mr. Anderson died in a local. hospital Saturday night. Mr. Conley shot himself: with a re- volver and Mr. Anderson, according to authorities, cut his wrist and loss of blood is. said to have caused his death, Anderson was found: along the Mis- souri river. COMMITTEES OF 2 CLUBS MEET The joint committee. appointed by the Bismarck and Mandan: Commer- cial clubs met for the first time this afternoon at the Lewis & Clark hotel in Mandan at a luncheon, The Bis- marck committee is as follows: J. C. Anderson, chairman; A. P. Lenhart, E. V. Lahr, H. J. Duemeland, George Will. The Mandan committee is: L, F. Lyman, chairman; A. H. Peterson, BW. A. Tostevin, J. H. Newton, J. A Harding. fg t is expdcted that the time of the committee will be largely taken up with organization and preliminary discussions. capiroul SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION Bismarck Lodge No. 5, A. F. & A. M. tomorrow at 3:00 and 7:30 p. m. to be conducted by the Grand Lecturer. CHEVROLET Parts In Stock. Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. D. eee eT The Mother Church, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY of Bismarck Announces a FREE LECTURE Christian Science : WILLIAM D. up cbnic Cs B of Detroit, Mich. i Member of the Board of Lectureship of of Christ Scientist, Boston, Mass. ELTINGE THEATRE The First Church oO > rp) > o 3 & § of a mm =} me e 2 Idiajseul v F1Y} Jey} 999 THEATRE TONIGHT UIU PUL SIE}S [LUOOUID Snowe JSAUL pure SI] IIDUIY UI a1nyoId Jo pay[e} Jsour ay This Evening, March 20 8 o’clock. LTING THE Direction Valieau Theater Company All Seats Free — The Public is Cordially Invited. ATRE IUBAPE ON ‘aINqoId 4S97¥e13 $,70}9 tad ul 3 st word; but the outer dome of St. Paul’s | before you. ‘The practice of 1,000 M \ cathedral was an adorable sham. Wren | rending has become so general at bee? ay Gist ge ut Ste fis said: “I am going to give you a benu-| proakfast time that there are little | ioe now he spent and invested the tiful dome outside, and an appropriate | metal paper props in the stores for; 75, ‘ey. Most of it is already disposed , TUESDAY dome inside, and whgt they are made of, or how they support my stone lan- tern and cross, weighing 700 tons, is my business and nobody else's.” Neither of the domes in any way sup- ported the lantern. The upper por- tions of' the interior of St. Petér’s at Rome were, he added, shame—cleverly decorated to look/like marble, Most of the great Palladio'’s best works at Vicenza and other places was sham— merely stucco laid on brickwork, but none the less beautiful in form; and our own architect Nash introduced stucco into’ London, as in Regent street and elsewhere.—London Times. Iceland in History. , | A visitor to Iceland has described the view from the plateau overlooking the plain of Thingvelllir, where the parliament of the commonwealth was which there is considerable demand, } making {t possible for one to eat un-| a convenient angle before him. train though, of course, the courteous man or woman will cont the paper or magazine or book so that | it does not annoy his neighbors or) so that his elbows in holding it do, of, he announced. “The Nobel prize awarded me,” said disturbed and have one’s paper held at) Mr, France, “has given rise to much talk and stupiditles. I have spent There is really no reason why one | some of the money for some very beau- should not read a paper in the car or tiful Gobelin tapestries — exquisite, royal ones. The rest of the money [ rive to hola | have invested in French national de- tense bonds. J consider that an ex- cellent and most comfortable means of investment,” Knut Hansum, the Norwegian novel- not prod them. It is extremely dis- : ist, whose “Growth of Soil” helped win courteous to read paper or magazine} gyr nim the Nobel Prize for literature, at a lecture, or any performance. If! showed that he was in earnest when this does not actually embarrass/ he wrote the above mentioned book. the performers it is the kind. of } He invested most of the Nobel ‘Prize thing that detracts from the enjoy- | in blooded stock and other improve- ment of the other members of the ments for his farm in Norway. * audience. And never, never read ve r ‘Roosevelt who won the Nobel Peace when some one {s talking to you. To Deke for 106 for his efforts in bring- what 1s being sald to you and sense | gave his $40,000 to the Foundation for It will be recalled that Theodore |, be sure, you may be able to attend to} ing to an end the Russo-Japanese war || NOW $50 The Twin City Barber College has started its Summer.term and now offers its complete course for $50, a saving of $25 over the Fall and Winter term rate. Personal at- tention given’ to each student by our staff of competent instructors., The Barber Trade offers excep- tional opportunities fer men with limited capital. Write today for FREE, interesting, illustrated cat- alog and full particulars. TWIN CITY BARBER COLLEGE 204 Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Kinograms eae AiR ace eae Topics of the Day MARION DAVIES in “The Bride’s Play” With Rudolph Valentino and Agnes Ayers Matinee Daily 2:39. ELTINGE WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY—FRIDAY “THE SHEIK” Evenings 7:30 & 9. ‘aanqaid auo sty} Ul [Ty “spuvsnoy} Aq sasapupe ry} yuNOD Jey} 81049" aTeur a OM} ‘SaIFNBIaq POMONA DALY “S1EIS UIIAOS 1303 008 SIMPY °s9 r what you are reading at the | Promoting Industrial Peace. eid He ee ae same time, but it is the sort of tee poke EET SESE THEATRE if i cus: ‘ . phire set within a circle of emerald | courtesy that is almost never excus- | WEATHER REPORT 3 Days s Commencing ( - hills and snow-capped mountains, al- |-able. | sar ¢ WEDNESDAY i together a picture of enchanting beau- | For 24 hours ending at noon, March Come Here Tyenines ck Hay The i ty/iWhe magnifitehce of its historical 120: 5 (4 - and literary traditions have enriched iTemperature at 7 a. m. for’ SHEIK : i the ages, and some of their Icelandic AT THE THEATERS | Baghest yesterday 3 : translations are now being adopted by | Lowest yesterday other nations, The -spoken language = [Lowest a nate : Your-Copy Candy of today differs so-little from that CAPITOL re OMe erry, } tf the Twelfth century that the Sagas! ‘There have been all-star casts ibe: | Highest wind yelocley, of the Bar . of that time continue to be, in the!fore in motion pictures, but i is) For Bismarck and Vicinity—Unset- : i original text, the daily reading of all | cowbtful whether any more important pee eeiat and ae tonight; | SHEIK Chief a classes. The remarkable revival of art ey ae players sa ee athan Tuesday ifain A ‘d 3g embied for a single A Mor } kota— - ee, = Ler iae san: Geaetel_obuepertty See Tee lliiam Christy Vor North Dakota—Unsettled wea: The Greatest JESSE L.LASKY of all : i Cabanne's big R-C drama, “Beyon Hothead J iy the national spirit early in the Nine | Rainbow.” More than a dozen fe ~ Novel its re 5 teenth century. prominent actors and scence take, iy art. For the most part they are; 3 F Queer Earthquake Prank. players who have ppeen batons the) of the kind. ‘ ublic on stage and screen for sev-/ a : ae or lobe oot bad |eral years and all number their per-' Century. Capital Bottling bx ei ‘sonal followings in thousands. | curiously distorting effects it pro- “Beyond the Rainbow” ig the cur-} rey 5 duced os sanding obieds ‘umlar ef | rent attraction atthe Capitol Theater, i 5th Street Stationery Works fects have been no! {where lovers of the movie drama | St Bi ‘MD earthquakes, hut seldom to so striking have an opportunity to, appraise the: ore ismMarck, N. ye . ‘an extent. In an official report in the work of the extraordinary cast. For| ras i i ‘ matter it {s described how this earth- (example, there are ETT MOG Ed-| my cold F Laskin Block RPUBOLPR VALENTING Wholesale quake twisted‘ a lofty monument at end Bese, Sore Sa eet porate | ALWAYS keep Dr. King’s New ‘a. : a : I ent was an obe- Harlam a1 * ate Discover , It breaks up 2, oh cae ! hat af brick, coated with plaster, more among the male members of the cist: ard “stubborn code and stops the Phone 347 GEORGE MELFORD istributors . t Among the women ar vorites f hin; 0 @oouction’ i than sixty feet tall and ones ee as Rose Coghlan, still the same great Eee bit seer hp te All square at the base. About six feet oDict'as of wid; Lillian (illic) Dove, Gruegiste, good medicine: : of a fe eae pokey es Poeaty test famous beauty of the Ziceiald Rellice, D r. Ki Pt) to the east. Then a p! whose artistry in Cabanne R-C p f n Ss in height was separated twenty-three ductions has carried her to popularity e > a feet above the ground and twisted 1n on the screen almost overnight; and New: Discov: 4 a direction opposite to the motion of Helen Ware, an artist of the first wa- RK C lds an d Cou the .ands of a watch, but withowt ter whose great performance in Bel-| £0R CO: y ve | asco’s “The Wandering Jew” was one: ; falling. ri isli-| ‘Stubborn Bowels Tamed. Leave es — lly» bi; rtistic accomplish $3 ST EE | meats in the theater last year. | ing foe Pisses: omer ey Sm ; f po Dance every ecsday, ThUre Then, too, there are two peend Clara| sHimulat De, King’s Pills bring £0, 4 venings at! test winners in Virginia Lee Hl regular, bowel a < 7 bgt aerhe Awe 10 Cents! Bow, one fair ani ie other eaatied | ue. *Beents, All ist se} Victor * HOSKINS-MEYERS F lowers : u : rtists who pr MPT! WON'T GRIPE ° * per dance. for the future. Diana Allen, a star! tr Kin >. ‘ills Records It’s Kodak Time. Stationery \ * f in her own right, and Marguerite | TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS Courtot, long prominent on the screen, We Sell SHEIK RECORDS