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aad THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE bia iain Mis respect of their fellows. Have not they, too, had their romances? Demoralizing the Traffic Am ladependent N i i pes fried o Lpait NeweriPek The whole problem is not finding romance, but recognizing it after you have it. Even in| , o 1873) h " \areetrtaabrdbntdd this prosaic, automatic age romance abounds;| ¢ Published by the Bismarck Tribune C-mpany, Bts-| but we are prone to think of it solely in terms march, LAEGER Goa au Dostoftice at Bis- of South Sca islands, treasure hunts, red In- Ceorge D. Maun .........-.-.President and Publisher|dians and Alaskan mine strikes. We don’t realize that it can be found in a city flat or a Sabseription Rates Payable in A ‘cy home suburban garden. carrier, per year . iti i Lt he 4 Ball, bar your, (ia Bis ; The very conditions of life make it an ad- Daily by mail, per year, - venture. On the street car next to you sits a (in state outside Bismarck) .........- young man in working clothes, bound for a Daily by mail, vutside of North Dakota . factory where he earns a matter of $30 a week by operating an automatic screw-driver, day Wane Cam, alae, vanes yeas. is .50/in and day out; yet you are wrong if you Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako'a, pe- think his life commonplace and unexciting. He YOBT .ccccvecccccccrccerscccsssscccenece sooo 180] ig buying a little bungalow in a new suburb. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation In it there is a girl in a gingham apron to ‘, Member of The Associated Press twhom he is youth incarnate; together the two < The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the/ are adventuring in life, fronting the world as use for republication of all news uispatches credited o % to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and Tee nd Hieeee fronted the hee of iy also the local news of spontaneous origin published | 2™Ma; y are very sure that presently herein. All rights of republication of all other mat-| they will mount a last long rise ard find a blue ter herein are also reserved. Pacific spread out before them. : again the rier ts capectinnss, i Foreign Representatives If you insist that romance consists solely in for these grew A G. pee aL RA strange scenes, wild adventures and hair- a} Bese_22 he develops the habit coe “s , : 4 - fallow ig eats SAE gh ie ag RR iar tae Pete Serco Tower Bidg. Kresge Bids. 2 ‘ gS f habit of Sed Ci, Bale Gal Coaly BOWLS) Cia uate una Coally BOWIDERIN) Men have died of boredom in Papeete. Cortez fact cx =. om ia = way tar te f ( ity. i mpl doubtless, had to stifle yawns occa years they become a ving part of your Recognizing Romance y- after} .|.If you have a heart that is full of zest for f sareoeeaty ea enadly Hen to roongen ana ay you can Ae delight from little de- 2 tails of everyday life, such as a spring dawn, Lange is 85, hale and hearty. He served un-|'er’s night—then romance is yours. You i der Moltke in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870,|40"t have to seek it. Live with an open he Amerk d served with the heart, keep your courage and remember how us sony in its Tndian wi in the west. Ht|*° smile—and you have it. marched over both Dakotas and Montana when Air Cures For the Deaf those states were lonely expanses of prairie} Col. John K. P. Scott, 84-year-old civil war and mountain. He fought Indians, prospected|veteran, has been deaf for years. But the | for gold, made a trip down the Missouri an‘jother day a friend took him for an airplane ! mem by bk cai eden patent se cess HL ts OC 10 Meas ee a returned to the northwest, tri is hand at/when the ride was ended the aged soldier dis- ranching and trapping, and saw a wilderness,|covered that his hearing had been restored. under his eyes, turn into a great farming and| He was so delighted, news dispatches say, that i 5 ig i cites np Sea sp haan he Bota! and hes with glee. ; le a romantic, adventurous career, no ere have been’ other stories of deaf per- %» | doubt. Yet there are men in your own town, sons who regained their hearing after airplane i ] ] a OC oe | who have never been ten miles away from/rides. Cannot some medical research organi- + ae | their birthplaces, to whom life has been far| zation provide funds for an exhaustive inves- y Blanton isn’t through with the richer and more significant; quite ordinary | tigation of the possibilities of this as a regular ona ene Sd an nl rer | men, in every way, they have had years of|treatment? It is important to know whether work is not in the District of Colum-| ef vt | happiness, have fought their own fights)we have not stumbled upon a new cure of against circumstance, have reared families,! great value. lent Tom Blanton of Texas doesn't s esidential Cam Portraits—No. 12——————| should not have made a “fake” loan i for then challenged Blanton’s pres-| that no dangerous bill --ts on the} ¢; sechels “I will not debate my character FO ee ee eere it cota ence. Latc- in the day Blanton Se an ped Ser Charles G. Dawes . with any man,” is the ony reply| something of a pity, for there has| took the matter up on the floor of| Cmmittee,” | says he. wht Dawes Swears Only When It Helps pene phen Oe aways been excitement here during the House and he and Repr senta- parted © on et micas, et Him Sell Things BY RODNEY DUTCHER legality of the presence of a mem- bart gry Py aT years lied e’ , F Washington, April 21.—If turbu-| ber of the trial board. The prosecu-| watched the consent calender to see In those lean years of Lew prac- Egle toabr air agen eee eto tive Schafer of Wisconsin ex-| didn’t, no one else would. No one tice back in Lincoln, Neb., 40 years! only knows. changed hard names and challenges| ¢lse has since Jim Mann’s beoert r este Lee were betas at Don Washington would be a very quiet} to fight. ides of Columbia work = aes ee fameron’s 15-cent lunch room—| place, indeed, with this congressman! On the second day Blanton again sideline.” must as ase os ae Aries i psbag ih i. cua ndek officer i occupied the local headlines and on ij sions of me of those splendid offi- jose life-long friendship was|” The: tt Tom on the District of i sla age, you he |cers and dear friends—so used to} destined to shape his whole career. Columbia « committee of the House, maiden nee fies ie ratopned feo you were doing sad therefore: ine, by Robert Talley, is | conventional military methods of| The young officer, a military in-| which has much to say about gov-|browbeating witnesses. On the! ¥ memory of events was ni ‘the first of four articles dis- | statement and address —when. | structor assigned to the University | ernment of the city of Washington, | fourth day @ near riot interrupted ized as much as later cussing Vice President Charles | breathing fire and brimstone, I made|of Nebraska, was Lieut. John J.J and that started it. Single-handed,|the trial and Blanton, after accus- G. Dawes. The second article | my incursions into the system after| Pershing. How their paths crossed] he drove from office one of thel ing a prosecution witness of bring. on Dawes will be printed Mon- results, my mind fixed upon the|again—in the great adventure of| three district, commissioners who| ing liquor into the courthouse fer day, = S stl ae ‘aaa A be eset § 1917—will be told in the next story.! was charged with collecting large! another witness, threttened to quit. pressed against the lower part o! 2 s fe tes of in wi ifth di i _" BY ROBERT TALLEY ——_| my back and oblivious to nicety of| | MONDAY: Dawes, Pershing and] eterssen This came. after nome | ap on ene ay ate, Session broke ASHINGTON, | expression or conventional forms of} the A. E. F. mittes hearing in which an inkwell| challenged to a fist fight by an op- Editor's Note: This, the 12th in a series of Presidential Cam- yore Portraits written for the af Ey 4 5 F i rt April won be .| military salutation.” : was hurled along with some very| posing lawyer; Blanton accused E. F. won § great) | Knowing that “the general” plays | “7-7 dirty. epithets. ¢ the official court rter of insult- officer and na-|the piano, the violin and the flute|| IN NEW YORK {| ‘Tom has also been in the thick ing Sin atid demanded that he be Be mere) tion won a most] and has written several composi-|» ——-4 } of it at other committee hearings|sent home. Then Blanton called on picturesque vice|tions, I asked him about his lov New York, April 21.—All the| where blows were exchanged and|the spectators for a rising vote of president, but the} for music. This recalled the famil-| world knows “the little chureh| others where such encounters were| confidence in himself. stage lost a great| iar story that his pereits, fearing | around the corner.” A considerable| barely averted. On the sixth day Blanton refused : actor when Charles |he would growupto be a poorly-paid | fraction of the world knows some- haan to permit a ban on the spectators| Deares: Marye: G. Dawes chose| musician, had forbidden him to play; one who has been married there.| A few weeks ago he started out! lest an armed witness shoot him.| I can see that you are dissatis- business and poli-/and that he had sneaked upstairs ree a visitor to Manhattan but|to clean up the police force of the|He accused a woman prosecution| fied with Alan’s promise of a car ties for his career.| with a flute under his coat—choos- | visits its snug little garden and is| District of Columbia, after a few| witness of kicking at him in thel to Florence. My dear, you should - country|ing the flute because it was easily| deilghted by its pastel-tinted ap- potaainacy skirmishes covering a| corridor, cited threats to “get him,”| not feel that way about it. You long pe ‘irst he & ‘ | i i 4 § 3 if i [ ifs £ B g2 H i. E K ie ii i rh ; [ The probably looks up-|concealed and because the notes proach. previously. and finally had a squad of six Capi-| know you can’t shut out a man’s on “Hell Ma- could not be heard outside his room |" But any number of people have aceused cops of receiv-| tol police placed here and there in| family—not if he is a worthwhile ; i i E rH y ales oH : many he| When and ria” Dawes—now of that story is true and/ asked me how it got its name. It| ing graft from bootleggers. He ac-| the court room for his protection. | man. I don't suppose you would] would make an equal sacrifice for|esseon a little salt. Add a possible presidential candidate | half of it is untrue,” Dawes replied.| Came about after the death of|cused the chief of jo eee want to do that entirely but, like| you if it were necessary. enough cream to make a stiff —as an erratic, violent man who| “While my father wouldn’t let me} George Holland, an idol of the old| Hesse, of drinking The seventh day Blanton clashed| most wives, you seem to resent the| If it mesns mere to you te live}batter deat vigorously for sev- flies at problems with a noise like| take music 8 for fear I might | Wallack’ Theater, Joseph Jeffer- | tected both with the prosecutor and the| fact that his life is not free of them.| there than here you should be enlyjeral minutes. Heap into a flat bak- a fire engine, who cusses out con-| choose music as a career, he didn’t| son, who made “Rip” a classic of| few speakeasies and appeared trial board. Words such as “filth”| Perhaps that would be an ideai| too glad that Alan can make it pos-|ing dish, 9) with Melba toast ressional committees, bawls out the| object to me playing. So I Never| the stage, went to a fashionable and “intimidation” were hurled and | state—for a selfish person. But one And is far easier for |crumbs place in a hot oven aon U. S. Senate to its face and, in de-| took a music lesson in my life. church in the neighborhood and was| h red the Blanton promised the assistant cor-| who is not selfish is certain to real- lightly browned. jot : E £ ; bate, seems to rely on his ability Enjoys Music iven a chill tion. No, th de-| poration counsel to “take care of| ize not a little pleasure from gain- to shout louder, the table} Music has given him solace ai not hold a) pati’ ee ped signed bootleggers' you some cther time.” On the| ing new relationships through mar- harder and grow than his| throughout life. When comptroller] tor! The very idea! sigh day Blanton charged the|riage. I’ve heard girls say they'd it. It also has heard that of the currency in his early days| Jefferson was shocked and indig-| sort of devices with beating two sons of Con-|like to marry a man without a rel- fel irk il soft melo- : he used to go to the White House} nant. Wh the ould to gressman Cl: elly of Pennsyl ive in the world. on the violin, and play the piano for the invalid} have awayeee sake the body of vania “to a pulp” and brandished a] What a lot they would miss. [| when oa, but it probably wife of President McKinley. While|a great actor? Orville billy to show how. Some of it not agreeable, to be sure. slipped for tela thinks My hin chiet of the A. E. F. supply forces} “There’s a littlé church around| Was reget ‘ly on the ninth day the pros-| But a man’s life is enriched by, F Ht Fi iano in his|the corner you might ” he was| trial on family connections. If he has grown at his Paris hotel to af-| told. dele so eo bribes from : up from babyhood loving his, moth- ford relaxation after a hard day’s| And “the little church around the| img women. Congressman Tom, who! Then the trial was over and Sta- ind sisters his heart hasn’t had Bat the real work. While head of the Dawes| corner” it became from that day on.| had become friendly with Sta inj ples was found guilty and fired|a chance to freeze, and far from Dawes is neither 5 commission to Europe he once be-| It also explains why the people of previous investigations, announced| from the force. Jt was generally | having less affection to bestow wu g@ roughneck nor a came 80 interested while playing) the theater hold it in such esteem, | it was a “dastardly, infamous and| agreed that the evidence, which was|a wife, he has more. Even hell-raiser by na- the piano at the home of an Amer- eee lying frameup.” heard now and then between loud] is a bit of a habit, I guess. ture; th iP: ican congul that he forgot all about} The best circus story I’ve heard atte outbursts of noise, wafn’t sufficient} There are, of course, those men ent outburst an important session with gold-|to date comes from Dexter Fellows, On the first day Blanton a; red| to convict him, but that if he wasn’t} whose love for their mothers is an anger and vehem- braided diplomats. In Washington|the veteran advance guard of “the| for Staples and c! the} convicted the police department | obsession—one of the = thi in terms “Onecare ag MoE bedroom ecutor quit in a huff, cursing Blan- a blaring cal- ton. ib I i I iff é ke i z are mere now he spends many of his even-| greatest show on earth.” Years ence tricke to attract Charles, ings with his family in the music| ago, relates Fellows, a lion esccped = icCoy Suggests room of his home. hile the cit la} the wants to get before the people. In Born in Ohio in 1865 psn Tolnncare aare called for to OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern his candid moments he has admitted|. Charles Gates Dawes was born|hunt it down. Members of the gi ee. y Dr. .M a 3 i #8 les it. He knows the value of adver-| April 27, 1865, at Marietta, O., the| party stopped to take a few bracers tising—and he can measure the size} son of General Rufus R. Dawes,/at the nearest bar. Everyone _or- wwe AM DANAY, wc THERE ARE YA BAD LUCK AN" ME ARE fe plane £2 tay, “in ahort) he ea] Bvigade’ ot the Civit Wore He wou) ered Whiskey—that is, except Fel- SOME MEW To WHOIA DAME FORTUNE] PALS fw IF THEY IAUITED MEE graduated from Marietta College waivtat's the matter ith yout IS A WiLLo'-THE-WIsP ALL “THEIR AZ. IN-TH’ MINT “10 CARRY OUT ALL Maat eee tikesla, To, fo tive| meee ee tested LIVES fue SucH A MAN, AM, Ife ZA tl’ GoLp 1. couLp ivr, ID with any mele and begin the prac-| “Nope, whisky gives me too much mweonly LAST Week I CoLILD 3 Z # game of straits, ‘ ait courage.” é After seven years that produced eee : HAVE HAD $5000. ~~ BUT ° f bi itz| little law practice—but a friend-| Broadway never tires of repro- THRs MN OWA STUPIDIty, I isc! "t have to be dumb these .{ ship that later to shi hi ing in life - to that G. O. P. stands i's Kecowited| wha enreer=he began “investing| Sea's” Se seat’ aN BLIADLY PASSED IT BY! d Ohad anne, banker and poli-| in ic utilities with borrow The police of Bi r 8. AM » AD, og 4 Then he moved to Evans-| were looking for iim. The charges ~ BAD LUCK £. EGAD, I the vice president’s luxurious} ton, Mil. This was the dawn of the| in both cases happened to be mur- A SPECIALIST IN capitol I found him|ers of public utilities; he induced|der. For months he had evaded BAD us cK! a 7 on his famil-|John Walsh, the famous Chicago| them. And then, this clean-cut, ot- > : ing pipe behind his ma-| utilities magnate, to back him, and| tractive yor fellow appe: on in the center of the| success followed success. When, Broadway. le to have. 32, he became McKinley’s Illinois] plenty of money. There was a the- = A s campaiee. manager, he was already | atrical man, for instance, who need- ? rt wealthy. After Sen, McKinley |ed some quick.money and got $5000 Wolisiy \ : * appointed Dawes comptroller of cur-|from the kid, though they barely ; had met. The on “the Lorimer Scandal street” liked him. Then came the “Lorimer bank] And then it became known why & 4 i ir 4 sa” retrospec- of what