The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 20, 1917, Page 4

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BISMARCK DAILY-TRIBUNE THE TRIB UNE fighting alone against a powerful andj greedy foe, that will be their blame, | with all calamities that may follow. The kaiser, his hands dripping with} * | blood, standing before a background RATES PAYABLE IN} of blackened towns, and burning farm} VANCE Cally, by mail or carrier, houses, has been heretofore the Per month ..,....eeeeeeeeeys 8 60} World's image of guilt in this dread(ut| Wally, by mail, one year in business. | oo He should have now to aa North Dakota ....... Daily, by mail outside of North Dakota, one year .,... 6.00/the picture an American pacifist on | Daily, by mail outside of one side and an American copperhead | North Dakota, three months. 1.60 on the other. ! Daily, by mail in North Dakota three months ........ «© 1.25 | ‘Weekly, by mail, per year ..... 1.50 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Katablished 1878) When the British capture Lens they | can see through the Hindenburg line. } ° ALL HAIL THE CAMERA! | Now come the days when the Ap ril showers are about to be dried up} in May sunshine. The doors of nat-| ure are about to open wide and | WEATHER REPORT. For twenty-four hours ending at! through the portal will walk the cam-| noon April 20: Temperature at 7 a. m. Temperature at noon Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday Lowest last night .. gg {era fan. All hail to him! | Now will the office of the art editor | |be deluged with pictures of the mat-| ronly cow and her frisking calf, of | Precipitation Z father in the backyard a-posing with Highest wind velocity ‘ja rake and of the next-door neigh-| ae |bor's young hopeful dressed in over-| Forecast, i i} alls bending over a plot of spaded-up | For North Dakota: Fair tonight) *! and Saturday; not much change in dirt in which he has planted pebbles, temperature. confident they will sprout. i And some of those works of art} Lowest . an : sal ‘Temperatures will be accompanied with the usua Fargo .... a effusion of the spring-poet, rected out} Williston in yards of explanatory rhyme. | orn Fork Yes, and the apple trees in full} ee Paull bloom, the old swimmin’ hole andj Winnipe brothor sitting up very straight be-| Helena hind the wheel of his new auto, all} Chicago will be recorded in a conglomerated | Swift Cur ee i ; ae Uy Kansas Ci enthusiasm of spring-time art. But let us remember this, that all! lthese pictures, that they are record-| ed, that, good or bad, they have; served their purpose in giving the op- {erator of the camera a moment of in- | ° * The best that history gives “/tense interest in a subject outside of | * the enthusiasm it himself and his own concerns. | j | San Francisco ORRIS W. ROBERTS Meteorogolist. a ee J Let us remember that before they; have faded or been dumped by moth- jer into the wastebasket during the} \top-shelf closet cleaning of some fu-| ture spring, they will have made at! least one impression on some mind) trom Vimy ridge. eee anaes or sorrow, that The invaders’ line held solid. Good luck to you, you amateur pho- Came a day when news reached|toeraphers! And this be suggested | the trenches that America Take happy pictures. | clared war. —————————— A young Texan—his name is not; What profit it a man if he corner, preserved for history—asked and re all the gold on earth but lose the love | ceived permission to fasten the/of his own brother? American flag to his bayonet and to| = ‘lead in the charge of the Canadian | LET US STAND BY. Se cens bine aie serving.! Every once in a while it is siven | je young American, carry-| some mah to rise to the heights, to! ; ing the Stars and Stripes, in the fore-| display a nobility not only of utter: front, the Canadians charged again. | ance, but also of sentiment, There The line that for two years had! nas been no sancr, finer speech made been impregnable, wavered and} apont the war than that delivered by | brolte. Elihu Root before the republican club | Who shall say it was not due to/in New york city the other night. It} the cheer given the Canadians, and) was noble echo of tne immortal war ihe, temo Etien the iad by address of President Wilson. sight of the American flag? The young Texan fell in the charge. They carried him back to the Ca- nadian lines with the Stars andj Stripes for his shroud. ‘Perbaps the battle in which this gallant Texan lost his life was the first American victory. ° oe | | { FIRST AMMERICAN VICTORY. For two years the British and C: nadians fought to drive the Germans; had de-!tg you: Root has now made specific answer to all unpatriotic noise: “We republicans. were defeated at the last election and now our first duty is to control ourselves, to ban-| ish from our hearts every feeling of party prejudice, and to fill them with | a strong love of country and a strong | p re to do our duty for our country. | Ye need no coalition government to make us loyal. We must make a co- alition of ourselves, a coalition of all “Trench warfare” it was; “furrow warfare” it soon will be. MUST ACT NOW. The United States of America can end this war, save hundreds of thous- ands of lives, prevent widespread and indescribable misery and bring close hand the restoration. of stricken and’ Bleeding Burope. government of the United States.” | Root knows that during former great conflicts when mistakes were made, when generals and admirals failed to} win hoped-for victories, there were 7 : bitter complaints. And to forestall! Or it can let the war drift on for and counteract all this, he uttered two or three years while more fields} these words, which all of us might are drenched in human blood, while] tare to heart in the weeks and more populations perish in hellish! months, perhaps years of war ahead tortures and while the whole world] of ys: | shudders and suffers. “There is one other thing of! That is the choice presented to] which 1 wound sound a warning, the congress; That is the issue hanging | danger from the first dying down of on every’ vote on every war measure.| enthusiasm, The United States has If we are sane, intelligent and effi: never had a war without its bungling clent we end the war. If we are dod-| and its mistakes. Do not Ict us re-| dering, drooling and impotent we pro-| publicans join in the band of faint Jong it, very likely to our own immi-| hearts, who, when criticism comes, nent destruction. withhold their support. The inevi The Half Hearted in congress, -| able shortcomings of a democracy in tively co-operating with the k preparing for war will come. Then American army, are massing to force} will be the time for the stout hearts us into the policy of shame and weak | to stand by our country and say: ‘No ness. matter what mistakes have been They are insisting upon the worth-| made we are for our government and Jess, perilous volunteer system, they| our country.’ Let us do this when the are opposing universal service and|faint-hearted and the scurrilous are! adequate preparation, they are fight-| crying down our government. articles by an expert gardner te'l’n3| ~ ONE GARDENER’S HARVEST ¢' what and agian igh to plant, how’ to plant g : and care’ for ‘it | sort to hard work to keep i 10 dozen” parsnips. on weeds, the land should be in condi-| 10 cucumbers. R 4 tion to be ea é 5 bushels of tomatoes. ‘ In the north, 2 bushels early potatoes, +! jin the our people to hold up the hands of the | s |The maturity of the bulb ‘Let us {= The Shattered Idol! Tabloid History United Colonies Throw Off CHAPTER IV. The “stamp act congress” York in 1765 created so much oppo- in New sition in the colonies to the stamp | act that the British parliament re- pealed it in 1766, at the same time re- affirming its right to tax the colonies. The next year a tax was placed on glass, paper, printers’ colors and tea. These taxes aroused protests which resulted in the Boston massacre of 1770, when soldiers fired on unarmed citizens, and in the Boston “tea par- ty’ of 1778, when colonists disguised as Indians threw a cargo of tea into the harbor. The first battle of the revolution was fought April 19, 1775, when un- organized farmers at Concord and Lexington compelled the ‘British to retreat to Boston. The continental congress of the colonies met in Philadelphia in 1775, and sought a peaceful solution which parliament refused. The congress then raised 20,000 co- lonial troops and placed George Washington of Virginia in charge. On June 17, 1775, British stormed and captured the colonial positions on Bunker (Breed'’s) Hill, ‘Boston, with so severe a loss that the battle was in moral effect a colonist victory. | The British were besieged in Bos- ton all winter, and had to evacuate in the spring, retiring to Halifax by sea. After the Boston retirement, Brit- {ain sent in 1776 an army of 55,000 |men, including 17,000 German mer- cenaries to quell the rebellion. On July 4, in Philadelphia, con- gress adopted the Declaration of In- dependence, drafted by Thomas Jet: ferson, which declared the united col- onies to be independent states, Washington was defeated in the Battle of Long Island, and New York fell into British hands. Christmas found the British opposite Philadel- phia, then the capital, when Washing: ton crossed the Delaware with his War and Take Place Among World’s Free Nations of United States British Yoke in Seven Years of army, and routed the royal troops. _ Washington’s army put through a \terible winter at Valley Forge, and the war was fought with varying suc- cess on both sides, till Gen. Bur- goyne’s British force was captured at Saratoga, ‘N. Y., September'17, 1777— the turning point of the war. ‘On Feb, 6, 1778, France recognized the American government and be- came an aly, sending a considerable army under Rochambeau, Washing- ton and Rochambeau with a French fleet éontrolled the sea, compelled ‘Lord Cornwallis to surrender the British army: of the south, at York- town, Va., October, 1781. This was the virtal end. of the war, although ‘Britain did. not,‘ recog- nize American Madependeyee till 13 months later, “War Preparedness”’ In Your Own Garden BEST WAYS TO GROW ONIONS IN DIFFERENT CLIMATE! EXPLAINED BY TRIBUNE GARDENING EXPERT. a a eS (Another of the series of gardening Albaugh of Cov- ington, O., who has written several books on backyard gar- dening, raised. the following on just an average sized back- and cut the cost. of! Benjamin F. | living, BY A GARDNER. The onion will thrive under a wide range of climatic and soil condition but a rich sandy loam contaimng yard garden: oy plenty of humus is best suited for it. 25 heads of cabbage. % As‘the crop requires -shalow~eu'tiva-| 4 --29-deren “Tatinnhes 0-5 2% tion and it may be necessary to re-/. 10 dozen. carrots. in * 7 i spring as_ the si brought ‘to ‘the proper conditicn: the south, onion sets are frequ put out in the autumn and carr through theewinter with th 30 dozen greer:onions. 1 dozen dry onipns. % 15 dozen beets... ° 200 heads of celery. 25 eggplant. fruits. squashes) 99 R 50 gatherings of Jettuce. 20 gatherings of endive. 10 gatherings green beans, 8 dozen ears sugar corn. 35 heads of cauliflower. 20 gatherings of spinach 20 gatherings o fasparagus. ‘ y sowing the seeds where the crop is to grow second, by sowing the s in prepar- ed beds and transplant the seed- lings to the open ground; a by planting sets which have } through the winter. it 50 muskmelons, The first method is d by large | ¢% 8 quarts lima beans, commercial growers on punt of the |e 3 quarts okra. labor involved in the others. On smal! ls 3 bushels turnips are: i as it may be preferable to plant . Onions planted from sets will ripen earlier than those from seed! sown in the garden the other hand a small The seedtings are when they are somewhat; a lead pencil and rather, stocky. ‘The, ones may be planted each year to pro- root end of the plant is pushed into;duce sets for the * following ear's | the soil and the soi] is firmed about) planting. Small-onions too, may be} the plant. pickled. The seed is sown thickly in rows| Onions, lettuce, radishes. about, a foot upart. After the plants; pot flesh building foods. beconte established, they are thins | the nee calories. to about two or three inche: onion con- transplanted | tains only one heait. and will produce } A few of the largej ler than! a large onion. are the most ,eas and beans. My ive to do with thes ard garden produc 2 {nish ‘calor et ontin-| Por example ued growth of the tops. This is some: article will times accomplished by rolling a sary bac empty barrel over the rows and brea! is ing down the tops. Wait until the tops are fairly well | hastened by preven A REAL STIMULUS. along. After these turned over tops! Linton Record: War reports would are practically dead, the onion bulbs | indicate that Uncle Sam has specded | may be pulled out by hand and spread up the fighti nsiderably by his in a dry, well-ventilated place to cure. j war resoluti “Ever since the Brit- - Sam was on their side they have been plier, or potato onion, for exam © | raising particular Ned with t fam- can be planted from sets in the au-| ys Hindenberg line. It is reported tumn and will produce excel nt jthat the north end of. the German green onions early in the spring. j battle line that has held solid f member this next fall. Cover the bed! years is crumbling like hor with leaves or straw. jfore the massive Allied drives. A large onion of this type contains | a a number of distinct hearts and if| The Hotel of Character and Com. Planted will produce small onions. On j fort. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis. ! stockyards at Bowesmont. ; Govertnor |Henry, state land comm: ish and the French heard that Uncle | ; CAPITOL NOTES | Speaks at Leeds—Miss Sullivan, assistant state superintend-; ent of public instruction, addressed the Benson County Teachers’ associa- tion at its conference in Leeds yes- terday. Jos. P. Hess of ‘the First National bank returned Wednesday evening fu from Glen Ullin, where he had been Commissioner Here—Kailway Com- ; f «| On business. missioner Charles W. Bleick of Elgin x Was a capilal visitor today, ** Mrs. U. J. Downey and son of New Protest Stockyards — The city; Salem returned: today, having: spent health commission ‘ot Lehr has fled|Several days in Mandan the guests with the“state rdjlWay- ‘commission |f Dr. and Mrs. Mackey. resolutions recently “adopted con-|, Mrs. E. B, Wilkinson spent yes- demning the present S00 line stock-|terday morning in Bismarck the guest yards as a public nuisance, and in-| of Capital City friends. Sisting that they be ‘'femoved ‘to a| President indications lead to the point not less tian 300 feet distant} belief that there, will bea large. num- from the nearest pbuilding within] ber attend the dancing party at the ninety days. From” Bowesmont, in|M. A. C. hall this evening. The Man- Pembina, comes a_ similar ‘protest}dan orchestra hag. been engaged. to from the Lincoln township: board, pro-| furnish the: music for the -occasion. testing the proposed establishment of}: John’ Dawson was in)/Mandan .yes- | terdgy, looking after business affairs. Half-Holiday—On proclamation of}. Mrs. T. G. Conroy was in Bismarck Frazier Thursday . after-| yesterday morning, visiting with Cap- noon. was oflicially observed at the| ital City friends. ; capitol as a half-holiday in honor of| Mr. and Mrs. A. P; Gray leave this the battle of Lexington, and everty;evening for Rochester, Minn., where department was "4osea! * the latter will receive treatment. Architect He! Saitt!F, Crabbe of} Yardmaster McDowell has resumed Fargo, state architett/*is here in con-}/his.duties at’ the \Northern Pacific sultation with thé@board of control| yards, after a several days’ vacation. regarding new buildings and altera- ——9°] Mandan News Bureau Messrs. IH. L. ‘Henke, August Tim- merman, Sheriff Oscar Olson, Attor- ney J. F. Sullivan and States Attor- ney Connolly returned last evening from Almont, where they had been on business. Frank P. (McQuillan, manager of the Soo hotel, was in Mandan Wednes- day evening, to attend the M. A. C. show and visit with his family. J. H. Rosen is in Wyoming, attend- ing to business matters in the interest of the Western Products company. Alfred Olson, who had” been in town on business for a few days, ‘re- tutned home to Huff this morning. Ben Bird of Almont was in Mandan today, ‘looking after business mat- tets, ‘Mrs, Laura ‘Bissonnette and ehil- dren departed for their home‘ in Can- ada yesterday morning, having ‘spent a few days in Mandan, the guest ‘of Mrs, Bissonnette’s parents, ‘Mr. and Mrs. William Stabler, ‘Mrs. R. E. Brown of Billings; Mont., arrived in the city yesterday morn- ing and is a guest at the home of | Mrs, Anna’ Stark, tions at the institutions in charge of the board. Governor's Staff—Adjutant General T. H. Tharalson, Major Frank 8. ioner, and Major Dana Wright of Jamestown, n command of the First battalion,| Celia Harvey, deceased: E formed Governor Lynn| You, and each of you are hereby y staff in the pa-| notified that Rose Bair, the Petition- ‘ade Thursday afternoon. er herein, has filed in the Court a For Food Preparedness—Senator | document in writing, purporting to be Thomas Pendray of Jamestown, who/the Last Will and Testament of Celia farms a big Stutsman county place| Harvey, late of the Township of when he is not legislating, was_ in| Burnt Creek, in the County of Bur- today discussing with Governor Fra-|leigh and State of North Dakota, de- zier and Commissioner of Agriculture | ceased, with her petition, praying for and Labor Hagan methods to be em-|the admission to probate of said doc- ployed in procuring the labor requir-|ument as the last Will and Testa- ed to seed and harvest North ‘Dako-|ment of said deceased, and for the is- ta’s crops. “They ask us to raise big} suance tp her of letters testamentary crops,” said Senator Pendray, “which}thereon, and that the said petition Margaret Murphy Kingsley and ‘Mary Murphy Lent, Respondents. The::State of ‘North Dakota, To the above named respondents and all persons interested in the Estate of >| we are perfectly willing to do, But|and the proofs of'said purported Will <i how are we going to raise big crops|and Testament will be heard and when we already are short fully 50/duly considered ‘by this Court. on per cent of the men we need, with the | Monday, the 21st day of May, A. D. ;| contetaty thal this shortage will in-| 1917, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of ase as the war progresses? I be-|that day, at the court rooms of this lieve the conscription method of pro-| Court, in the County Court House, in viding farm labor is the best scheme |the City of Bismarck, County of Bur- yet suggested. It is just as patriotic} leigh and State of North Dakota; and for a man to work in the fields in] You, and each of you, are hereby order th his comrades may be fed|cited to: be and appear before this as it is for him to fight shoulder to|‘Court at said time and place and an- shoulder with them.” swer said petition and,show cause, if Capital Increased—The state bank-|any there be, why the prayer of said ing board ina brief session. Unis morn- petition should not be granted. d By the Court. -| (Seal) H.C. BRADLEY. Judge of County Court. Newton, Dullam & Young, Attorneys for Petitioner. ital from $15,000 to $! tended the corporate existence of the institution 25 years. 1,500 Tags Daily—The registration department of the secretary of state's office is selling automobile licenses at |LITTLE DAMP WEATHER the rate of 1,500 per day, and there is DOES NOT INTERFERE pouring into the highway fund of the WITH BISMARCK PAVING state $4,500 daily. Three clerks are The damp weather of the last few constantly employed in wrapping and Measles! VERY CATCHING AND OFTEN HAS DEADLY ENDING ‘Measles is about the most contagi- ous disease there is. It is communi- cated by person- al contact with the discharges from an infected “person, or cloth- ' ing, handkerchiefs or other’ articles infected with the recent discharge of a patient. The virus of measles is short lived outside the human body. The germ can live but a few hours in the pres- ence of sunlight and air. The dis- charge from the throat, nose and mouth are exetremely dangerous. Tho early symptoms of measles are those of a catarrhal cold, These in- clude a watery discharge from the nose and eyes, together with some hoarseness and cough. Persons pre- senting these symptoms, especially if they have some temperature, should be separated from others until. the presence or absence, of measles is de- termined. It is -believed the disease is given to others most frequently during the first four days of the attack. It is not believed to be “catching” after the fever has disappeared for a day. The disease is most serious in chil- dren under five years of age. It kills ‘by causing inflammation of the air Passages and lungs. It maims by causing diseases of the eyes and ears. ing a rational method of taxing wealth, they are entrenching them- selves against the sending of troops to France, they are appealing to ig- norance, prejudice and treason to keep this country from being of any effect in the war to release human- ity. There ought to be some way of bringing home to these men the ap- palling nature of their work. There ought to be some way of making them hear the death shrieks of the men that will be slaughtered on their ac- count, the moans of the children they will starve, and the cries of the home- less people in the towns they will lay waste. They will be responsible for these horrors, just as much responsible as if with their own hands they cut throats and butchered infants. And if as a result of their murder- ous folly their own country is plunged ‘fato"huge ‘disaster = they see it Phat diise stand by as we stood by ‘Lincoln when the faint hearts were saying, ‘The war is a failure.’ “In ill repute, success or failure.| Keep all loose paper i come what may, let us stand by.” | ie Austria wants a separate peace—| perhaps as an alternative to separate Pieces. when it is filled. 5.—Keep clean y e All’s quiet. along the Rio Grande—| pelea sy evs wale except ‘ eae and President Car-} premise ranza is writin message, % aves ee eee | 6,—Cultivate lawns, tree More and mighty reform in Russia! | Her war censor has quit lying and! dens. actually reports “our unsuccessful at- ‘I years to thei tacks” and “our heavy losses.” a Scan Argentina and Costa Rica assure Uncle Sam of their moral support. iWe'’ve got more morality than we can take care of now. What we need from you is beef and potatoes, good fotks. table and the yard. | CLEAN-UP AND PAINT-UP COMMITTEE. See that your portion of street is dustless. “Keep garbage in covered can, notif: ~Keep buildings painted up: uffer less from deterioration if kept well painted. | They are more cheaply kept clean, lend beauty to your and suggest thrift and healthfulness. keep them trimmed and attractive. 7.—Yes, and fix-up too! Perhaps a little bit ‘of carpenter if work will not only make things look better but will add H 8.—Beautiful annual vines will hide that old fence or if out-buildings and a few vegetables will at once improve the : | 9.—Clean up and paint up; but Keep It Clean. Make Our City Beautiful by Making Your Part Beautiful. BISMARCK COMMERCIAL, CLUB... ee |9 Sonn hares, James W. in receptacles, ing department barns, fences, garages, s, store-rooms, barns and gar- fj) | gardens, window boxes and | | mailing out tags. days has not intereferd with paving|The chief complications are pneu- Must Show Them Both—‘I have | operations now under way in the two| monia, ear disease and the lighting up noticed that many automobile OWN-| Rismarck street improvement dis- ers continue to display but one tag tricts. ‘Excellent progress is report-! this year,” said E. M. Walla, in| oq in poth No. 1 and No. 2. charge of the registration department iret district the steam. shovel: now of the secretary of state’s office, to- is working on Main street, excavat- day. “These people are liable to run ing between Sixth and Seventh jinto a stiff fine if some zealous Off-| streets. Curbing is going in on Broad- cial notices this oversight. The law way, one-half block det Ei passed. by the Fifteenth assembly and bet "Seventh and a half-block, Be oS given immediate effect requires that fenth between Broadwa: P . y and Thayer, both tags be displayed, one on the! “ty istrict No. 2 the steam shovel front adn one on the rear end of the is excavating on Avenue A, between car, and there is just as great a Pen-| Fighth and Ninth streets, and jon |alty for failing to show both tags as Fighth street, between Avenue A and for not displaying any.” Rosser. Curbing is being laid on Ninth street, between Thayer and CITATION Labrie PROOF OF |Rosser, and on ‘Thayer street, be- HL. tween Eighth and Ninth. North Dakota, County of Visiting in City. Mr. and Mrs.-C. L. Henderson, who have been_guests at the Roy Hender- son home for several days, left Wed- |State of Burleigh, ss. In County Court, Before Hon H. C. Bradley, Judge. .In the Matter of the Estate of Celia} nesday for’ their home in Helena, " Harvey, Deceased. ose Bair, Petitioner, BR ee a vs. You. will find more of the leading ,M._J. Hiltner,, St. Mary's, Catholic | people of .Noxth, Dakota segistered. Church of Bismarck, 'N bee Dakota, | the Radisses, than at any other hotel W. pMarpby, in the Twin Cities. of latent tuberculosis. Kidney and nervous affections in later life are often due to measles in childhood. _ ‘Mild cases in adults may cause fat- al cases in children. Unless your ser- vices are needed, keep away from the disease yourself. If you do visit a case bathe yourself and change and disinfect your clothing before you go where there is a child. Whenever a child has sore throat and fever it should immediately be isolated until a physician has seen it and has .determined~ whether it has measles. . Isolation of the sick should be established + and’ maintained throtighout the course of the disease. HEALTH QUESTIONS ANSWERED. G. H.: “What is neuritis, causes it. and is there a cure?” Neuritis is an-inflammation of a nerve, caused by debility, local injury, exposure to cold, gouty or rheumatic , lead what bends wu Sed tbe ‘?

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