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iaaieceucranns Ni a i CEE FOUR BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUNE ar A - its inhumanity, but they against the increas THE TRIBUN Entered at the Postoflice selves. In the early U-boat days it N. D., as Second Cl was not hard to volunteer crey pay and the pros nd} 3 of ds and honor: alluring. something happened | The higher | pect of prize aw: | ISSUED EVERY Day Ex. GEORGE D. MANN, - ENSLEY A. WEIR, Busi | decoration Kut by which Manager and by the ious Chinking: 5 COMPANY, epresentative, German sailor do The number | made ih Ave. Bldg; CHI, some GAGG, Marquette Hldg.; BOs of suvinasines whieh did not retern 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kr , . wore a ynose fate wa Bide; MINNEAPOLIS, $10 Luuver| (2 Mt! And whose fale un known hogan to increase, Aud since| Exchange. i pape ) America have MEMBER OF ASSOUIATED press.| ONC ( me The Associated as exclusively | the job, this number has been mount- entitled to the use for republication of all news “redited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and alse the local news published herein All rights of republication of special ; s herein are also reserved. | battle, tof Circulation, | Chauees with the enemy, but he i destroyer: been on ing rapidly The German lost his stomach for the job. be willing enough to fight in where he has about ilor, therefore, has He may big n | not! Member Audit Burea :, 5 i : SUBSCRIPTION RAT PAYABLE | keen for this thing of being drowned ADVANCE _ {like a rat ina tub. Tt all came to a Daily, by ad per month. 50 head in the recont mutinies. Daily, by mail, per ’ re) eae : s 4 eta Daily, py mail in Nowh Dakota, | ‘The satisfactory point to the allies three months .. 1.25} that such news cannot be sup- Daily, by mail c | pr ed Ly the authorities. By now Dakota, one year + 6.00) every German sailor knows what has | Daily, by mail outside Dakota, three months. Weekly, by mail, per year happened, He knows some of his Feomrades were shot, and others sen- The § 7 OLDEST NEWS sl tenced to long terms in prison. , (estabilzhed 1873) This kind of thing does not im- <p> prove morale. It hurts it. It does 2 not suppress feelings of revolt. It spre’ German war- WEATHER REPORT. at noon Oct m... Temperature at noon.. not now in a are will al- ship commande | comfortable posi for 24 hours end — | | | ways be in the back of their minds; a he watched with “Mrs racks. tare crow THE WAR IS GIVING THE PRESIDENT A BULLDOG IAW AND ENRICHING MRS, WILSON'S FACE WITH SYMPATHY With sympathetic hes dug in this mimic war. und n demons trations of modern warfa) by the en eine es that saw also the strain of the conflict in rance, Mrs, Wilson saw walls scaled s* corps at Washington Bar- liighest yesterday the lurking fear that in a pinch the] erday | | | crews may uddenly go back on them Precipitation ... Highest wind velo: The worst has happened—the price ty FORECAGT. of pumpkin pies has gone up. | for North Dako Generally fair to.) = night; Tuesday fair with rising tem-| SPEAKING OF REWARDS. perature, and diminishing, northerly | It is solemnly telegraphed from It wiide ae Worth, Texas, that Poolville, Parker| Temperatures | County, has 1 $12 as a re 24 ward for the capture of the kaiser, 20 and that practically every male resi 26 ; dent contributed. All of which sounds good and patri- a otie, but is nothing of the The 40 | thought occurs that the place for that WG | $1246.50, and for every other kaiser! Winnipeg Helena .. sort He reward in this country, is liberty loan| , ROBERTS, | bonds. i Meteorogolist. In effect every citizen who buys Ii)- Me ate te erty loan bonds is offering a way to) ¢ scotch the kaiser. Follow the dollars ubscribed for bonds. The money paid into the treasury, Uncle Sam uses it to train, equip and tr soldiers to the battlefields of Fr Ile uses it to buy clothing, ammuni soldiers. lvery rifle! P bullet sped on its way to the German trenches is paid for by money raised | , Don't be tight, old ‘top; kick in B bond and help in, OD eee} thon, food for the ‘ance. | p GLORIOUS FRANCE. Making every allowance for the fine} ay| this way. work of the British and Itallans in ‘iS Fe ie the world conflict, this is ina very}. Th@ dollary raised for the liberty apeelal “sense Rvanee sw It js| 1022 make the fight for liberty pos: ible. More than that, every dollar is aimed directly at the kais 1 rand] ¢ France at which the kaiser aims his most savage and smashing blows. It} 108,825 PLEDGES women’s clu interes family in th. sons, the fi EXPECTED FROM Food Adninisivator Ladd Finds there are 128,404 Families in Flickertail Mtate 99 Fargo, N. 2. Oc —Of North Dakota's 138,461 families, 108,825 fam- lies will have been expected to sign the food conservation pledge by the end of the campaign, which is to be- gin in North Dakota Oct, 28 and con- tinue to Nov. 4, advises "Dr. E:' F. Ladd, federal food administrator for this state. “Hundreds of me: preachers, slation agant th postmasters and other: sition to help, in this food — pledg paign,” said the administrator. Dr. Ladd finds that the average te co of 48 p ather,” no doubt, representing tion, and that North Dakota's us popula- the state 5, teachers, members, of cam- most receut accurate, ¢ ion of 664, ld gi is France he is seeking to-ruin by all the savagery, brutality and men- 1386) h fi milies. Cass county killing her men, sending her women | ®°° pty es Shs OG es One hap eat famille, and To a ot Rae cee ae Her chit, dllars that we will conquer him. — | 8:00 pledges’ is expected; Grand to untimely graves, starving her chil- i 4 Aa Forks has 6,043 families, and 5,800 looting her factories and de- it is immaterial whether he is cap-| pledges pledges are asked; Morton dren, stroying her orchards. And amid all this wreck and ruin there stands that glorious country re- turning blow for blow—-the marvel of an admiring world. She stopped the Huns at the Marnor, Almost alone, she sustained the at- tacks on the Somme. by herself she replied to the barbarians at Verdun. She is still holding #50 miles of the 450 miles front. Her troops are re- pelling attacks aloug the Aisne. They ere co-operating with the British in 4he latest thrust in Flanders. nica the best troops Frene! The routed troops of Ruma- nia were reorganized by French offi- Belgians and Serbs and Greeks | have been equipped and rearmed by the French. The arsenals of France have furnished the big guns and the ammunition, not only for the splendid French armies, hut also for some of} the allies. France has spent eighteen and a half billion dollars for war pur- poses, of which only one and one-fifth billions were borrowed, and she loaned one billion to friendly nations. And all this magnificent record has been achieved, despite the fact that some of the best of her iron, co: agricultural and industrial distr have been in the hands of the brutal) invader. i AL Oe are dame Fashionplate will now probably don a low-necked WAR WEARINESS, War weariness, emulation of Ru n revolutionaries—all these things are perhaps involved in the first big cra k in the German military | It shows the pline is breaking down. It shows men are beginning | to dare to rebel. And, enough, this first outbreak occurred not among those who have endured the terrors of trench fighting, but among sailors idle at Wilhelmshaven. The mutinous condition apparent on at least four big German battleships must exist, even if in milder form, elsewhere. It sounds very like the Russian revolution. The faet that while savage reprisals were ordered by the kaiser, the chan- cejlor did not dare obey his royal mas- ter, testifies to the dangerous mood of the men and perhaps of the na- tion. Probably the main cause of the re- volt was the submarine warfare. Not that the Prussians were shocked) by sely interesting news. a di; | ing example for all singularly | penhagen The feat would be almost im-] h possible. What is material the army which keeps him where he is shall be defeated. What is mate rial that Americans, in company with Frenchmen, Britons and Italians, shall carry this war to a victorious end Such an end will probably mean the restoration of the German people to their own. It will mean rule by the people instead of by the Hohenzollern tribe. It will mean that the Germans, | ¢ having been taught a terrible lesson by the armed democracies of the world, will have done with military] , machines, dreams of empire, visions Another indi- line Bulgars start a drive. ion that he’s about out of gas himself. SMALL BUT GREAT. Uruguay may be small but she's wise and honest. Her ships haven't been sunk. So far as discovered, Ger- man diplomats haven't accepted her hospitality and then sought to under: mine her interests at home and abroed. She is a victim of none of the habitual villainies of the German aurocracy. She enters the war in or- der to align herself with the cause | I of liberty and justice. She is a shin-| ! other civilized nations not yet so aligned. Slowly but surely all peoples of the earth having any conception of human welfare are coming forward to help put down “the mad dog of Eu- rope.” if “Germany s steel,” This in addition to all] she's getting from the Freach and British cannon? When three-cent postage comes | father will have another excuse for] not mailing the letter mother told! ! | him not to forget. A Harvard university chemist has | perfected a tear-gas to produce co-| pious weeping. It was designed for army use but ought to have a large | circulation among movie actresses. | The American brain is now focused on war taxes. Some of the brain is trying to figure out what must be paid. And some is trying to figure out how-to avoid paying anything: is that] i Walsh, for 3,9 — _ — GRAIN MARKETS | No, 2 Mont oats. No. 4 white oats Barley Barley choice Oats, Dec. Oats, Ma Rye on trk and to arr Oats November, = el aneeee aaes a ; CATTLE MARKETS ! Honor to little Uruguay, who | ¢————_____. ————$ ables Co-! 15 90, mouths of! steady 13.00; native beef ste em feeder: ers, $4. wethers at $8.80@1 $12.65@17: has 4,080 families, and its pledge goal is fixed at 3,700; Ramsey has 3,127 and 2,750 pledges are asked; Stark, with 3,135 families, is asked 3 Stu nan, with 5,577 pledge 4,890; families, is asked Wi with 6,111 pledges, and asked to 4,327 Burleigh county s and is expected to “Camp Dodge Current Events” at he Orpheum tonight. e| Taylor, r. g.; Her LOCAL FOOTBALL SEASON WITH MANDAN HIGH ON LATTER'S HOME GROUND High School will Close’ Sessions Early Tuesday for Battle i with Rivals ‘The local footvall season formally | i opens Tuesday with a postponed game | between the ‘Mandan and Bism: highs on the former's grounds. The ! high school wiil convene at 8:30 Tues- day mornin ions wiil be com: | pleted by san opportunity lo take No. 7 acro. H river at 3. It is expected that-lé#fans 5 will ac pany the team, and an ef fort is being made.to obtain a special car. The Bismarck hig" follows: Hugh’ Spa Coorge Holta or John W. Liirson, ry. t.; dwin | ton Taylor, ¢? Ken-| neth Allen or Cor Yegen, |. 8.3) ; tain and r. h.; Bert Cook, 1. h.; Guy; | Grove, £. b. | fication of the Bismarckers will carry no substi- £ int! lite 450 cay Ch tee. and Wor toward William Yegen, 11; Marland ‘Fossrty, 1. s.; Rex Berndt, q; Lloyd Coach, cap- ; ! paign. of the ws. D. on the dollars: before Because of the disquali- a number of candidate tutes, and they are depending on their lines remaining intact, as not a single man can be spared, ‘Next Sat- bismareck meets» the Mandan penool, and Thursday, Nov 1, during the ‘state convention fb. A. it meets Mandan local grounds, BISMARCK BOY SCOUTS CONTINUE THEIR DRIVE ismarck Boy Scouts who early he week took subscriptions for rty loans to the amount of $1,- among Tridune employes, to- turned over $600 more to irrman Goddard of the Bur- le.gh county liberty loan commit- The Loys are still “scouting” are doing excellent work. Linton Scouts Get $2,500. rd has been . received in :Bis- marck of the spleadid work of ‘the Zoy Scouts of Linton. t week's campaign they ‘securel $2,509 In’ the .‘last, d the Liberty Loan fund... The boys are still working and expect to swell that amount by several hundred the end of the cam- woosnoo—a--. MINNEAPOLIS, of loot and conquest, and will get No. 3 low corn 194 down to solid constructive instead of] No. 3 mixed corn 192 @193 destructive work. Corn other grade 175 @192 H14@ 63 The kais as e at the| 5: W 58%@ 60 he kaiser has ted that the S.W.toa 581%@ GD 0. 8 white oa . ‘0. 3 white oats to arr 58 @ 58 @ @129 @180 31S @314 Close 1:55 p. me DULUTH. Ys 56% 1000 @139 S11 @3a lax on trk lax to arr. Jecember takes her stand as a matter of con-| ST. PAUL, entiousness, purely! HOGS — Receipts, 10,090, steady; range, $11.50@ 3 bulk, $17,750 CATTI killers, Receipts, 15 1. $5.00@ 14 00@8.00; calves, stockers and 00 @ 10.00. <P—Receipts; ambs, $8.00@ 16 ewes, $5.00G CHICAGO. Receipts, , firm, with 00@16.35 ht, $14.50@ $14.90@ 16.755 rough, $14.80 15.00; 00; cows and steady at feeders, HOGS. SATTLE—Receipts, 25,000, 8, $6 teers, $5.90@1 $6.00@ 11.40; ws and heif- $9.09@ 15.00, 00, slow with and lambs at SHEEP—Receipts, heavy, Your $50 Liberty Bond A STORY TOLD IN PICTURES. MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1917 WHY MOURN CZAR ALEXANDER THERE ARE NO ‘‘LIBERAL MONARCHS,” NO ‘‘GOOD KINGS,” SAYS CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL At 12 o’clock of March 1, 1881, the ezar finished the reading of this docu- ment, said it was good, and ordered it printed for the information of the council of ministers. Then he took the imperial sleigh and drove to a palace on the other side of the city, where he made a call upon one of his relatives. About 2 o’clock he was on his way back, when two bombs were thrown at him. The second exploded by the side of the sleigh and the czar was fatally injured. They brought him to this room in the winter palace and he died in his By CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL, Who Spent Three Months in Rus- sia as a Member of the Official American Commission. The more a thinking person sees of democracy, the more he wants to take off this hat to it. It doesn’t seem, as you look at it carefully, to be so much a kind of creed that men have knocked togeth- er, as an eternal law of progress that goes on and goes on always, no mat- ter what men may think of it. Sometimes when it seems to be de- feated it is winning a victory. Un- less in this war it is to be stamped! pjain army cot bed. out forever under the Prussian boot,| }yis son, Alexander 111, succeeded you can feel pretty sure it will con-! him, tore up the plan for a national tinue to move on until it gets the’ council, and put the kibosh on reform whole world. and the clamps more heavily than : ae ever upon the people. He was an ex- There is in the winter palace at! treme reactionary, and his son, Nich- Petrograd a certain room intimately| olas, last of the Romanoffs, was Mke connected with one chapter of the pj, long struggle, and supposed on other} + oe grounds to be the most interesting] The destruction of Alexander II’s room in the palace, although it isn’t.' perorm plans, if he had any, was long ‘They show you the great, gorgeous pointed out as an evidence of the ‘ball rooms and the marble staircase yselessness of the revolutionary move- and the thrones and the royal suites ment in Russia. Its only effect had and the riot of extravagance, and peen to prevent a constitutional form then they show you the rooms that of government and make the Russian figure most in the story of Czar Alex- aytocracy stronger than ever.’ About ander HI, his council chamber and the 4) the world agreed to this and de- room in which he died. The council chamber has still the long table around which his ministers used to sit, the chair for each, the portfolio with the name of each stamped upon it, the great chair at the head for the czar. These you are expected to view with awe. I don’t know why. They then exhibit,the Led room, the plain camp bed that he always preferred to any other, the stub of the last cigaret he smoked, the keys and penknife taken from his pockets, and other relics, supposed greatly to move the visitor. Perhaps they do, but if he is a phil- osopher they certainly don’t move him in the way that was expected in the old days. + * 8 Alexander II is called by his ad- mirers,' and particularly by English writers, a “liberal monarch.” The name is an error. There are no “liberal monarchs” and never were any. There are no good kings and cannot possibly be. ‘Some, of course, are worse than others. But if a king exercises any authority he is taking something that doesn’t belong to him. And if he doesn’t exercise any authority he is not-on the level; he is taking the tax. payers money on a false pretense. ‘How,’ therefore, can he be good? As for Russia, a czar always went ahead with the hideous old machine for sending men and women into the living death of Siberia. He always supported’ the monstrdus ‘system: of tyranny and espionage. He always knew that under his rule men and women were being beaten with knouts, sa¢rificed,: burned and mutilated be- cawsé they believed in human liberty. If he were good or “liberal” he would- n't sit for a’ moment on a throne drénched with human blood and sup- nounced the revolutionists. But behold, now, if any scheme of constitutional monarchy had gone through, then we should not have had the revolution. tee Constitutional monarchy is a device to head off democracy. It is an allur- ing side show that keeps the minds of people occupied and prevents them from taking full charge of the govern- ment that belongs to them.- If the quarter-way reforms supposed to be in the mind of Alexander II had mate- rialized, the Russian republic might ‘still be 50 years away, It is difficult, of course, for us that live in freedom to understand the sit- uation of people that dwell under | tyranny. It is infinitely harder for us to excuse violence. But there are two things about this chapter of his- , tory we might well. remember, be- cause they will help us to understand the Russia that we must understand if we are going on with her. First, while violence in any country that has universal suffrage is utterly indefensible at all times, in countries ~ | ruled by the iron fist there is no other , way to agitate for freedom. Second, there is that deadly fact that Alexander II supported and car- Tied out the terrible system of tyran- ny and sent hundreds of thousands to the unspeakable tortures of Siberia, Anyway, no one need regret now that the constitutional monarchy fake was not put over in 1881. Because we have the repuvlic. GOVERNOR GIVES MAN “UP TO NEBRASKA LAW Surrendered by Governor Frazier upon requisition from the governor of Nebraska, Roy Bryant is on his way to Lincoln in custody of Sheriff Sim- mons to answer to a charge of seduc- tion. The young man, who is married, only recently took up his residence in Bismarck. He fought extradition, but Governor Frazier decided in favor of the Ne>raska officers. wena 2 IREYS? ™ : HAZES OINTMENT (COMPOUND) ‘op Piles or Hemorrhoids, ternal or Internal, Blind or’ ‘ecing, Itching or Burning. 10 vpplication brings relief, ice 25e., at all druggists or riled, ported by force and fraud. Men said Alexander Il was a “lib- eral” monarch, principally because he signed the ukase that abolished serf- dom in Russia. This, of course, was a vast improvement, and the fact that serfdom was strangling Russia’s de- velopment takes nothing away from the glory of the emancipation. But the same czar enforced a system far worse than slavery in his brutal and ruthless suppression of free speech, a free press and every other right that freemen hold dear. see Slavery was abolished in Russia in 18¢1. Twenty years later Alexander Il, greatly alarmed at ‘the rapid in- crease of the secret revolutionary propaganda in his empire, consulted with his secretary of the interior as to the best meays of stopping it. The secretary told him that the best way was to grant specious re- forms and give to Russia the form of a constitutional monarchy, with a par- liament that should be more or less of a fake, but still could be called a par- liainent. The czar thought well of this scheme, and told the secretary to go ahead and put his plan on paper. The secretary drew up a plan by which the zemstvos of the empire and some oth- er bodies were to send delegates to a national convention to devise reforms. tent Tree Sample of Ciutmest to “ro. Redicine Company ww Yors. he Bank with the Coc CLEAN STRAIGHT BLOWS! Americans. do not‘ try to win wars by murdering women and children or by diplomatic stabbing in the y ap is We win by givin i vin by giving clean, straight blows tha’ ik home with crushing force ‘i po That is what. LIBERTY. BOND: ; : straight blows for Peace through eee arr: Make your dollars LIBERTY BONDS. Bring us your subscription. details free of charge, TheFirst National Bank ring trué by investing them in We gladly handle all = BISMARCK. N.D. | {