The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1917, Page 4

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BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUNE TUESDAY, OCTOBER. :30, 1917. THE TRIBUNE ‘phtered at the at the “Postoffice, “Bismarek, | bell takes D. as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN, Editor ENSLEY A. WEIR, Business Manager G } LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative. NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg; CHI- CAGO, Marquette Bldg.; BOSTON,| 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresge Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber | _ Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. | The Associated Press is exclusively | entitled to the use for republication of of noise distracts your attention from | your evening paper, or when a door-| you from your easy chair. ber, “you was young once up: Remei D EVERY Day EXCE! pr SUNDAY | on a time” and just as full of deviltry | as your boy is today'— probally | more so We helieve few boys will be prop-| j orty destroy if permitted to ex heir energy in noise and playful) +! pranks. : i Yoo loo, Skinnay, ee c'mon over! ITALY'S PREDICAMENT. Germany's drive against Italy was all news credited to it or not other-| planned largely to revive the fallen wise credited in this paper and also) spirits of Austria and to aid the peace the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special @tenatehds herein are also reserved. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. | SUBSCRIPTION us PAYABLE 1N Ch Daily, by earriens per month Daily, by mail, per year. Daily, by mail in North ‘Dakota, three months .... 1.25 Daily, by mail outs Dakota, one year. . Daily, by mail outside of, North Dakota, three months. . : Weekly, by mail, per year THE STAT! de of North 1.50 WEATHER REPORT. for 24 hours ending at noon Oct. Temperature at 7 a. m.. ‘ ‘Temperature at noon - propaganda at Rome. The central | powers have been busy seeking to sep- Highest yesterday 23) Lowest yesterday . 5 Lowest last night. 18 Precipitation Highest wind velocity... FORECAST. for North Dakota: somewhat warmer in the tion; Wednesday probably fair. tL por- | i settled tonight; | | drive, == | Italy will not lessen the cohesion of | the entente. i} tions of the war theater. arate the allies through the lure of peace. Fi it was Russia, then Bel- ;gium, next France, and now the dipo- iy i$ 50| macy of the Teutons will follow upj closely the success of Mackensen's| | arms. It is the German hope to deepen, 6.00 | political differences at Rome, just as} lagents of the enemy attempted coun, 1.50. ter revolutions at Petrograd spirits may re- atest of “s drooping under the success of this but even the humiliation Haig has won material successes before Ypres, and Petain’s 20 | drive toward Laon is part of an im- 24! pending maneuver of firs magnitude. | Italy's temporary difficulties over- shadow developments in other por- Germany's own frontier was threat- ened by the early suc of the Italians. Austria alone proved no | match for the strategy of Cadorna. ''The loss of Trieste and Pola would Lowest Temperatures, have deprived the central powers of Fargo ... : A ag jan important base. So great were Taste ‘ MW { the issues involved in the Italian cam- : | : St. Paul . 18 | paign, that a supreme effort was im- Winnipeg 8 | perative even at the expense of N= Helena .. 28 wing large lodies of men from Rus- Chicago ; 22 i si Balkan front Swift Current » om «OCS ee ye i ee Teer Kansas City . a at the central powers have been San krancigco 50 able to rout the Italians in a few days fro sitions won after months of! ORRIS W. ROBERTS. | c\Gvoue campaigns, discounts the ae-| Meteorogolist. | arduous campaigns, discounts ac — i complishments of the Italians, here- SEO TT TE TEE EES E SS totore classed ja Tittle short of Her- @ One-half of the world must % culean, sweat and groau that the other ¢ The Unitod States fs vitally inter-! @ half may dream.—Longfellow. — %/ ested in the stand Italy is going to SEER ESTEE EE EES make. While short of fucl, food and =m | ammunition, Italy has put up a plucky OUR WELCOME GUESTS, ; fight, but superiority of Germany’: Bismarck is a proud host today. The teachers of North Dakota are as- sembling here, and the Capital City is not lacking in appreciation. The North Dakota Education asso-} ciation is not only the largest conven-| tion body in North Dakota, but it may | be stated, without any exaggeration, that it is one of the finest. It is! made up of sincere and earnest young | men and women in whose keeping is the future of the state. What they * make our boys and girls today will be the men and women of tomorrow, the citizens to whose care the affairs of state soon must be surrendered. North Dakota is justly proud of its educational system. This system is; a source of pride because of men and women who believe in their work and who have carefully prepared them- selves to make their work 100 per! cont efficient. Tomorrow, Thursday and Iriday the | leaders of North Dakota's education | system meet in Bismarck to “go to; school." The best instructors the; state and nation afford have been as- sembled to instruct the teachers. A! good teacher is one who has not lost! the ability to learn, but who each day} strives to inject into his or her work | some new thought that has been mas-| tered. Such are the educators whom | Bismarck is proud to welcome to the! Capital City. The Tribune predicts for this great! convention, coming at so crucial a time in the affairs of the state and| nation; much good. It is glad that Bismarck has been selected as the theater for such a notable gathering. The city for the week belongs to the educators. The Tribune knows they will not find Bismarck lacking in hos- pitality, in entertainment and in cour-| teous interest in the teachers ana} their aims and aspirations. | Remember! It's better to meatless days and wheatless than catless days. have days BE A GOOD SPORT. “Once you was a Loy, and in those| happy days you, too, “cut loose” one evening each year. and raised the very dickens with your elders’ peace of| mind. You tooted horns, loud and long. You carried off gates and all other things not nailed down. You were not at all backward about hoist- ing a neighbor’s-sign upon the barn roof or transferring an undertaker's sign to the doctor's front door. You rang front door bells and, scampéred away witha delighted heart when the folk rushed to the door. You revelled in tick-tacks and every noise-produc- ing decise your young and gladsome! boyish brain could concoct. That was | the night of nights, eh fellows of 40 and 50 and 60? Well, your boy and your neighbor's boy are young today. They are now/| planning on “cutting loose” on Hal-| lowe'en. j Let them. { forces and guns won the day. ; crown. | resented the great body of opinion. All must read grave warnings in the dispatches from Italy. AL8ATIANS AND GERMANY. Favery time the Germans take time) from. ruthlessness and from oppress ing the Belgians, Poles and Serbs, | they amuse themselves by proclaim- ing to the world that they will always hold Alsace-+Lorraine and that in this they are justified, as this territory, which they took from France in 1870, was originally German territory and | belonged of right to the German) In other words, they hold that | they simply restored to Germany what | was Germany's. For justification they like to point to the German names of the towns! and the German names of many of| the people. Unfortunately for them,’ this kind of excuse ‘does not advance | their, cause very much. So far as the towns are conc sinols| as Alsace-Lorraine has been under the, Prussian heel for the last 40 years, jit has not been hard to impose Ger- man names and place these names on all the official maps, The fact remains that in their hearts the people of these conquered provinces remain French. They re-; main loyal to the tricolor. A mere glance at history serves to; show how many Alsatians with dis-! tinctly German-sounding names were loyal sons of France and did their} best to fight Germany and Germanism. It was Reubell who {dentified Alsace: with the cause of the French revolu-! tion.” It was the Pfeffels who distin-| guished themselves in France's for-| eign affairs. It was General Keller-; mann who repelled the invasion of; Valmy. It was Kleber who saved Na-, poleon’s army in one important bat- tle. It was Rapp, Napoleon's aide-de- camp, who demolished the last of the Prussian forces at Jena. It was Diet-; rich, mayor of Strassburg, in whose house Ronget de Lisle wrote the im-| mortal “Marseillaise.” It was Erckmann who collaborated with Chatrian in the many romances glorifying French valor and French arms. It was Keller who, as a deputy, in the German reichstag, as early as; 1871, made the famous exclamation. “We are French.” Finally, Zislin and Waltz, collabor-| ating at “Han: are the great carica- turists, who have made the Germans wince by the keen edge of their poi- soned pencils, and who have also seen the inside of German jails as a resuil. Note—all these men had German-| sounding names. All of them loved} France and were true to her. All of} them fought in various ways by arms,! by pen, by speech, against the Prus- sian oppressor. And they merely rep-) Sure signs of winter—the first ap- pearance of the food conservation | product on the family table and the | proud expression of the woman who Don't scowl and growl when a bit] put it up. ithe stat ing, are gathering here to addr | William 1: Prominent Educators Will Talk Shop to North Dakota Teachers i. in Session Here een nn nn nn come e eww ewe cnn n on noon nnn nono eeeeesesooet FRED W. SMITH President of Bottineau School of Forestry and Agriculture. i E. S. KEANE Dean of Engineering and Physics N. D. Agricultural College. ‘Many of North Dakota’s most pron 's, men who have plac in the faculti of institutions of learn- s the members of the North Dakota tion association who assemble here this week to attend school. Joseph Kennedy, dean of education at the University of North Dakota, will discuss the modern training of High school teachers; “Mechanics of the Household” will he t n up by 45. S. Keane, dean of the department of engineering and physics at the North Dakota agricultural college. “Night Schools for Students of High School Abilities” is the subject as- signed Supt. Bruce Francis of the Mi- not public schoo red W, Smith, chool of agri- is down for an interesting addres: “Higher Learning and the Wi Thomas 1 by ‘ar and professor of chemistry and physics at Jamestown college, promises to be ia most timely paper. “Educational Patriotism,” al address of the 4 Kk tho annu- ‘ssoctation president, Kdwards, state high school in- also of Jamestown, is looked fo as a message which will sound a key-note for the session. The programs have heen very care- R. Macdonald. Bismarck. (the Effort to Secure Credits for Mu- Y Roll of Honor Is Your Name Written Here —" Mrs. Brackett A. L. Barlass P. Jacobson Jacob Berg, Jr. Bess Spreckilan Bismarck— Richard Moore C. L. Burton Winifred Mutschelknauss Catherine McAllister Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Roberts Pat Kelly R. W. Ensign Fred Farnsworth Albert Borkhart John Dietrich A. W. Luehrs Kdwin Taylor, Jr. Herndon Taylor Mabel Nathan H. T. O'Connell William McDonald Mrs. A. VanHorn H. C. Bradley Charles ‘W. Moses Arthur L. Nathan Julia E. Weber Bismarck’s roll of honor, composed of those who purchased liberty bonds, | is growing rapidly. The names print- | ed herewith are purchasers secured up to noon Tuesday. Tomorrow The Trib- une will give the names of those who; buy up to noon today. ‘The list follows: Arena— Krank Prate M. M. Mounts M. Louise [Bra Catherine Schultz ‘ Thomas Jacobson i Mrs. Blanch Von Hagen Mrs. Ingvald ide ! M. H. Cook i John A. Davies | Morgan Memorial Fund \ George Loelter W. R. Peet t W. B. Heaton Dora Larson Grant Palms . Vettel A. C. Isaminger vert LaFrance 2. ! Ralph ©. Halver | Lynn J. Frazier 7 os H. A. Muchler | Salisbury } B. Jacobson Crewe Walter Scott i t. Sanders H. FP. Williamson i . Willson A. O. Krogen A. ."Luce H. Dahlberg Pearl Kernel! Catherine M. Griflin John O. Rise Nels Halvorsen Halver Paulson N. McDaniel Kk. Cekert Ed Nygaard E Swenson ys \ . Alfred Arneson W. H. Ostrander lL. S. Ward, trustee Richard A. Tracy John S. Rise C. BE. Stackhouse John Hanson j Menoken— John W. Wutzke William Nelson Adin Leve Mutchler ‘. Hendrics loway J.ambert ; Galloway. Lutgens Baldwin— tine Mredericks Albert Larson Why (3 minute papers) Ernest Brun- the High School Curriculum—Oscar ner, Wahpeton; Arthur G. Brown, Bot: Erickson, ayvilic. tineau: Harlan W. Corzine, Minot; 1 11:00 The ‘Modernizing of Latin-- ‘ . Butterfield, Mayville; W. M. Dew-) May Grant, D 1 oy, endale; Ray Hoisington, Farge Hsdv Pusiness. LL. V. Mercer, University; I. H. S$ 8 P. M. at Auditorium. | den, Valley Ci 8:60 Music, by the Bismarck Thars- 4 1 Club. i alter B. Tripp, of the Emer: n, School of Oratory, . of Boston. , will appear at this session and bes E io Lusiness. DOMESTIC SCIENCE. President, Katherine Jensen, Agri- ‘fully compiled, and mea and women , ltural leg 5 Il be the attr n of ‘the, evenii who have been assigned various sub- Soe 7 ec aan Oe, ye * . jects have heen selected with a view| Head of Mag’ Supt BRUCE. FRANCIS OF MINOT: silt dlaeuss® WighE. G heel: ident, Ielea Finlayson, bi eleetion for the evening will be - | to their ability to handle them satis-| Schools f ‘titi alley City. : avid Copperfield. | factorily and in a helpful manner. ehools' for, Students.of) High’ Schoo! Abilities: ‘ieee Isabelle M. Perry, Litch- Re A ° = coer semen = === ville. nice aaheon aratly” i rn 9 A. M. at High School. ¥ aie Whe boa nerally i aime 9:00 Home Economfes and Present aver off : mali Day Needs—Ela cueme weld, Grand ye th et 9:15 General ‘Teachtog Methods, | I will send you a $1.00 bottle of my | aad ml Atal uv Nellie Farnsworth, Valley City. Guaranteed medy for Asthma, on = aaa 10:30 ‘The Home Economies Depart-! trial. Remedy gives quick relief. Has a jment as a Mecting Place Between| cured many after everything else RETURNS FROM CAPITAL Home and School—Nola K. Fromme, | failed. Mention nearest express office, eg 5 E —- ae College. | Address: Secretary J. H. Calderhead Home :20 Business. * 3 GEO. D. HOO ig Mfgi’ Pharmacis é i TEA HERS AN DOFFICERS OF AG.) Dept.i441, Des Moines, Towas ¥;)4.5 from National Mecting || RICULTURAL SCHOOLS AND ee ——_ : Xposttively wears J. H. Calderhead, secretary of the Al Seaetiene Genre wenatee “Carine: ' [LADIES 8 $1009 REWA Lg eres, North Dakota railway commission, re- rum ey Sea ai : ‘the fon sort, me cars x i gaoes Tas Co turned today from Washington, D. C., fice-P 5 , rea eens Wi ee where he and the members of the Rainey he eds See tcaaGion sentan Ga AMSAS CTT= AG board attended the annual convention Sceretary, J. M. McArthur, Minot of the national association of railway “"9 A, M. at High School. WILLIAM B. THOMAS commissions. 9:00 How the Extension Department FARM LANDS aimed : Registrar and Professor of Chemis-; Open evenings until further notice. ot the | Aprile tata Coe eet INSURANCE jtry and Physics, Jamestown. 3. ESON & SO ip panei cue cere dehedee ry and Physics, Jamestown S. F, BERGESON & SON. ture Thos. Cooper. Agrieultural CITY PROPERTY = = College. EXCHANGES 9:15 Boys’ and Girls’ Club Work— (D. W. Galehouse, Fargo. id 1° ° JOSEPH KENNEDY : : i Ca ‘ ae 10:50 Extension Work that is Worth pital City Se Co " f) f h. PROGRAMS TOR TOW R ARROW | ee pean of Cavceten of the University) while and Extension Work that is not, TVice VO. Akotay Worth While in the High School—E. cai J. Tainter. E. H. MANN. Manager : 4 3 hwo, 204) a) Sha ye Mak C: sic in the High Schools—W. W. Nor-| ti 00 ae Mt we Make: ca 'Room 20, City Nat. Bank Bldg. as sue The annual convention of the North, 4:00 “The ‘Man of Destiny.” Walter, ton, University. more one , Fhone 867 - Dakota Education association opens | B. 1 11:00 Community Benefits to He De)" 39 polation Between Class R 4 |tomorrow with a re day. Ten} 5:00 Announcements. rived from School Bands and Orches-| aoe eee ee are: in| eamarck 3: North Dakota » he Itras. and How to Orgay Them~ 4 aces dueyeaitiorent placer: at hell] SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS '1!Tiguson, ta i |the Agriculturat lish School—John 8. the morning. At 2 in the afternoon W. Smith, Bottinean, | 11:30 Business. apr the first convention of the general dent( H. E. Simpson, Uni- TEACHERS OF ENGLISH. cali aan Re Achen LEAGUE, AUDITORIUM association will be held at the Audi- | verst a F "ee President, G. 1. Paine, Mayville, | Lada eer torium, where the association will} Secretary, 1. B. Smith, Fargo, Vice-President, Ruth Guild, Far-|, Peres! erty. | meet again at 8 in the evening to hear | 9 A.M. at M. E, Church Chapel. | xo. j Grand: Forks, SATURDAY NIGHT, NOVEM. a musical program presented by the| 9:0 Botany—Norma B. Pleiffer,, Secretary, Hilda Taylor, Jamestown. | sre ee eatnioniehon ol BER 3, 1917 « t ’ Thursday Music club and to listen to versity. | 9 ASM, at Presbyterian Church Oa TRL A 2 iz ‘ Ks ‘ a reading by Walter B. Tripp of the 30 Geologie] Knowledge of North Chapel. 4:00 ‘The Aims of Parent-Teachers The Musical Treat of the Season y Emerson school of oratory at Bos- Dakota as a Foundation for in the Teaching of & ‘ociutions—J. M. Gillette, Univer: ton, Mass, who has selected as hig Teaching—A. G. l.conard, Univers McDonough, Minot. | S#ty ’ THE MUSIC. subject, “David Copperfield.” 10:40 Applied Home Physics y Provlems in Spoken Eng-|, Reports from delegates. Each club | i Ul TUSICAL COMEDY. ‘A complete program of the day’s Keene, Agricultural College. asan McCoy, Valley Cit in the state is asked to have a repre-| activities follows: 10:20 Busines: on of above pap sentative here nd to make a report. | GENERAL ASSOCIATION. 1) Mathemiatics--R. 1. Murphy. Report of special committee on the} 10:80 Reports of Committees from Present, ER Hdwards, James: (mfion [teaching of grammar—A. E Minard, {he county associations. town. 11:30 Chemistry and the War—W." Agricultural college. MSD ESS { First Vice-President, P. J. Iverson, © (ould, Mayville Discussion of report. MODERN LANGUAGES AND LATIN. | NEW YORK S GREATEST SUCCESS . Lakota. HISTORY, CIVICS AND SOCIAL scl.) [eports of other committees. fee ane te eaten Dick ; ~ ay i Second Vice-President, L. A. White, | ENCE. 1 Business Vice-Pres Williston. idacie ce: fice Minot | PRINCIPALS OF GRADED, CONSOL- acces renilents Gacieeen Just a story of romance and Socretacy ; mare ise sident, I Ean . re IDATED AND THIRD CLASS Secretary, Ro C. Mueller, Lucca. F + | pee W. 8. Parsons, Bis: “Vieopresident, F. i. Callahan, Ca- HIGHHSCHOOLS: 9 A. M. at Commercial Club Hall. love with ee tickles and | Treasurer: # WV. Jeltioedl, aa a A ek eset President, Carl Gilbertson, Lignite.| et Ale in Teaching French— ances < etary, A) . Niels A are. Vice President, J. S. Fevold, Churchs! * ce art, ottineau. , | ers eater Corte 9 A.M. at M.E. Church Auditorium. !yyng ne | 9:49 How to Master the German Vo- : Seat Sale at Knowles 5 | Chat eee com tee. io, Ee {,, The Community Pageant —Mattic se etary, Ceo. W. Bertram, Grace | Cabulary—Edith Hoppe, Grand Forks, Prices: $2. $1.50, $1. 75 & 50c | ft: Hawarda: Jaiestow 2) Crabtree, Ellendale. ity. ; j0:20 The Value of Languages on, Msiiog Vecothcles Stale: Supt (N: ae Ross L. Finney, Valley 9 A.M. at High School. Macdonald, Bismarck. der Pita uaa eats Address-—Carl Gil Sorteters and Member Ex-officta, W.| Atdress—Geo. H, Will, Bismarc K. afte. - e ys \E. Parsons, Bismarck. Side Jights on Our State Constitu- ausportation Problem of oa Term expires 1920, Minnie J. Neil- sonal Convention—R. M. Black, Elle the Consolidated School, Talward Er wg Pale SEND 10 THE BOYS OVER SEAS, WHO ARE Term expires 1918, P. S. Berg, Dick MUSICAL EDUCATION. inson. President, A. J. Stephens, Fargo. 10:45 What we do with the Over: Term expires 1917, M. Beatrice! |, Vice President, Eugene Woodhame.’ crowded Curriculum in the Seventh FIGHTING FOR DEMOCRACY THEIR Johnstone, Grand For! {Valley ¢ Sand Grades, C. L. Kobertson, | ’ Term expires 1917, J. Nelson Kelly. |, Secretary, Cordelia Hulbert, Grand Tebron. | cand Eee | Forks 11:15 Disenssfon | CHRISTMAS PACKAGES NOW 2 P.M. at City Auditorium. 9 A. M. at Presbyterian Church Audi-} 11:40 Business. ANING | 2:04 Call to order. torium. 3 b . i io! 205 Prayer | 9:00 ‘rhe Place of Music Training in | President, J. W. Dunn, Valley City. | 4 ecurelal County Red Cross Chapter has arranged through HARRIS 10 Music) by Bismarck — City| the High School Curri¢ulum—Crail ! dent, M. F, Pitman, Grand | 'Y, to furnish Gift Kits to our boys in the trenches. | Schoo! Codding, Mandan. PKS: Tee | 100 GIFT KITS TO BE SHIPPED MONDAY, NOVEMBER Sth. 2:29 Address of Welcome for City— ) Cooperation of the Superv! ecretary, Mrs. Harriet Stone, La- G. N. Keniston and the Private Teacher in the Musi- Moure. t Be on time—have your Gift in the first shipment. 2:49 Address of Welcome for State cal Development of Communities— 9 A. M. at Hish. Sehool: : —Governor Lynn J. Frazier. Mrs. Amy Simpson, Minot. ducational Value of My y Q ALL WRAPPED 3:60 Response—B. H. Kroeze, James| 1:09 The Development of Commun: | —0. B. Badger, Fargo. 12 Gifts in one Package AND PACKED $1.75 town Singing in America and its In- : sous ae op 3:15 President's Address—Educa-jfluence—Eugene Woodhams, Valley 0 Replacing ‘Manual Training in tional Farrel sm, the Need of the City. our City School Shops with Mechani- PROCURE THEM AT HARRIS & C0. | Hour.” E. R. Edwards, Jamestown. 10:30 Certificating of Music Teach- cal Science—A. E. Field, Valley City. 3:35 Address—State Supt. N. C.'ers in North Dakota and Progress of| 10:15 Discussion. | 10:40 How I-Start-My Course, and

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