The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 12, 1917, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Nam 0.¢ The Tin Can Garage by Hop. HEY INA- DIDYOU TAKE THAT Iggie begins to FEEL the war ATS. SURE. GOSH \eGie_ PIECE. OF Soap L : Rel - \ | { Gouna Be 4 | IBROUGHT DOWN THIS Was THAT GONNA BE MORNING FR SOAP?— LATE IT : IN MY LUNCH THIS NOON FOR, \oveomare! Z Bi & = ————— : ee : = = — = coe A ” 7 ill be an peas: 5 CHIDE: OF. “an ee : f . Settlers ofthe new type began to bus. Both bride pad ‘groom ere mall 4 VALIAN' g J N come also to Jerusalem, where, as in| known in’ this vicinity. ey wi mericanism W ant rrauians | LOng Dream of Jews Near _ |:202 30 sersien, wheres in| known, inthis, sin. They, i I M P H r Fi ht Ci ii e e le é suburbs outside the old, over-crowdea roe ; lor eee weet P ed city. In town and country alike e science Cc’ ‘ ssue in rima ‘y g. omp etion m a estine the new settlers have brought with {high school visited ‘the refrigerating ad Ti S B. s. Ag S — & them European energy and ideals of | plant in the meu rank boat nae HERMAN £ | ; g i progress. Friday evening. e plant has jc o oon eg inim tate rc Sy AN PE ANSTEIN: gerne EB national colonization in|” phe arabs have not unnaturally felt |been installed and’ was explained. to gi. «é Biche ah American Hebrew. "ke - if aie date ban a some jealousy of the Jewish colonies, | the students ‘by the aginger in charge 5 on yee 2 * s Copyright, 1917; by the Newspaper in the last few years before the war} which favorably with their | of the installation. e machinery is For the fet fihesin may years, made,cairying with Atsa stipend, with | Enterprise Association.) there ‘arode a number of:large plante- rat Pehaitive ‘villages, ba they real-| decidedly modern and very effective, “With. the iajune primaries only six the exception of ste adjutant panera | tion societies (“Achuzoth”), which! ize, that economically the coming of} Using the expansion of ammonia to months’ distant, political ‘gossip in. ship, whose giving was .coveréd by. pre- Joy was brought to the hearts of Were founded in Russia, the United! the Jewish settlers has been greatly |absorb heat. It is cleaner, more eco- North Dakota is overshadowed. by aj cedent, has gone to one of the faith- eae of HEM aroughout the world ae England and: Rumania. to their advantage, and they have ac- nomtieal, and jeasiet handle than: 3 ee . e last November 3 when Arthur Balfour, everal workmen’s settlements have | c: sa ma ct that | the old iced refrigerator. : Mleger Isaue. It ta doubttal whether ful: He-has: loyally followed leasuc Hritish forelgn minister, wrote to Sir een founded duriig the last: few | the Jewish colonists shall make their| ‘The Ladies’ “Aid of the Congres, i any one thing could better indicate | doctrines as laid down by the supreme Lionel Rothschild, vice president o/, years ,mostly with the help of the|own local laws and regulations, as {tional church held their annual chick’ bie how entirely North Dakota is absorbed | teacher of the order, and whatever the Zionist organization of Englana,'Jewist national fund, in the neighbor-| they build their own homes. Thus the |€N supper and bazaar in the hall last in the war, for it must be .confessed | else may he said of him, he cannot be that the British government viewed hood of the large colonies. At the] Jewish colonies in Palestine have en-| Saturday evening. In spite of the bad that in this great Plickertail state poli- | accused of not having been “regular” with favor the establishment in Pal-'same time the former colonies have joyed a measure of independence and, Weather a large number of peopl® pa- BRA ON . olin the sense it was used in the old estine of a national home for the been considerably enlirged by the| self-government which will be ,impos-|‘ronized both supper and bazaar and tics has found the meat and daily|qays of “bossism” and “gang” con- Jews. : purchase of land in their neighbor-| sible in a more highly developed and| the ladies were rewarded for their ef- bread of 99 per cent of the males and } trol, so fortunately obliterated -in the ie there ote the joys of antici-| hood. closely controlled country. They have] forts by taking in nearly. two hundred not a small proportion of: the female | light of the new freedom. pation, the Jews having ‘been prepar-| 4 prisk influx of ‘brave youtig la-| had to work out for themselves their | dollars. population in years past. The Republican Nomination. . ae vale sem orelal statement is- borers on the one hand, and of enter-| own political and municipal problems..| The high school ‘basketball team co For anything really apt on the polit-| Governor Frazier, it is anticipated, sued ‘dy General Sir Archibald Mur-’ prising capitalists on the. other, was| (Mr. Bernstein will tell tomorrow] Will play a game with the Mandan ical future of North Dakota one must | will seek renomination’ on :the Repub- ray in March, just before his army particylarly. noticeable in Palestine about the first battle in this war,|Mgh school team Saturday evening. g0 outside the state capital. Here even | lican ticket. It carried with it a big Fonched saan during ‘the last few years before the which was, fought not in Belgium, but| This will be the first real game of the most inveterate political dopester | advantage, aas Patrick M. Casey can}, forahie shall De do with Palestine, war. in Palestine.) : the season, and it is expected that a has declined to dope. There is a lit-| testify. If the. leaguers enroll as con- hich is now about to be stripped! the Jewish. population of Palestine large crowd will take advantage of tle idle talk at the state house as to who will be who next June, but no one, apparently, unless it be the of- fice holders and the probable candi- dates themselves, have given the mat- ter really serious consideration. To Elect Full Ticket. Nineteen-eighteen will be an “off- year” so far,as national politics are concerned, since there will be no pres- idential ticket. There will be three congressmen to be elected, and it’ is anticipated that none of the present], fepresentatiyes will decline to seek. re- sistently as Republicans as they did in the last primaries, *twould take a strong combination of Democrats, turned Republicans, and Republicans | independent of the league «o prevent Frazier’s carrying off the bacon. And ‘tis quite generally acknowledged that. whomsoever secures the Republican jtali, f Ay nomination, whether it be Frazier or Halen, defense along, the Play, xiver Langer or Kositzky, or an independ- - ie ent,,hands the fellow on the other ticket. a. big handicap to overcome. As to independent candidates but GB. ARMANDA DIAZ commander of the Valian army. some pf Mr, Johnson’s indeepnden views on railway legislation: .,/-: iwo names have been openly mention. || ie. Seriate.- The jreal ABAt at the primaries will General Armanda_ Dfaz is supreme He succeeded General Cadorna ‘and has been in command during the brilliant from, the Turkish yoke?” he inquired ‘say: * “Beyond doubt, we will revive the Jey Palestine of ancient days, and give to the Jews the possibility of vealizing their ancient hope. Not all Jews will return to Palestine but large numbers will. The new Jewish state, “ander either English or French pro- tection, will Secome the spiritual and gultural center of all Jewry. The Jews ast have their own homeland {and their own naifonality. (Hopes Whieli, have sustagned them through and answering bis own question, ho} total tion ii world. i. The whose ,to Pak have passed the prime of life, to spend their remaining years in. prayer and study Part they have, been.from the outset, or jhave ;become in the: course of ‘time, dependent on charity. country than does the Jewish popula- now bears a higher. proportion to the @ number of inhabitants of the in any other country in the old Jewish settlers: are those religious sentiment drew them lestine, in most cases. after they | on holy grounds. For the most! This evi} has SSSA she mm eH | CORRESPINDENCE ¢ HEBRON NEWS Charles Bumgarten and his son Carl visited Mrs. Bumgarten at the Bismarck hospital last Wednesday. Mrs. Bumgarten is deported to-be well] ;. on the road to recovery. -- Private Nick Streitmater visited at}; home last week, returning ‘Monday to Camp Dodge. i | Manager W. D. Richardson, ofthe Hebron Fire and Pressed Brick’ Com- he opportunity to see the contest. See “The Judgment House” at the *! Dismarck Theatre tonight. [more days to Christmas blection: the First district’ Jotn] cd to”date about the capitol. One of | “tHe centuries will 4 -eall exiended to. their chikiren, andjtheir| pany attended a brick makers con- M. Baer will undoubtedly be the] these {s John M. Steen, state treas- be for 'the-control of the 'senate.-Twen- , ‘Statesmen of Italy France and Rus-| ldren's children, oy ina yéntion in Minneapolis last weék.¥ + J 4 Very different areithe settlers of the Jacob Hauser who was rushed ito, urer, the only independent Republican ‘ty-four new.awembers.are to be elected Bismarck last week to be operated candidate who succeeded in overcom- next fall. Tlie ‘Tleagdé* elected 18 out ing the league majority last year. The of 25 last fall, but it-lost several of other is E. G. Quamme. Steen has de- | them in its famous secret caucus. At clined to consider seriously a sugges-; that, the league now has .a. safe tion that has come from his home-folk nucleus of 14 to build, upoon. Should in the northern part of the state. If, it-succeed in electing halt of the new Mr. Quamme ‘entertains any political. members of the upper house to be ‘bees, he hag.kept their buzzing well named next fall it would have control league candidate, while indications are there will be the usual large field of opponents, both Republican and Demo- cratic. Baer originally was a Demo- crat, but in the special election a few months ago he sought nomination on the Republican ticket. He probably, will do so again. George M. Young of the Second is sia have politically pledged their coun- tries to tue support of this plan. The Pope recently received a Zion- ; new type, who went there undar. the | impulse of Jewish nationalism. They | upon for a sudden and severe attack ist.emissary who explained the Jew- sought, a foathold first of all outside | of appendicitis, is reported tobe pro- ish aspirations. After listening intent-| ‘te towns, in the plains: of Judea and] gressing rapidly toward complete rer|’ ly, his holiness ejaculated: “We wilt! Galilee. . As jthelr. agricultural colon- | covery. { be good neighbors—we will be good !5 stew and their produetivity in-} | Miss. Ida Krueger and. Mr. ‘Theo- neighbors.” Peeeery bd poe hanlnnae to: the dore Kuschel were imerried last Tues:| i a owns of Jaffa a ‘aifa, and | day at the home of the bride’s’pareats | Waether ;by. coincidence or. design, side by side. with ‘the development ot Ly pr : in’ Hebron. A number of relatives ‘g said to be slated for league opposi- et ilar «= file of the league. tion, although in a number of ways he has sought to curry favor with the league, It is said gaat even Pat Nor- ton: of, the Third, Who has. been very much a farmers’ representative inthe Jast; session,’ will not be endorsed by theleague, Leslie A. Simpson of Dickinson {s touted as a candfdate for the Republican nomination in the Third, and it is said that the former. state senator from Stark county Stands. very, well with the league. A fight between Norton and Simpson, with the league strength in the Slope thrown one way or another, would -prove, mighty interesting. ‘Both are veteran campaigners. Bruce Will Run. - But one member of the supreme court is to be elected in 1918. Chief Justice A. A. Bruce's term expires. ‘While the jurist has given no indica- tion.of his intentions, friends are in- sisting that he be a candidate for re- election, and they express confidence to himself. [ee that end of the body. It is not i » The Lesser Lights. | Probable that, unless there is a neat ‘ John N. Hagan, as commissioner of. revolution, the league will lose com- agriculture, and A. S. Olsness, com- plete contro! of the house of represen- missioner of insurance, are regarded, tatives, in which it.had an overwhelm- very strong candidates to succeed; ing majority in)the last'session, themselves. The same is true of N.! C. Macdonald, state superintendent of , date, for,,cangress from the First dis- public ‘instruction, who appears very | trict,is reported to have made. ‘‘Amer- well entrenched in his offiee. icanism js not an, jssue” his slogan in There will be three members of the; the special election campaign. Things railway commission to be elected, and| have changed since then. There has the present commissioners undoubted-| been a mosé radical change since the ly will be candidates to succeed them-! state primaries eighteen months ago, selves, unless M. P. Johnson, president | when the Nonpartisan league’s victory of the state Equity, should, as some of| was really won. Even the league man- his friends .have suggested, have an/ agers now realize that Americaniam is eye on the governorship. Johnson has; and must be made an issue in North not been altogether regular since the | Dakota by any party or candidates of chairmanship of the board was{that party who hope to win. The war dangled in front of his eyes and then|has introduced a new element which handed to another, after President|makes the outcome of the coming Townley has conceived a distaste for | primaries an uncertainty. mortar amie eta” ‘fe ae LEO THAN ONE-SEVENTH OF AUSTRO- justice's militantly patriotic _ stand during the war has won him hosts of new, admirers. He has a strong f0l- lowing among the university men and members of the state bar. William S. Langer, the present at- torney general, is said to covet a place on the supreme bench. He is also said to have eyes on a senatorial toga. He would be barely old enough when Gronna’s term expires four years’ hence to be admitted to the United States senate. At the present writing he is just past the minimum age for membership in the supreme court of the,state. E. B. Totten of Bowman al- ready is announcing himself as the league's choice. From time to time = reports crop out that William Lemke, chairman of the Republican state cen- tral committee one of the governing board of the league and a man very active in its councils, would like to, sit on the supreme bench or go to the Uniied States senate. The two Bills are sufficiently friendly to probably arrange this little matter between themselves, providing the remainder of the league leaders are. willing. , The Governorship. There has been some talk of Lang- er ,being a candidate for governor. Little credence is given these rumors, however. More probable, if possil at all, is the candidacy of Karl Kosit ky, state auditor, for the gubernatorial chair. The state auditor has been very =mch on the job during his first year ~UNGHRANS IN AMERICA ARE. GERMANS in office; he has managed to get a full share, of favorable publicity for his work, and even his recent tilt with . the attorney general over the matter of the supreme court’s expense money = seems to have won him favor with = many farmers, He has a batch of let- ters in his desk which would indicate = that this sparring match has, at least done him no haarm with the rank and There has been no visible friction between the governor and the state auditor. The governor undoubtedly . will seek re-election, and it is to be = presumed he will have the endorse- “ ment of the league. Frazier has been = a very loyal party man in his adminis-, tration. Every appointment he has '163,720 Slovaks, 114,484 speaking He In the diagram above, based upon the census bureau's statistice, it is seen that the German speaking Aus- tro-Hungarians born residents. in America number but 231,255 as against 222 Polish speaking Austro-Hun- garions here, and 227,742 Magyars, 220,969 Bohemians and Moraviany garians. ‘ The middle Atlantic York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania— lation, 553,557, and also the largest Hungarian born, 267,951. Pennsyi~ vania has more Austrians than any other state, 251,774, and more Hur garians, 123,498. The east south central states, Ken- brew and Yiddish, 123,250 Slovenians, 77,652 Croatians, and 159,397 of all otuer Austro-Hungarian tongues, Ru- manian, Ruthenian, Bulgarian, Rus- sian, Serbian, Italian, Greek, Lithuan- ian, and others, a total of 1,670,524. Of American born of one or two Austrian parents there are 826,635 in issippi, have the smallest Austrian- Hungarian population—2,999 Austrian born and 1,742 Hungarians. North Carolina has the smallest number of Austrians and Hungarians of any state—139 Austrians and 37 Hungarians, John .M, Baer, the league’s candi-| po) the United, States and 204,627 of Hun- states—New have the largest Austrian born popu- tucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Miss- it is noteworthy that; the, American council in London, exten:ing its greet- ings to the Zionists leaders on the of- ficial declaration in their favor by the British government, used the identical phrase that fell from the lips of the pe. Germany, too; indicated ‘its willing- negsto!permit:a Jewish state in Pal- estine,.‘naturaily under ‘fits over-lord- ship. Eut’‘sMee’ England's‘ declara- tion, there has been a revulsion of {feeling in Teutonic circles. Since the fall of Jerusalem before the overwhelming legions of Rome, and the Jewish dispersion‘ from Pai- egtine, the liturgy of that people has been: burdened with prayer for the res- toration. Through the centuries there have; ‘been various attempts to re-es- tablish the Jewish people on their an- when the “Alliance Israelite Univer- salle,” of Paris began operating in Pal- estine. alliance was to establish an agricul- tural school, for which the Turkish government donated 625 acres of land} / near Jaffa. A school was opened in 1870 under the name of “Mikvah Is- rael.” ' In,1878 Laurence Oliphant, and Eng- lish explorer, visited Palestine and be- came an advocate of Jewish resettle- ment of the country.. But not natil the $0's, when the first Jewish mass- acre$ occurred in Russia, colonization. ‘There were organized, throughout Russia, “Bilu” societies, composed of intelligent Jew mén, who determined to become pio- neers of Palestine colonization. on de Zion” (first for Zion) was es- and Jerusalem. to the pitiless glare of the tropical sun, rotting into morass and swamp, and were almos:: entirely surrounded by savage nomads. © We are thrilled with the story of the Pilgrim Fathers who fought their way to success from the precarious foothold in bleak Plymouth. All the valor, te unquenchable courage oz the Pilgrim Fathers was displayed by these Jewish young men from the, uni- versities of Russia. In 32'years, from 1882-1914, this handful of pioneers in Palestine, strongly organized in 40 villages. Meanwhile the Dreyfus scandal had occurred in France, and Dr. Theodore Hatzl, a Viennese journalist who re- ported the last trial of the historic scapegoat, published a brochure en- titled “A Jewish State,” in which he summoned the Jews of the world to revive their nationality and claim at the hands of the powers “a pulicly recognized, legally secufed homeland a call was issued for a congress, which was held in Basle, Switzerland, in 1897, and the Zionist organization. which today has branches throughout the world, was organized. The Zion- ist organization undertook firstly, po- litical negotiations for recognitign of, the Jewish nationality and its claims on Palestine; and. secondly, the fos- cient land, but nothing of a serious]; character is recorded “prior to 1860,| j The first thing done by the]? was the] ; founflation laid for the present Jewish | , young | | Under their auspices a colony “Rish-| ' tablished on the road between Jafta|’ They found a land]: atrophied, barren, waterless, exposed | | grew to some 15,000 Jewish farmers| ; in Palestine.” Inspired by this dook, | the col Jewish, immigration into those, towns.; which was preformed by Rev. A. De-}: lonies there proceeded a rapid | and friends witnessed the ceremony SHsHagusasanndouguosagquennnnnqnnaUnt oi nuninedianana egueunonss All persons paying in advance for the Evening and Sunday Tribune for a period of three months, will be given three want ads free of charge. The Tribune is offering this unique premium in order to introduce the Sunday Morning Tribune. All new and old sub- . scribers are-entitled to this ~ FREE OFFER which holds good for thirty days only. ' Don’t wait. Mail us at once your check for three months’ subscription in advance for the ‘Evening and Sunday editions - and take advantage of this excellent offer. Price of the Evening and Snuday Tribune is only $.70 2 month. Cal 32 and Ask for Crcalaton Dept, | ’s Pioneer Newspaper: | : | i The ‘Tribune Want Ads bring results. Have :you'a house to rent o rseil; farm implements of no further use to you; or horses or cattle for sale?-~Oan you dis. pos eof them in any better way than by using the Want Ad :oi. umns of the Bismarck: Tribune? at

Other pages from this issue: