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_ HU ppinaageskabystine.-consorin «Bertin, “Hyery'B P. hae 4 BISMARCK EVENING TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. Entered at the Vostotiice ¢ Bismarck, N. Wy 3 Matter ¥ DAY as pews! Editor GEORGE D. MAN G. LOGAN PAYNE Special Foreign Repre 3 CHICAG ; DETROIT, Euct rquette Bldg.; NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg. titled to the use or not other- for republ ion wise credited in this pap Mshed herein : All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved “MEMBER AUDIT BUF J TION BAI Dally, } per Morning or 1 year Morning or one year Sun¢ay in ¢ mail, OBSERVE MR. KRYLENKO. The world mu y some f il to Mr. Kry lenko w it, which is the was days, and he is nos men Looking upon Krylenko out the “bourge Germany “Bours thing 1 “hour Kryienko to farmers flush s idea is that possession ts crookedness or special privile edy is arbitrary di Application of such remedy other people, depends tpon ho of the people get the idea a s he apply toy co fer Commander Ki thronph the ballot, and so he’ He may vo quite a ways, too, propided that Trotzky ay army and Lenine dow’t get enough of this I's good to decidedly modify their bolshevilcts supposed that they, like many other folks, have a viewpoint largely predicated upomawhat they've got n. It is to he WAR IS JUST WHAT THEY CALL IT. war is bound to knoek all Alas! this mis the fun out of marrying. First thing, we cannot afford to shower the bride with rice in your hair and cars! Oh! it can be figured out as violation of war necessity, all right! There are, say, 8,000 weddings in your town each year. A pound of rice for cach bride means 3,000 pounds, nourishment. for 12. people. 2 makes 36,000 persons that you rob of a ieal. Awful! but there’s more of it. contains oneimeal and one pound of ri Three thousand times ‘Secondly, leather is. very precious. ‘The Rus sian armies ery, “Cive us boots!’ The French sol diers are short of footyear, In the trenches, she last but a short time, Tt tales a lawye and an astrologer to tell what part of American shoes are leather and what fell, paper or something else. Save leather! How can you conscientiously throw a pair of shoes after the ear ear in which the happy couple sail forth into: the matrimonial seas, maelstrom, puddle, or whatever) you want to enlt in | chenis! sor street No shower of rive; no shower of old shoes! What next’ the diamond rings have wedding: Borsooth, they anay gro to evttings out and the silly looks, and we ll} : ‘ | bout as hilarious as funerals, | GETTING WILSON’S IDEA. | The German people who have none of the Prius: | sians’ world dominion aims are becoming bolder and | bolder, according to the Zurich Volksrecht (Peo- | ple’s Kights), | Articles in this Swiss daily may throw some light on recent developments within the German} “Gron ring.’ They are particularly interesting in| view of President’ Wilson’s statement of war and peace aims. Events within Germany are stated to have been a principal factor in the determination of the presi dent to make his momentous declaration of Lt Amer- jean peace terms. The Volksrecht prints an interview with Carl Radek, a Swiss socialist and delegate to the Stoek- holm conference, who after an extended sojourn in Germany returns to Switzerland and reports the following: Hundreds of young men of military age re- volted against conscription in order to serve revolutionary movement. They organize clubs ¢ publish socialistic periodicals in spite of the v anee of the police and the persecution they were submitted to. “The dissatisfaction grows from day to day. In Kiel the military authorities had to employ ma ehine guns and artillery against the rebels. In Hamburg the garrison refused to fight the people, and-eavalry had to be summoned from Meeklen- burg. In Hanover the soldiers openly fraternized with the independent socialists. The government is compelled to act severely against mutiny and open revolution, js “‘Among the rebels are many women, In Thur- ingia several women were court martialed.”’ In another article the same Zurich daily quotes ‘the Berlin Vorwaerts as follows: “The German government soon will see that: it cannot achieve results unless it works for a peace suitable to the wishes of the German people. The German people will not fight five minutes for the purpose ‘to make Poland an Austrian and Courland hnd Lithuania a Prussian province,’’ | district, and the substan pardent fof the state. while the mines on this With remarkable courage, Herr Hirsch recently made a speech in the reichstag which was promptly ae ; ctl newspaper was forbidden to mention even the fact | that he spoke. Hirsch, however, sent his speech to the Solingen of the miners of that} of it is reproduced as fol- | Arbeiterstimme, the org lows: “Befor with our enem any understanding to lead to a 'y the old Prussia must be tion of this horrible butch destroyed. OW the classes vhieh | over | loited this popula: | s this old P: ho have the ce po $ 1 have so few fric 1 rid, and it i nke , ae for the pro- p dad robe fords and . Hor po vited. but free men, rises in its place. YAR WILL COME TO FOR THE SPEEDY } DAY. THEREFORE, WE ON THAT DAY THE \ J AUTOMATICALL ae) » OF THAT ST STRIVE STRUGGLE, A FIGHT AS OUR SGLDIE f THE FRON WITH INSTRU-| NTS OF J EATIL z TRUCTION AND D THE SHEDDING G wy BF Mi FIGHTING Mth THE VICTIM Ee “Tae DEVIL HATH PowER TO ASSUME APLEASING SHAPE> YEA, AND, PERHAPS, OUT OF MY WEAKNESS AND MY MELANCHOLY (AS HE 19 VERY PoTENT WITH Suctt SPIRITS) ABUSE ME Yo == Damn MES | ‘“) SHIPBUILDERS’ BLANKS HERE —O’HARE SENDS OUT CALL FOR GOOD WORKERS ES O 2 of the Nat | | WITH THE EDITORS. TE Aa Seana HUMANITY I8 PRONE TO ERROR—AND TO CRITICISM. rtob pnota li into the right p elf this mental ex ork of being or tive if you vi Try to imagine the mighty + he last pine , imaginable that cri mouths done by any he collection of human beings in such a Daluth Herald. ticism was impossible SAVING OUR COAL INDUSTRY. a matter of no sinall interest to those who pe for the full development of the state's val resource 10 note that lignite coal from Noonan is being sold in this ¢ Noonan is @ iin ing town in the northwestern 4 of the state, close to the Canadian boundary, on the Great North road, in Divide county, and the sale here of coal from zccomplished by the splendid riers by It is that distant point freight rate agreement made with the ¢ the foriaer board of railroad commissioners, Yet it was a member of the Nonpartisan part of the last legislature, hailing from a western coal territory, who introduced a bill and got it through 1 the senate and been vould have confined the local neighborhood, which, had it pa the house, roved by the governor, apy saies of this coal mine to its ¢ The same handicap would have been experienced by coal mines in other parts of the far western section le of the Mig- sound river would have had a comparative monopoly in the lignite coal business in eastern North Dakota, the horrid senators realized effect of the bill would be, and killed it, h act they have bec roundly denounced by “mang”? Fortunate what t for wh Townley and his cohorts, In the opinion of The Post one of the first duatic of the state is to eneourage the fullest production of native coal possible in order that the state ina he safeguarded from fuel famines, and at the same time furthering the use of a fuel whieh is bound fo prove one of the greatest. blessi ranted the commonwealth by Bounteous Nature, largo Post. fore long “WHAT SHALL IT PROFIT A MAN— Profiteering—that is, using the war for personal gain has become a term of the greatest reproach, It is a fighting word everywhere, You can’t say a much more harmful thing about any man than that he is turning the distress of his country, and the sacrifices that other men are making, to his own profit. The more he conecals his methods, the more pains he takes to pretend a publi¢ ser the worse he is, But there are other forms of profiteering be- sides money making. Any man who uses the war for bis personal advantage is a profiteer, Bernard Shaw spilling tawdry epigrams on the principles that, boys are dying for is as much a profiteer as the grocer who overcharges his customers, The employ- er of labor who attempts to enforce the ‘open shop,’” and the labor union bodies who take advantage of war conditions to order strikes for a ‘closed shop.’’ are equally profiteers. Any man who looks upon the war as an opportunity to inerease his personal or political prestige, to,promote the aims of sect ism, to forward political ideas which the public would not accept in times of peace, to get tue peo- ple of this country ‘‘out of step,’’ is a profiteer, The spite tax legislation of Claude Kitchin is profiteer- ing, The presidential booms of half a dozen men in Washington are profiteering of a very bad and dangerous sort, Playing cheap politics giving o?- fices to incompetent men, refusing. to give office to compefent men in the government of the smallest village-—these are all profiteering. Those who en- : in it are referred to the fathliiar words of ( : it 80, Cottle iy from beens At Bergeson’s Saturday You'll pay more be- TWO REMARKABLE VALUES IN SUITS AND OVERCOATS A saving of $5 to $20 a garment. Suits and Overcoats If you need an Overcoat, Sheep Lined Coat or Mackinaw, now or next fall, you can save $5.to $20 on your purchase. HEAVY OVERSHOES—One: or four buckle, at a saving per pair of Young men will find this a rare oppoz- tunity to get snappy, up-to-the-minute Suits at under market prices. Law. Closed Sundays and Eveniitgs: en in the ship- factory, no workmen is required to ac- te with him cept appointment. r by mail in order , rolled for this ser-! oft enrolling carries | 1 ut pl: on the government’s | Webster on Opinion. Ss the} Inewusistencies of opinion, arising If the posi-| orton justifiable—Daniel Webster. from changes of circumstances, are FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1918 RURAL’S CHANCE ‘OF SQUARE DEAL ‘ATTYARD LIMITED t | i} ing. ing just before onomic waste. | ers., iders aid he would like to see conditions improved Anthony F ; meat dealer, testified that net profits | have been very small during the last two years. He said that the packers buy from one another a great deal, but that he believes there is competi- tion among them in selling to retail- Paul, Minn. Jan. 18.—If a farm- to the hands of a “profes- y” in the South St. Paul asn’t a chance to buy cat- price, S. J. Melady, i before the federal on, Which iv tor “butting in” when was being swindled. he said, a farmer “dogs” or cattle fit but killing, at eight and when the market urice of eattle was six cents. Expelled for Butting In Hie testified that he had been ex- pelled atter retusi ng to pay a fifine for uncommercial conduct. He so that farmers would feel yuld secure the services pn men who would “play Ye could rob the shippers if we nted to,” he d, in speaking of ns of a previous witness that mpany had been giving short an hay. ch bale of hay, sit estimate as Haney Makes Comment. is J. Hane torney for the he should think he would welcome any lation for the benefit of the Hetthen presented figures to show that shippers over- stock just before selling in us testimony has tended to w that the big packers buy “on the making allowances for overfeed- Mr. McGivny said that overfeed- slaughter was an ec- edmanin, St. Paul retail and u heat $15 and up ...50c to $1.25 ‘ovvsansevsancseacveanennnationseancvesnasannysusanenrsysnagyenngy cuit ea0402209 0O0AUUOEAEEE SAMA TASTTLO EU TEe ae eens eeae eae cea eesaa Naat OUGAOOCHEEERUOSOOEOSOOOUSON ASANGROSOAUSAOAUSESSSOQGGNOSODOCSSOUNGLSOEOLUGUASOOUONOSOCUOSEONOUCUONOSOLESOOLOUSQOUSOCESOESOOSOOSRSSSQ0U QUAGOCLSOUSHOUCCEOSOUEQOOEAONED