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te THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE e ostoffice, Bismarck, Class Matter - GEORGE D. MANN : Editor G. LOGA: AYNE OMP: NY, Special Foreign Representative NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Blig.; CHICAGO, Marquette Bldg.; BOSTON, 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresege Bldg; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchan, nge. MEMBER OF 2 OF ASSOCIATED D PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not other- ioe credited, in this paper and also the local news pub- ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserv All rights of. publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. a an MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATI SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year «$6.00 Daily by mail per year....... 4.00 Daily by mail per year (in state)..... 4.00 Daily by mail sie of North Dakota.. 6.00 in for! 0 One year by mail.. «$4.00 Six months by mail. +. 2.00 ‘Three months by mail 1.00 Ons yet aoe $5.00 }ix mont aes - $6.00 8.00 1.50 50 One month .. oe * 7 STATES OLDEST’ NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) Ra ea Neen ROB DIE KINDER A Berlin news item informs the deluded Deutsches. populace that the school children’s knapsacks were confiscated. in the class rooms by four uniformed and: fully armed. gentry who proved to be imposters. , We-aren’t one of those sleuth persons who hunt clues with detectiog} devices known only to Nick Sherlock and Holmes Carter. However, it requires very little perspicacity, perspicuity or acumen to, smell a rat but an im- perial polecat in this print-type camouflage. His royal flyness, Bloody Bill, needed knap- sacks for his men. The kind of “nap sacks” they should have, ‘Uncle Sam, would supply gratis. Ours are weighted at both ends and intended for the “long sleep” and the long slide from a plank at.a ship’s side ‘to the ocean floor. - But -Willum ,wanted: “made. in Germany” knapsacks, So-he made a raid on die’ kinder. Women and‘children first, when there’s any brunt} « ag borne—that’s the code of kultur. Witness ait Germany ‘isa’ “fatherland”—“mother coun- oF would be anathema to:the Teuton tyrant. : “The tweak bay and bay wars Savings Stamps NOW! | : ‘ WASTE OF -WORRY : ; {What sense is there in Aimerican editors dis- cussing ‘the barring of Germany from sources of Yaw, material or the crushing of all, Germanism, in this county ¢r any other, when peacc: comes? Threats have no, effect. upon fighting Germans and they sound like whistling to keep up one’s spunk, / i If counting chickens before they’re hatched is poor policy, trying to sell chickens by weight before they’re hatched is downright idiocy, and that’s about what’s attempted. in. establishing world policies before itis known how we arrive at peace. ae If Germany wins in ‘this war, Germany will dictate as to her sources of supplies and as to the dissemination of Germanism throughout the world. If the nations fighting her win, it will be a barren victory if they do not dictate what her commercial, political and military policies shall be. We are not going to control the mad dog of Europe until we lick him into complete submis- sion. The only question worth while, now, is the licking of him. ‘ The bread riots in Vienna indicate that it no longer is Austria-HUNgary but Austria-HUNegry. REASONS ENOUGH “A Woman Reader” asks for “some reasons why Thrift Stamps should be purchased” so she may be “equipped with telling arguments in mak- ing a house-to-house canvass in our club’s W. S. S. drive.” : = . If there is one thing easy to do it’s finding reasons for investing in Thrift and War Savings Stamps. 1 or To begin with, there are more than 700,000 reasons in khaki “over there.” There are millions of equally good reasons in training at cantonments in the U. S. A. : There are hundreds of thousands of reasons in-blue and white on battleships, destroyers and other war craft sweeping ocean lanes clean of uF boats. There are thousands of reasons flying thru ike air. They are the aces which will play the deuce with Hun aerial forces. There are as many reasons as there are stars on service flags in the millions of American homes. Than these the human ‘mind cannot think of more potent reasons for investing in War Savings Stamps, which is nothing more or less than back ing without saving our sons who fight our bat- tles for our safety and independence. ‘ ; Any one of those boys is ‘reason enough for any. American acquiring the Thrift Stamp habit: THE LOWEST. ? Speaking of traitors in general and war. prof- itears § in particular, The Indiana Daily Times de- livers itself of this opinion and wish: ~< “We’d like to pull a rope on the wretch who plays, false to his country’s back by profiteering while his neighbor is going about his country’s job. God help us, there are a lot of him. “And none meaner, none lower in the scale, than the landlord-who boosts the rent to Amer- icans Because Americans are fighting and work- ing, over there and over here, to make the world safe for homes.” Hear! Hear! If you need help with the rope call for us. When they told him America wouldn't fight, someone at the helm of Helhelm gave him a bum steer! CARRY ON When you read of the rioting Austrians and hungry Hungarians and any other news from:the inside of the iron ring which seems to indicate to you that the war lord’s alliance is about to break up, take it with a grain of salt. Doubtless there are disturbances in Austro-|* Hungary and in Germany, too, and they may grow. But don’t let the effect upon you be what the kaiser hopes for. Remember that he is pray- ing for a slowing up of America’s war prepara- tions, and that may be why-he is not censoring riot reports. Indeed, a large part of the “disturb- ance” may be a cunningly devised German plot to lull Americans into inaction. So, then, when you read of hungry Hungary be not tempted to eat one more slice of bread 3 or an extra piece of beefsteak. Let not any riot in Vienna keep you from buying a Thrift Stamp. If it is true that the central powers are getting “groggy,” it is our cue to adopt the pugi- list’s method of “sailing into” our opponent more fiercely than ever. That’s the best time to.deliver the “knockout” blow. Bring on your stories of riots, Kaiser Bill,|} and whether they be true or false, the United}} States will carry on, faster and farther, and un- ceasingly until freedom has been won for all peo- ple and so safely won that it will last forever. LET HER CRUMBLE No one outside the “House of Hapsburg” will shed a‘tear when the Austro-Hungarian throne crumbles and the emperor goes the route of Nick Romanoff. It'is a nation built upon the sands of several nationalities bound together by a ring of iron and straw held in place by the ‘notoriously: \} desolute. and corrupt grand dukes~of Hapsburg whose hands and*brains»and souls: are guided by the House of Hohenzollern:’’"" © + Let Austria-Hungary ‘ertiimble ‘and fall ‘apart: Germany may try to grab’ some of the crumbs, but she won't hold many of them. German Aus- tria is now Germany, just as much so as Prussia. She could not aid: the plans.of the Teuton junk- ers any more if she became a part of the kaiser’s empire. The rest of the crumbs are not German now and never can be made German. They will rise independent states out of the wreckage of the Hapsburg ruiné.,... These: peoples submitted with ill-concealed displeasiire to'the German cof trolled: government of the dual monarchy.” They will not long tolerate anubdaly- Ger FIA AO eenment of Potsdam. — : Austro-Hungary for years was the Sadie house’ of Europe and there never was a dearth of matches about the place. Austro-Hungary divid- ed.scatters the powder. ‘Emperor Carl can join King Constantine and Czar Nicholas in the land of “used-to-be” without evoking any regrets. Let the House of Hapsburg slide, the world has seen its best—and countless years of its worst. The family of nations can get along quite well without Austro-Hungary and|_ will be. hugely benefitted by the formation of a group of free and independent states whose bor- ders run along racial lines and are not dictated by Hohenzollern greed. DON’T FORGET Kor vacation, “pack up your troubles in your old kit bag,” but include steen pencils. Every day write a six pager and make glad some lad “over there.” READY They say the Germans now charge with their uniforms on backward. ’Tis remarked that this is done to make the allies think they're retreat- ing instead of advancing. It is more likely that they’re practicing for the serious REVERSES just ahead for them. ee + F That Gott person with whom Bloody Bill is so chummy evidently is a poor provider of prov- ender. We're Devil Dogs now, eh? “Then THEY must be Hell Hounds; and for them the WURST is yet to come! i German soldiers surrender eagerly: to Italians BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE _ THOMAS SHAW, FARM BYPERTT AUTHOR, DIES 2 FRIDAY, JUNE; 28; 1918. studies at home. Brought Here ‘By Hill. When. Mr. college at Guelph, Ont. met the late James state agricultural college. home at 2135 Knapp‘st., St. Paul. He} ter’s farms. died late yesterday, : after.a six months’ iliness. The deceased was very well known in Bismarck and throughout the state. on promise of meat and real bread.. Hoover proph- ie esied that ‘food will win the war.” Instead of forcibly feeding it to the world, Germany will have ‘to swallow that kultur her- self. And on an empty stomach at that. While the Prussian bear is hibernating, let’s see that the Teutons don’t make a rug out of his} skin for Potsdam ‘palace or train the tisk Bol- sheviki to perform for-them. ji England recently exempted the one man liv- ing today who is expert in the construction: of padded cells. Evidently Tommy has made up his mind as to:Kaiser Bill’s post bellum career! Every article is marked in’ plain fies and priced as low as we.can.sell it and make an honest profit. You get one hundred per cent value on goods with the “Bergeson” label. ' is to give satisfaction. CUSTOM TAIL “EXPERT RED. G.E.BERGESON & SON , THE UNION DAYLIGHT STORE , ° OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS-CLOSED SUNDAYS ° Proved Out Dry Farming. Store, Absolutely Our constant and increasing effort HAND. PRESSING tNG DRY CLEANING What Ts Your Baby Worth to You? : That baby of yours-~-he's the very center. of the world to you. When. he laighis you laugh, when he suffers you suffer. His tuture—to you that is the most important problem of life. His future — the conditions under . which he .is. to live depend upon the at come ot this war. His future — the mey deperid upon the size of the farhily “nest egg’ when he grows up. \ a ES terest in agricultural work. The lit- tle schooling he had was acquired dur- ing the wintermonths, his summers be- ing, spent at farming. When 15 years old, he was out shifting for himself. From that time on, he carried on his Shaw was 45, he was elected instructor in the agricultural By this time, he had become widely known as an ag- Ariculiist Well Well : Known in| ricultural expert. While at Guelph, he | Bismarck Passes: Away at Age. of 75 Years {. Hill, who in duced him to come to Minnesota in 1893, and take a position with the The early Sree friendship established between the two Professor “Thmas Shaw, 75 years| men continued until. Mr. Hills’ death old, first advocate in America of the] in 1916. dtal purpose cow, agricultural expert, aathor and ‘lecturer, <is‘dead at his| taining to the management of the lat For years he was the close adviser of (Mr. Hill in all matter per- Professor Shaw’s work here afford ed him the opportunity of working out forn on a farm in Ontario, Jan. 3. | some of his theories, one of which was 1843, Mr. Shaw early manifested an in--|dry farming. You have a right —to know that ‘You are not paying more for anything you buy than some other man pays for the same thing. The One: Price Principle Rules in This The practicability o! this he demonstrated successfully on] alester ¢ lege, and ,he wasymade pres- one of Mr. Hill’s farms in Montana. | | ident. eAabeita i short time ago. Professor Shaw was. the first to Professor Shaw is sufvived by his bring the South Devon breed of cattle widow, |.two sons, Professor W. T. to America, he bought them fr Mr.| ‘Shaw, of Pullman, Wash., and Dean Hill, He was always in demand as a| Robert Shaw of «the ‘Michigan State lecturer on agricultural metters and ‘Agricultural. college, and two daugh- was known as a keen debater. He was} ters, -Mrs. J..K. Robinson and. Mrs. also the author of many books on|M- H. Reynolds of St.: Paul. farming and stock reising, some of which have been adopted as textbooks w 5 by leading colleges and universities. _ Ss: IEND Professor Shaw was once editor and F ° R. owner of the Canadian Livestock Journal, of Hamiltow, Ont., and was eae’ Pains AvoIDED ——aur W. 8. 8 later editor, of The Farmer. President Emeritus of Macalester. For years, Professor Shaw was pres- ident of the board of trustees of Mac- osnnneane Hnnnseauensnnonanexsusunseasenauensuavenncnasegsneudnegeaucnegnepenanuavuacoeceees ’ Retrigerators ovresnnuunnndoocuuvevdenaa40neevauegegegensQv4nAveeuso4g44QqvOCUneesquoucctinengsccuieenae Herrick Dry Air System Refrigerators Ask any user in the city and they will tell you they are the most economical Refrig- erator on the market. Hundreds:of them have been sold in Bismarck and all are sat- isfied customers. French & Welch Phone 141 Hardware “ , This space contributed to the Winning of the War by jane tT cuuvncccceauseenccvecsucaanncceccannqnsnnsaentanntn <Pratect the future of that baby of _ yours — protect him from future’ wars, provide for his education. Join the millions: of other American fathers and ‘mothers. s for that baby of yours on esa? invested now in WS, S, will pay you—or the baby~$5:00 in January, 1923. Bay all: you can tor “that baby of yours.” % National War Savings Committee “= WEBB BROTHERS =