Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
As MONDAY, JULY 8, 1918. : BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE OCG © AMERICA WASH NA ADVANTAGE OF AN INEXHAUSTIBLE: SUPPLY OF ‘RAW. MATERIAL’ WHICH ‘WILL BE OF THE UTMOST VALUE AFTERFTHE. WAR - By FRANCIS H. SISSON, THE WAR HAS MADE NEW YORK: rN HE NeNE EATEE OF THE NORD AND Hs CVE OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE ONWLSEHE DEVELOPEMENT rivals, Enropean nations will also: certain material. advantages, . Otte-o8-—- these will be the it; given thelr colossal nationak Teva arhicn apur them: to redoubled efforts t a quick upbullding of thétr’ trade, They will-Rave. colonies: raw. materials, which" hated during the last three years é gree’ of productive ‘effietéticy. 7 wilt have ao iifimate ‘acquaiat with the conduct of foreign trade aid’ at least a framework of an organliehs tion for perfectitig it! They wilt have a system of forelgn batké withistaits of trained men. ‘They will hai gree of governmental aésiétatite ‘dad support, hitherto, at least, unkiows American traders, But America has certain other ad: vantages over them. She Hada) Rigo gold reserve on Which to build credit, sufficient ‘not only: for. our’ own: ebters prises, but also to give‘ foreiga sd We have a banking system character- ized by some of our rival nations’ és ideal, a system lending’ itself’'to the extension of American financial houses abroad. In this a beginning bas been made, not, only by setting wp. branci. banks and foreign offices, but: s organizing commercial banks, Then, too, America bas a form of government in which her citizens be lieve, Other nations’ generally under staud that she has to territorial am- bitions, Finally, this country is not likely to be cursed with the class struggle, : , Economically, her position 1s solid. With an fiumense and varied popula- tion, she is assured of a richness and. variety of productive efforts that, rightly directed, should give her pre- eminence, She has ‘an abundance ef untilled farm land, {nextiaustible mines, rich forests:and ample water supply. Our inventive genius is pro- verbial, And we shall have at the ‘close: of the war a merchant marine such ns America or any other nation has never before known, S And yet, while every other great na- tion 1s attacking its future prepara- tions under carefully organized. gov- ernmental direction; we in the United States are lagging behind.’ There has been so fir no organized ‘\indertaking of the’problem of reconstruction as q whole on the part: of the Governiierit. While it may be fairly assumed’ that such departments as those of the Treasury, Interior, Agriculture, Com- merce and Labor are devotitig much of their time to reconstruction measures, there Is as yet no agency for the co- ordination of their findings and: the suggestion of general policies, untess it be Congress ttéelf, a: purely political While up to the present time tndivid- uals, corporations and: associations have done a great deal in the desulto- ry, detached sort of way, no for the Interchange of opinfon | co-operative effort has been creat This country seems not yet to hav’ sensed the fact that the day of Jodi. vidual efforts and purposes, as diatib- guished from co-operation ‘and "publ service, has passed; that: the war bee Mice President Guaranty Trust Com- pany of New York, In the chaos of war there ts both ‘evil and good. At first sight the evil ‘of war Is so manifest that talk of bene fite seems sheer trony. In money the war has already. cost at, least a hun- @red billions, Millions of lives have { ‘been lost or rendered economically ‘ 4 ureless, Entire countries have been ‘ laid waste. The paraphernalia of busi- besa bas been scrapped. Normal trade youtes have been abandoned, and new ones, to meet temporary needs, have been established, ZPARTIALLY ny MOBILIZED AFTER. - THE WAR. equipping the industries of peace. The needs of every European country along these lines must be studied, Jsut with this period of reorganiza- tion successfully passed, the nations utfected by the war foresee ‘a new era of prosperity. Countries heavily in ldebt are planning to reduce their ob- ligutions and eventually capture. the bilance of trade, . They are planning intensive cultivation of the soil, en- Jargement of industry, development of DEVASTATED NPRES - THE RECONSTRUCTION OF CITIES. DESTROYED BY WAR WILL BEONE OF. THE FIRST OF THE TASKS OF PEACE its ourcome, will have unavoidably made different from the old pre-war standard, How great 1s this problem of read- Justment is illustrated by the estimate that 35,000,000 men are under arms or directly connected with military and naval service. How many more, in- cluding women, are engaged exclusive- ly in war work It is Impossible to es mate, Then there are the million: resources never before known, | Lux ury and euse-loving peoples have be- come frugal and industrious. Uni- versal turift has become a necessity. Neutral countries, no longer able 10 Import necessities, are | developing their own fields and mines, They are increasing their manufactures and de- veloping their foreign trade, We are entering upon an age of: enterprise and preparation, not unlike that of At this time, when all the nations of the world are giving thought to. their commercial, financial and industrial conditions after the war, it behooves the United States also to tuke stock of the future. Whether pi is one year or five years away, it must come eventually, Business, however, will probably never again conform to pre-war standards. Whether the United States ts to be a well integrated part of the newly ‘organized economic body depends almost entirely upon the steps which we now take to prepare for the adjustment of our business to the conditions.that will prevail after the war. 5 To assist in focusing public attention upon the very pressing and immediate need for giving serious thought to our economic future, this hewspaper has arranged with the G. Trust Company of, New York for the pablication of a series of author es on the conditions brought atiout by the war in this and ether co ken to meet Nevertheless, there are certain ad- vantages in which are seeds of restora- «tion and even greater future prosperi- ‘ty. The war has driven individuals and nations to # marvelous develop- the Renaissance, at the close of the Middie Ages. The first peace task will be the de- mobilization of the vast war machines ‘and the rearrangement of society on a mect of thelr personal. and collective | pence basis which the war, whatever whose energies are directed towards | supplylog goods and services needed only because so many, men and worden have been withdrawn froin production and distribution, ther, and to pr ter the future. actual fighters is a huge prebleim, the noof the war Indu e and the steps which are bein! me THE NDITOR. wisdom of mankind. ope especially, must and re- all the cover, far the pertod of rebuilding 0; their merchant marine, While America’s rebuilding and de- mobilization problems will be compara- tively light, and she will accordingly have an important advantage over her Do Your Share arial! dence of nations, but also the*interde pendence of individuals and classes ‘and that common understanding, coup- sel and co-operation are to be tlie watchwords' of the future, a established not only the me ( * > eT OZECHO-SLOVAK FORCES’ | | POSITION IS SERIOUS | I Will C E ) , ; pails | t Will Come Lasy Children Cry for Fletche YANKS’ SECTOR | Anisterdam, July 8—The po- : Ae : rs ; ? ; American Front Remains T [peition, ofc the Gzecho-Slovak | That there will be as itto trouble eee ee ER merican Fron! emains Tense | forces operating in Siberia has | " in Putting over wate aw save - of’ Big: Drive acording to a Vienna dispatch | This Is. Done Cross pledgeS is assured by the way | to the Berlin Tageblatt. They | By P. G. HOLDEN several communities In the state have} With the American Army in France, | already have suffered several | HCANNOD. gb gvod. trult stthout spiaying, Wee ae already secured thelr quotas. The July. 8. (By the. Associated Press) —|| Severe defeats, the message de- produce cull fruit, It is a waste of ti - Unsprayed trees | Nowth Dakota War Savings Committee Although the entire front continues in i clares. é | trees unless they are sprayed, ae OG cae oaks a 2 Pan ee |18 highly gratified by the way the pe Ser Ape rari orsa Eade | Austro-Hungarian prisoners | bearing age and millions of those of Hearing age Alb ecuunane county idircetors snd ye, aren meld bed he i enmy effort has not yet developed. | of war in Siberia, the newspa- | pecans sheyiare ROLsprnyed. De So ED ee eh Retaaaus al in use for over thirty ¢ : Comparative quiet prevailed in all the ||} Per adds, are taking a ‘promi- | The spraying outfit must be a good one and kept in repair. Fi : port to headquarters a made : 4 A Z cha te ones D pair, For a small | terest in the War Savings movement and has been made under his pete American. sectors last night and this | | nent part in the fighting i orehar a ere! Sprayer will do; for a large orchard a power, outfit is most ica a general determination in their sonal supervision since its inf; ber morning. A ‘ {| ,economical, Have at least 30 feet of hose foi nnd spray : ; i i bya Be : i Meee es kane gatincreahe’ HOw: I against the Czecho-Slovaks. P| nowar"gutat:: ‘Shia‘ie\ilipertant r a hand sprayer and 50 feet fora oe to put be inte “oer the) i Scleciie tt a no one to deceive you in ever, in the aerial activity. chiefly in A SOWA Se it is more efficient and economical to disca ; ya jeon aaa rcnsie Sa oder unterfeits, tations and Just-as-good » ate but Bo natrolling and scouting: Pranches: BANK PAINTED gun which larely has come into use. In GHUle ae oman Teaatta0 fi c vo eat Ae a a ive Experimenta that trifle with and endanger the health .of ——— buy ws. s——— spraying, we s se 2 1 a s! ; s : 5 hi jounds of pressure s : ‘ past 2 in buying the stamps It can easily have ake YELLOW: BOARD b pressure so as to blow the solution upon every part of the tree. We | ¢o its credit the luvestment of enough Infante and Children sieace against Experiment, GRAVE COUNTER ’ Should. spray from ev- | money to build and fit out one or more What is Ss OR A ery side so th si vi le ‘sth th REVOLUTION IN . ORDERS PROBE}, Tenet Patttag ek Fe OT aa parapet Castoria is a harmless substitute for re Oil, gorie, MOSCOW RAGING| : F. Kettogg, Hebron banker ané | thoroughly coated, with,| need hundreds of these bouts te pro- Drops,and Soothing Syrups. “Tt 15 pleasast It chapels i re et at ey chairman ofthe Morton. county, coun- | the solution, i] tect our own shores from now on, neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Fighting of Great Severity Be cil of defense, today: reported to the The standard mate: eee ‘ its Lear) Eee re (an nitty years it has Me"! state council that the front of his nals are. lime-sulphur, | SAVE AND SERVE. en in constant use for the relief o! nstipation, Flatulency, tween Bolsheviks and bank was painted yellow last might. | arsenate of, lead, and | The gospel of “Goods- and Services” Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising: Revolutipnist ine state council Enmediaisly directed |} inicotine sulphate’ or to-'| ean be summed up in a single senr- therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids evolutionists an investigation by the state's attor-|) bacco solution. All | tence: “Nobody buys anything without the assimilation of Food; giving healt ‘and ney and sheriff of Morton county. Kel-| these can be purchased ; | makiug somebody else work for him.” The Children’s Pana . Th 4 bin raed rica sleep. gyondon, say eee Serious counter etre pettvelins pegeiotte, work | ready. td mix, except! Therefore refrain frow- buying what cea fe Ho eb wolution “hag broken: out in. DLOsco W.. — v8 ‘ the self-boiled lime-sul- | you do not nctually need ani save the i en socording, tous semboltee Wert ee é cae ee I ed: 1 i '¢ ney, Saving, however is but halt GENUINE CAS R AL YS reau telegram dated on Sunday from iP ee ae in: -SbeayiDg, | Money. ay ee i Ta a aon’ T | WA er ° Moscow and transmitted to London 60-DAY COURSE peaches. your duty to your country. ane oe : by the Exchange Telegraph company's FOR UNIVERSITY When to Spray Apples. | plete duty is to save and serve, the Bears the Signature of correspondent at Copenhagen. Fight- First spraying, just, | service being the loaning “ your sav- ing of great severity is taking place A as buds swell, Solu- | ings to the government so ft can ente in the streets between the Bolshevik MEN ANNOUNCED t tion—5 gallons: commer-, | ploy the men formerly making unneces- troops and ‘social revolutionaries. 4 A cial lime-sulphur to 50 | sary things in m ng things neces: | rea § _| Washington, July,8.—A sixty day in-|' , euD 0; y ee Beat yar Sav- ate bis the: Been hepa ly don. to: tensive course to train college men |, gallons water. / | sary to win the war, Buy War Sav: i A dated Sunday evening at Moscow says as assistant instructors in the stu- Secon spraying, just | ings Stamps. — P C4 @ that ti vas Bt q|dents army training corps will open as blossoms show pink. y ‘ in: fae CHupetan capital, but qhat tu July 18 at Plattsburg, N. Y., Fort Sher- Solution — 144’ gallons NOT A CHILD'S MOVEMENT. : has’ been: suppressed ean Ils and Presideo, Calif. The commercial Mmme-sul- |! The War Savings movement is not ll Se or ef ears Sos war department announced today that phur to 50 gallons | ® child's movement; it fs a wage id colleges which enroll the minimum of ‘ + ’ v Y bi Bo yl Trae SY Se i water; add 2 -pounds earner’s movement, ‘It would be a cap- $ TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | 100 able bodied students for, the stu-| powdered arsenate’ of lead and % pint nicotine sulphate. k | Li a {talist movement if Uncle Sam had not The Kind You Have Always ught im ; R se {ralning cores eee Anriied fo Third spraying, when blossoms fall-and before calyx end of little apple’ 1 put the'limit at $1,000. If you do not’ t OO FOR RENT—Furnished * ouse-keeping|es. Regular army officers will have clones jaonton eats in second spraying. i } | buy your quota of War Savings Stamps rooms, modern. Mrs. J. O. Varney.|charge and members of faculties as these three spruyings are thorougly done, almost perfect apples can be’ | you really have no right to complain Phone 773. 78 1wk| well as students are eligible. grown in most sections, hut it is better to give two more sprayings, using the) | if men with large amounts of money j avy Ww. 5. 5.——— “BUY W. 5. :——— same solution. ‘The fourth spraying should be given two weeks after the third,’ ) are given the preference in absorbing | WANTED—To buy old potatoes for| Cools the stomach, washes out the and the fifth, during the last half of July,or first of August. x 1 |gssues of government securities in tha | § e the State Penitentiary. S. F. Tal- powell: rive (out dee eels For Pears, Plums and Cherries, ! | tuture. : id , Y i y cott, ‘warden. 78 2t|the liver — it’s Hollister’s Rocky Practically ihe same calendar and mixtures used on the aj oy eee en ets ld i Loa Pair of ays WB 8 at PG ana tine itronces.weck factory for pears, plums and cherries, pe apDles arereatle , | THRIFT JINGLES. HI , \—Pair of glasses in case, Satur-| durin, v' a a s - hile eg Fs beri *] : ‘ day evening. Finder return to Trib-| happy and contented you'll be. . 35¢.| ang Hanes plan, while spraying the apples, to go over the pears, plums} 2 Eee suip page i 4 Sheetal une and receive reward. 781t|Tea or Tablets. Breslow’s. x Spraying Peach t one rel with aciaattion ' BUY W. S. 5 BUY W. S. S——= ying Peaches, 4 was filled w! “ ‘ . = WANTED-—Stenographic work even | For peaches, the first spraying can be given the same as for apples. | For fighting Germany; i Consumers will suffer a serious short- ings. Call 197 78 It Cc. ALBERTSON f sie fe econ spraying just after the shucks fall, but use self-boiled And oh, pe ee BADEY age of. coal next winter, unless they be- ———auy w. ss. me-sulphur instead of the commercial article and add arsenate of lead j . ‘That I had done my share i i ir bi ‘ WANTED—Furnished room. Address PASSES AWAY licotine, the same as with other fruit. Your experiment station. aE “uns | Through purchasing War Savings . gin to fill their bins at once and contin- or call R. H. V., Tribune composing IN MICHIGAN] ‘2%."i! tell you how to prepare self-botted time-sulphur. Stamps, il ue to accumulate their winter supply, room. : ‘Two more sprayings should be given peaches at intervals of about one’ || To send it “over there.” | during the summer months.’*” ‘ °¢ SA Xne——— e e} 3) y "a °] pap eran =) " Sante Bellboe Uaast” bet 1s|. Aries: from; Brank-Alberteon of De- | Tenth: | Osre:shouldibe falien not fo sbray ny tajt when 1¢1s-in fall blond - > years old or over. Grand Pacific. | troit, Mich, today, announced the) . ae pea ree recussed but as yet machinery for dusting trees . 78 tf | death i nthe Michigan metropolis Sun-| °° e experimental stage. H] area aaa tee day of his father, Charles Albertson, eee ? BUTCHER WANTED — Gussner's| for 38 years a well-known resident of | sons had preceded them. It was not ow and five sons—Frank, Charles, Jr., je store. 76 tf| Bismarck. Mr, and Mrs, Albertson, | generally known that Mr. Albertson ; I William, who is serving in the e@ on t e e Si e an er ow } —_arv w. §, S$ who had lived in the capital city from | was ill, and .his friends were unpre-| United States navy, and Stanley. The DELIVERYMAN. WANTED—Gussners | territorial days, left about a year ago pared for the news of his death. funeral will be held in Detroit, and Adv.—Weste cers Association. t 6 There survive the deceased his wid-| the remains will be laid to rest there. m za Coal sree Y Y ‘i a store. ._ cétt Titre , for Detroit, whither several of their