The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 11, 1918, Page 8

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f; SIGHT WILSON CLEARS WORLD VISION SAYS ASQUITH Former British Premier Gives President Sincere Praise for War Course CARRIES PEOPLE WITH HIM Makes Greatest Decision of the Age and Has United Sup- port of Country London, July 11.—Sincere praise of President Wilson’s leadership in the war and his advocacy of a league of nations after the war was given by Herbert H. Asquith, the former pre- mier, in an address last night at the National Liberal club, the occasion was a “Hospitality dinner to Ameri- can officers,” at which 500 prominent Englishmen were hosts. The dinner resolved itself into a meeting of ova- tion for the president. Vice Admiral Sims, commander of the American naval forces in the war zone, paid tribute to the co-operation of the British and American navies, and declared: “The submarine menace is not at an end for we are dest ng them faster than the Germans can build them.” Former Premier Asquith, urging the importance of President Wilson’s idea of a league of nations “The most urgent of all peace p said: “The United States a nation has had the very good fortune'that in the supreme ¢! of her national history the man whom she most needed for in- spiration and guidange has always ap- peared. Thus came Washington and Lincoln. “President Wilson has taken the greatest decision of our age and has carried his people with him in it. ‘Moreover, he has laid before the world the grounds for his decision, the rea- sons which justified and compelled it) and the in which it was adopted. we. “America has had her difficultie They have not stifled, but have stim- ulated her energy’and we grasp the spirit opportunity tonight of acknowledging ; our unbounded admiration of the mag-; nificent contribution America has made, is making and will continue to} make in ever increasing measure. “Probably the world oves its great- est debt to Pi for) helping men whose vision has been} blurred and blinded by the smoke of| battle fields. to lift up their eyes and | to look through it and beyond it. It| is'very difficult in time of war to} ‘keep a steady head and a clean tongue. ‘President Wilson does both.” ——— avy w — MYSTERY MAN SHOWS UPIN. WISHEK TRIAL { “Jones” German Agent, Says| Prosecution; Government | Spy, Defense LIVELY TILTS IN COURT A mysterious stranger, introduced in the examination for the government in the trial of John H. Wishek, Ashley banker, charged with interfering with} the sale of Liberty bonds. was appre-| hended outside the door of the fed-j eral court room this morning on sub-/ poenae issued for him by the defense, | which promises to prove that he is} an agent of the department of justice; and not of the German government, as | the prosecution's questioning has tend-! ed_to indicate. The stranger, evidently a German, | but registered locally as Jones, spent some time in McIntosh county, avow- edly soliciting’ funds to provide with) comforts and luxuries Germans intern-) ed in American camps, whom he de-/ clared poorly treated. At the same} time, it is alleged, the stranger sound. ! ed out McIntosh county as to Wishek’s | attitude toward the war. District At-| torney Hildreth first introduced the mysterious stranger this morning, and his subjpenaeing by the defense im- mediately*followed. The defense an- nounces that it will put Mein’ Herr! Jones on the stand in rebuttal. At noon today the prosecution had not finished examining more than half its witnesses. The testimony is much along the same line, dealing with Wishek’s alleged attitude toward the| war and America’s participation there. A majority of the witnesses are Ger- mans or German-Russians, who speak | no English. necessitating the use of} an interpreter. Thorne, speaking | through an interpreter, told of tn. transfer of certificates of deposit from the First National . ank to Wish- eks bank. Nesthke, another German- Russian, apparently disappionted the prsecution, which charged the witness with having changed the story told be- fore the grand jury. Judge Lawder, fo rthe defense, objected to this state- ment, and a heated argument ensued. He finally identified an exhibit in question and _ testified that Wishek had told him that “we must buy bonds to buy peace with the government.” He further alleged that’ Wishek sai “We Germans must together stick. | You Germans are supporting Ham- mond and the First National bank, who are English, and | want you to support me, because | am a German.” Isador Geith, cashier in the Farm. ers’ National bank at Ashley, de- clined to repeat aloud a statement which he alleged Wishek has made to him, declaring he could not do so be cause there were ladies in.the court room. He finally wrote out the al- leged statement, and it was given to both counsels and to the court. The defense objected to the alleged state- ment as scandalous. At noon the court had not decided whether it should go to. tue-iury. EVERETT TRUE Regs Owe Moment MY HUSKY FRIEND. IT HAVE HAD MY’ENG ON YoU FOR WHY, I | GUESS So. WGECL LET'S NOT GUSSs ABOUT IT! STEP OVER WITH ME To THE QXEMPTION BOARD AND GST A RULING ON (IT!!! | SIBERIA REPUDIATES | BOLSHEVIKI itary LOAPER LID IS : | London, July 11.—The ob- || FIN ALLY GIVEN COUNGIL'S 0. K. jects of the new Siberian government include repudiat- "| Everybody in North Dakota Must Work Eight Hours | ing of the Bolsheviki and the | |, Brest-Litovsk treaty and the | establishment of a Russian | republic with an autonamous |! |. Siberia. According to a dee- | laration made by a member | of the new government to ily F ‘ the Vladivostok ‘correspond- Daily ore sailed ent of the Daily Express, it is also proposed to rehabili- state the army and send the ' troops against Germany. Rus- sia’s national debt would be |, acknowledged, Siberia assum- After flirting with the question for sevgral weeks, the North Dakota fed a resolytion placing a ban on loafing. The council had this mat- ler up more than a month ago, and a i 3 ibility. resolution had been adopted. It was ing seresponsioity for her , discovered at the beginning of the x ¥ .. |present session, however, that formal \& ——* action had not been taken, and Assist- i PESIRIT ack ale lay Saar « ant Attorney General -Bronson, the i\SLACKER DRIVE council's legal adviser, was directed to prepare a resolution. As adopted, NETS A DOZEN ithe resolution requires 48 hours, pro- eee jductive labor each week from every Men Evading Draft or Deserting ;2b!e-bodied male between the ages of és |18 and 50 and declares a vagrant any Taken Up by Guard | person within these ages who does By Conde HOW RUMANIA |Council of Defense has finally adopt-| majority of the members thought a; "LOST CHANCE IN DOBRUDIA | Confidential: Document Tells of Interesting Opportunity | Passed Up POLITICIANS ARE BLAMED |Failure Not Due to the Military Leaders,;'Says Memoran- i dum Now Published London, June. 30,—(Correspondence. of the Associated Press)—iow the Humanian armies lost an opportunity. of annihilating the German and Bul- garian armies in. the Dobrudja in 1916, | 1s revealed in a contidential document | which has just reached the Associated Press from an authoritative source in } Rumania. ‘The document, contains an account of a conversation between Field Mar- |shal Von Mackensen and the Kuman- }ian military leaders which occurred jafter the Kumanian peace treaties ; Were signed. Von ‘Mackensen declar- {ed that the failure of the Rumanians {to press their advantage in 1916 changed the whole course of the war. }eH said that action by the Ruman- jians could easily have been followed by a separate peace with Bulgaria which would ‘have separated Turkey trom her allies and changed the whole balance of power in the east. The Rumanian failure, the memor- andum states, was due not to the mill- tary leaders, but,to the shortsighted- ness of the politicians at Bucharest. In. September, 1916, General Aver- jescu, commander in chief of the Ru- | manian army.-had taken an army of’ four divisions and had ‘crossed the Danube into the heart of the enemy's !country. He had, found a clear path !into the heart’ of the German-Bulgar- ian Dobrudja army, and had penterat- ed 15 miles witha view to cu {all their communication: a iri | cu's own position was safe, for be- jhind him he had eight divisions of ; support and reinforcements. including | Serbian. and) Rumania. troops, of the inst quality. Averescu had c ected te cut jthe vures which conne: bin with jitol, and he had only got 15 miles Ve- j}yond the Danube when there came an | order to.withdraw. It was. an abso- lute command from the cabinet Averescu tried to reason with his po- litical chieftains over a long distance | telephone wire, but the potiticians rer tfused to change the decision. The cabinet, it appeared, felt ‘! was danged_of the German the other side of, Rumania ;Pathian tront—breaking thr: | | politicians preferred a defensive pol- | icy tog daring. offensive and Averes- | jeu and@his army withdrew from their | | commanding positfdns. uy Wiss $$ ——— \ Wail Hangings’ of Patchwork. The art of makingepatchwork fs very old. It was practiced in the days }of ancient Bgypt.... Jt was not used there for quilts, however, us the Nile ®/man of the Burleigh county council | ,|fense has: directed Governor Frazier | “ito take up with President Wilson. the} with the North Dakota Council of} Defense, Loyalty Week, resulted in} |Founding up twelve actual or techni-; cal deserters. Of these, four were es-| corted by home guardsmen to the ar- my recruiting office, where they were promptly enlisted. One other has | been sent to camp, while seven are | still held at the Bismarck slacker sta- | tion, in charge of Sheriff French. Of these two are actual deserters from the United States army. They hdd taken French leave from a training camp in Texas and were found here with the carnival company whi¢h en- tertained the Loyalty Week crowds. One of these is a Wisconsin boy, un- der the legal age, who ran away from| home and enlisted without his father’s | consent. His much worried parent is now here, seeking some way by which his son may be extricated from his difficulty. Other slackers detain- ed here are from New York, San Fran- claco and other spots on the conti- nent. . “Corn-Less Day” | for Feet, Every Day| Use “Gets-It,” the Great Corn Discov- ery: Makes Corns Peel Right Off. ‘Look at the illustration below. See the two fingers peeling off a corn as though it were a banana peel. And the man is smiling while he’s doing it! All done painlessly, joyfully.. The moment “Gets-It” touches a corn or ( “Gets-It,” the Only Genuine, Thorough “Gets-It.” callus the growth is doomed. It takes| The corn pain is eased at once. You} can sit at your desk or walk about, dance, think, love and work with ab- solute ease. -You can apply “Gets-It” conveniently almost anywhere where you can take your hoe and stocking off for a moment or two. “‘Gets-It dries at once; then put your shoe and stocking on again. There’s no further jexcuse for suffering from corns and corn-pains. . “Gets-It” the guaranteed money- back corn-removér, the only. sure way, costs but a trifle at any drug store. en by E. Lawrence'& Co., Chicago, Sold in Bismarck and recommended Weems Wit Tribune Want Ads Brine Results. as the world’s best corn remedy by Finney's Drug Store. . A slacker drive, conducted by the Pected to help with the harvest labor Bismarck Home Guard, in conjunction | Weston. Corn Peeler Ever Discovered. Demand but two seconds to apply “Gets-It.”| - valley has & warm climate, but ‘was used extensively as wall hangings and ecreen coverings. not do his bit. The resolution is ex- Hardly a Drugstore in the Land That Does Not Sell This Remedy appetite, a feeling of lassitude and a general weakening of the system. It is then that you should Promptly take a few bottles of S. S. S., the great . blood purifier and strengthener., It will cleansé the blood thoroughly and build up and strengthen the whole. system. S. S. S. is sold by all dru: gists. Valuable information-about tl blood supply can be had free by writ- ing to the Swift Specific Co, 24 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. AUDITORIUM ONE NIGHT JULY--15TH Comstock--Elliott Co. pre- ’ sents the Biggest Musi- cali\Comedy success in years On the Market Half a Century. When you are in perfect health, and are enjoying a strong and vigor- ous vitality, it is ther. that your blood is free from all impurities, ine You should be very careful and give heed to the slightest indication _of impure bloody A sluggish circul tion is often indicated by an impaired with ‘ JOSEPH SANTLEY AND AN ALL STAR CAST 40 Stunning Girls—Dazzling Gowns Ran 2 years in New York, 6 months in Boston and 7 months in Chieago. The Musical Comedy Hit of the Season ULY. 11, 1918, . VALENTINE’ This pretty little French. girl, “Val- entine,” is a soldier’s bride of. two months. Valentine is the maid in the house which was the ‘headquarters where Mrs. Pauline Sands + Lee; ,an American woman working in Paris for the . American Fund for French Wounded, had her headquarters, Mrs. Lee left one night and return- ed the next day to find the house: in ruins. Valentine was’ searching among the ruins for traces’ of trousseau, for the bomb left her d tute. FRAZIER WILL ASK WILSON TO NAME WAR BODY. State Gouncil of Defense Be-| lieves Farmers Should Have a Board of Own \ On suggestion of J. W.. Brander, | county agricultural agent and chair- of defense, the state council of de- matter of naming a federal, agricul- | tural war board, to have the same functions during the continuance of | the war which have been conferred upon the war industries board. The council of defense resolution points | out that the farmers have no orga ization at Washington. protecting their GLYCERINE MIXTURE ~ ° ~ “FOR ‘APPENDICITIS Bismarck people can prevent appen- dicitis with simple buckthorn, bark, glycerine, atc., as.mixed in Adler¥-ka. ONE SPOONFUL flushes the ENTIRE bowel tract so completely it relieves | ANY CASE sour stomach, gas or con- stipation and prevents -appendicitis. The INSTANT, pleasant action of Ad- ler‘i-ka surprises both doctors and pa- tients., eLaves stomach clean and strong. Jos. Breslow, druggist. ng upon cooperation among deal- ers to insure efficiency. The dealers j went on record in support of the Bov- ty RETTIRN \ ernment’s rulings and pledged them- GROVE RETURNS ‘selves to the enforcement of these FROM HIDE MEET ean meeting the Northwest- tern Hide Dealers’ association was re- organized, with the. election . of John Mack, Minneapolis, president; Cc Cc. |Clagg, LeMars, Ia., vice president; aR j Louis Andersch, Minneapolis, secre- H. G. Grove, Bismarck hide and fur tary; Oscar LaLa va dealer, has returned from Minneap-/urer, and J. C. W eae ineaballs, olis, where he attended a meeting of }and D. Bergman, jt. Trae eee eat, car-lot hide dealers of Iowa, Minne-| committee. The ney be uirect: gota, North and South Dakota and/ors consists of Abeniticech. Alpert Montana, called by D. Bergman, re- | Lea, Min Cc. fie ae reall gional federal director. Highty-five | town, Ia.; Bred Re ek gran Forks, dealers were present, comprising outs Dai cory. BIIIBE ie Ha per cent of the dealers in the terri-|C. C. Bnet yg eatceomamltiee tory represented. The object of the; Bergman, i meeting was to receive instructions; to revise the rules and See regarding the handling of hides dur- | was named, consisting of H. G. yn, interests and that such protection in! his emergency is essential to pro! itable agriculture. Dealers of Northwestern Terri- tory Confer in Minneapolis i ; ‘harles . Percival, Des ing the war and to organize the deal-} Mitchell; Char! 2 ‘ fee pes ers so that further instructions could | Moin: H. G. Grove, Blames aw: be, disseminated among the dealers on | H. son, Great \s, J ao wri short notice, as the government is in- | Charles Arnold, Minneapolis, Minn. / SA RS 1d You Have Always Bought, crd which ‘has been The Kin y “in use ‘for over thirty years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- fila sonal supervisioa since its infancy. g Allow no one to Ccccive-you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-cs-good’? are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger ithe health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its ege.is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in cohstant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arisiag therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the asaimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. Tae Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA Atways Bears the Signature of é la Use For Over 30 Years : ‘ The Kind You Have Always Bought’ ~ ray i ENTAUR Co: wevo Ri Good Farms--Easy Terms We offer a number of fertile farms for sale in tracts of 160 -acrés or more in Perkins County, South Dakota, also = annuennnscesagesnnenesonnccsoccconvccsnaccse— mend them. Here of pure high where strain And be reasons, come in, %, on MON RR PLANNER ET NEY = in Bowman, Burleigh, Sheridan, McLean and McIntosh z Counties, North Dakota, at prices ranging from. $8 per 3 acre upwards, 1-3 cash, balance mortgage on easy terms = at 6%. For particulars address THE JEWISH AGRI- 2 CULTURAL SOCIETY, 174 Second Avenue, New York. “Tossnanantacennnnsenusnusnencensaoaqesta anenennnecanguansganavenenenncaccaauanencogunean f i; Usk WE: know you get more mileage rom Firestone Cord Tires than from others. That's why we recom- are the features that we find give the extra mileage: Numerous walls of stout cords, Pure 3um separates cords and prevents friction. Extra thick cushion layer um under tread absorbs shocks and protects inner body of tire. Tough, thick, resilient tread. Bead, which holds tire in rim, stron}- ly reinforced, as is also the side wall. Hinge or bending point of tire thrown has least effect. Result, Most Miles per Dollar. Firestone Red Tubes stand up to the hardest driving, for the longest time. » Antimony cure and laminated con- ( struction are two of the important : \N \ ( ( sure to see the Firestone Cord‘section when you Missouri Valley Motor Company Distributors if or ‘ ,

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