The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 17, 1918, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - *: itor "CHICAGO, Marquette ; IN, 3° Winter ETROIT, Kresge MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber: Exchan, “MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED. PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for: republication of all news credited to it’or not other- Wisp credited: in this paper and also the local news pub- MeeAA rights of publication of special dispatches herein ~ All tights of publication of special dispatches herein SEER At CULATION BR AUDIT BUREAU OF CIR ‘ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by‘carrier per year... «$6. Daily ‘by. mail per yea: le of fies SUBSCRIPTION RATES : (in North Dakota) kaiger’s brutes. every city and hamlet in America, of the earth? ‘ Penis gears on the Austrian military machine.: THE GREAT LEVELER It ;was. once as, unpardonable. for the rich to work as for the poor to idle.: + : “Useful effort signified vulgarity. To confess a trade, or. to profess knowledge of ‘a craft at which men labored with'their hands, was to lose 0 every vestige of social prestige and caste. ~ An aristocrat was a dandified fop. - He regard- 3.90 |ed the toiler akin to cattle and next to chattel. He TR's OLDEST NEWSPAPER, Fee era i scablished 1873) : > FIGHTING FRANCE Frdnce has cut her bread ration one-third. : Ev- ery once in a while France cuts her bread ration. And she keeps on fighting as bravely and as well. The home folks keep on working just the same. That’s France! “When France cuts her bread ration she is cut- ting: over one-half of her diet, for bread there is 50 ‘per cent of the meal. ; » But. France cannot keep on doing this. France already is undernourished. She could fight bet- ter and work harder if she was better fed. “We must do our utmost to see to it that the bread ration of France is not cut down.a single ounce more,” warns the United States food ad- ministration. ' “France must have bread if it takes our last ounce of wheat. to give it to her.” France must not starve. We must save wheat. was peering through the big end of life's tele- +-*_— scope. Along comes Mars: His steel fist:gnd iron-shod foot batters and shatters the barriers twixt classes and masses. Seat ecg To meet the exigencies of war, he thrusts forge hammer. and plow: handle into the hands of -rieh sluggards. see ‘ 7 3 The kick of necessity is administered to make action imperative and discomfort complete. A strange thing happens. It suggests the mix- ture of two chemicals to produce a third. An up- mental “play” house. Some volcanic’ action takes place. The curtain of conscience: rings down on a reckoning. with self.” reveals the plutocrat transformed, bearing “his share of battle-brunt and bitter burden and hardihood which wins for him the: toiler’s genuine respect. ee bee Sk Capital and labor have discovered the joy of making concessions to each other in this colossal <Any Amerjcan who eats wheat now or until |common cause. our cfop’ is ‘harvested ‘takes thatmuch: bread ‘out of the.mouths of hungry’ fighters’ and workers and‘little children “over. there.” op sfessor Emery of Boston is reported “SAFE” REIN!!! ‘ se Bo *..- A SUPER CHEESEMAKER...° ’ “Way uup.in'the northeast corner of these United States; in’ Palmyra, Me.,..i8..a little old woman hose.qnaint ambition in life has been to be a ‘good itothier,’ a good wife,-a- good housekeeper and ‘a yod:*.cheesemaker. Quite a sizable ambition, ‘Gr86. years she’s been’ America’s leading/wom- eeseimaker,.and -although ‘she’s: 71 now, she xXpécts to“keep right’ on spending four or five months of each year making’ a cheese a day. ‘Her name is Mrs. Marcia .Gifford.' You'd like her if-you ever’met her, and you'd like her cheese, top. Everybody who likes cheese would. For Mts. Gifford isn't ‘satisfied with merely making cheese; she insists upon ‘making the best cheese sie knows how. ay < ‘lt. is her. pet idea that a housewife should do: something more than just doing what every other housewife does, dusting, sweeping, washing dishes arid the baby. \ a4 “}-would paint a house ora picture,” the old lady: said. “I'd raise flowers. or write.a book. I’d do: something to take my mind off .the routine of housework.” ed -, It would.be: the:soldiers of: Side -by. side-they strive and struggle toward that goal,,on which Mars sets the price of sacri- ‘|fice unstinting—Freedom, for ‘All, Forever! > American “housewives ‘can’ can—also,’ they should and will—fruits: and’ vegetables. - Shoes have heen classed’.as'.essentials by the war industries board, at the FOOT of the list. Baker has asked “Gérier: general pushing to. better t he ‘letter service; for oUF boyse 2° 2; ¥ a ; t. absistance to ‘our poets. if hee were called Franks. Rhymes with Yanks, you see. | The sweetest words of tongue or pen come from the garbage mén,.who say: “Gee, those folks don’t waste much food !”’: paso Nae : Now is the time for gatden patriots to come to the defense of their country by sowing a fall ma- tiring crop of vegetables in those idle rows. | A PATRIOT: AND ‘HIS: FRIENDS “ Boss, Townley-of the: Nonpartisan league seems to:have ‘had:another. stroke of. ill-luck.; The New Cheesemaking, gccording to:Mrs: Gifford, isan |York Evening Mail, which for nearly a year has art.and hard work. Every year for three and a half decades she has made at least a ton of cheese. One year she made 4,000 pounds. 3 Many prizes adorn the Gifford home, all won at state and county fairs for the best home manu- factured cheese exhibited. “I shall try to make more cheese this year than last,” Mrs. Gifford is quoted, “because our country will need more food than ever before.” 3 Musig houses throughout the country report rio demand ‘for “Die Wacht am Rhine!” _ 5: /« THOUGHTS ON A PICTURE “Two little gitls lie on-a blood-soaked bier, the warmth of. life not yet chilled in their pitiful bodies: 8 le peek PE On.the ‘dead face of one:is an. expression of mortal 'agony.. ‘The other has no. face—it; is a battered: mass of_torn flesh, cut away by a bay- onet.” : One little girl has but one leg. The other: is a‘stump, ragged, lacerated, bleeding from the blow of an axe.. __The second little girl has lost both legs in the same way. -Those pitiful stumps, ending just below. the: knees, are too ghastly for’ description. It: the child’s side is a wide incision—the cruel thrust’ of a bayonet. ; : Horrible? se Yes! © But ‘a ‘more damning. indictment ' of German “kaltut” ‘than any of the countless crimes’ that cai; he laid at,the door of only one man—-Wilhelm I, emperor of Germany. ‘ i: + That picture is: no product of: the: imagination. It isan: actual photograph,’ inthe possession of Dr}; Newell Dwight Hillis! Those little: girls were been perspiring:in his “cauge” is under the search- light of the federal department of justice. The de- partment: charges that: its principal. owner, Dr. Edward A. Rumely, has: received. upwards of a million dollars of German money.. Now we sup- pose the hirelings of the. “kept. press” and all the other wicked and corrupt enemies of Townley- again. The spectacle is enough to make angels weep. Reet fe Townley, of course, is a patriotic man.- The says. he heard about those “rotten rich” ‘speeches Townley..was making, and, with the.assistance of Mr.:Hoover and President Wilson, converted-him to’the cause of the United States. : Take Creel’s word for’ it—Townley has been loyal for eight months at least., ees . Yet. how sorely have Townley’s. friends ‘tried him during that ‘period! Senator. LaFollette, for example. ° Imagine his: anguish“ of saul while “Fighting Bob” was talking about. the Lusitania atthe St. Paul Auditorium last September. True; he bore it with apparent. bravery, yet: it. must had no-more than picked Lintbergh, for ;gover- nor before the facts with reference to Lindbergh's war book were disclosed. | More agony;. Secretary ‘| Joseph Gilbert’s conviction; Randall’s: convictidt; Martin’s conviction; Brinton’s arrest and. indie! ment; the huge Lindbergh majority at New Ulm. and now the revelations concerning the New York Mail! Ossa‘heaped upon Pélion; grief piled upo the brow of grief. Pet hs,:tot more than 13:years‘old; and the pho- tortured in:a manner. that would reyolt:the most barbarous: savage, and finally murdered by the : Horrible as it is, that photograph should be “| eopied and re-copied’and displayed to the public in ve l CHLOROFORM :.Can.you doubt that it would reniove from the BRENDA SE: mind of every man, woman. or child .steing it, be they German-born or American, ‘the: last vestige of doubt that the: Huns. who perpetrated. such deeds and their raler must be. wiped off: the face *iuNeer, théenew chauffeur, has. stripped the heaval has the stage’ in the wealthy wastrel’s| - There is a lightning change and the added scene| : "oilers|| LAND MONOPOLY ATTACKED—WOULD ‘THE IDLE LAND. INTO PRODUCTION | T'S Before Ways and Means Committee Mineral. Land First. 4 Ities_raised.. by: that provision, in ‘the constitution which requires that ington, July 16.—The plan_ ofall direct:taxes:be apportioned among Henry: George for taxing unused land{ the several states according: to. popu- into production was expounded to the lation. My pit 1 think does this. It ways .and -means cofimittee. of “the|is=rot a tax’on-the land nor even on the value of the land, but on.the priv- m? ilége“of holding: the land. This privi- iswealthy’ ex-congressmah gnd‘-lege ‘of holding.the land ‘enjoyed by D tariff board, and Juiige certain individuals to the exclusion of | torney for the ‘Ameri-}all° others is due’ entirely to: conven: | ff Labor. Thé commit-;tional arrangements. invention: it does not: exist: “The right to hold land is t «treated as: a’ privilege and, while the land’ may not be’ taxed, the privilege —the franchise to hold and-use—is | fairly the subject of- taxation: fers in no wise from the ‘franchise of a corporation whose: property; is ‘taxed separately {rom the right to hold and! we would have had little or no crop, ‘but that same night we got a ‘soaker being 1.05 inches at Garrison and) |about: tye ‘same on the reservation. ; This rain made the most wonderful change it is not possible to believe it, “Would Tax- Unused rn 2 have. Jess: opportunity. to. work out their economic’ freedom -than’ when they went away.” i house. recently by H..H.. Willock, Pittsburgh, Pa., oil magnate; Willi js, GARRISON. hitveca stake in the!Control its property.” 2 -He “suggested the 'law~ could «start with a tax an lands primarily valued for mineral” production..-«: “A tax on unused - mineral he, said, ‘would: reach: big..ateel and r ig house”; while Kent argued fist a lot of rich men, like himself, should not be allowed to maintain-aselegs ‘servants and should | he, i to-hold valuable irom fax here seeded in June. I.got 100 ‘ou have taxed the ‘fncome of} : “corporation’ : moderately,” acres of it myself that is just coming “In: thisyou are tak: ing alittle of their income or excess profits, but leaving it-in absolute con- trol of its right of monopoly. monopoly, and it is a-very dangerous * submitted a copy of a: bill has drawn, providing: for tax- ing Jargé landholdings on.the theory “Wj tax-’falls: upon the privi-!one by reason of its ownership of tre- the use and enjoyment of mendous beds of ore and by reason of lands of large value.” In‘ theory this leases of its beds of ore; only a small taxci#ike:the*goyvernment; tax'on the ' percentage. of which holdings are be- privilége of. distilling whiskey. The ing worked.” All the speakers called attention fo tax falls onthe: privilege’. “| garétorthe’ uge:made®ofvit.\The:bill|'the growth of -tenantry ‘in this coun- everything ‘under. $25,-| try. : . a “Fe: Philadelphia,”' said Ralston. “nearly 30 per cent or pedhaps less, Afew years ago'in Washin; ism will be yapping at his intensely patriotic heels |’ nation has. George Creel’s. word for that. | Creel |’ IT DOESN'T Look Good T0 To See A Younes FOctow WHO HAS BEEN EXEMPTED 1QN ACCOUNT OF FLAT FEAT FOXs TROTTING AROUND WITH THE SWEET> —"J HEART OF A SOLDIER ' Bo pweathér conditions. have wrung hiis.heart. And then Lindbergh. He] . ‘It is no business for. ribald jest...’ Put yourself in his place. Fancy: a great soul, filled to burst-| - ing with pure patriotism, éternally. condemned to]. assoc ticti sath: eriveltens, pacifists:and pro-Ger-|* ‘\Hire;and I am ‘sure’.the Bulletin will iy De Preased to: copy ‘same’ f ton it was 25 per cent. %n Baltimore it is between 25 and 30 per. cent. | In New York city the percentage of peo- ple living in their own homes runs down to an infinitely"small one. Thps. under our present syatem, which taxes industry, and which does not. particu: larly tax land monopoly, we have the lands going rapidly into, the hands of a comparatively few men; and-unless somehting is: done about it..when our men return, conditions will be worse | instead of better.. Work will-be.hayd- er to secure, the-cost of livin: 1 ing rent will -be higher, and, they. will LY W. $=, GOOD NEWS FROM * | Garrison, } July 16, 1918. Bismarck Tribu ° Bismarck, ! i Gentlemen: Referring to the statement. I:made | July 11 about the crop .in this vicinity, wish to say it was a fact at.that time especially on the flax. There is some up. After this rain that of course will mot make flax. But in’ whole ‘there is not 5 per cent of the flax crop here but what was seeded early enough so it had started but in this few days it changed from a few scattering sick spears, to a solid blue blanket: A drive through a flax field now is a beautiful sight. The wheat that I never intend- ed to cut a week ago now will go. 5 bushels. and the wheat | intended -to cut with the header now looks like a yield of at least. 15. bushels ‘and. will use binders. ; However, Sanish,- Van- ‘hook, Parshdl-and Plaza is beyond re- demption, *but ey. will also have some ‘crop. I am ‘no crop reporter. ‘out am writing this:to offset the state- ment I made a. week ago. However, at that. time I would have sold out my crop for the expenses of putting it in and now I believe it is the best pay: ing. crop I have had sinceI. startea farming. on the reservation. Yours truls 02S. DALBY. ay ——— f PEOPLE'S FORUM | + eae WANTS CROP. REPORT. Champaign, Ill, 7-15-18. Bismarck Tribune Co, .-.. Bismarck, N. D. Gentlemen: I have been a subscriber for The Bismarck: Tribune; under: its different Kmanagements :for ten years, as I have some land’ holdings-in the Mis- souri Slope. country. ;: In. the paper that came today 1 have-looked it over thoroughly from’, start’ to finish, in hopes: of: finding some sort of a re- port onthe crop-and: weather condi- tions up. there, but all in vain.. I pre- sume you have some ont-of-town sud- scribers, who like myself have land up there and would like.to’ know’ some- thing: as to’ the ore outlook and thought’ today after having read the. paper. if I hac marck IT might have. thought. it was published “somewhere” in. New York. Very truly, W. G. KENNARD. APPROVES OF STAND. ' Mr. George 1, Bismarck, D. ‘ ‘My Dear Editor: . I read_your editorial in your issue of July 2, relating to Judge, Dunne of San Francisco, Cal.. It hews close to the line. . But,,let\us. hope“ he is not a fair sample’ of San Francisco's bench as Ibeliéve we have some here \hat are almost human. However, I ‘will give the issue of your paper to the F.' Bulletin to copy they so de- very fine’ makes “a fight rt y things.’ have lived here in ‘Efisco for the last three years but always claim not: known it- wad ‘published in, Bis-|fendants. : San Francisco, Cal.. July 7, 1918. North, ‘Dakota’ as jy ,home where: I spent 13 of the happiest years of my life 40 miles from Bismarck at Wash- pufn,'N. D., and vicinity, and we don’t soon forget happy days in these war times, . My. son, Rinaldo Fleek enlist- ed‘at our president's first. call with Co. F,, Mandan, and is over there with the rest of Dakota's fighting men whom. we know will make more than good of: course. With every’ success to The Tribune, 1 am your citizen of former days, + f E H. H. FLERK, 112 Seventh street, Cor, Mission, San Francisco, Cal. BUY W. 86 8.—— PUSHING PLAN 10 HITCH UP OLD MISSISSIP Revival of Traffic on Father of Waters Means Building: - ~ of Docks La Crosse, Wis,, July 17.—The plan to utilize the..Mississippi river as a mednum of {ransportation is being pushed ,rapidly-and.with an industrial survey. of the river. valley’in progress, a fleet. of government “barges with their noses turhed . toward -northern ports from:St:'Eéuis and an $,000,000 appropriation ‘bill\pending, in. congress, an early return of lumbering days ac- tivjty on the stream is confidently ex- pected, 4 To’ relieve railroad congestion was a prime. objectim the movement for reviving: river traffic, which was lea "| by Congressman John J. Esch of La -Cropié® and: others, The cargo ca- | pacity of the first fleet of sovernment Harges is’ 4,500 tons, ’and-E. F. Goltra, president of an iron'company, has leas- ed the fleed which will carry iron ore on erturn trips south from St. Paul, Minn. The revival: of river: traffic: will bring into existence a new style of 4 boat to replace those which have plied (the atream‘half’a century or more, ac- cording to’ plaris. The new craft, some of which ate: in course of construc- titon, will be. barge-Jike, ‘wide of beam and‘ shallow depth, driven by -high- poweret!engines,.probably:of the gar- oline sort. This would assure great- ‘er speed, more freight space and. less danger of being run aground ‘on bars.. The present day picturesque steam- - boa with its ‘several decks and stern or side wheels: will not disapepar at once, however. They will continue until. they arrive at .a useless stage, especially in excursion: traffic. ° * The«Helen Blair was the. first and anly..packet of the: season to engage in the freight, traffic.:“She carried ag- d- | ricultural: implements, paints, oils, and miscellaneoys ‘merchandise. .. “Revival. . of-‘traffic:. will necessitate erection of docks along the river. at the. principal sports. ‘St. Paul: is/tirst to announce: such i built, docks..with of handling 2,000: day. towns are expected’ td.'tdo likewise. La ‘Crogse. haa, .no:.decks:but has space | for: unloading - of .merchand’se. " Hast- ings. .Lakg, City, Red. Wing, ,Winona, Prairie ‘du Chien, Dubuque and. Daven: port. will,..make <‘arrapgements ' to’ handle river freight). /.°.:: pied , Charles H..Huff’of,.8* tants who. is. making..a .tour ‘the. found, nine chief; distributine “points along the stream., They are Minneap- olis, Red’. Wing,. Winona. La Crosse, Dubuque, -Ravehport.-. ‘Clinton, \Rock Talend and Moline. These towns, it is predicted, wit play’ ‘Yeading role’ in ‘the development of river traffic. BUY W. 5S. S——— ere .\*6UMMONS. STATE. OF “NORTH: DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh. : IN. DISTRICT COURT, Sixth Judicial District. y Lewis J. Priebe, plaintiff, vs. Wal- ter A: Deitchrick,:.Walter A. Deitch- rick, Van Sant’ Company, a corpora: tion, ‘Alice’L. Howe,;Grant Van Sant. Annie Hegdahl, ‘Hans: Hegdahl and all other persons unknown claiming any estate or interest in or (lien or in- cumbratce* upon’:the’’ property de- scrided in the’ complaint,’ defendants. The State: of North: Dakota: to the ‘Above Named Defendants:’ ; ‘You ane hereby, summgned to an- swer the complaint in» this action, which ‘coinplaint was filed’in the of- fice of the district court of Eurleiga county, North Dakota, on the 8th day of July, 1918, and to serve a copy of your answer to: said complaint upon the subscribers at their. offices ‘in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh county, North Dakota, ‘within ‘thirty days af- ter the-service of this summons upon you, exclusive of‘ the day of. service; and-in case of yout failure to appear or answer,’ judgment ‘will be taken against you by' default ‘for the relief demanded ‘fn -the ‘complaint. Dated at. Bismarck,--North Dakota, July 8;°1918. Si ; NEWTON,-DULLAM & YOUNG, Attorneys for ‘Plaintiff, Bismarck, -North ‘Dakota:*. : * cai NOTICE To the Above Naméd Defendants: You will please‘take notice, that the above: entitld action’ relates. to the following ‘described real property sit- uated’ in.'Butleigh County, North Da- kota, ‘to-wit: The! East Half (E 1-2) of Section Thirty-Five (35), Township One’ Hundred Forty-Four (144) ‘North of Range Seventy-Five (75) West of the'.5th P.M. ‘containing ree hun- dred twenty (320) acres, more or less, according to the U. S. government sur- vey. thereof; thatthe purpose ofthis action is to, quiet in plaintiff the title to .said.real property; that no personal claim .is ‘made: against any: of the de- NEWTON: DULDA? = YOUNG, orneys for Plaintiff, Bismarck, North Dakota. is 24°31; 8-7 14 21. Grocer Up Against It. “Ihave been up against, it\for past 3 years suffering from’ pain ‘in my Stomach and, side until. was consider- ing giving up -my: grocery ‘busi Doctors and medicine did ay help. nie. I heard of Mayr’s Wonderful Kemedy through 2 friend in Buffalo. The. first dose ‘gave memore’ benefit than all the. medicine I had taken before and ~ amy now ‘feeling -as_well_as ever. in my life.” It is ‘a‘simple;-harmless prep: aration ‘that removes the catarrhal mucus ‘frony.the ‘intestinal tract and allays tte inflanimatibh ‘which causes prattically“all ‘stomach, liver and in- feelin ates including append. areal ose wi convince or money

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