The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1918, Page 3

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1918. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBU ‘ _to his sins. we learn that they are but they're stolen from ‘bpavery—has exposed Plagiarism, publishing a el between one of his re and an article in the The imperial words lows: “Hither the dom, honor and morals, of gold.” ' . And here’s what :Dr. “Fundamentally, this | KAISER STRALS + HIS. PEI ECHES , German: Paper Shows Him Up], “as Plagiarist (By, Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) Berne, Switzerland, Aug. 20.—Kaiser Wilhelm has been justly accused of every crime in Ahe calendar except Plagarjsm; now that offense is added His bombastic speeches have dis- gusted the world tor four years. Now Wt his at all the works of German authors who are vastly more intelligent than the all highest. The Strasburg Freie Presse—its ed- itor deserves the Victoria cross for the _ kaiser’s deadly parall- cent speeches “Politisch-An- thropolgische: Monatschrift,” of which Dr. Schmidt-Gliebichenfels is editor. were as fol- Prussian-Germanic world conception, that of right, free- must be pre- served, or it must fall subject to the Anglo-Saxon, which means the idolatry Fhmiat-Ciev- ichenfels had to say three days before the kaiser’s speech was delivered: is-a war for the triumph eitler of the heroic or the commercial, the Pan-German or ‘the Pan-British world conception. On the one side the Prusso-Teutonic, on the other the Anglo-Saxon ideal of the supremacy of gold over How would you like t man_ editor everything.” 10 ‘be the Ger- who was courageous enough to print this expose? BUY W. 8. 5. FOSTER. /GROP. REPORTS _{ YH Wheat harvesting commenced Mon- day in“this section’of the country and a good deal of grain has been cut. The stand of grain in instance is good and a assur ot \ | RICHLAND. First scores from if. the figures are kept have had a bumper crop. running. 25 to 85 bushels; barley is nearly every good yield is threshing ma- chines over the county make one think up ,that we Wheat is running 40 and better, and rye is ex- ” ceeding the average. Reports of-dam- age from hot wind and drought in the southwestern ‘end earlier in the summer are not verified by the thresh- ing machine, and it is safe to say that, except where hail struck, the crop this year is one of the most bountiful for many seasons. z PEMBINA. - The harvest is going along nicely and the indications are that the yield “| will be fully up to expectations. The | heads are unusually well filled, many 4 having six rows of plump kernels. SON. harley. black rust is reported on those pieces damage by rust. i MLEAN, ” Fred’ Prater threstied this week, but have not turns from his is above what was expe farmers. ADAMS. will be nearly double,wh: mated that it would be to any extent and the TRAILL, by Saturday night. all cut. of hetp and the town helped out .where there cessity. ready. and only “waiting to start. for harvesting—no rain, ception of last night’s will. be housed within vest without. section of the country. and gardens ‘have imp: since these rains. STARK, able ih this section. els to the acre. This *aere. ” acre. peen dissipated by good out the affected areas. The country around be obtained’ in the task the grain. Labor is si in the fields. _ Tribune Wait Ads Br EN re a Tops. ° Cutting has commenced in rye and The high winds have done some damage to these grains in spots where it was advanced and dry. Some in the wheat, which will probably decrease the yield planted late. early planting is conceded to be past The his rye this week and it averaged 10 bushels to the acre. Ben Weise is also threshing heard the re-~ ‘he average cted by many The farmers are fipding as they are harvesting the grain that the yield at it was esti- a short time ago. The kernets are plump and the heads well filled and heavy. rust nor smut have injured the wheat prospects are for a much better yield than last year. The small grain crop of Traill coun- ty is nea¥ly all in shock ‘or will be is hearly hess There is no material shortage people have was dire ne- A few threshers, here and there, have started u pand others are for the. word The weather has‘been ideal with the ex- sprinkle—and if the dry weather continues the grain a few weeks, Good average yields are expected. STEELE Harvesting is progressing nicely and another week will see the fields pret- ty well in.the shock. Help is getting more plentiful and there will doubt- less be plenty to complete the har- loss. Threshing will] “ start ‘within the next ten days. To Weavy’ rains have visited this Late grains roved greatly The full swing of threshing in this county will not get ‘started good un- til next week. An. excellent quality of-grain is promised, the grain being hard and plump.’ No smut is hotice- Winter rye ‘has already made its appearance at the elevators in small quantities, running about seven busff- will be the best yield in years and with an in- creased acreage . Wheat is of better ¢ quality. than formerly and will aver- age about eight or nifie bushels to the| ! An excellent quality of barley and oats show a decreased acreage under former seasons, the highest yields not showing over seven bushels to the _A recent normal rainfall! has pre- vented a burning up of the crops and the supposed grasshopper menace has work on the part of County Agent Neumann, who has spread poison broadcast through- Werner, Kil- deer, Hiliday and_Dunn Center. re- ports big crops and Hettinger county is now working as many men as can of getting in earce in this section many of the busingss men of the towns going out into the fields to relieve the stringency. children are also doing active work]. Women and UY WS. 4 ‘ing Resulte. re 3; Neither |: 1 Se $ civaese * Fiera near thé-Swiss border! (Fig. 1) Military Critics Warn of (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass’n,) Amsterdam, Aug. 20.—Every day ar- ticles appearing in the German press make it more apparent that the kai- ser's government is preparing his people for a great retreat on the west- ern front.” ~~ Many of the articles are undoubt- edly inspired by the general staff, | and most of them hint vaguely at im- pending military disaster, veiling the real situation under such terms as “shortening of the front” and “con- centric gathering of our armies.” Gen. von Ardenne in the Berlin Tageblatt is the most outspoken of the military critics. He wafns, Ger- many, of an impending “change of po- sition in a backward direction,” add- ing: “It, notwithstanding the manner in which the Germans have frustrated the French attacks, a shortening of| the front is ¢arried out, it can only be | pointed out that the German armies| are ding in enemy country and that the war is now one of movement. | The momentous' decision to give up| the line of the Marne will, therefore, be no reason for great rejoicings on| the part of our enemies. Foe Strategy “Praised, At ‘the same time anoth nous expert, Colonel Gaedke, writing in “Vorwaerts,” warns Germany — of “events that may come.” Ie gives.) extraordinary praise to General Foch's strategy; Which “always-doos, the Jright thing at the right moment in the right way.” The military writer of the Berlin Lokal Anzeiger-remarks that a ‘change in the present tine is possible, and even. probable. “The phrase, ‘a war o fmovement,’ sufficiently expresses the fact that both parties, attacker as well as defender, ‘have reg: their liberty and m i the battlefield-as a chess board, with- out clinging desperately to villages, heights, or even sections,” he says. “It As indifferent whether troops move forward or backward, so long as the adversary’s aims are impeded.” The Cologne Zeitung says: “General, Foch’s attack has caused pessimism in Germany. The-dismal ones are going round with their heads | bowed, uttering lugubrions cries andj} endeavoring behind the concise state-! ments of the official, reports to discov- er all kinds of bad suppressed events. “The work of the German supreme army command should not be render- | ed more difficult or altogether ygin | by chattering at home and on the ‘The Kind You. Have Always Experiments that trifle wit Drops and Soothing Syrups. , Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; therefrom, and by regulating 1 Asiago (2) where the Teutons are concentrating men. the Piave front, scene of the Italtans’ victory of this spring. HUNS PRESS PREPARES PROP FOR RETREAT neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance: ege is ‘its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, In Use For Over 30 Years - ‘The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEWYORK CITY, - INA ON WRRYCHEN am a x nigh ee Plodee * co Zt Pana a4 e 4 , ° ’ OM) ofaarwcuara» beakelaats ‘ . Italy is reported to be’ preparing to attack the Austrians as a part of the great allied offensive campaign. The drive will come to outflank the Austrians at Fig. 3 is Impending “Shortenin of Front” : : front, as occurred in. the -case of: the offensive begun’ on July 15.”" , Retreat Foreshadowed. An- article in the Vossiche Zeitung clearly, foreshadows a_ retreat. ~ It says: “It is not in the interests of the Ger- man army leadership to allow the fighting front in, France to stiffen, that is to say, to revert to a war of position. Our strength“is in move- ment. Hindenburg has already shown once by hts“great retreat that without endangering the gentral situation it is possible to bring movement into a stiff front also by a change of position to the rear. Viewed in this light, there becomes clea the extraordinary ad- vantage which lies for Germans in the fact that they are standing deep in the enemy’s country. We have, therefore, at disposal as the field of operations the whole aréa between the German frontiers and the present front. The lines in which the two opponents stand opposite each other are now so intricate, that somehow or other a solution must be found. Such tension as is connected with the is year and ensuing de- is in the long run un- bearable. Somehow or other this sft- uation must change. y, “Do not allow yourselves to be de- ceived . Wurther great events must follow. To even a greater extent than ourselves the Frgnch leadership has engaged itself so deeply that it cannot break off the battle ‘and is forced to fight it out.” HUY W. 8, §——— Canada, Too, Calls For. Army Nurses (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) . Ottawa, Oont., Aug. 20.—Canadian hospital. authorities are appealing to \| the young women of Canada fo enroll in schools of nursing to release train- ed nurses for army servjee, warning the public that unless they do so many civilian hi als may have to close. 7 ——-nhvy Ww. s.s——— Thousand Belgians Building Hun Roads (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) . Amsterdam, Aug. 20.—-One thousand inhabitants of Coutra west of Flanders ve been compelled’ to go to Sedan, ance, where the Germans are mak- ing them build roads and dig trenches. German convicts work with the Bel- gians, SONA AEN Bought, and which has been in use for over thirty years, has borne’ the signaturé of and has been made under his per. Led Sonal, supervision since its infancy. d Allow no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitationg and “‘ Just-as-good” are but and endanger the health o; Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. ‘ ‘What.is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, It contains Its It is pleasant. allaying Feverishness arising the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sl Tae Children’s Pane te i i oe GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Mother's Friend. King Albert Gives Club to His Officers , Paris, Aug, 20.—King Albert of Bel- ‘gium has ‘retited and furnished the pavilion of Henry IV at Saint-Germain- on-Laye to be used as a club for Bel- ‘\gian officers, to be known as “The Gercle Royal des Offi ‘belges.” It aims to give officers with families a lodging at reasonable prices. my ws. §. ——— DAKOTAN- HELPED TO FILL THE GAP Minot, N, D., Aug. 20.—Corporal A. Ray Hardy of Surrey arrived home to-| day after spending nearly a year -in France. He went over with an’ engi- neer division. He was in the trenches 28 days and was in the company of engincers and infantry that rushed in to fill the gap that was made on May 27 when ithe-~Germans were making a drive and the English and French line@ were broken, leaving a clear road to Paris, Hardy was wounded twice ‘but did not.leave the fighting lines. He is in the United States under special or- Cuticura Heals One Solid Mass of Scales, In Blotches, Itched and Lost : ‘Rest at Night. “Nothing Purer, Sweeter, for All » Skin Troubles Than a Cuticura, x 5 v “My face and neck were affected with ugly pimples, and blotches, and my face became one solid mass PAL of scales. The pimples fes- x tered and were in blotches, ‘ )) and many ‘of’ them itched causing me. to scratch them. T lost rest at night, and my face was disfigured, & “ For two years I suffered, when I noticed an advertisement for Cuticura. I sent for @ free sample and when’ I Had used Cuticura Soap and Ointment for three months I was healed.” (Signed) Miss Erma Bruem- mer, Willow St., Stephenson, Mich., August 30, 1917. These fragrant, super-creamy emol- Nenss are all you need to keep yqur skin clear and healthy. ry bo Uy Address post. Bo: oP 4 Siniment Sande, AT ee A AP ders to trainpectnits.at Camp.Farrest, Ga aa . “When we took the first German Some of the.smartest Suits of the season are being shown in our Ready-to-Wear Sec- _ tion’ They are always distinctive for their styles—their individuality, every. model in Ae ee ee i ae the new showing is a new triumph, the ex- clusive creation of the world’s foremost.de- ue signers. The collection’ throughout is notable for its moderate prices and practicable, service- able fabrics ‘and styles. ° WEBB BROTHERS co were Epglishinen dressed,in American, |,.Germany. is -|aniforms-to foot-them;”-he said. “They | tack and-when they go.cut-a~barrage-- ~ know now ‘that the Americans are on|is held behind them st prisoners they would not believe that|the battlefield and have a wholesome |turn. We found many wa were Americans, but insisted we’ fear of us. year. Mail '- Owing to shortage of Print Paper, the government 5) you_will not miss a copy. . Weekly Tribune in arrears will b Look at your label today. / e d ATTENTION Subscribers Examine the yellow label on your papér. If you are not paid up in advance, kindly mail remittance so that (Ready-to-Wear Section) insists that. all mail subscriptions not paid in advance be cut off the list. , On August first the Circulation Department will re- vise its mailing lists _ and all subscribers to Daily and ropped from the list. In face of the high cost of production, The Tribune. management has retained iis old rate by mail of $4 a. This rate can only be maintained by enforcing the ; "paid in advance regulation which the United States postal authorities insist upon. ~ Send Your Remittance. So TODAY gun men chained to’ their guns.” s forcing, its men_to.at- oan”?

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