The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 6, 1918, Page 8

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UMBERED, AMBUSH REDS, AIR RAIDS RUIN "WIN BATTLE WHICH FREES SIBERIA SERWAN MORALE annwrr~.~ |Huns Take Planes From Front THE FAN OF SOVIETISM to Rhine SIBERIA OVER THE TOP Great Shortage of Men’s and Boys’ Clothing HE _ Govern-: Turn Railroad 4 Gulley In Into Sham.| bles in Which Dead Laid Un-| | (By Newspaper. per Enterprise Ass'n.) ‘ buried for Days, Says Knisely. London. Eng., Sept. 6—The moral effect of the allied bombardment of military objectives in German towns Ya By BURTON KNISELY 1 i i 4 z along the Rhine is constantly increas- (Sta? Correspondent, Newspaper \- ing. Every source of information |brings this word to the allies. terprise Assoclation.) Nikolsk, Siberia, Sept. 6.—This is the best place to stand to watch the allies try to close the fan of soviet-| The scarcity of German planes at the start ofsthe British offensive m August is largely attributed to the ment has com- mandeered for military use many of the foremost woolen mills,,5 and no new wolens shown for spring 1919. Whole- sale prices on suits and overcoats in Chicago and New York are from 10 to 35 per cent higher than our retail prices for the same merchandise. We Glory In the fact that many jfact that @he German .gaasters haa been compelled tu heed the clamor of the press and people for greater de- fense against the allied bombardment, and had recalled great numbers of fighting planes from the front. An example of how great this with- jdrawal was: Allied aviators return- ing from a bombardment of Saarbruch- en encountered 40 German fighting planes before they reached their base. With all the bombing the allied air- men are doing along the Rhine, they are sticking strictly to military ob- jectives and indulging in no “slaugh- jters of\innocents.” The Air Ministry points this out in view of stories tie Germans have beenaspreading re- cently. One example. When British air- ism. | 5) The little remaining Bolshevik con- trol in Siberia spreads over the coun-} f try in the shape of an open fan, with i the east tip on the Ussuri, the center i of the base at Manchuria station, the | west tip at Lake Baikal—the base ly-| ing along the Trans-Siberian and the curved border pointing north. There are three battle-fronts—at each tip and at the center of the bas: Allied strategy is to close this fan, | | and shut the Bolsheviki up inside of it as it closes, driving them from Hab- | arovsk in the east and Chita in’ the} west—their greatest strongholds into) a center of nothingness, And most of the troops and sup-! plies in this maneuver go through | Nikolsk. It is a busy place. The last time I passed through Ni- i factions trying to grab the Bole | jmen arrived over Cologne recently kolsk before the Bolsheviki were| sheviki’s reiu [and found their view of the city o- men have been able to overthrown at Vladivostok there were! AI have happened. scured by clouds, they refused to Hooverize and make a no warlike signs. The soviet govern-| ‘The soviet's troops temporarily have | drop a pound of explosives and made |} their last year and a ed the city, but there were no guards | gained, or coerced, recruits from some | off to another town where they could | year before suit and ia at the station and few soldiers in indifferent, t be certain of dropping their bombs on overcoat hold out up to ag sight. ‘ - derson, Toronto, §. D.; Martin B. Thor-| Strictly military targets. this ti a But in Nikolsk, as in Vladivostok, | aims to ute Russia will remedy this, | tion, 70; w yanded“ ae erely, 120; died /esoa, Dawson, Minn.; John C. Fergu- BUY W. Is ume. |: the soviets still had smooth salling.|” ‘The soviet troops are now openly Of wounds, 15; wounded. degree un-|soa, Milbank,'S. D. BLEACHED WHEAT To these men who have r Then came the blow-up. The minute}hand in hand with armed German determined, 142; died of disease, 3; | Section No. 2, f broken all previous. 4 the Czechs had taken Vladivostok} prisoners. But so were they then, “ied from accident and other causes,| ,Killed in action 20; missing In at- REACHES MARKET service records in co- amoutlaging it. } 2. total, 382.0 i tion, 69; wounded severely, 143; died} demand to control the Chi- | ees i action: i Privates Lester} of wounds, 11; wounded, degree unde- ern railway from Chang-| King, Redwood Falls, Minn.; George termined, 112; died of disease, 7; to-| Damp Wea in Sli K. Senstad, ‘Lakeville Minn.; WAL tal 362. ny P thes Revels. Slane operating with the conservation program, we extend an invita- they started westward toward their) though comrades in the interior. Japan ‘The Bolshevik troops from Grode-| ne: Kovo, and some from up toward Hab-| Chun the only part she did not al. arovsk, hurried to reinf theNo- | control, while the Japane TER J. THOM, ELGIN, N. D. | Died of disease: Private Kenneth F. Lowering of Grades i 1 : e Japa RJ. 1 GIN, N. D. ‘ oni nae Kolsk garrison. But the Czechs mov-|Chinese troops flowed through Muk- Died of | wound PVT. CHARLES | Kingsley Edgerton, Minn. —____ es Ores ed, too fast for them. Within a week ‘den into Harbin caused feeling in Rug-/ E. FLETGHER, PROSPER, N. Dj; Wounded ‘severely: PRIVATES; Minneapolis, Minn, Sept. 6— choice froth a showing Hirsi, Wickwirk Co, sia and Peking. But the demonstra; | Roy D. gubetaner, F after taking Vladivostok they captur- fax, S. D. | CHARLES -A. BAKER, OVERBY, N. aw coat : ; : : . 5: 2 Threshing has continued the past two which wise foresight in buying has kept complete ed Nikolsk. ion of allied unity, through joint! | Wounded PRIVATE TRACY MUIR, MOORETON, N. : The real story of that battle prob-| war coun will end all such mis-, PAMES C. 3H, TAYLOR, N. D.;/D.! JESSE A. TIEDEMANN, JAMES Wlihathotecsblioner e day oF tw up to this very moment. ably has never reached the world. | understandings | Robert F. MeConne ike City, Minn, | TO N. D.; ALEX L. HINN, POR-| when rains fell quite generally in the | , There was: no corps of war corre-| The liberal autonomous Siberian Wounded, undetermined: | TAL, N. D. northwest: } Cable communication | government and the reactionary Hor-|Cook Frank ‘A. Falls, Sioux Falls,; Wounded, degree undetermined: The erain now bei eceived at the , adivostok is about as good as !vath group have been at odds. Hor-| Minn. Privates Arnold D. Dittbrenner,’ Privates Henry FP. Klum), Ethan, 8.| terminals is in ich wettar conaitiog CUSTOM TAILORING , HAND PRESSING none. The fight was bloody. |vathi, who was forced to recede after |St. Peter, Minn; Arthur O. Orland, ,p.: John Peterson, Del Rapids, S.'D.,|than that threshed durihg the wet EXPERT REPAIRING DRY CLEANING haps 200 Czechs and 1,000 Bolsheviki- | prociaiming himself Provisional Ruler |New London, Minn.; Arden Frank| J : 7 EB a e - 19 ‘ |John J. Secora, Huron, S. D.; Peter weath but th vill bably bi prisoner troops were killed or wound-|of Siberia to heat the liberals to the|Ranney, Frankfort, S. D.; John An-| H. Minners, Johnson, Minn; Sees car et ihad { ed. ; : [soviets’ seat, is again bobbing up. ayn y | Sc conendere vie! amount: Of bleached f Czechs lacked both guns | But the military, financial and eco-| : =e is year. There js also more y won by strat- | nomic aid trom without, which inter- | smut in the wheat than usual, and ced, Seereted | vention is just beginning to disburse. | ate nag nad somes offect pen ie ite Siberie | price. In Minnesota, and South Da- ‘ pera ney kota there have been exceptiomally ns they had on | will automati hillsides over a gully along the | whatever leadership the allies deem | heavy yields of barley and oats, ana this territory can supply western S.E.BERGESON & SON , THE UNION DAYLIGHT STORE , OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS-CLOSED SUNDAYS ° railroad track in their rear. and (most efficient to handle that ‘aid. — | Her to ph yore Soon Siberia, richest land in the| North Dakot: id Mont here thi the track, Vhen the — pursuin; nse e Nort akota and Montana where the iki jammed the cauly the penis wilh imninen eal oaks gold | __FROM BOB SISCO. , appreciate, until war, and we left | feed crops have heen a failure. Czechs cut loose, like a | with limitless fertile farm land, with| * Jeter received by Mrs. L. H. Sis them, then {t was too late. Undoubtedly the run of barley and d of death. broad rivers teeming with fish and |8°. Kintyre, D.. from her son Rob- in ihe (ana Heena to Fo out one ae iouon will be sooner wy " ean = rz Bolshevik bodies lay on these! with forests so virgi a >» may lert P. Sisco, w , sen i e o get “Over there,’ | stack-stained, due to the heavy rains NT r - f car B ONAN or Te udet ey oe with forests so virgin th al one mas ert i tal taa kg hi ae where we all ett side by side. Ana | after harvesting. The wheat has start- FEW HUNTERS I Federal Employes L trom Nikolsk and nearby towns, |through one of them without zetti te aye a a »| protect “Old Glory” and carry hker;ed to move very freely from South . * "arrived daily to hunt their dead | peyond its borders, will be tefiniaely | jthroagh: 4 Dakota, Minnesota and eastern North LICENSE QUEST Put in Class One . —husbands, brothers, sons. aved from German intrigue. | Dear Moth | ane yet aoe peat Mother, | Dakota, and shipments may soon be i —_——_- : The capture of Nikolsk seemed to A) as Siberia ea pee he ar Mother: yw come back to you—back to those | expected from Montana. i gpell the Bolshovikts early end. The |igge a 8S Siberia more and more real-) "Tach night as the sun is going down homes that have been sad so long, to] On Monday night a heavy frost o¢-| yor im hunt ae for thel reason Tene He ee Lo ePaper octet city is an important railway junction.! move toward European ‘Russia with|in the west, I watch it and think of fill them with happiness, joy ana] curred ‘in the territory from Devils] the average male is tod busy just now | ‘2"Y Baker ‘has ordered the chief of The direct. ‘Trans-Siberian runs|an allied army which. if the soviets|the ones I love best, and wonder if: °"® ‘ ; Lake west into Montana.’ This no|+ consider hunting, very few licenses , each ‘bureau in the war ‘depertment to through Chinese land—Manchuria. ‘have not already been wped out in| the ah teaaye oun lovingseqn, doubt has caused a -considerable| nave been issued to date, The 175th | replace by Decembef 31, all men with- Here branches north the Amur line, | Petrograd and Moscow, will wipe th they are watching it loo; with tears! ore BOB. | amount of damage to late flax and f | ih the dratt ages who would be cla'ss- circling Manchuria, rejoining the| out, ill wipe them) in “their eyes they can hardly see he brother referred 49 is Levi H,| other late grains, which have no been booting, license yas lasuct by the Eu ‘ified in Clacat havea asignea to duty Trans-Siberian west of Manchuria, so} Russia may not win the war for the) 7 ogy eit vaten: who, #8 im France, His wife and his|cut. A large proportion of the flax|T'ast’ year more than 1,000 lleenses in Washington, or in war department Russia in war would have a through | allies, But the day when it eeomed | que Oo fother dear, vi she watch-/ little daughter whom he has never | however,-in this territory has been were issued in the county. It is pre-| branches elsewhere with men physical- line on her own soil. she might help Germany ‘whi it has ed it tonight, I know where her seen, live in Jamestown. harvested, while in Minnesota, South - ly disqualified for .general military But the Bolshevik resistance in this | passed any win it MS] thoughts were—with her boys gone to = Dakota and sastern North Dakota only | ‘cted that the total this year will not | ly. disqual eh hats sector stiffened. Through Nikolsk!” BUY W. 8, 5. fight. Her youngest, the baby, who's, FROM RECONSTRUCTION CAMP. ja small amount of flax remains un-|°%*¢eed $0 per cent of that number. | service. Ag, c troops, guns and equipment now go; THOSE STORM WINDOWS. Monee nero and she prays al U. S. A. Gen. Hosp? No. 2, F.. | cut. ——— OOOO ug north to the Ussuri front. At Nikolsk} Now is the time to have your storm feoresti What he ue hic Teel comme MeHenty, Md., Sept.>1, "1918. |. There have been no. disturbing ele- 5 8 supplies, Red Cross outfits and hospi- |, windows overhauled and repaired be-| y, Liar EN ee Ca ean Bismarck, N. D. ;ments in the corn situation and a 5 - tal facilities pile up. To Nikolsk are!fore we get See Faunce’s| 22° Sarthe back to his Mother and pear Sir: |alrge crop of high quality is assured. constantly returning wounded Czech-|Fourth street. Als ve your Aut se thigh iether dear, after. we...) Wish to thank you for sending the}—The Van Dusen Harrington Co. te allies from Ussuri. me jshields repaired. T have all sizes to {ick the Huns, welll come back better TTibune” to this hospital. I have pe tries VR At the other Mancnurian front, the | replace ‘broken lights. Low prices | ra thers aide much hatter sons. To iooked for it every day. during my |#— = o as ‘ center of the fan, Japanese-Chinese | guaranteed. Faunce's Fourth street. |r “onos and homes that we didn't: tree months here and have greatly ||: THE WEATHER | reinforcements to Semenoff's troops $3192 Was) ce mHe S that we ahin'’ anpreciated it. I lived near ‘Ashley %. ; \ are causing the Bolsheviki to disperse. tatatrt about tne years so it is like seein; 1 y 0 i E s ig an| For twenty-four hours endi ie ‘ { Only ene ae ay ae pe ett take) WAR’S EMERGENCIES MET BY old friend when I see your paper. noon Sept. 6 Eee ences Style and service con- Mod ewe: —Lake | This is a reconstruction hospital! Bs : Baikal—the Czechs from the interior ADVANCING DIAMOND PRICES tor disabled overseas soldiers. Type. | Temperature at 7 a.m. - 47 sidered, the Lanpher has 7 advance steadily toward Vladivostok. ' writing, stenograp! bookkeeping, premperature at noon:. . 65 q though they need help. 1 i | Highest yesterday 2 . |printing, sign painting, telegraphy, | )Gnen Soterday 38 always been tho best % and shoe-renairing are taught so we may be self-supporting and. be able j | to make a better and easier living jthan before we enlisted. Thanking | | you again f el | you ag pr vour paper, / For North Dakota: Fair tonight But at the east tip of the fan, Us- i suri, the Czechs, though expecting to} take Aabarovsk in a couple of weeks, have already been eight weeks at it vainly, and several times have had to .owest last night.. Precipitation .... . None Highest wind velocity ... hat buy—today it is more so than ever before. rovsk. or somewhere between. the Bol-/ sheviki will make their last stand. - 43 i retreat. ' T remain. your: / Now that crisis is past. Within the CHORGECE. 3 SR eTELAW, jand Saturday; slightly warmen to-|) i last two weeks trainloads of Japanese i127th Inf., U. 8. N. G. . tnight. } have gine notrh from Nikolsk. Gen- U. S. A. Gen. Hosp. No. 2. i eral Otani now has a force heavy ta Ft McHenry, nae on.2.. Lowest THE an er HAT enough to start the drive toward the | nv W.S8.8 i J Temperatures inevitable end. At Chita or Haba- | 9 Fargo ... vee HAD |Celebrate La Fayette’s Williston 4a i i Birthday in Gotham, conn Four unfavorable results from 52 Intervention were thought possi- | Winnipeg 44 ble: New York, Sept. 6— 6.—- “The 161st anni-| Helena .,.. 42 1. Russian consolidation be- |versary of the birthday of the Mar. Chicago . 54 hind the attacked soviets. |quis d'LaFayette and the 4th anni-; Swift Current . .. 40 2,. More complete submission |versary of the battle of the Marne | Kansas City . of the soviets ‘to German intlu- | were celebrated»in New York today} E. G. LARSON, ence. , by a series of ceremonies. Observer. 3. uspicion in’ Russia and | China of Japan’s motives. 4, - Frietion between Siberian | ELDALLO ach Cigar in its own humidor” Factory, fresh and NO RED TAPE. It’s a very easy ‘mat- ter to open an account— Checking or Savings— with the First National Bank. Our officers are always glad to explain banking matters to any unfariliar with Shotguns Say, if it is a shotgun you need or want, then come to Lomas Hardware Company anl let us show you a Remington repeating and auto loading shotgun. They are so fine you'll never need to “apologize” for mayne bought one. omas Hardware _ Company — one them. ¥ tr BROS 6tect 7+ \ 6for35¢ 3 for20¢ By - . 5 ‘ Cullinan”, World: Largest Diamond. (Gixeet Size) 5 How a diamond paid the emergency ; and one remaining diamond had ty be sacrificed, Fortunately, diamonds of expenses of a soldier’s family is one of the sidelights of the war, dis-| quality are more in demand than be- closed through the proposal of dia-| fore war reduced the supplies and mond cutting as one of the highly almost a fabulous sum waa realized paid oat how, oper in America! from ® suick sale in the Jewelry to disable anks.’ ‘ore the war the jewelry e¢; lead to arrest and conviction Here is the story: A family ac-!ports of Germany and Austri who took a bob sled |} customed to affluence was strange!y| amounted to $200,000,000 a seas disrupted when Belgium’s invasion! leading those of all other countries, sent out the call for men to fight/To secure for America a dominant ee Huns; sons enlisted and went’ place in this trade will require a daughter entered war, arge increase in available workmen eek: vorks family incomes were sto) | and uninterrupted growth, even dur- and a blue derbies xbit was turne jing war's economies, of the industry Heavy expenses had to be met with which diamonds are concerned. Just bring- in the amount you wish to de- posit—whether it’s one dollar or many times that dmount—we'll do the rest. | “I will give liberal reward for any ‘forostion that will The Oldest ana Largest Bank inthis sectionof the State 4% interest on Sav- ings—complete safety.

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