Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MARCK TRIBUNE ce, . D» as z / Class Matter GEORGE D. MANN - : G. LOG. ‘ EW -YO! 3 STON, 3 Winter St.; Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Ex: MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ae Tle reece hae ase lication news credit it or no! a ‘redited im this paper and also the local news pub- All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also reserv PE’ (Established 1878) a ad c , THE HOME FIRES. Of course we must keep the home fires burning. We now are talking about the fires in stove and furnace. Dreary and chilly winter days are hov- ering near, just a few weeks away. They'll sonn be here. That. means more and hotter fires in stove and furnace. ; But hot fires in the furnace will not help win the war. And that, fellow Americans, is our biggest job. So it is that we, each of us, must figure out. ways and means of making our furnace fires help lick the HUNS. At first thought, this would seem impossible. It isn’t. Every person who fires a stove or furnace may do his “bit” toward fighting the kaiser by— f SAVING FUEL! aot This doesn’t mean that we shall go cold and | freeze; that we shall sit in chilly rooms. It merely |; means that we shall heat our homes intelligently. That we become efficient firemen in our own cel- lars. That we will get as much heat energy as possible out of the: fuel we copeyme. ‘Thig means that we must add knowledge and‘thought to our daily job of. keping the home-fires burying. It won't be enough that we pitch in coal every time we feel cold. It won’t be enough that we are fore- handed and lay in our coal garly. We must use less coal than in other winters. The nation is 100,000,000 tons of coal short: It has been figured that domestic users may , save 40,000,000 tons by using a shovelful less thre times a day. 4 The coal is needed to produce war supplies. What coal you save relieves the railroads of coal 'freightage to that extent, and léaves that much coal forsome war industry. — meg It is patriotic to save coal. ” nay It is profitable to get more heat out. of less coal. It is healthful not to keep homes overheated. Keep YOUR home fires burning—WITH LESS COAL! , OH! MR. FRAZIER. Mr. Townley’s daily newspaper at Fargo, anent the recent separation of Thomas’ Allan Box from “the state treasury, makes Mr. Townley’s governor of North Dakota say: 7 “No change has been made in Mr. Box’s relation to the council of defense, EXCEPT THAT HE HAS BEEN PLACED ON A PER- DIEM SALARY ON THE SAME BASIS AS BEFORE.” ‘ Read it backwards, stand it on its head and read it crosswise, read it up or read it down, and still we find, Mr. Frazier saying that the only change that has been made is that no change has been made. f ’ Then we are to believe that Mr. Box still has the privilege of drawing $7 per day for seven days a week as payment for services to the state coun- cil of defense. The.framers of the council of defense act decreed that the secretary should be paid only when actu- ally.on the job. Mr. Box has actually been on the job ‘as secretary of the council_of defense very little. Still he has been paid for every day, includ- ing.Sunday,.as the records in the state treasurer’s. office show. Now Mr. Frazier hastily informs us that “No change has been made in Mr.‘Box’s relation to the council of defense, except that he has been placed on a per diem salary on the same basis as before,” go we ‘must conclude that although the executive committee, on motion of Mr. Langer DID pass a ‘reason for vanishment, the sum total of all other ‘\merey; you will give no quarter; you will make some extra big expense items that had been paid from the film account bobbed up against the coun- cil of defense exchequer, Mr. Langer saw an op- portunity to satisfy another personal grudge. And he promptly did then and there avail himself of that opportunity, and the only change in the rela- tions of Mr. Box and the state council of defense is that Mr. Box is now secretary in name only, as the Tribune correctly stated in its news report, while a personal friend and private press agent of Mr. Langer draws the salary and does the work and enjoys the title of executive secretary. MR. DOYLE’S SPEECH S$. J. Doyle, the democratic-independeat candidate for governor, made a mighty good speech at Car- rington last Saturday evening. His analysis of tlie situation in North Dakota was thorough and his conclusions logical. Te was temperate in his state- The one regret is that the men who really need the light may not read it. a So thoroughly has Mr. Townley hypnotized: his follower completely has. hé “innoculated them with his virus of class hatred, distrust and unbe- lief that many of them, we fear, can recover from their present sickness only through the most/radi- cal surgical treatment. The Tribune still hopes that enongh will have seen the light by November 5 to} elect Mr. Doyle governor of North Dakota.“But until the final blow-up conies, and the rags of hypocrisy are entirely stripped from Townley and his fellow socialists, it may be too much to hope that the mass of TeWnley’s converts can be reclaimed. The Tribune recommends to leaguers who wish to be honest with themselves a careful perusal of Doyle’s Carrington’ address, which appeared in full in these columns yesterday, The truth, can neyer harm a worthy cause, and Doyle has told the truth about the league. :No.man, is in a better position to know the facts. CONVICTED. ‘ Germany cannot have a negotiated peace. That, we know. = = would be sufficient to convict the unspeakable HUN. ’ ; A tenth of that tenth would suffice to brand him as, history’s vilest brute. But it has been left-for the HUNS Most High- est,’ the supreme embodiment of Teutonism, the molder of mouldering Prussianism, Gemany‘s em- peror, William Hohenzollern, to supply. the REAL reasons for unconditional capitulation as the price of peace. : The kaiser’s self-imposed sentence was passed in 1914. He chose 26 words to express it. His HUN death warrant was~couched in the terms of a deliberate,éplanned command distributed on postal cards to every HUN in the German army. “You will take no prisoners; you will show no yourselves MORE FRIGHTFUL than the HUNS under Attila!’—and’ history says it was Attila’s boast’ that the grass neyer grew again where his charger once trod! k Peace at ANY price? Yes, fellow pacifists, at ANY price required to purge the civilized world from the scourge of the HUN, to eternity! Free- dom, For All, Forever. “Tell mother I made good,” were the first words a Yank who fell wounded on the Marne said. Boys like that are putting the fear of God in the heart of the HUN. | ‘WITH THE EDITORS © THE GERMANS. * tween the German military castle and the German people? They were ordinary Boche regiments uation of the place became obviously necessary. they. set about to destroy and pollute everything within reach. Remember, this is not hearsay; I went into Chateau Thierry on the heels of the American advance and saw things with my own ,eyes. Every available, Hunnish, fiendish, filthy thing that men could do these Huns did in Chateau Thierry just before they left. The streets were littered with the private possessions of the citi- zens thrown through-the windows; every bureau destroyed; in the better-class houses the paintings were ripped and the china and porcelain smashed ; furniture was broken or hacked; mirrors were shivered into thousand fragments ; mattresses and upholstery were slashed; richly. bound books were ripped; in fact, there was hardly a thing. in the city left intact. The houses of the poor, in which resolution’ decreeing that the services of Mr. Box; should be used and paid for henceforth only at the direction. of the executive committee, someon higher up, presumably Mr. Townley, has reunited Mr. Box and the public purse, and that Mr. Box’s daily. pension of $7 will continue to flow into his capacious pockets, even though another man is doing “Mr. Box’s work and receiving therefore a very ‘substantial stipend, in addition to the title of executive secretary. -. : . Asa matter of fact, Mr. Frazier should com- mend rather than contradict the good work done ” by. the executive committee of the council of de- j fenuse... Mr. Box’s expense accounts became too gael sive for = body of even. such well for Mr. Box; who was not Mr. | this does not tel] the story—a-story which cannot) °}} be told to people who respect decency—for the}, " Langer’s choice for the secretaryship, and when, the German-privates had been billeted, were just ments; he did not exaggerate nor did he distort. |, than he, as Cited Sf#¥4ps marshal for North Dakota, | One-tenth of the evidence already. recorded | . Why do Americans persist in differentiating be- |: which held Chateau Thierry, and when their evac- hs and chiffonier drawer was rifled and its contents | sinnitioine, Mont. ae ‘of Somewhere in France. | wi Dear Mother and: Folks: jbu July" 15. It. took’ them less than a| ou them,, don’t sendjany more for where we are at now ff {& impossible to'spend them. ] am carrying over sixty dollars now and don’t know when I will get a chance to ‘spend any of it. eb never, in any towns -long enough to spend any-and-t! ing us our smi three times, but it’ sure goes good. Glad to hear Yhat’ you got; soiné.-of my ‘mail. and: hope that’ you: will keep on getting. them regular, for I try'to write When: ever possible. I hav6 not written any for about two weeks ‘but oh they have been two ‘awful ;weeks, ‘ard ‘during! government is giv- do Germatis from one,end: of France to! the. other. tis Mae You ask if 1 am.on the front line, . ten oN / Killed in action, 14; missing in ac- tion, 79; wounded ‘séverely, 49; “died of wounds, 5; died;from accident. ana other.causes, 1; wotthded, degree, un- deternined,, 11; woxnded slightly, 3; Frank 44:Anderson, Grand orks, ‘N. Q.; Joseph’ Matthéws; ‘Bismarck, N. D.; Franklin Schfietder, Raub, N. D. | C. Wounded, degree undetermined: Cofp. Melvin C, ‘Olson, Abercrombie} N. D.;. Privates® William S. Osborn, ‘ x f PEOPLE'S FORUM- | ee > LIKES PICTYRES. Bistharck, N: D., Sept.17, 1918. Editor Tribune: Dear Sir:—I congrajulate -you on the picture of GenerAl ‘Pershing in yes- terday's issué-of the Tribune. It’s the} only real picture of our general I-have seen ere . ae 1 cn to feel angry, at the ri iculous: ca: loons Of a srondnas ‘And: wienever it becomes please -hold, and’ fap We. lived in his' house at Fort As- id" Ne frequently it this one: | nas Zz —it is fora vast future as badly pillaged and devastated as the homes of the well-to-do. The church, grand enought, for a cathedral, had not beem spazed. Its paintings and jaltars and crucifixes and stations of the cross-had been ruthlessly batteted and defiled. Yet even Germans left tokens of physical and mental ob- scenity in every house I visited, and I éntered scores. | If all hell had been let loose in'a choice suburban town for half a day, it could not have put its obscene and diabolical mark on_a place more unmistabably than the Germans put theirs on Chateau Thierry. I stood amazed that there could be so much unrelieved-vileness, such organ- This bank believes in vg} rendéred them now will ; > oeessiin shee fotire, 5 : We wish e ally to / | a8 a@oiivenient “and hel ‘ deposits -o- TWO WEEKS IN HELL. yes and I have been since the Fourth | Just received ‘your two letters to-,a rest in a few daysnow and hope so day one dated July 13 and the other! for I can’t even sleep nights now. But month’to get tg te, each one confain-' grand.work, we have over a thousand ed’a dollar bill, thanks very much for |; prisoners to our credit, and; I, -would} hate to have the job of counting what we have not taken but sent to where) they belonged. Don’t’ worry about my AC Money | place that there is; from the looks 07/ is not wosth’a darn here for. we are, things. pital but Frank Weinhandle is. still ing « tobacco about; getting along fine but I have not seen wee}, just Bull Durham |him since the‘fifth of July. Tell their folks when you get this letter. had to write and don’t know when I will be able to.write again’ but will itself, love and best wishes to all. every day of them,I have cursed the! Sgt. Martin Mosbrucker, | American Ex. F. iy | SS <—s SIEAARN LA. Wildrose, N. D.; Travis G..Cope, Rug: by, N. D.; Peter Rdsle, Kindred, N. D. tion, 87; wounded severely, 60; prisoners, 3; ‘total... 165. of a PRs, wy wtunded, degree undetermined. 6; ‘Wounded, severely: (~ Corp. fioy Is. | prisoner, 1; total, 178: Alberts, ~ Noonan, ; N. D.; >Privates| (Killed in action: Private William, A. Fry; Stampede N. D. Smith, Lemon, Ss. D. D. Pennypacker, Neche,'N, D. Ne s 3 | came to our, shop.and.paid us_ kindly visits. A Calcium compound. that will bring ree Aief in’ mi acute and _ chronic’ cases. Provides in’ necessary: to bring General Pershing’s | edy hist! picture ‘before ee you will} tains’no harmful drug AS OUR ABRAHAM LINCOLN'SAID. _ “The struggle of today is not altogether for today * growing’ with ‘its’ depositors, beli¢ving that service July and ‘hell Can never compare; ith what I have seen and been thru} t guess that we are going to ge}, r regiment \sure..has done some; ing up in front for\that is the ‘safest | ira Place has been sent to the hos-| This is the first chance that I have so when-the first chance affords Must close for tonight with _~ Ha. Co. 58th Inf. Via New York. ~ 2 = BS SECTION NO. 2. Killed’ ini action, 14; missing in ac- diea disease, 6; died of woun ei towd Privahes ' {yer D.; Clysle W. Wounded. severely: Prescogt Sykeston, Missing in action: | Private Clayton So I know whereof Ispeak. Respectfully. se! . 1 TULLY. A FOR THROAT. AND LuNes fest form, @ basic rem- ily recommended by science ‘Con- ‘Try them today. 0) FES ¢ pal Thawte” ix - alsp7 building for: the future, and- determine their mutuol suc-* fee se call-aftention to this bank pful‘one in which to place HELM GENUINE - ~ Tn Use For Over 30 Years eae in use for over re Ail Counterfeits, | ACT QUICKLY~ © Do the right thing at the right Ume. ‘Act quickiy in time of danger. In time ° of kidney danger, Doan’s Kidney Pills. are most~effective. Plenty of Bismarck evidence of their , worth. Mrs. H. Steinmetz, 117 Second St., _ Bismarck, says: “I had a-severe pain in-the small of my back aud lameness and soreness across my kidneys. I also had a tired, lafguid feeling that {caused me much annoyance, ~ 1 tried leverythin~ I knew of to-get relief, but | was unsuccessful until I ‘got. Doan’s | Kidney Pills at:the Lenhart Drug Co. Doan’s entirely cured me and the | trouble hasn't returned.” - F NO TROUBLE SINCE. | Over’ two’, years‘ later Mrs. Stein- | meta said: ““i have never.had kidney trouble since. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me a few years ago. I take them ‘once in‘a while, however, just to keep | my kidneys in. good condition.” ‘ | Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t | simply ask for a kidney remedy—gec Doan's' Kedney Pills—the ame that ‘Mrs, Steinmetz had. Foster-Milburn =~ ;.Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N.Y. a ‘ oe a ‘|PUBLICITY FILM. . ‘| ‘TO MAKE BIG. |: | WESTERN PICTURE | George V.; Halliday of the: Publicity | Film Co.,.on his recent. western .trip } contracted for the-production of: sev- | eral hundred fee: of tilm-showing the {great Big’ Horn basin Arrigation’ pro- | ject, and other publicity film: showing the model coal-mining town of Acme, | Wyo. Both of these pictures will be | shown in the near future. The Publj- city: Film:.Go;*hasjust completed a | very good-picture of the Judith basin ‘. iin Montana, taken for the Lewistown ~ {chamber of commerce and: farmers in | the adjoining territory.’ | UY ve | CHARGED WITH: BOOTLEGGING. H. O. Brockell, ané.'N. P. section | foreman in charge of the Apple Creek | territory, was arrested Saturday even- _ |ing by Chief Martineson charged Wwith- having sold a quart of whiskey for $10. Brockell has pleaded not guilty. {In defauft of bail, he spent Sunday _ The Kind You Have Always Bought, and whlih. has been thirty years, has borne the'-signature of and has been, made under his per- sonal. supervision: gine .its infancy. “Allow, no one to dcccive you in this. ~. Imitations and “‘ Just-cs-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of” its “and Childr lenée- against « Experiment. Castoria is a at is substitute for Castor R IA otic; Drops and Soothing Syrups. . It is pleasant.. Jt contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more -than thirty years it has ® been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, * Wind Colic and . therefrom, and by regulating Diarrhoea ; giaring Feverishness arising e Stomach and Bowels, aids ~ the assimilation of Naat, iving healthy and. natural sleep. The Children’s The Mother's Friend. . y CASTORIA atways Bears the Signature of. ‘e The Kidd You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW VORK CITY, \ “Look Who Is Here : “- TONIGHT ONLY Politician’s Dream Pauline Starke _ The little girl with the big, personality in “ALIAS MARY BROWN” — “The sweetest underworld story ever told! ORPHEUM THEATRE “TONIGHT ONLY, TUESDAY, SEPT, 17° _ Thrills! € a