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ced A a eos Bak -ment to eliminate German from the public schools|ends in victory, if it takes ten years. | The word today is CARRY ON !—Duluth Herald. | to get in. DAY, SEPT. 23, 1918. ‘ | ysteria,” and that he op) sates anti-Germanism in} J THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ae. and that he opposes anti-G | HOLMBOR GETS Entered at the Postoffice, Bi kN. D., . OF oe = Claes fatter : The only difference between our children and} GEORGE D. MANN - - Editor | these Belgian children is that it was easier for | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, ithe HUNS to get to Belgium than to America. real ial ign R tative | 7 | NEW YORE’ Fifth vere e de. CHICAGO, Marquette the United States had been as small.and as near} Bldg; BOSTON, 3 Winter St; DETROIT, Kresege (jermany OUR CHILDREN would have to have! Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. . z | ———MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS gas masks hanging by their school desks this very | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ate day. for republication of a ead also the ey not ob taught German by German teachers in schools | ‘controlled by German military commanders. lished herein. a i i herein; Fi ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches he And this man Claxton still talks about are also reserved. aoa ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches herein '\.4Jue of German language and literature’’! ere also regerved. i i : 4 . MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION There is no room in the American school sys- | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | tem for Claxton! Dail, ie! r year. - $6.00) tN ” : Daily by mail per year. 4.00! Kick him out, Mr. President! Daily by mail Per year Ad an aie re Dai! il outside of Nor’ akota. . ee °'SUBSCRIPTION RATE! (In North Dakota) One year by mail... Six months by mail... Three months by mail. (Outside the | Whaddaya mean neutral? The native land of $4.00 Spanish influenza is an enemy country—that’s alf! | 11°2.00 -. 1.00 $5.00 2:50 I 125 $6.00! AN EDITORIAL By Victor Hugo “And woman—what use do you make of her?” Cimourdain replied: One year .. Six months Three months . ore Fontha. 3.00 Three months .....- 150, “Yes. On one condition.” One month .......- = “What?” “That man shall be the servant of woman.” “Is that your belief?” exclaimed Ciraourdain. \“Man a servant. Never. Man is master. I ad- >THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. | (Established 1873) | —————— DISCONTENT . : " 7 a ki 2 ome.” jing and remaining until Saturday ev- Are you discontented? Then you've cause for |! ng at home ere ‘ening. The Publicity Film — peo- Yes. On one condition. ple induced a number of the} self-congratulation. You are on the high-road to achievement. Poor indeed is that man who has never known the pleasureable pangs of discon- tent. Beware of satisfaction. It produces stagnation and stagnation presages a yainglorious end. But! likewise don’t mistake dissatisfaction for discon- igs tent. The two represent opposites, extremes. ee “| Dissatisfaction readily degenerates into fault- “What is that?” “That woman be queen there.” that you want for man and/¥ “Equality.” “Equality! Are different.” said equality. I did not say identity.” A “And the child to whom would you give it?” finding; it sloughs to pessimism and pointless, “First to the father who begets it, then to the profitless, puerile picayunishness. mother who bears it, then to the master to teach Discontent has its origin in desire for better-|j+, then to the city to make a man of it, then to ment, improvement and advancement. It is found-) the country, which is the mother supreme, then to ed on ideals and based on principles. ‘humanity, which is the great ancestor.” Discontent marks the thinker. It is a badge of | “You say nothing of God.” cranial quality. It sets men apart, adds to their; “Each of these steps—father, mother, master, stature in the eyes of their fellows, their com- |city, country, humanity—is a round in the ladder | munity and the world, for success attends upon | which leads up to God.” s you dreaming? The two be: Others of OUR LITTLE ONES would be Publicity Picture Co. Returns, |PROSPERITY SEEN ‘Red Men Have Good Cattle and| {of the | Sunday from a three-da, Indian reservation and a visit to the Burnstad ranches at Pollock, S. D.,| and in Logan county. dian fair at Fort Yates the Bismarck } | motion picture men . , hundred feet of unu | “Let her be what she is the servant of man.” | film showing the Sioux methods of ‘living. their pow-wows and councils, ‘Indian ra \ cessful held in recent years, and more than 3 the = ; | tents were pitched on the grounds, the | tos , the | 'mit but one royalty, that of the fireside. Man is/ Indians coming early ‘Thursday | most ;nonball tribe to rig up in full war r galia and pose for the camera “That is to say hose who were filmed in the gorgeous LZ es 7 garb of by-gone days w ‘isi for woman— ychief of S Holy Horse, Black Bear Dog. Good Boy f 3 Shoot the Clothe: in Red Cross work and ¢ matters cept those of a p were interpreted in cost camera women took p reservation from Solen D.. reveals a perity Holmboe. in fine conc are of registered stoc | FINEFILUSOF SIOUX COUNTRY | from “Shooting Up” Indian | Fair | Horses and Many Own Fine Automobiles d George V. Halli Film Co. returned, s tour of the F. Holmboe Publicity During the In- snapped several lly interesting and sports and agricul- S$ one of the most suc- 500 Sioux from both sides of | ate line attended. At least 500] noted the Cy members of Among! h, | 8 the Cannonball Sioux, and! aff, Dubious Mis Red Winter, <l Bow and tT ull, | ad ni of the ‘ \ onball women | the councils t active 1 patriotic Sioux ex- All of the dances of the Ino! one gth of the o Pollock A drive through the ler gener: India cattle jon and > of pro. reports Mr. re sleek and} * rule they | Ui i “ he horses; THERE| & tonight RR meee pur dic now bi of the chronology of the Sioux t ) ng Bull outbreak in w Not iny Artcratt has ever appeare The so from the s Two BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUN i ADDIES’ TOURNEY i C AT COUNTRY CLUB i | A caddies’ tourney staged at the {Country club Saturday afternoon | proved an interesting event for partic- jipants and spectaors. There were fif- teen entrants, and John Schwab and ‘Ted Cook tied for first with 52 holes. | They played off the tie in four holes, | which Cook won, receiving as a prize a |book of War Savings Stamps. The |second prize, which also consisted of | Thrift stamps, was av ‘bara Register for good deportment. C. B. Little and 0. |N. Dunham were the donors of the | prizes. RUY W.S. 5S. 'w.C. 0. F. DANCE TUESDAY NIGHT | | Ste. Anne's court, Women's Catholic | Order of Foresters, will give one of its | popular informal dances for the bene- | fit of the Red Cross at the Knights of {Columbus hall_ Tuesday evening. | Dancing, with O'Connor's orchestra at bat, will begin at 9:30. During the ; evening refreshments will be served. | A general invitation is extended the public, and the ladies hope to realizez a substantial sum for the benefit of Nuptials Saturday Mr. Albert L. Hendrickson and Miss | Marigold E. Mumm_ were united in marriage at St. George's parish house Saturday evening, Rev. George Buz- |! zelle officiating. BUY W. S. 5. 1 Goes To War. J. 1. Whitney has received word ‘trom Minneapolis that his “kid” broth- jer, Verne Whitney, has enlisted in the | medical corps of the navy at Great | Lakes training station. Daughters of Isabella. An important special meeting of the Daughters of Isabella will be held at {the Knights of Columbus hall at 8 o'clock this evening, when a full at- tendance of members is desired. CC en mother is a washerwoman, and her offer of marriage from ner, of Clothes Lir suciety youth, a i al hfe, of To Enter War Work. Miss Elizabeth Bayliss, former so- or of The Tribune, and who 4 . * for sev has been en- hundred, resulting in f ree r ; Heit aie Aula aged in writing advertising publicity All will be shown at the Bisma |in Pittsburgh. writes friends here that she s soon to enter war Washington. marilly of Clothes | nnd vomorrow, Enters Hospital. Returns Home. Mrs. P. A. Weeks of this city has; ennie Kinsvogel, young son of Zim- entered the Hismarck hospital for |i) Kinvogel of Hebron, and for sever- treatment. ‘al weeks one of the most popular pi are tients at the Bismarck hospital, re- lew Da F Hew Eauanier: _ | turned home with h t night. daughter was born at the Bis- | pennie’s visits, whi good as K hospital today to Mr, and Mrs. | medicine, will be missed by fellow pa- ame of “Piz t famous in the Indian Gail was the est warrior and statesman of the tah nation at the ne of the ich he par- He was one of the ting Bull, escaped ed in 1876 who, with 5 discontent. 1 i into Canada following the massa ' rv ; “ P +, are larg: nimals, the |! anada n . Mahiman of the tients a 2 arck. Discontent chafes beneath the restraint of en- Officers leather leggins, too conspicuous, will Pinto pe having Little bie Uorn, returning to the nant : ate ents ae theabismeree vironment, the force of ircumstances and the be abandoned. ‘Puttee’ bad news for Washington #!most e ed, and the ie banishment ae Gwen ae ihitan ee 4 Pianist Returns. 4 RnR . , Rann i een 6 “ Indian farmers well provided | 0" peg . a i | Miss. aces Peterson and Mr, and | After nding a short vacation Mr handicap of conditions which restrict individual | swivel-chair heroes! vwith 1 ty, which they keep in|, ot omy becatee he ® V Mrs. George VY. Bowers of New Eng-! M. Morris will resume her posit evolution | good repair. In 99 out of 100 homes ond pe -j land have returned from a trip of! pianist at the Orpheum again tonight. 7 . Ne eT 5 Aiea) . passed on the journey. a Red Cross{ ns la : ack Hills and at) Mrs. Morris is without a doubt one of The kaiser visited the Krupp works and ex-) banner appeared, while in a large pro-| 2S, burn k | the picture players in North Da- i jtheir and. Burn | kota and Manager Bauer of the Or- Discontent produces added effort; awakens self} orted the workers to continued effort. He prob- to possibilities within that are even greater than | i . is ; 2 eB la Ae Z jably intends to take no chances K’rupption in that those which aroused it. | Gita basti { the crumbling fortress of kultuz Discontent projects life upon the screen of | “it pastion of the crumbling fortress of kultuz. iscontent projects e UpO : | still the squat log cabins which fi n of the window: ‘e Was also! t one service hile a majority of the homes W voded the native teepe, there are} with! are Ben ee eae Ganesan te Ramee | .\¢y , - : : : of fine frame dwellin realization. To each who experiences it, some-| Count Burian of Austria says, “The only logic good barns and other buildings. Many of the Indians own cars, and those , thing of life's PURPOSE is revealedb-a glimpse | iy. stomach can hear is hot soup.” We’ve heard all obstacles that would thwart the attainment of lthe message. that newly-discovered true objective of existence!) Discontent discovered America; harnessed | pereeeeeetereeeeeeeree eer ernrrrrr rare j bers. Very few Indians elthe young |! ‘ slectricity ; learne 2» secre y= | or old showed evidences of disease or steam and electricity ; learned the secret of pow-| WITH THE EDITORS debility. The Sioux have always been | ne noted for their splendid stature and al? d-tim er in the combustibility of gas. Discontent unfetters the oppressed and shackles the oppressor; discontent moves mountains; changes the course of rivers; builds railroads ; | erects factories—tor DISCONTENT conceives | Pretict an renee eee Lae caveat projects, inventions, devices and methods. It is e answer to that is given by a conversation the signpost to progress! overheard in Duluth yesterday, in which one man CARRY ON! | Why throw cold water by disputing those who | and preserved lerty Bonds when the war will be over before I get Uncle Sam's going to curtain the manufacture; : : ithe bonds paid for? of straw hats. He’s favoring the tin variety these days. s the fruit of them. Conditions are good—they never have been bet- IN BELGIAN SCHOOLS There are two kinds of Belgian schools. In the one kind German teachers are teaching German to Belgian schoolchildren, too young to be enslaved workers, and who are forced by Ger- man authority to learn the German language and are fed German “kultur.” In the other kind of Belgian schools, those few near the battleline, there are Belgian teachers, and Belgian children are gathered up from ruined |! homes and HUN-devastated areas. Here the kid- dies are fed, lodged and educated. These children sit at their rough desks, over their books, studying away as hard as they} can. By the side of each desk hangs a MASK! For the HUNS take a keen delight in bombard- ing these Belgian schoolhouses with poison gas. To save the lives of the kiddies the allied gov- ernments have loaned them gas masks. Every once in a while there is a signal, each child drops | his books and hurriedly dons the gas mask. After the wave of poisonous death has swept over them. | they remove their masks and go on with their; studies—UNLESS THEY ARE KILLED! Now, dear fellow Americans, do you think that those Belgian children who are beaten into learn- ing German in their German-centrolled schools | will want to study German AFTER peace restores | the whole of Belgium to Belgians? Will THEY ever) want their children to study German? | And, will those other little tots who have to have gas masks hanging ever ready near their desks ever want to study German language or lit-| win and 1 ot until thea. erature, or anything German after peace comes to; And the question each of us should ask is not them and HUN poison gas never again can fright- “When will the war end?” but “What can I do to, en all of them and kill some of them? ‘help win the war quickly?” “NO, a thousand times NO! | The word today is a sane optimism that never | These school children will have had enough of fails to reckon on possible disappointment and de-| German. jlay and that never neglects to guard against all; ears ago. Victory is certain. us entertain a doubt of it. jsibly come sooner through a collapse of the Ger-; iman nation, anybody who figures on even a pos-| sibility of peace before next fall is inviting bitter’ ointment to pa: In that connection, an address recently issued hy the American Alliance for Labor and Democ-, |: bent |"@cy is timely and pertinent: ' Ultimate victory is as certain as the coming of the dawn, but in the very joy of present success there is a danger that is as mena:- ing as German arms. Alreaav, from namberless sources, we are receiving information that the disintegrating torces of over-confidence are at work. People are saying: “What is the use of the draft law?” and “What is the use of another Lib- erty Loan? The war will soon be over.” Germany could well afford to spend millions to spread that point of view. In its essence it is defeatism of the worst sort. It weakens the will to save, to serve, to give and, above all, it weakens the will to fight and the will to win. Let no one ask “When will the war end for it is a question that tears at the very heart of resolution. This war will end when we or) Still, there is Philander P. Claxton, U. $. com-| possible contingencies; that hopes that the war) 4. missioner of education, who says that this move- | will end tomorrow, but keeps willing to fight till it worst case of ilues and if you want |to see it you will have to be with the | crowd tonight at the Orpheum. | of the United States is nothing but a “form of tes: ‘ hase ss ; who do usually sufficient to ‘rouse inward defiance for jiots of soup—but it took, the count to translate | generation shows ization in neat dr ed carriage and a thorough mastery | of the tongue these characteristics have been hand-| ed down to th course of their education in reserva- tion schools and government colleges. jerous and of an i hae : wy | duality. said: “Why should I strain myself to buy Libs | fined to no one came from all the tribes, that ; popular. That? ‘ ¥ a, at! That’s the menace of premature hopes, and that tty Neve inads ander twa personal die rection of C |his fine herd 2 | Percherons jter since the German repulse at the Marne four! county, We shal 1 in the vic . shall none of stad, who recently was adopted into But the war isn’t over) the ‘blood brotherhood of the Sioux, until it is fought out ; and though peace might pos-} ~~~ disappointment and helping to bring that disap-| or | e kood on youn; progress of ci > 8 Fea and . and Europeaniz-| of their white neigh-| 5, rtain native nobility of bearing, and} » younger generations by them through the pra The agricultural displays were num- eptionally high bibitors were con- neighborhood, but indicating becoming generally The farming is The tilms of the reservation coun- P. Burnstad, who grazes of Herefords and his over 40.900 acres in Logan and on both sides of the river cinity of Pollock, S. D. Burn- You've never seen bim in this com- Triple’ Trouble”. will cure the Try. the Standing Roc e ceeded in | never before have been |film will be incuded in a 6 ture of thi mstad the Dakota jthe oklen da will be especially interesting be ing with the dwindling rank place " picturesque and ron more valuable to the nation from the| er whose artic 1 citizenship. j une readers last winter. —————— | Statesman in City. | pheum has reasons to be proud of the Senator Hans P. Jacobson of Mott | musical end of his theatre. | motored to Bismarck on Sunday, and | | Senator Frank Ployhar of Valley City | | came in today. ‘Their presence in the obtaining Th eet pi northwest of today which 1 soon exhibit in the east Incational purposes. ‘The pic: will show modern ranch life in with some rough-riding | ports which revert to) The Indian pictures use| route to Chicago. where he will take} —————————— ¢ aspects of early | up th estudy of art in the Chicago Art! 5 vhich vanish- | institute, expecting to gain admittance | of the| to the students’ army training corps | FOR Indian, in whose | at this institution. Mr, Gannon is a} Expectant Motiers ion vastly 1ess | brother of s Florence Gannon, a | A FRIEND IN NEED Nature always warns you if your bowels are clogged or inflamed—heed 's merely a coin- this. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea | removes the inflammation, soothes the irri ids natural diges: ier of great re : ynchroniously cidence, it is understood. eeeee | irrit In Student Army Corps. tion. Clell S. Gannon of Underwood pass-| nown. i 4 ed through the: city last evening en!| . front will pr on the prair ket” ng a gener: untic, but much | well known Underwood school teach: | on soldier life at | appreciated by Trib- | ! ical standpoint of constructive ; Camp Dodge we! ny TONIGHT; QRPHEUM THEATRE ‘ YOU’VE NEVER SEEN THIS ONE! A BRAND NEW ; CHARLIE CHAPLIN COMEDY “TRIPLE TROUBLE” Bubbling Over with Chaplin’s most side-splitting antics. In 2 reels Coming Thursday GLORIA SWANSON 5 Ae “THE WHIP” thrilling Acts “The Secret Code” ISMARCK THEATRE B! SMARCK THEARTRE Tonight SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT OF TWO DAYS __- Mary Pickford ——in—— “Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley” Greater than “Stella Maris” and “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.” A wonderful feature for everyone. Orchestral Pipe Organ and un- ified orchestra of twenty pieces hand played, insures the best music