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GENERALLY FAIR |THE BISMARCK TRIBU- THIRTY-EIGHTH YEAR. « MON 7.301918. BULGARIA GIVEN ARMISTICE DRAFTLOTTERY | FOCHFIGHTS | | AY ATWASHINGTON) szzgsizecs 3] ATONE re AUSTRIA TALKING PRAGE T0 (0. 237. “aay BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, PRICE FIVE CENTS. Beloved Church Head Scheduled For Elevation Campaign for Belgian Relief to be‘Postponed Ireland Would Have Been Made| Cardinal Had He Lived Until November Seventeen Thousand Numbers! onities at We D.C, Rome, Sept. 30.—A consistory is 1 Will Be Drawn in Senate \| request that campaigns fon {scheduled to be held in November, when Pope Benedict will announce the EXPECT OFFER FROM TURKEY é plicity of Attacks | London, Sept. 30—Strong belief exists here this aft- ¢. erty Loan Taken Here. famsen.ot fi two cardinals to be reserved Office Building che Betelan Tle commission S as "| erdioon that a peace offer front Turkey is imminent? It was at this consistory.that the France be postponed until fur- Tae Speaking at the guild hall today, Ander Bonar Law, BISMARCK MAKES GRADE [late Archbishop Ireland was to have / LISTS NOT TO BE WIRED OUT|| ther notice if same have not || RESISTANCE IN ARGONNE, chancellor of the exchequer, said a Bulgarian convention jreceived the red hat. The corriere d'Italia, leading Catho- Capital City Will Have $350,000 tic newspaper, declares Ireland was !the greatest American bishop of the Worth of Bonds When Noses | 20th century... It-details the political are all Counted. | had been signed by which hostilities ended today at noon. been held as yet. — R. C. Bulgaria gives up completely the control of the railways. Emery, ae | Enemy is Being Gripped Every- | where to Break up His | Integrity Reports Will be Mailed Selective| Service Headquarters in Each State Paris, Sept. 30—Am armistice has been concluded between the {allies and Bulgaria, on the allies own terms. The announcement was made officially today. : A} WILSON ASKS = and religious services rendered by him when the. Talf mission regulated the Philippine religious questions, Paris, General. Crowder as the date for the {national draft lottery to determine the \ |order in the classes to which they , | a cardinal at the next consistory. 11,5 assigned of the-1:3,000,000 men from : 19 to 45 who registered for selective LOCALTIPMAY. sine The devine ‘will take place public-! jWhen - the apostolic delegation was! washington, Se es Sept. 30.—Marshal Foch is #f - 7 : pt. 30.—Monday, aaa 3 HONOR ROLL TOMORROW first established in Washington, and| oo) 39 was by P Marshal fighting five battles simultaneously DISCUSS PEACE when Pope Leo offered to arbitrate| Sept. 30 was set by Provost Marsha’ 5 ; Because of the delay in tabula- and successfully, a feat unparalelled Amsterdam, Sept. 30—A proposition that the presidents and the Spanish American war. Vatican circles declare: Ireland un- questionably would have. been made in the history of war. The battles are so timed and placed that each army tion, The Tribune. will; not be able to present a complete honor roll Saturday's subscribers to the Lib- erty Loan until’ Tuesday. The names which will appear tomorrow are of those who responded Sat- urday without solicitation and signed up for the amount allotted ivice presidents of the parliaments of belligerent and neutral states i jbe invited to met for a nonbinding conference on the terms of peace i ee > support: the other. General Grant's | has been introduced in the Austrian parliament by Herr Newman, a oe a multiplicity of continuous | a liberal deputy. It would empower the chamber of the president attacks on various fronts is being! of the chamber of deputies to convey the invitation to belligerent realizzed., Thore are five battles to-! and neutral states for a conference to be held at a meutral point to day; there maye be more tomorrow, be agreed upon. ——___@ 0.K. SUFFRAGE Appears Before Th That Body in | them or voluntarily increased ily at the senate office -building and : | | their allotment. : pate) ls Special Address for Enfran- [all correlated and working as smooth- ; a | the numbers will be given to the press [ees i BULGARIAN KING CABLES fand the country by district draft chisement of Women [eae aders of mimachine. © yt acct! F rs ane : Indications are, Chairman H. P: boards as quickly as the list can be i ‘The er is still fighting well. He! . Amsterdam, Sept. 30—King Ferdinand of Bulgaria has tele- splendid resistance, graphed Emperor Charles of Austria assuring him of loyalty.to the Washington, D.C, Sept. 30—Presi-|! 4 : , of the Argonne. quadruple alliance, according to the Nieu Presse, which is quoted in Goddard of thé Burleigh county Lid- dent Wilson today stepped into the | ™ erty loan committee reported today, | BURNQUIST j Printed and put into the hands of the boards by mail. that when all the odds and ends-of 17,000 Capsules. fight over woman's: suffrage and as ports abies that tha guemys dispatches here. ; : , : dia ea wal to a-shorter line, prob- . Saturday's one day drive for the fight Bomb Plot Discord in Time, It will be necessary this time toed for its passage’as “a war meas: cply that of Antwerp russcisteries |, bulgarian representatives agreed to an amistice, probably the 's withdrawal from the alliance with Central Pow- ure. Some believe | first in Bulgaria’ ng aud that he! ers a few days less than three years after she entered the war on y in prevent- | the side of Germany. -It was on Oct. 8, 1915, that Bulgaria issud vtreat from degenerating into! » manifesto announcing her decision to cast her lot against the h Napoleon, » fentente. She had been 15 months in deciding her course. 1 Paris re-| In the manifesto the Bulgarian gover! nment declared that her < not to push back! trade interests and economi: rights were “inseparably bound up mm a line previously fixed | with Germany, Turkey and Austria.” {draw one at a time approximately 17,- own $350,000 worth of bonds of this |- ' to Post Guard About Goph- - j 000 capnales: contelning ape sexe g resident Wasore said: 7 f ‘ |nummebs and will require approx! “I-regard the proposed amendment | wi issus, ‘while ‘the county, outside, of| er State House | mately £6 hours to complete the task. Vextending suffrage to, women ac vital | making Burleigh’s quota of $500,000, ! The first drawing of numbers was! ly essential in the struggle for the! , with the additional ten per cent re- {flashed to the country by Wire as the! extension of liberty to the world. quired for safety.‘ G RECEIVED HERE capsules were taken from the bowl,| “It is only my duty.to apprise you | ¢ because, under the sysiem then pre-} of every circumstance and element in- Burleigh county never embarked on a a money-raising campaign which prov- { vailing, the order of numbers actually ; V volved in this momentous struggle. It ing Heats are cleared ap Bismarck will and Metz, is imm Foch, as \ Jor Vivre “to co er an enemy WAR 4 of ed-such an all-around success as thej Mention of City in Rough Sketch | indicated the order in which men/is my duty to win the war and to ask | upon, bu, gripping him everywhere, | - 2 Fourth Liberty Loan drive. The al-| i z é lwere called for service. The later/yo uto remove every obstacle which | 1, Went ins intéerlty of his forces, It was said that Germany had offered Bulgaria the whole of lotment plan was 99 per cent'success-/ Results in Action by Min- | creation of the classification systems,/stands in the way, of winning it.|and then whirl him disjoitited on the; Macedonia. A still greater territorial expansion at the expense of dul, ‘The’ plan “of “asking prospective | nesota Officers. [However Ais, entirely: altered, the sit)) Through many, many ghannels,T have road to ne defeat. Like all! Serbia was said to have been offered as a condition of active mil subscribers to call on their local com- D ec? ae uation and the order of numbers now| been made aware what the plain, great brought al: 5 eve ra mittees at their polling places rather | 5 eS, jonly. indicates a mans-order. in his|workaday folks are. thinking. upon | siory ‘of the world i itary assistance. than to consumé several days of the| Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 30.—Edi-!Class and several considerations de-! whom the chief terror and suffering s one is being p \ictory 46 “ a me committee's time! looking up-each in-! dence of a state capitol, bomo plot! j cided his elags. nanee of thie tragic war falls. Bi ey are in sight. z INVADE SERBIA OCT. 15 ae} a | e Fir: jumber. | king to the grea we emo iver, ta 7 a . ate f ‘- 3) atylduat subscribed worked like 21 i a crude building sketch, with Bi ree eee att ene outlines eT aiere 2 a “Dor petals etna [erence Cea is attacking in the Bulgarian troops invaded Serbia Oct. 15, 1915. Her entrance x jot the Dowl might be 248. Numbderjnew day for which they have so long ampagne. ‘Tais battle will give an) into the war led to the over-running of Serbia, Montenegro, and Al- The First ward in Bismarck, operat- ing on this plan, sold bonds Saturday to 310 individual subscribers. In the whole city the number who voluntar- ily marched to the polling places Sat-| urday, ‘signed up and paid down the initial instalment often per cent will not be less than 1,500, and it may run nearer 2,000. is expected the aggregate number. of bond-buyers: will. exceed 3,000. » In every ward there were dozens of buyers who had not been notified, but who came in-of their own volition. This was true in many cases of school . boys and girls or of other people who | had been thought not financially able to invest, ‘The big sacrifice in this campa‘gn, day, “has been made by the people who have bought $50 bonds. There / was one instance of this kind in the! Fourth ,ward, where a young woman; doing chamber work at small wages insisted upon investing, even after the committee, knowning of her cir- cumstances, had advised her that she; was under no moral. oligation to in-j vest. ‘And,’ this young woman said, ‘Ll have two gentleman friends who haven't bought yet. \ They're slack- ers, and I’m going to tell them so, and if they don’t buy: they'll never keep | company with me again.’ ”. His Dollars Fight ‘Too. Typical of ,the spirit of the day was the case of Myron Henzler, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Ws Henzler. “Chris” had Kicked because his allotment was not large enough, and had insisted up- on daubling it. Myron, who is just 20, and who expects to be called soon in- to active service, had bought liberally of the third loan, and the allotment! committee, knowing that he would soon go to war, had assigned him none of the Fourth. The young man refused to be left out, but showed up bright and early with $500 in savings, all.of which he invested in a Fourth Liberty bond. “I'm going to get into the scrap over ‘there, and I want to,know that my savings are fighting with me,” said Myron. Still Time to, Buy. “; Chairman Goddard urges that any-. one who has been overlooked report at their bank and buy their bonds be- fore the close of business tomorrow. All reports will be. turned in tomor- row night, and tomorrow will. be the prospective bond -buyers’ last oppor- tunity. It is also’ urged that the small pro- Portion of bond-buyers.who could not jnake the initial ten per. cent pay- ment Saturday to do so at the earliest possible moment, mailng the check to the bank through which they are tak- ing their bonds or ‘presenu.ng it m person. This will save the banks and ; the loan committees ine unneces- sary work. ‘ ¢ Country Districts Fine. Loan workers coming in from coun- try districts report that. a splendid spirit prevailed everywhere and that every rural precinct has oversubscip- ed before the polls were: closed Sat- urday. Everyone who anything to do with the campaign the commit- tees, the bond salesmen and the bond- “buyers are most enthusiastic over the! success of the drive, and it is univers- ally agreed that history was made for the Slope country. during this happily busy. day. “The following report from State Chairman Wesley C. McDowell was- received too Jate for publication. Sat- urday attemioon ss “Reports received at North Dakota headquarters of the Liberty Loan show results at noon today as follows: Nel- son_ county allotment oversubscribed before Friday midnight; Buffalo, Cass county, over at 5:30 this morn- ing; Alice and Embden; Cass county, (Continued on Page Three.) In the entire county it} said Chairman Goddard to- | bomb location corresponding to cov- }érnor Burnquist’s office in the Minne-| sota statehouse, found yesterddy 0:1) | Pleasant avenue, St. Paul, resulted in| | restoration of a military. guard on the state capitol today and” in élabotate plans by the military department and; St. Paul police to apprehend the plot- ters. » " The rough diagram bore notations; which lead“to a belicf that the at- tempt to.éxplode a bomb in the cap-j {tol would be made about 4 p. m. to- day. ‘ Warning Sent to Bismarck. i Mention of Bismarck, N. D., on the! sketch caused the authoritiesh to send | a warning to capitol authorities in‘ that city. | | Adjt. Gen. W. R. Rhinow Jate yester- iday received the vuilding plan and no-; tations from George W. Welle, captain} | of the St. Paul police bureau of detec- | | tives. It was picked up yesterday by! {Uscar Nordquist,.576 Pleasant avenue, ! {St. Paul, in the street near his home and promptly turned it over to the St | Paul police. | The sheet, torn from a small note- | book, contained a faint outline of a | building diagram. A dot near an out side wall line was labeled. “Bo: scrawled across the center was ‘ ‘rom Bismarck, .N..D., and a short horizon- tal liné on the lower half of the sheet were followed by the words, “Be up on Sept. 28.” 7 (Much Evidence of Handling. The slip was folded and showed evi- dence of much handling. The writing was that of 8 man of limited education and of vertical style. The dot apparently intended to indi- cate a place for placing a bom) was at a point tiat.may have been either on the inside or outside of the front warr of the Minnesota capitol at a point under a window in Governor Burnquist‘s office. The sketch, how- ever, bore no marks of direction nor was' the front of the building indicated and was very crude. A copy was forwarded to North Da- kota capitol authorities after a tele- gram of warning was. dispatched. Guardsmen Put on Duty. | Gen. Rhinow immediately ordered a detail from ‘the Fourth infantry, Min- nesota National guard, on duty in the St. Paul, and re-established the mili- tary guard at the capitol. The guard) will be continued indefinitely. | The bomb plot story caused little alarms today among state officials and employes at the capitol and the sketch was regarded by many persons as a hoax, undertaken by a sensation seek: ing person. Gen. Rrinow, however, acted to in- isure against any possibility, of a bomb explosion or other violence, Secretary H. W. Libby of the Stated Public Safety commission, today said. he was not permitted to make any an- nouncement or comment of the estab-; lishment of a new military’ guard on| the- state capitol or reasons ‘for it, only that it was thought necessary to. be one the alert at this time, and the! action has nothing to do with the! Blooming Prairie or othet Jiauor, sit-| uations. ~Governor Eurnquist was absent from | the capitol again today and was sched- ured to make a patriatic address in Fairmont at a county fair. He spends comparatively little time in St. Paul; because of his numerous speaking en- gagements in various parts of the, state. Members of the Governor's office staff said no tthreatening letters have been received for several months and no suspicious characters have been seen there. ~ They denied “knowledge of a bomb plot. Governor Burnquist Absent. 1: 248 might be-held by a man 43. years {old, married’ and having children. The} simplicity that democracy means that | j, | fact that his number is the'first drawn stands for nothing at all. automatically go.in the fourth cl for deepndency- xd -unless “the “govt erhment reversed ‘its policy of not in-| j vading the deferred classifications he | new era has brought forth, they will never would be: called for service. If! cease to, believe in us; the policy ever should be reversed, all the men in the class‘ahead would have first to “be exhausted. This it will! ‘be seen. materially alters the import- ance of his‘number being the first out fof the bowl. Similarly, 5,276, for ex- ample, might be the v last capsule drawn and the holder might be a man 19 years old, He would be prfctically certain to be | called to duty soon, despite the fact that his order number was at the bot-! tom of the list.! Furthermore, all. the registrants whose numbers are about to be drawn, have heen subdivided into three class- es for present purposes. Those be- (Continued on Page Five.) ~ Buy Ww. ss. NORWAY HUNGRY IN NEUTRALITY People, Wealthy, Cannot Buy \ Things They Want ° (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) Christiania, Norway, Sept. 30.—Nor- way has made millions out of the war, but her wealth isn’t giving her en- tire satisfaction. “What's the use of money ifsyou can’t buy anything with it?” is a common plaint, Food is short and raw material for industry scarcely to bé had. A meatless meal costs a sovereign— soup, stuffed tomatoes, a few cherries | and a bottle of wine. ‘A haircut is 6 shillings, a bath 10. Six slices of bit- ter, black bread a day is the ration. Though maintaining strictest neu- trality in word and deed, the majority of the people are hoping for allied victory, None of the newspapers ‘and none of the songs in the music halls Minneapolia milling / district, sent to|Vetray the slightest ‘hias in the war. An nnn eee WOMEN “MAN” GERMAN SHIPS b 5 : German*women are used for arduous work of firing and trinimng ships of the merchant marine—what re- marins of. it in commission. who are about the only male wel left to the merchant ships. many and Ewedoa: He would | the men and on equality with them, unmarried and footfree. | ; their thoughts and 5) This picture shows a group of these. shiphands together idea of German wastage. One the eve! of the ‘att General Uidendortl co. jbania by the armies of the Central Powers. Bulgaria’s joining the offenders with two new|the Central Powers wasone of the reason’s’ Rumania entered the ter he threw in twelve! war on the side of the Entente allies. Ruan He oan On September 14th, Franco-Serbian forces attacked the. Ger- Htront Bue pe aires’ Away,.2&. Sj gnaneBulgarian. line in, Macedonia... east...,of ..Monastir.. Breaking “Soher observers here contend that | through the allied troops rapidly advanced northward. driving /a | yesterday marked the first vital step} wedge between the wings of the German-Bulgarian front. Bulgaria in wi fee i Peet ta oie Paty | was invaded by British troops at a point north of Saloniki, and on Waceelie toe piece at lestried | September 27 General Franchet d’Esperey, the allied generali§simo, . Cambrai and St. Quentin, the | announced that he had received from the Bulgarian govrnmnt'a which places is considered a/ proposal that military oprations be suspended pending negotiations ot hours.” The central pillar | for z an amistice. The negotiations were opened Sunday. flanked Hindenburg system, is out-! tho enemy north ot iechomiit dee enh teammate et prea ; Dames; Gen. Girand is at the gates of As an armistice has been arranged on terms laid down by the Charleville on the way to Vozieres, | allies, it is probable that it calls for the occupation of Bulgaria by |the key to the Jateral: railway com: | allied troops with the assistance of the Bulgarian government. Hiner te ean erie ines “on | Bulgaria probably will be compelled to break off communica- mn front. tions with the Central Powers and also withdraw her armies from the western front have taken more '}than 50,000 prisoners. Serbia, Greece and other war theaters. waited, and they think in their logi women shall play their.part along with Course to Fellow. “Lfowe ‘reject -atccopportunity” like this in ignorant defiance of what 2 they will cease to follow and to trust us. We have jmade the women partners in this war. Shall we admit them only to a partner- ship of suffering and toil? This w could not’ have been fought either by | the other nations engaged or by! America had it not been for the serv- s of the women, services in ever: sphere, not merely in the etfortd where we have, been accustomed to see them won, but in every line of} endeavor, on the very edge of the battlefields themsel “L know the> magi matter of the « Ray apropos a i atta ve ely Wak i Before the allies can take over the occupation of Bulgaria it is linen fighting in the field for our lib} WANT OFFICERS ie aula Conse a ia an aes will make ee Hd erties and the liberty of the world, = eep Buigaria in the Teutonic Alliance because it would mean the were they exeludeds che tasks of our FROM PRIVATES | ‘collapse of Turkey and the aims in Turkey and the near east and Bare and ae Le : Cane | probable elimination of Turkey from the war. It has been reported that heart will beat if you show the|SPanish War Veterans Seek ' that Bulgaria blaimed Germany for her defeat in Macedonia, claim- {ing Germany did not send reinforcements there to aid her. | : ae PUSH GERMANS HARD (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) H (By Associated Press) ‘ leanne ori ay era al London, Sept. 30—Pushing the Germans hard on the front have, started a campaign in congress| north of the Aisne the French today reached the Oise-Aisne canal, for legislation which will provide a [cpap von Co len dane are progressing along the Chemin Des |the selection of all commissioned of- | fed, an the army from he: ranks. | SMASH HINDENBURG FRONT fan see ey Universal, Promotion | London, (1:45 p. m.) Sept. 30—Field Marshal Haig’s forces Sa gr gala sonal | ;,,TBe bill.is to provide that every cit-| today smashed the Hindenburg line on a front of 8 miles to a max- ins eee betd eps nsational | izen be guaranteed an equa opportun-! imum depth of two miles. The British attack was made just north place today Se allatine atone In ty for promotion to commissioned / of St, Quentin. The British and Belgian armies in Flanders have lay a | officer-an hat tt - z Which traders took to mean the be-| yi Gy vhs Mite ieee ot, Gualitica’ advanced for an average depth of five miles geginning of the ond | of the war. public graded schools combined with Hour is in bert and the whole-g of the “enemy ¢ communications EE practical knowledge of field and bat-|in Belgium and Flanders articularly on the Belgian coast are CHRISTMAS FOR TOMMIES. ile duties as a soldier. A resolution} jn Belgnum 2 : i | Gen. Pershing’s communique Saturday reported the aviators ‘Di (Bs Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) sums up the demand as follows: don, Sept, 30.—Every Tommy in “Every citizen to the ran every " ‘had brought down 12 balloons and 60 enemy planes. RESEMBLES A DUEL every theatre of war will (bet a Christ- i officer from the ranks; every soldier mas pudding with lots of plums in it;a fair chance; every test democratic this year. The preparations are al-|—the graded public nuls and field | : A ready under way. and baitle knowledge.” American Headquarters in France, Sunday. (by Reuters) Sept. NS | 29—Fighting along thé new front northwest of Verdun has settled = down to the dreary busines: which the machine gun has reduced | modern warfare. Progress is being measured by the reduction of various small units. From a dramatic viewpoint the greatest fight- ing has taken place in the Argonne forest, where it resembled a jduel in a dark room fought to a finish. { CAPTURE CERELLO | London, Sept. 30—The Serbians have Sapte the town of | Cerello, and the retreat of the Bulgarian troops has been cut off, says the Serbian official statement of Sunday. More than 700 | prisoners and 20 guns were captured at Cerello. 3 | AVIATORS ACTIVE | With the American Army in France, Sept. 30—The outstand- jing achievement of the American army in the late offensive was ‘that of its aviators’. Their commanders. Col. Mitchell, proudly | claims there is nothing to beat them in the world, nad it will be . . {long before their record up to and including Saturday, with 60 ma- chines downed and a dozen balloons vurned, without a single cas- | ualty, is paSsed. women that you trust them as much as at heart you depend upon them. I tell you that this measure fs essential | to the winning of the war, and not to the winning of the war only.” i ary We 8. CORN BREAKS ON WAR NEWS Promotion Law CAPTURE 398 GUNS ; British Forces in Belgium, Sept. 30—Belgian troops‘in their ‘ | drives east of Ypres have captured 398 German guns; British: | troops yesterday took 78 gums in the same territory. BREAKING HOLD OF INVADER Paris, Sept. 30—The progress in breaking the hold of the Ger- man invader on French soil is shown by the fact that no longer is any of the French departments entirely: occupied by the enemy. This situation was established by the recapture of four communes in the department of the Ardennes. | | i with their officers, The boatshown .here operates between Ger- cmp evn pant ore