Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUN: WITHDRAWAL FROM FRANCE AN BELGIUM IS DRAWING NEAR The Germans appear to have decided to make a stand in the (Continued From Page: One.) cy pes A “. Pe es Oe nee: tee group of hills northwest of Rheims called the St. Thierry Massif. | cabinet in Bulgaria under Premier Malinoff and Genadhiff. re-|1t is just west of the old French line that ran along the Aisne canal leased from prison a few days ago under a ‘pardon from King| trom Berry-Au-Bac to the region of Rheims. Possession of this/ Ferdinand. ASIATIC CHOLERA strong position is necessary to the Germans in order that they may | f cpa ae are g maintain their present line farther east, including. the forts of St. Madrid, Oct. 2—Several cases of Asiatic cholera have been Thierry and Brimont, from which they bombarded Rheims discovered in Vienna and several deaths have occurred. i 5 350 PERSONS KILLED | London, Oct. 2—T! | hundred and fifty persons have been killed it is feared in in the Argonne Forest. and in the occupation of Marvaux 4nd Aure to the west. the machine gun opposition. have everywhere advanced beyond Rvillon. ‘ 3 A GREAT VICTORY ‘wav aecident at Malmo, Sweden. Fifty | ee pene ware ee ‘) Stockholm from the country were jong bitter battle is still raging, but it.has turned so definitely in AONE ne eae eV ACUATE SERBIA favor of the British that it is scarcely even now premature to hail z i : . lit as a great victory. London, Oct. 2 serbia is being evacuated by the Bulgarian! e 30 KILLED IN HOSPITAL troops who are returning to Bulgarian territory according to the! With the American Army Northwest of Verdun (Tuesday) Serbian official statement of Tuesday night. Oct. 2—Twenty patients, many of them already suffering from MAKING PROGRESS |wounds sustained in battle. were killed when a German . ‘ 1 li ane Saar . . \s ‘k a hospital a few nights ago. It is possible it a stray shell, Paris, Oct 2—General Berthelot’s ary today is making good | Struc k : f Fe progress between the Vesle river and the Aisne canal. The French | Pu nt Sean probable it was a deliberate effort to wreck the troops have captured or 6 villages and their advance has reached | ospliat. CAMBRAI HAS BEEN MINED ident Ob frome to Gomes | London, Oct. 2—Cambrai has been mined, but the British OCCUPY DAMASCUS jhave encircled the town, and defeated the purpose of the enemy. London, Oct. 2—Danrscus, the capital of Syria. us occupied ; by General Allenby’s forces |‘uesday morning. } ' CONTINUE PROGRESS ate ' Damascus is the Turkish base in Syria and Palestine, and its | progress until midday of Sept. 30, according to advices today. On fall may mean the end of the resistance to General Allenby’s forces | the north the Serbians occupied the heights of Gradishte and in Palestine and Syria. The main railroad leads to Beirut and | Plavitse, between Uskub and the Bulgarian frontier. In the region Aleoop, 180 miles northeast. ‘of Lake Bresda and Ochrida, on the Serbian-Albanian border, the Aleoop is the most important base in this area. | Austrians are putting up a stiffer resistance to the allied pressure. Damascus is the capital o7 he Nye of Syria and has : popu: | 2 S lation of about 150,000. It is \..v of the Holy Cities of the Mo am- | medans and the Arabs regard it as one of the four Paradises on | THE WESTERN FRONT AT HOME earth. ' The capture of Damscus marks an advance of 130 miles by, Earn afid give. For a year-the young | people of America have been coached Gen. Allenby’s forces since Sept. 20, the day he launched his vic- | torious attack north of Jerusalem. In that time the British have captured 50,000 prisoners, destroyed at least three Turkish armies jy thrift. Instead of the old problem and driven the enemy from Palestine. in the arithmetic book, “If Mary's ‘mother gave her three apples, Jane gave her two, and she ate one, how./ GERMAN LINE BROKEN man vould she have?” the third grade | clothing for the French and “Belgiuth orphans and perhaps send them some of her own: squalid, dingy ‘homes, with absolutely no spending money Belgian and:*Armenian relief when they themselves.. were not getting enough to eat’ They “gave up their meat ‘once'’a ‘wweek: for the Belgians, though théy only-had It uvice a weer themselves; antks. for «the - Armenians f i | | | | i i | London, Oct. 2—Between Cambrai and St. Quentin the Ger-| T | tional prisoners were taken Monday in the capture of Binarville | \ Along ‘the Vesle General Berthelot’s forces, notwithstanding | sh Headquarters in France (By Reuters) Oct. 2—The} bomb | | London, Oct. 2—The allied forces in Macedonia continued their| | School. gitlsiin India, children’ from | ave Inst year 0} man line uf defense has been broken. The British advance threat- ened the Ccrman line of retreat in the Oise valley. Between the Aisne and Vesle rivers French troops have ad-) vanced on a front of 10 mile to a depth of three to four miles in the last three days. The Germans are now retreating to the line they held in 1917. | In view of the loss of the Germans of St. Quentin and_ the} lines to the north of thet city an enemy retirement on a fairly large | seale sems probable. Some very big changes on the western front! may be seen before winter. 4 FRENCH ENTER ST. QUENTIN { French Headquarte in France, Oct.1—3 p.m.—French ; troops entered St. Quentin this afternoon. Violent explosions were | observed in St. Quentin begin-ing about 6 o’clock this morning. | General Debeney’s forces operating with the British to the north | of the town advanced beyond the S*. Queitin-Cambrai road. Between Urvillers and Cerizy the l'rench are meeting with | | grader girl is now sent to the Mlackboard to | solve, “How many Thrift stamps at 25 cents apiece will Mary ownsat the end of 12 months If she saves 10 cents ; a week?" The girl in-the grade above her ts ; learning in her arithmetic lesson how many Thrift stamps if takes to buy the | n for 500 helmets for the soldiers | in France, Still farther on the eighth told to figure in terms of War Savings stamps how much it costs to supply a regiment of Uncte Sam’s men with shelter tents. And now the Earn and Give ¢lub of the younger girls of the Young Wom- | en's Christian association is organ- ized to turn those Thrift lessons into giving. The children of America have deen ttirning in pennies and nickles they set asidé@zthe handful of fresh grain that otherwise each girl would have ground if her own littlesstone mill. Both contributions; from all the girls in one! missfonary’s school, amounted only to $5 “But it was ai tremendous sacrifice,” their teacher writes, “although a joyous one, It actually meant less bread rh day, and once a week a meal of dry bread and water. This was done by 80 girls | from the meanest homes in the world —children between the ages of five j and fifteen.” | Four hundred thousand girls in 47 | states have become Patriotic Leaguers since Aterica declared war. If as many schoo] girls and working. girls from all cldsses pledge to earn and give, the united war fund campaigners much resistance by machine gun nests. but everywhere have ad- vanced in this region south of St. Quentin | East of Rheims General Gourand, in aduition to taking a large| number of px'svners end guns, has capiared great quantities of | Ieding more than 200 narrow gauge railroad cars. Addi-| {and pisting a green stamp ou thelr Thrift card. The Earn end Give club can now use some of those cards and War Savings stamps in their campaign among the sounger people for the | united war fund. This fall when the war council of | the Y. W. C. A, made plans for the 1918 war drive, it included in its pro- gram the rufe that‘no young gitls un- der eighteen cun do any soliciting, on the streets or otherwise. They can give, but they can only give by earn- ing. Consequently in order to co-or- dinate the-efforts of the girls in all the districts over the country, the Earn and Give. club is enrolling members and has given out an estimate of apiece to be earned for the war fund cumpaign by the American girls who still count their age in ‘teens. Five | dollars apiece from ‘the younger girls of the country will mean that the na- ! tion as a whole will fill its charitabie organizations’ war chest. Some high school girl in New York | city is going to earn her $5 by shining | her own shoes instead of stopping at | the Greek stand on her way to schoul , and by making her own sandwiches for her noon luneh, Out in Iowa the girl who has been spending 15 cents plus | | war tax for a movie three nights a} | week Is going to draw a line through | the movie habit except when there is | an especially good bill. More than one | girl plans to clean all her own gloves this winter and to salvage all the pa- per and collections of junk about the house which should be sold to the junk man to be worked over into'some pro- ductive industry. The ‘girls 1p their { "teens are going to earn instead of | ask others for the money. They are to | | sacrifice and give in their own names , and older women will make the public | requests for money elsewhere. Many of thg girls who are waiting | to join the Earn and Give club are al- | ready Patriotic leaguers, and they have ‘ned several practical lessons in the thrift that will make them effective | meinbers of the new club by their con- servation of fruits and vegetables. ‘They have canned and pickled. Now when the end of summer brings the beginning of school they will change ! | thetr thrift into winter thrift and be; gin saving their $5 for the Y, W. C. A. | | 000. Hey Ww. ss. Safe, but a Nuisance. To prevent poison heing used in mis- take for medicine, an inventor has pat- ented a bottle with the neck at one side and so formed that, its contents cannot be poured@Sat without careful manipulation. HINOLA SHINOLA SAME 13 PAE A LWwAVRICE TEN CENTS ARGE quantities of StinorA are pur- chased by the Government to be sold to the Soldiers and Sailors. We aim to make SnmovA’ cost the men serving their country and the public back of the men, as little as possible. | war fund. “Wherever You Are Is the Western s the Slogan which the Harn! ve club has adepted. Anna, one | wiry thirteen-year-old daughter of New | York's: East side, who was one of the | first and youngest members to join the | at a New York settlement d to have it explained to her | that ead of western front meaning ! fzht and fight m ing fists, the west- | tern front means Work and work means | save in order to give. | The girl who joins the Earn and| Give club will discover that in con-| / junction with her tvorking and saving in order that her club will furnish its | quota of the money that is going to help the girls like herself in France and Belgium, she will also find numer-; ous ways in the community to help the | war that she had never dreamed-of. She will see that-all the fruit pits and stones that can, be saved from her own’ dining table and from those of ‘her neighbors, are dropped inte the little réd barrel at the corner; ‘in order that the carbon which the seeds contain can be used in making charcoal for the American soldiers’ gas masks. She will save all the tin foil that she Stes for the Red Cross. a | War conditions turn men’s heads to profit making. We believe. friends and users are more valuable ,than the profit of the moment. That\is why you can buy Stow’. at the same price as always. " BLACK — TAN —WHITE— RED ~ BROWN | i i i | r a will have $2,000,000 of thelr $170,500,- | and others famous in the screen world. f | | | | Derosawaee &oweeew iN i The president of the American Federation of Labor at a) luncheon given in his honor by the British government at the Carl- ton Hotel. From left to right, Winston Churchill Premier Lloyd George and Mr. Gompers.' : Abin ee GOVERNMENT ~ FIXES PRICES OF SHOES i | | | | MINNEAPOLIS CLOSE. No. 1 dark northern 224. . 2 dark northern 2 3-dark northern amber durur 2 amber durum 2:amber. durum yellow corn 148,to yellow corn to 127. . B mixed 12 7to 1 Other grades 100 to 125. 2 White oats Mont. 67 to 68. aay D. C., Oct. 2.—Maxi: prices of shoes | Washington. mum and minimum ranging from $3 to $12 for men and women, were fixed today by the war industries board. The shoes were di-| vided into three classes, priced as 3 white oats rive 64 to 64 | >». 4 white oats 61 to'64 12. Barley, chaice, 87 to 91. | Barley crdii | . same. | | arrive same. |. Oats. 64 5-8; Oats Oats Z 66 1-2 Rye, Oct lRye % 159. ——ay we ss DULUTH CLOSE. Proportionate prices will-be fixed for youths’ and children’s foot wear. . |The cutting of shoe pr under this rorder begins October time being al- | lowed retaileds pose of their | present, stock | X 65 155 1-4; Rye X { to dis ENDORSE LOAN. | Shanghai, Oct. 2.-+America’s fourth Liberty Loan campaign has beeh en- i do by most of the Chinese cham- i hers of commerce, and it is being pro-| " moted by the most extensive advertis- | ing campaign in the history of China. | 4 ane, In Shanghai at the close of the si cond | { pie ‘ { 2: hday $250,000 had been s' ribed. ~ ‘ps Duluth cash oats track 64° 1-2) re ney wes Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. No Need to Worry. | Mrs. Livewell—“Please don't be ! fended at the question, | you addicted to drink?” New i “J don’t know the taste of it, in. You can keep a bottle in every room in the house if you like and you'll al- ways find it as you left it’—ufialo Express. : \ of: | are ARRH of the BLADDER. 24 HOURS Tach. sule bears the eof counterfeits, | | TARZAN FANS TO BEGIVEN TREAT “Tarzan.” Edgar Rice Burrough’s most unique character in modern fiction, has a host of admirers in Bismarck who tonight will pack the Bismarck theatre to see “The Romance of Tarzan,” a great. picture drama founded upon the love exploits of this man of the jungles. Almost everyone who reads has enjoyed the Tar- zan stories. Tarzan fans will readily, understand how the adven- turd of this! wonder hero will readily lend themselves to picturiza- tion on the screen, and it is.said that in-the picture which the Bis- marck theatre presents tonight realism has been carried to a de- gree seldom before attained in the history of the photodrama. In the cast are Elmo Lincoln, who was “The’fwo Sword Man” in David W. Griffiths’ great “Intollerance ;” Thomas Jefferson, son of the immortal creator of Rip Van Winkle; True Boardman, star of “Stingaree,” one of the best of the “Raffles” pictures; Enid Markley, the beautiful Triangle, Fine Arts and Thomas Ince Pro- ductions star; Kathleen Kirkham Cleo Madison, Gordon Griffith “GOING UP PASSES UP | BISMARCK , Bismarck theatre-goers — who had looked forward to seeing “Going Up’ at the Auditorium on Saturday were disappointed today to learn, that the company had changed its routing, and that instead of going west from Win- nipeg via Fargo and Bismarck, it would dip down to. Kansas' City and thence continue its: journey to the const. Bismarck may catch “Going Up" on the rebound in the spring. BUY We 8 3 COUNTRY CLUB * TO. HUSKING GO oh Tonight is the big night for the Country club corn huskers—ladies in- cluded, Bismarck received, more fav- orable. advertising trom tHe! Country club's recent exploit than from any- thing else which has occurred recent- ly.‘A_ story of the golfiends’ ‘exploits j Was carried, by the Associated Press }and published in many-eastern papers. Tonjght the Country clubbists expect to duplicate their former achieve- ment. They will tackle a big field on the William Claridge farm, Six, is the hour set for leaving, and the Me- Kenzie hotel the point of assembly. Every Country club member is asked to turn out ,toting their cars with them. You Get Delicious . ; Results ‘with SA- This.is fhe new coo) pound that housewives allover the country are using in place of eggs in cooking and baking. It also. saves shortening. Try it yourself and see how. good it is. Cakes, muffins, waf- files and. cookies will come out as delightfully crisp, brown and. appetizing as ifeggs were used, It may be used in salad dress- ings, puddings, French toast, gravies—any recipe that calls for wholeeggs. It gives you the same fluffy lightness—the same leavening power — the same thickening and. binding quali- \ties as eggs at a fraction. of what.eggs cost you. ‘The first 25. cent package will save you over $1.00. As eggs go up it will save you more. TODAY —. Ask Your Grocer for 44, SaVan. THE BISMARCK. WHOLESALE)” CROCERY:CO.. Distributors,