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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE As WEDNESDAY,-OCT#36, 1918. PACE 3 . THE ANSWER THREE NEW bs | Americans, and we can kill ten times as many. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! times as many German prisoners as you hold! Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D, as Second .» D. as | Class Matter GEORGE D. MANN - = - S BEWARE!” BOOZE AND FLU. |» DEATHS NOTED Special | Fortunately, the constitution of North Dakota, [Mrs. John Christopher Passed Fifth A Bldg.; CHICAGO, Marquette Vy, ; yO gt 7e. S- .; DETROIT, Kresege/ js still in effect, and Attorney General Langer, ; | ‘away Early This Morning— ___Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Le ifor a few months more, at least, has not the: i HEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| for republication of all news credited to it or not of | power to suspend any law which has been signed by Governor Frazier and formally; placed on the} | Others, Very Til. BAN IS LIFTED. he has a shot, ‘oe cred is and also the local news bs4e ; lished Tec aa ee Istatute books. Attorney General Langer’s order: H nearger iN! Ox Oct, Sue The in. All rights of publication of special dispatches be partially suspending the bone dry statute during i prevalied here for several weeks are Ai rights of publication of special dispstebes herein the period of the present emergency is of less | was lifted today. ‘are also reserved. HUREAU OF CIRCULATION {value than the paper it is written on. The atti-; | Phas Sate eck Cx utente cee SEMBER AON RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | tude of mind which led the attorney general to; | authorities lifted the ban on. meet- Daily by carrier per year. “ $6.00 issue his proclamation is revealed, but aside from ees Haren arene ener erred Daily by mail i gsegh state). 4.00 that the incident is of no importance. jhere as the result of the epidemic. Othe 2 Daily by mail outside of No ON RATES It is regrettable that North Dakota should re- Bil cna ner caulk Gece ascanlk (In North Dakota) ‘sort to fraud for such worthy legislation as the - |influenza was reported from Bismarck by mail... Sh 00 es . _, hospitals over night. Mrs. John Chris- bed reer s by mail. ae be bone dry act. The Tribune does not believe such ;topher, who had been very ill for Three months 2 mall od orth a ‘underhanded methods necssary, or advisable. The! i several ert Le rarenind eedesie Outside o: Dakota , A A 1 ‘ 5 year . i eo Tribune trusts and urges that the next legislative Christopher, and other relatives in One a ee cece ‘ - t } Bismarck survive. a aon "25 assembly will re-enact the bone dry statute and ; | John Wingate of Bismarck was in a Be ‘ bg 36.00 make it unassailable. In the meantime that act; | decidedly critical condition. Mrs. R. . eae . ;K. batzer, Mrs. H. O. Batzer and Mrs. One your - 3.00 is still in full force and effect, without regard to. | William Langer, all of whom havo Bix months ee {anything Attorney General Langer may say to the. | been ill from influenza at St. Alexius, One month ......--- aaae Tawar contrary. Mr. Langer cannot by public proclama-' aerrtus tera kearotgsy of THR 8TATES OL 2 |tion suspend the operation of any law. the state welfare commission, entered (Established 1878) e ie é the Bismarck hospital this morning, iy CONFIDENCE. suffering from influenza. Other new — IN NCE. i ipatients at the Bismarck are Mrs. 4 t NITEDQTA TES ,- Are you easily dissuaded, readily persuaded to} ans Ss Tay Pe ck eae nconditional ) urrender:: ichange your mind, to alter your views, to amend | jlete the hospital galy. a few days ago eae BNC cited See ~ your decisions, to veer in policy, opinions or plans? Set inet ke eas Fan eeeee o i FOR THE PEACE COUNCIL—BRUSSELS. i In this world of kaleidescopic change, cross-: juen feday: an boa Af i ‘ 5 ; repo! . Before many months the allies will summon the current influences incessantly assail; they decoy,’ lene thas aCfany aches Cie since I i : ders of their respective nations to a peace| detract or deflect us from the path of predeter- tee re eerucr tne, Slope cour: est leaders 0: as fs si uy, a e agon to rae to discuss the terms to be imposed | mined DUPDOBE: j hope that the scourge has passed the upon a beaten Germany. There is one possession which insures undis-/ orWalter’ On Zimmeringa, a well a) Fy "Where will the conference be held? No one has /|turbed poise and undeterred pursuit of any pre- leet Piswjarsh commercial traveler, vet given that question’ thought. In fact, at first scribed objective. It establishes unshakable firm- Mute acute trout spine ? pene ann - blem. ness, a resoluteness that accomplishes the end: growing ‘out of influenza. The de- thought, it may not seem an important eet porn % . 1 . ceased came to Bismarck four years There is London, the world’s metropolis, where/ originally designed. Peer ee eee eee ago from Wheaton, Minn., eo enter the Balkan wars were settled—or, rather, NOT| Confidence is the key. Build it; develop it; st BISMARCK BAD 7 the., ‘employ: ed tne Thternational settled. And there is The Hague, which enters less assurance from without, gain reassurance, } ee STATE-OWNERSHIP OR OWNERSHIP OF STATE. gaged jn the shop here, and the last everyone’s mind in connection with peace negotia-|from within. Be self-sufficient. i j carte eet? tae eines seat tions, because it is the seat of The Hague tribunal,| Confidence brings adherence to convictions de- SAYS MAGAZIN ; Is it state ownership or ownership of the state bee was born in Wheaton, Minn. about which never succeeded in pacifying anything. | spite their conflictions with views of others calcu- a ! i ae Townley, LeSueur and Mills have as their ultimate a8 ie dee CaBWAT bn marriage none ‘ far 2 i ce for fi i if goal? : * [i with: Adele Kopernick a well know! But there is a far more appropriate place lated to revoke them. Popular Mechanics Would Have pernick-a Own, 7 . . A . u 7 . . 5 Bismarck yo { vho witha holding the peace conference than London, The} Confidence is the offspring. of faith in self and Us Amend 0: i We all know how completely Townley owns the Non Ppresetints ne roman. oy ch Hague or any other city—that is Brussels, the! in one’s work. Confidence is born of belief in per-| Ss -omend. or idea state ipiesaen Hie of pone pate ees a , ler ot the Wecoasen Chale (6 sBibmare 4 a : { * A a! Are By er. | er common knowleage a ie own Dsoule baba yesterday on receipt of news: of the capital of Belgium! {sonal power and:in that which is. soughtoh attaur. ee fi et Teague member of the last general assembly. Re-elect the |) eritical condition of his son. SHe will Brussels, soon to be alae by the vdorond ment, | Popular Mechanics makes editorial present Nonpartisan state administration and give Townley - Tow morning. for Wheaton oath, i Belgian army, was the first capital to shake and| [To he well-to-do, found the will-to-do on a hasis | comment on phatase trea of oer possession of both houses of the legislature as = a oe H. Dollar will accompany the remains ‘ shudder beneath the heel of the Hun invader. of confidence. Ambition commences, confidence! a crack at the capita! city of North judiciary, and how much will your interest in the state o as eS representative of the Interna: It was the scene of one of the most dramatic | carries through. “Less confidants, more confi-| Dakota as follows: North Dakota be worth to you ie : F ene tas Glen-Uttin-Man Dies, . oe i is . A, want igi = “ - ae p . ; * A aya. Bennie Hernlie of Glen Ullin, aged episodes in all history, that momentous Aug Fe \dence” is a rule the successful man rigidly ob-| Solomon ‘sars ia font namie is The nation embarked in state ownership of public utili 21, died at a local hospliay Tuesday 1914, when heroic King Albert walked before his) serves. See, ehteh te may auiendd “aad (| ties solely as a war measure. Its expediency is yet to be |! atiernoon from Spanish influenga. ‘The s parliament and, in a speech that will ring down ee a bad name is a lability, net.” \} proven. . National “operation of the Piet he pe sir ody wad tak ‘today to -Glen Clin cate : HAA is brave defiance at ve id well i ‘1 The good work of. removing Ger- not made for efficiency. and economy. * Our-national adminis- - 7 4 ase the corridors of time, hurled his brave The last of the H apsburgs did well in stating) man names of places is going on with! tration has given less service for more money and is showing _ pe ahs ome Regn er Germany. that the case of Trieste would be separately acted| increasing fervor. Individuals even a deficit from month to month that would stagger any pri- Joe Greyerbeiht’ Dies.’ It was one of the most imposing structures inj on, It will be acted on at the all-allied peace Cone ee oy Cenebane eoide later oats vate corporatjon. ~ Joseph Greyerbelhl, oné of the old- 2 yreat cause of freedom; . s “, ized” | daily fi t with d Am-4 is : : Bees) est and best. known, residents .of the the world devoted to the g : F Poth Terence; where; alse, the case of <federalized” Aus lerican'namen, "From all paris of the And, when the nation essayed ownership, whom did it « }/ south side, died at his home early this, “a Pas the very symbol of democracy and liberty—the jtria will be reacted upon. ‘country comes the sews of German'| call in to manage its great public utilities? Arthur C. Town.» }j morning, following several years’ sut- famous Palace of Justice, whose stately assembly — |having been banished as a public | Jey? Eugene Debs? Emma Goldman? Scott Nearing? Arthur bad targa Sea casa halls and court rooms were defiled and turned into) After that brief flurry of propaganda, it now) n° hos imine onureis the | LeSueur? Kate Richards O’Hare? gaged in the teaming and contracting barracks for filthy Hun soldiers by the ruthless|hecomes evident that the Germans still have a/German-name propaggnda, which has No, Uncle Sam passed up each and every one of these quainesgizend jhe. hed “2. general ac- ; . A ~ Mlourished for years;A4s being rudely ay Pi id him Willi G. McAdoo, a n S invader. -husky mailed fist, have not lost their morale, atefswept away. ‘There {s still opportun- | theorists, and he called in to aid Ain. y liam. . . 1B out the sity. Tate death ‘ot this time ere is i world any more fitting assem-! executi: i i ir|ity for further reform. Many towns | construction engineer who buil , unnels, an Is_especia le because Mrs. Is ie is eae : Ee : sre canes : Se ies are a not ae their and cities bear names distinctly Charles M. Schwab, the steel magnate, and John D. Ryan, Gréverbelhl.. who ; yecently was very bly hall or the meetings is Pp 7 crimes, will not make reparation nor gran HUAT-| German, | and the | loyal eltizens of the copper king, and Hoover, Hurley and Garfield and others —}) circuiting of wires arouen ee hors . % which is to decide the fate of the world? : it anties. Otherwise peace is near. | changing to something better, Not who had made a success of “Big Business” on a big scale. rent to an slbatric Washer, is 2 pa: And how natural and appropriate a tribute i ee \long ago a California city of 5,000 5 A A fth ienced lent at St. Alexius hospital, and was i : ‘ ‘ inhabitants changed its name and , And in spite of the expert services of these experienc unable to be with her husband when would be to the liberty-loving Belgians, who have | inhab! at ae hanged -tts iat lena generals, Uncle Sam has yet to demonstrate that public own- the end came. Besides Mrs, Greyery suffered greater agony at the hands of the Hun WITH THE EDITORS jplish, and the new name a great im-|’ ership is a success or that it can be made a success in the Bein: there Weareave, govern. ehilarer than any other people, to mete punishment to iProhorc'e a bad spot though on the | present stage of our development. ‘ dade. s as + sa ions a . { ely, Bi . De ig Bresiow in Hospital, _ their tormentors in the city which for generations | THAT'S NOTHING. {map, namely, Bismarck, N. D. ‘This 4200s Joseph ‘Breslow. the Math” dtrect R : h bol of Germany’s greatest) town started out in 38’ with the *% druggist, is'in St: Al fe 1 ' ., : rs . :, ip . ropagan: t jn its work. and, wrote the town a Tr 3 shame! jconstitution without any legislative action during on the promise, ot Honnaa money ' ike “intelligence of its citizens.” [| PEOPLE’S FORUM ‘: | Sea eeeried ‘ibe tee rab sopeition nnele \this influenza epidemic and says that liquors can (whl never, came) its name WaS nat letter, still in the archives,|® o pone tobe. favorable. ; THE HUN T ae _,,.__|be shipped into the state for medicinal purposes.| Cornerstone of the capitol building Would make a good occasion for a FLU, N. P., ET AL. LANGER UNFIT TO HOLD Germany has captured two American soldiers|t¢ ty, attorney general can do this at his own|was laid the German ambassador nublic meeting and a patriotic bon-| 1 would suggest that the state of HIGH LEGAL BERTH.. carrying shotguns. The Huns don’t like shotguns—not in the hands of a Yank! And the German government has sent an ulti- matum to the United States threatening to shoot every American soldier captured if a shotgun or shotgun ammunition is found on him. Kaiser Bill says that shotguns in warfare are forbidden by The Hague convention. The real truth is that The Hague convention permits the use of shotguns rather than the high- powered army rifle in general war police work and in guarding prisoners. r Shotguns are being used by Yanks “over there’ for those purposes. But even if they were used to blaze a path to Berlin, what right has the arch murderer of all| history to protest? What right of protest has the Hun who scorned all rules and laws laid down by The Hague convention which did not please him?) The imperial government of Germany has torn up solemn treaties; warred) on non-combaants, nurses, wounded babies ; violated international law and tramped upon honor, truth, justice and right. And now this Hun, with his hands dyed red in honest people’s blood, with his pockets filled with stolen booty, and his frightful record of criminal- ity, talks of The Hague convention! The Hague convention meant nothing to the, Hun and means nothing to him now if it stands between him and the gratifying of his beastial de- sirés and his greed. We devoutly pray that our government will not take away one shotgun from the Yanks. We hope that our government will see fit to send this warning to the Huns who fear our shotguns: “For every American soldier you slay because or shotgun ammunition we will AN ‘OFFICERS! For every jake we will make five! We have \ RANG | eNOS LOPE LENE LN EME Fad | sweet will there is nothing to prevent him from ‘not leave the whole matter of a new constitution} to Langer and save all this talk and bother. You |read in one place where a learned physician says \that liquor is bad for people and then another |comes along and says it is great medicine, and | there you are.—Valley City Times-Record. | i BISMARCK’S ARMISTICE. i | While the subject of armistices is under consid-! |eration, it might be well to examine what Ger-' |many considers the right kind of armistice to give ja defeated enemy. | Here are some of the terms Bismarck imposed jon the French in the Franco-Prussian war: | 1—An armistice of twenty-one days. | 2—Disarmament of'the French army, the sol- diers to remain in Paris as prisoners of war. 3—The soldiers to give up arms and banners, but officers to keep their swords. | 4—Paris to pay an indemnity and give up its forts to the Prussians. 5—The Germans not to enter Paris during the armistice. é That was Bismarck’s idea of an armistice, and it was enforced despite the fact that there were| still French armies in the field outside Paris, de- termined to continue the war for better terms. The peace terms included the ceding of Alsace- Lorraine, an indemnity of a billion dollars which was an unheard of sum for those days, and per- mission for German troops to march through the streets of Paris in token of complete victory. This). last was a typical Prfissian touch, and 30,000.Ger-| | man troops did parade the streets for forty-eight hours. Today the same Germany pleads for a peace that| will not humiliate the fatherland. —F Begs Bie was present, and Bismarck himself |suspending the whole constitution at will. Why, EVERETT TRUE fire, North Dakota confer on our vener- able jurist one or two honorary de- grees. He ought to have the title Dr. Think he would be pleased to see his tinh insintelin: Conde name thus: \ James E. Robinson Flu D., L.L.b.d.D. (The D. meaning .Doctor and So ‘ou’ WANT MY NAME AS A WITNESS, MISTER MOTORMAN $ ALL RIGHT. L'VE 4 You FoR SEVERAL Biock KEEPING YOUR SYES ON THEM ON THE SILK ‘STOCKINGS ALONG THS TLEBE A WITNESS ALL RIGHT U8 Strset! L.L.b.4.D. meaning Doctor of Bone Dry Laws.) ~’** . When the Nonpartisans talk about the “old gang” it reminds me of the old horse. The old horse stood under a tree, patiently, tho horse-flies were thick on his back. A kind-hearted passer by, seeing the flies, went up thinking to do the old horse a kind- ness by brushing ‘them off. “Don't do it, sir,” said the philosoph- ical old horse, “Leave those flies alone for they're nearly full; if you drive them away their places will be taken by others, more hungry than they.” For instance, Mr~ Box, who requires two meals in one day at $7.50. ATTRITION AACA ALL WN AW |. When a person is suspected of steal- see how that person is spending mon- ey. If it appears that he has more money than formerly which can not be accounted for it is an indication that the. ‘suspicion is well founded. When Mr. Hastings can buy Hudson super-sixes and Marmons—he only a former bank clerk BEN WaTcHing AND INSTGAD OF 'S TRACK You HAD A. READER. BUY W. 5. S- The King Got His. Solomon, a London musician, had as pupil King George I. “ One day, when the king had not distinguished himself by great practice or skill in playing, the teacher gave him the fol- lowing classification of fiddlers. “Fid- dlers, your maje8ty, may be divided into three classes: To the first belong those who cannot play at all; to the second those who play badly; and to the, third those who play ‘well. You, sire, haye already reached the second class.” ctor ——avr w. 5. 3 ——— Maud—Isn’t 30 to 50 too old to hope for any improvement? 1 should say not. One just begins to live. Take © | willbe bloom! 60, ing money, detectives will watch to; Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea; you ary (Continued From Page One.) ing the passage of Bill 44, when any school boy in law should have known that it could “have no effect, even though * had received the vote of ev- ety member of the house and the sen- jate, because the bil had no emergency ‘clause and it provided for a special .glection in June, when-ft: could not Possibly take effect until July. The Spectacular Hall Fizzle. “Then, when the attorney general came to arrest Secretary Hall on the groundless \charge “of . embezzlement, We was so anxious to do it in a spec- tacular way that-he had Hall arrested and taken from his bed at midnight and put the state to the great. ex- pense of a needless prosecution, which ‘was manifestly groundless. So when he made the Minot raid, it had to be ‘done at midnight and not in a decent, orderly manner. It was done in such a way ‘that he himself became the chief ‘criminal and had to induce the governor to give him a bodyguard of soldiers to protect him from. arrest. Has Not| Kept His Word, “Thus far I have refrained trom say- ing. anything ilk’ of Mr, Langer, but on last Saturday I stated the facts of the case. to him and showed him that the bone dry statute is a‘fake and that his plain duty. was to tele- graph-the express companies to re- ceive and-carry all orders for liquor to any part of the state. He assured me that he would do it. But:he has not Kept his word or made an excuse for not doing it. Now, of course, Mr. Langer pee paid a high price for the votes of ‘the extra drys, which he seems to value more than the‘ lives of the people- He may be reelected; but he may never again bring anoth- er prosecution under that fake statute, and if reelected, he must conduct his office _ decently. and. in accordance with the law, without any more gfand- )Stand plays.’ When the oftice of state’s attorney is not conducted. in a spirit of humanity.and fairness, it ‘becomes a public nuisance and a curse instead of a blessing. Oe cE ML 9 Ap» ane