The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 30, 1918, Page 2

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Stacie etn pe SAGE 2 -BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE site HUN ARMIES IN PANIC IMITATE RUSSIAN ROUTS Teuton Soldiers Loot and Slay In Mad Rush for Their Old’ Homes DISAPPEA Order Gone, Sta Make Them Act Like Pack of Wolves | DISCIPLINE SHEPHERD, | shington Burean, | Munsey i Washington, D. tof misery when | s portions of the | in panic Th supposedly literate ¢ heir homeware . The Russian rout duplicated in many ! ries in twentieth century sign of a coming rout is the Lady Druggists’ Advice! Taken © MT before re | feeling fine now.” It is a simple} harmless preparation that removes| the catarrhal mucus: from the intes-) tinal tract and alla, the inflammation | Tt i nelud: | dose il con-} For sale by | One refunded t - | vation “Fears | o! army are retiring from the} The + | become worthle: all stomach, | , loss of faith in their officers, because of the army’s defeat. In Germany, | perhaps, as In Russia, the first.breaks jcame when the officers attempted: to | enforce capital punishment for mutiny und discovered that they couldn’t get | tiring squads to shoot. Without the death penalty officérs are helpless. These things happen next, in about the following order: g le to go back to their homes. Each is desperate to see the revolutice k home, and to be on hand to take © of his family in case of street fighting in his own home town. GRY SOLDIERS SEIZE FOOD. cided to get home as quick- ssible, they either shoot thei , if the offic {or clse, at a stated time, they depart [for the nearest railroad line, leaving | their officers behind them. To get on a train is thelr sole aim. jly ‘ney find no trains provided for them, In their efforts portation, they Groups of them can. Other groups in} ‘Also, they find no food tu st food i 1 iment usual-} s together until, in desperati hold up train and seize eu a fireman gnd en-| them. If not, they com-| + those they find on the train, force the train to start toward tination. It may have been a train that was loaded with food for soldie at the front. In that case, within a few 's thousands of troops at the front will be facing starvation and they, too, will start for home as best they can, i RAILROAD SYSTEMS ARE DE- i MORALIZED, 3efore long the railroad systems are filled with stolen trains. Schedules are abandoned. Train orders sent by sta- tion, masters while the alfles of the} fugitive soldiers held at their heads Trainloads of sol- diers meet. metimes there are col- lisions in which many are killed. At other times the soldiers on each train fight each other for the right of way, killing vigorously until one. trainlo: or the other wins, Then the losing | train backs up to the nearest switch | Station masters se to send satisfactory orders, or who try to pr vent groups of soldiers from seizing trains at stations, are killed outright. | | { When the Skin Seems Ablaze | With Itching and Burning | There's just one thing to do. If your skin seems ablaze with the fiery burning and itching of Eczema, real and lasting reliet can only come from treatment that goes be- aches down cannot find 1 remedy that ap- proaches S. f for real efficiency. , and youl y the proper treatment is through the blood. ‘ S.S.S.has been on the market Top fifty years, during which tim has been giving uniform satisfaction fox, all manner of blood disorders. ff you want prompt and lasting relief, | you can rely upon S$. S.S. For ex. | pert advice as to the treatment of | individual case, write to- | ief Medical Adviser; Swift | , Dept. C, Atlanta, Ga. | You Can Enroll at This | MODEL OFFICE PRACTICE | school under guarantee. of a sat- isfactory position as soon a8 competent or your tuition re- funded. Send for particulars. | When you know more about this! | college and what it has done for hundreds of the most successful business men and women, you'll attend. Write G. M. LANGUM, Pres., Bismarck, N. D. 1. } ») y COLEMAN’S Sel “tana Opposite Hotel McKenzie, Bismarck SUCUUUUCLST ETE TS We are closing out our entire stock of Clothing, Overcoats and Men’s Fur- nishings. Prices way below cost. Going Out of Business STORE | Bismarck,ND. TheOldestand | | Largest Bank |{ tin this sectionof the State LIVE YOUR OWN LIFE Don’t\allow the spend- ing of your money to be eontrolled by what some- one else does. Live life. Save systematically a por- your own tion of your earnings and you will get your reward in later years. We welcome . Savings Deposits in any amount and pay 4% interest. The men of a company or regiment |. try to Interfere, | It is estimated that over 500 station masters were killed In this fashion rduring the Russian rout, At ‘each station the soldiers alight and hustle for food. Being penniless, they. steal it. A panic grows in each man’s mind. as he sees food getting scarcer and scarcer and as the delays on the rail- roads become greater. i PANIC CONDITIONS SPREAD 1 RAPIDLY. “I want to get home before I starve and before my family starves,” I heard Mesperate men say in the stations in s Wild rumors, born of panic, the disordered mil- bout among | Hons. At last the rout becomes a giant panic in which the men no longer try to stick together. It becomes a ie of cach man for himself. In despera- tion, each man becomes a sort of high- !\wayman. Carrying his rifle and plenty of ammunition, he seizes whatever he needs. Trains of ull sorts are covered with men in uniform. They break the win- dows to hang on to the sashes, They ride on the couplers and on the plat- forms and roofs, At certain tunnel entrance, -near | Moscow, not a train passed that did not several dead men alongside the lesperate, home-going men whol leave track .{had heen brushed off the car by the tunnel roof. The undertaker in the little town nearby made a small for- tune by burying them at governinent expense. The mails practically stop. Letters between the fleeing saldier and his home cease altogether. The home folks, in the villages and cities, fall into panic. The regular distribution of food, by train ceases, In Ri a it was stated that many soldiers would not get to their homes for years; some, never. Dispatches from Germany indicate that many of the German soldiers are going home in this sort of a rout. Stories of soldiers being brushed fram car roofs give a sidelizht that makes the German hegira look decidedly -Rus- sianesque. GERMANY HAPPY WITH WAR LOST SAYS SPECIAL First Correspondent Across the Line Tells of Experience In Hunland | Kejoicing Over Fact That Strug- gle Was Over and They Could Go Home BY EDWARD M. THIERY. N. E. A. Staff Correspondent BASLE, Switzerland. I have just come out of Germany. I was the first American correspond- ent to cross the Rhine. Two American Red Cross workers, girls, entered Germany with me. They are Cheta Geary, 1155 Garfield St., Denver, and Letitia Curtis, 1516 Masonic-av, San Francisco, We visited St. Ludwig, Huningen, Neudorf; we inspected the railroad bridges across the Rhine into Loer- rach at the foot of the Black Forest; We went aroud behind the fortified Mount Trillegen. In Baden, flamingly red-beflagged, we saw thousands of German soldiers marching home. And, most amazing, they were SINGING—they were joy- j ously singing: ~ “Wir hab’ den Krieg verloren, Nun gehen wir nach Heim!” (“We have lost the war—now we are going home.)” A thousand released Italian prison- ,ers of war, on their way home, were cheered lustily by the homeward- ‘bound Germans. Unassigned German officers who appeared at the roadside were not saluted. ; The retreat was orderly, Many of the German orivates had thrown away. their rifles and were carrying red banners, T talked with a German’ officer, Lieutenant Sandblein. “We are glad the kaiser {s one,” he said. “We hail the republic!” In Baden each Rhinelander home I saw was ‘bedecked with the red flag of the socialist government and the populace rejoicing at their escape of the allied armies which they have micsed so narrowly. The frontier guards were with- @rawn across the Rhine, but our way was barred at Frieburg and we !returned through Alsace south of Mul- hausen and saw the tremendous de monstrations of joy with which the ) Alsatians greeted the coming of the | French and the release from German} | domination. i 160 Hens—1500 Eggs. | i Mrs. H. M. Patton, Waverly, Mo.. {writes “I fed 2 boxes of ‘More Eggs’ jto my hens and broke the egg record. Tt got 1500 eggs from 160 hens in ex- actly 21 days.” You con do as welk Any poultry raiser can: easily double his profits by doubling the egg pro-/ uction of his hens. A scientific tonic has been discovered that revitalizos the flock and’ makes hens work <all ithe time. The tonic is cailed <‘More! Eggs.” Give your hens a few cents’ ‘worth of “More Eggs” and you will bo amazed and delighted with results. “More Kggs” will double this year’s | production of eggs, so if you wish to | try this great profit maker, write E. J, Reéter; poultry expert, 1836 Reefer Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., for a $1 pack- age of “Mote Eggs” Tonic. Or send | $9.25 today and get three regular $1 packages on special discount for a Season’s supply.. A’ mfllion dollar i®ank-guarantees if you are. not absc- futely satisfied your money willbe re- furned on request” and ‘the “More Eggs” costs you nothing. ‘You tal ho risk. ‘Write today. Pin a dollar fill to your letter or send $2.25 special discount for 3 packages. Or ask Mr. Reefer to send you free his poultry ‘Dbodk that: tells the t man’ who has made # fortune out of ¢ | I have seen German officers \the certdinty that an armistice was here. out of hiding. forth flowers in the:cell. phase of the paace gives the readers.a intimately, are: News of Busin the readers of “Th easily trace the pro; heads” along the li WOMEN ENTER FORTIFICATIONS. Happy bands of Alsatian women and children on the hells of retreat- ing Germans took possession of im- pregnable fortifications. I visited twice the Rhine bridgehead of Loer rach, where thé Germans had planned | to make a last stand defense, the bridge at Karlsruhe, the network of concrete trenches and dugouts and ‘gun mounts. Tho shell-proof quart- ers, which would house a thousand soldiers, solidly planted in the hilly Sround, itself a natural fortress, Three barbed wire nets, form semicircle on tho west bank of the Rhiné, protected the bridgehead. Tho Alsatians have disemdowled the fortress of metal and wood and discarded German ammunition. Death traps were absent. i I inspected the reserve defenses. on | the Baden side, with their miles of barbed wire, commencing at the east along the’ bank. I was there when the \first French officer arrived in an automobile, with ; the tri-color streaming from its front, heralding the conquerors, and the} Germans, apparently without regret, rélinquished the useless Rhine strong- | hold. | Here in Basie I have seen German } nobility flee by airplane, loaded down with gold and fifinding safe refuge: here, | in- ferned here tearing off their uniforms in anger at the surrender of their army. The cessation of the distant battle sounds has produced a strange still- ness here, Basie heard the guns for mal. i carrying. as much of their treasure with them as they can, began with to” be signed, and continues daily. | ‘A Getman prince who escaped in an airplane loaded with gold has been in- terned here-as a formality. He is safe. His wealth is: safe. ‘Propanancists are Stranded in Basle. Hundreds of German propagandists aré stranded here with the cessation of imperial: funds, waiting to see what} government will prevail in their own a, jah | Switzerland] is a clearing house for refugees, for Red Cross workers, for returned prisoners, for diplomatic rep- resentatives and provagandists. . It is! liké‘one vast hotel with a mnititude of convertion gatherings of various tia- > Babel of sound. of, tagged. The Contributing Causes of Germany’s Def SOLDIER EATS OWN: S a|000 tons, of food every. 37 days. river edge and extending for miles | four years, and the silence is wbnor- | The exodus of German nobility,) iGet the Habit Shall We Feed Germany nd Stint Ourselves? An examination of the American press shows that the German wail for food, which was the. first sign of life of the-new-born German government, has ] To many observers: this “propaganda” is important as the opening gun of Germany’s fight for.a victory: at: the peace table. . All our late full-Germans, pro-Germans, and pacifists are expected to come “show mercy to the defeated.” ‘They will come,” predicts the Kansas City Star, “bearing bouquets,:asking permission to offer consolation to the prisoner ahd to leave tracts and . . + Heaven spare us now from mush.” er, the Food Administrator, says ‘there has been a great deal of unnecessary feeding the Germans. We are not calling upon the American people to make any feeding the Germans. Remove the water-tight blockade and the The leading. article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week—November 30th—takes up the latest negotiations. and by presenting the sentiments of editors of all political persuasions of how America feels upon the subject of feeding Germany this winter. Other articles that will be of great interest to the American people upon subjects that concern them How the War Was Won feat as Adduced by Authorities in America, England, France, and Germany J with and: concrete idea of Wilhehn to the Bar of Justice The Coming British Elections The Swiss Center of Bolshevism The World’s Strongest Fiber Curing Madness by Tooth-Pulling: Praise for American Poets ' Cold Water for French Good Will A Call to Repentance Meeting the Test : (Prepared by U. S. Food Administration) ess and Finance Many Illustrations, Including Maps, jHalf-tone Portraits and, Cartoons Full-Page Colored Map in “The Digest” This Week This instructive map will be eagerly welcomed by e Digest,” for on it they can gress of the great allied army of occupation in its triumphal march toward the Rhine. The map also shows the Gernian territory to be occupied by the American and Allied armies under the terms of the armistice. The “bridge- ne are clearly indicated, with November 30th Number on Sale Today—All News-dealer 10 Cents t FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK crland to Italy, their disembarkation in Switzerland fordidden. Phone 75, City Fuel Co. For the Beulah Coal WEIGHT IN 37 DAYS N. E. A. Special to The Tribune. Paris, Nov. 30.—A statistical fiend estimates that the American army. in France eats: 280,000,000 pounds, or bn in that period every soldier eats his own; —————————— No. women awaiting the Joy of, coming taotheshozd sh: aifosr the cays. to, pase without using the wohderful penetrating ap- pizaticn, Hoth iret Fiera: nit the alot rogalar use througho the system fe prepared for te coming’ event and strain cad tension 49 relieved. It ren- ders the br: flat abdominal muscles pliant Gilg. yield to nature's demand | mn. AS a@ result the. nerves arc | upon with that peculiar wrenct- | ng strain’ c2d nausea, nervousness, bearing- down and stretching pains, are count ‘The chd: ‘expands easily when baby ar- ives ant 2 hours at the-crisis are nat- ‘urally oe Fala: and danger 23 a: cons ied, on The skin is kept soft ‘ofural and free fvom aistigare: tothe Bradfield R 2 fe Patel Reet Coen Moiber} ara By re 8 es onything you can ment, Wri et. es standard Get the habit to ship your hides, furs and junk to the firm that pays the highest market price. Send for our. price list and tags. We pay the express and postage on furs. . ; not aroused any large amount of compassion: over On the other hand, Mr. Herbert C. Hooy- furor in this country about sacrifice with a view to Germans will take care of themselves. ‘N The President at the Peace Table Germany Playing “The Baby Act” How Aviation Has Done the Impossible How Inffuenza Got In New York’s First Statute to an Actor Tolstoy Still Dreaming Foch—“The Gray Man of Christ” “The Great Army That Died” The Best of Current Poetry Personal Glimpses of Men and Events the neutral.zone shown in color; also the battle line as it stood when hostilities ceased at the eleventh hour on the eleventh day of the eleventh, month of the year. Briefly, the entire region that will be most prominent in the news for a long time to come will be available for ready reference through this map. It ‘is worthy of permanent preservation. } weight in food. This is on the basis {and a daily food consumption’ of 4:3 of an average weight of 160 <pounds | pounds. é = SES y g||| The HURLEY'S (angraniwn imam. ||} Dance and Concert a aaa || Orchestra cfnment Is. Vsing thuusands: of, women in Us tole-'}) graph service. . Wedding Invitations and Wedding Announcements Come’to The Tribune for your Wedding Invitation or Wedding Announcements, ~ We have the correct forms and the best style and quality of wed- ding, note paper and envelopes, Our styles of type are the very > latest designs for this use. : Printed or engraved work done in short order. : a ARES BISMARCK HIDE. &.FUR CO. ‘acndine, ean cot of Germatiy: are rushed: through wits: Bismarck, N.D. j 4

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