Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGCK 2 | PAGES ~~ f >. *TSrAL CABUACZIRE TD DATE. , TOTAL CASUALTIES TO DA ” ods and machinery with which to organize social play. It showed us a vision of directed, socialized, educative amusement. The lessons, machinery and vision may be saved if we bestir ourselves in time. That THE SCHOOLS WERE ROUSED FROM SLEEPY ISOLATION and their plant, staff and pupils made to play a great part in national life| | The Asociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for in time of desperate emergency is the greatest ed- republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise | ycational advance of this generation. Only de- credited in this paper and also the local news published | | 4444 conscious care will preserve and add to herein that advantage. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE pera daira eae eRe Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as. Second Class Matter. GEORGH_D. MANN - Editor G LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative NEW YOR Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHICAGO, Marquette Bldg. ; POSTON. 8 Winter Stes DETROIT, Kresege Bldg; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. SIEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS { ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are} aise eT ZUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | The reconstruction armies that will salvage SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCED | these gains and defend in time of peace the vic- Pia bd ca Eee (10 oe ){ tories gained by the war will have as great NEED 2. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Fallen For Freedom + | od | Killed in action, (including | 396 at sea).. 26,379 | | Died of wounds 10,042 |} | Died of disease 14,424 | | Died of accident and other ' causes ; Wounded in action ‘Missing in action (i prisoners) Total to date Killed in Action. Private Jat J. Andrews. Grand Forks, North Dakota. Wounded Severely. Private Earnest E. Gustafson, Port- Daily by mail per year (In State outside of Bismarck ) | FOR ABLE LEADERSHIP, trained strategists] a) x. pax. Dally by mail outside of North Pat ee | and unselfish, patriotic devotion as was required] ‘Private Bernard G. Kolsrud, Flora, THH STATE'S OLDEST NEW ie |by any army that crossed the Atlantic. Ne Dak, (Established 1873) Gi WHAT AILS DEMOCRACY? In leaving New York city for home, Stephane Lauzanne, editor of the great Paris paper, Matin, calls our attention to a matter which, in such crises as war, reconstruction, birth of our first- born, asking her dad for her hand, and so forth, we were likely to overlook. “It has been a diplomatic custom from time im- memorial,’ advises M. Lauzanne, “that the head of one government who oe ae dare aes i i repays the visit. President Wu-) © eee eaves Cie King Emmanuel, King fighters per month. Albert and, perhaps, the heads of other govern- “Send your ships and we'll send the men,” re- ments and Americans can expect the visits to be pliec President Wilson. returned.” | Britain sent the ships and the Hun was stopped jt is the real stuff, M. Lauzanne, and our pres turned back, never to return. dent should “go to it.’ What America needs is} he good old ships of Britain Yr concludes Lloyd more personal attention from kings, and we are | George in is speech. “The ships which have saved sure that it is not the intention of Mr. Wilson to| the liberty of the world many times—saved it in sail over there in a beautiful ship owned by this | the days of Louis XIV; saved it in the days of Na- democracy and hog the association with kings, | poleon ; saved it in the days of Kajser Wilhelm II!” premiers, mikados and such. The day: s of Louis and the Corsican butcher and Arrange for plenty of return calls, Mr. Presi-| Wilhelm the bloody Hun are gone, and civilization dent! pee 1 jhas paid al We Americans will turn out in enormous n awful price that they may never re- crowds and make the circumambient atmosphere turn. But will Britain, issuing from a test that roar with acclaim over a king, a white elephant, or | tried every pound of resources she possessed, be the largest gorilla in captivity—most anything at all willing, to abandon or weaken that which that wears a jeweled title or rides in a gilded cage, | Saved her? If she is so, peace finds in the hearts ‘And the more the merrier. of the British a sentiment far greater and nobler Our worthy president will be derelict: if, beside {than joy over a triumph with arms, and Wood- isiting King George, King Albert and King Em {row Wilson will earn laurels such as no other mere visiting Ki , a manuel, he doesn’t call on that bevy of Balkan} |mortal ever wore. bs kings, who, as our more or less intimate “associ-| Alli Fee ae : : ’ i A jase ear ee ates” in the business of basting the bloody Hun, iases appear to be popular among revolution aa 1 4:4 ary leaders. Trotsky’s real name is, Brajastein, now rejoice over our successful contributions to} ‘ 7: e : the job of creating new democracies of the made-| 224 now we are told that Kurt Eisner used to be in-America brand. poemanoys sky. Then, too, it would not be de trop should Mr. Wilson send his visiting card to the ex’s. There King Manuel of Portugal, and Straddler Constan-} tine of Greece and old fat Ferdinand of Buigaria, - for instance. Oh! it doesn’t make a heap of dif- | LUNGS REPAIRED AND CLEANED. : ference whether it’s a crowned or a clipped king,| Remarkable lung operations have recently been Woodrow. We genuine democrats will turn out | performed by Colonel Pierre Duval of the French and whoop it up, anyhow. | Reserve Medical Corps. In describing some of his What’s itching our democratic hide is long-time! work to American army medicai officers at one of lack of association with kings, and, now that our; the southern camps a short time ago, he explained yearning for it is aroused, we'll take any old kind.|that he enters the chest cavity by making a six ioe ahs Baber e Ze |inch opening through the ribs. With the aid of The soldiers in his escort gave three cheers and | forceps he then lifts the lung through the aperture a tiger for Wilson. Let us hope the Tiger will also | and lays it on the chest wall. The bleeding blood be for Wilson. | vessels are tied, the outer surface of the organ eis Seo es cleaned, and the tracts swabbed out with gauze. WAR GAVE US VITALLY USEFUL THINGS! Torn pieces of the organ have been excised and FOR PEACE; “HOLD FAST TO THE GOOD” | the wound sutured. After this the lung has been For the United States reconstruction is a prob-| replaced in its normal position and the aperture lem of salvage rather than rebuilding. Our cities|closed. Two-thirds of the patients who have been Revolting news continues to come out of Ger- many. i / pie ee eee, | THE SHIPS THAT SAVED | Lloyd George’s speech in Leeds strongly indi- cates that, in respect of freedom of seas, disarma- | ment and League of Nations, Woodrow Wilson is | going to have his troubles. The British premier ‘called attention to the fact that last March, when the Hun was nearing Paris via Amiens, and Haig was crying that his back was against the wall, Britain appealed to America to send over 120,000 t i-| and an WITH THE EDITORS | oe Lake, N. D. were not bombed. Our factories were not looted. | subjected to operations of this kind have fully Our fields are not torn by shells, nor our roads | blown up by mines. | We did add many THINGS FOR WAR THAT) WILL BE USEFUL IN PEACE. Every commv-} nity should have a salvage committee, composed | of the war work bodies, to see that nothing of | value is lost. There is greater need for such a committee now than at any time in the last four years. Knowledge, emotions, institutions, as well a8| guns, ships, shells, armies and munition plants | have been accumulated. Indiscriminate junking | of these will lose much that we fought hard to| win. j The war welded new elements together and forged from them instruments for common action of incalculable value. \That rival churches, hostile classes, competing industries and antagonistic institutions and indi-| viduals of every sort worked together and grew| appreciative of each other’s virtues marks a gain we must not lose. | That BILLIONS OF WASTE WAS SQUEEZED FROM INDUSTRY, much marketing friction re-| moved, labor truly mobilized and a promising be- ginning made in adjusting the relations of employ- ers and employed is as important ‘a victory as any gained in France. It will be lost if we see no need| of reconstruction. We created an army of Red Cross nurses, trained millions in “first aid,” built a nation-wide system} of base hospitals and accumulated a vast fund of knowledge concerning our national health. We learned WONDERFUL LESSONS IN SANITA- TION. We bought, most dearly, valuable knowl- edge concerning the health of the people. We have the machinery, made for war, with which to save in each peaceful year more lives than we spent in war. Unless we consciously plan to keep these things, they will pass away and the fruits of our WAR TAUGHT THAT MEN FIGHT BEST recovered.—Popular Mechanits. RB: FOR A FEDERATION OF NATIONS Is there hope, then, for a federation of nations, however rudimentary? As soon as we cease mak- ing paper constitutions for it and begin to build upon what'we have, it will find its sanctions quick- ly and impressively. These radical personalities I have been describing are facts that tell neither for nor against the probability of world federation. They are like the differences in character among the individuals who make up a nation. That John is a very different fellow from James, and James as a personality, very unlike Tom, does not prove that they will be unable to keep the peace in the same village, if village life appeals to them. The important question is not their temperamental dif- ferences, but rather those similarities in habit and desire which make communal living possible. Temperamental homogeneity does not find in a village, and racial homogeneity I did not discover on “Transport 106,” but similarity of thought in those principles upon which joint action must be based was very marked. Our international group did sufficiently hold in common ideas of equity, of the rights of individual, and the duties of the State; and if a difference of opinion arose, the cleavage, as within a nation, ran between tempera- ments and philosophies, not between local or racial units. The liberal Londoner, the radical French- man, the some time candidate of the progressive |republicans joined forces against the tory MxP., |the French legitimist, and the Rhode Island judge. And on every question that a peace conference or an international council might have to disciiss, there was one one side a majority drawn from all nations, and on the other a minority also drawn |from all nations. This, I submit, is a true basis for the only international government we are likely to desire in our time—free nations pooling for dis- cussion and majority action their questions of in- ternational policy, precisely a&they are now pool- WHEN HE PLAY HARD. It gave the meth-|in Harper's. ing their international trade-—Henry Seidel Canby Private Earl Wanner, Wishek, N. Dak. ~ Private Fred Kelle, Napoleon, Dak, N. Private Harry BE. Holm, Raleigh, N. Private Boren F. Holmen, ;Rose, N. Dak. Private Ross R. Sherwood, Almont, v. D. Missing In Action. Private Arny L. Satterlee, Turtle Died of Disease, Private Joseph C€. Olson, Almont, N. Private Adolph W. Wedman, James- own, N. D. ' Wounded Slightly, . Private Edgar T. Graham, Ross, N. Dak. Private Francis F. Paysen, Good- rich, N. D, Private Melvin Mootz, Lakota, N..D. Private Mark George Zavalneyv, Max, N. D. Killed in Action. Jrivate Jacob L. Askildson, Cogs- well, N. D. MONDAY, DEC. 16, 1918 EXCLUSIVE PHOTO OF PLANE THAT SET NEW SPEED AND HEIGHT MARKS AMUSEMENTS ORPHEUM THEATRE PRESENTS Clara - Kimbal Young This is the first exclusive photograph permitted by the government —IN— of the remarkable new monoplane designed and built by Grover Cleveland j Loening, fitted with 300-horse-power Hispano-Suiza motor, which has ibrok- on . ” en all speed and altitude records. Its official speed is 145 miles per hour; The Marionettes unofficially it has made over 150 miles. It climbed 25,000 feet in 48 mnutes. : From the pay, of the Michael Sperle, Napoleon, N. D. Private Francis ‘T. Dwyer, Omemee,|| S8me name. Positively her Private August Sukul, Jr., Lehr, N.| N. D. best picture. Dak. => Private August Keller, Beulah, N. Died of Wounds, Dak, Private Jess J. Dillon, Rolla, N. D.| Private Harty L. Piceard, Silva, N _ TONIGHT Died of Disease. Dak. Private Louis J. Otto, Hillshoro, N.! Private eGorge Westland, Mayville, ae k. |N. Dak. Wounded, Degree Undetermined. ‘Private Paul W. Chapman Rugby, Verner Lydeen, Pettibonne, N. D. | N. D. N. Dak Wounded Severely. Private Fred Fercho, Lehr, N. D “private John J Private Waller L, Welo, Velva, N. Wounded Slightly. Ht in J. Beck, Zeeland, N. Dak. Lieut. William W. Jeffrey, Williston, Pr E Private Beecher K. Malone, Regan,| x. “Dak, y we one Erling Knutson, McGregor, N. Dak. ! ‘ Wounded Slightly. Missing In Action. —— wea Valentine C. Gores, Bisbee,| Private John G. Skojold, Fargo, N. | N. D. Dak. j ORE THROAT Private David Dell, Hunter, Nj Da eee or. Tonailitis, gargle % rivate Holmes F. Dixon, Milnor, MOTHER'S FRIEND with, warm salt Driv. n So wae apple Is wrivate Frank Herman Marking, . Sykeston, N. D. = Private Walter LL, McMillan, Me- FOR Ville, N. D. Private . Bodyuad'ts V, HICKS APO UBS Walter Theodore. Ntenow, ierivale Expectant Mothers NEW PRICES 30c, Gs, $1.20 Private Frank Mazzoni, Grand Forks APPLY REGULARLY Thrift Car “Established Overland policy is apparent in the -es- tablishment of this new price at this time. That policy is now as it has been in the past —quantity production of a quality car EE pts “>: economies. of large purchasing’ power an standard- ized factory methods eet =zsmall per car profit. 4 And the result is now as it has been in the past —the ruling: sensible automobile value of ‘the season.. Aside from price, the Model 90 Overland’ Thrift Car is the sensible automobile to buy on its record. Pa Over, one hundred thousand of these cars are giving. . their owners service that is far. more than merely: satis- factory. It is affording them individual transportation at re- markably low cost—transportation of the utmost de- pendability and real comfort. And considered with the price, $985 f. 0.”b. Toledo, the intrinsic value is compelling. -It establishes Overland, as hetetofore," {the ruling sensible automobile value of the season. : Production cannot immediately be restored to normal. But we have not let price wait upon the lowering of costs through the increase’in production. : We have anticipated. the time to buy. i We also anticipate a demand for this car that we must necessarily fall short of fully supplying until wejshall fully have restored normal factory conditions. Pe « Cars on hand are few. : : : We are doing our utmost and will citi to do everything in our power to bring stocks of cars up‘to working requirements with the least possible delay. es Shipments are already moving in fair quantity. Your purchase if made this season should qhave your atterition now. ‘ We are ready—come in and see us. Willys-Overland, Inc., Toledo, Ohio} it, you have it now, and now is LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. PHONE 490 300 Fourth St. Bismarck, N. D.