The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 27, 1918, Page 4

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era ALUN NTS Sk , PAGE4 BISMARCK. DAILY TRIRUNR THE BISM ARCK TRIBUNE disorganization that went to create the deep- efi ewe eee | seated discontent that is now blindly seeking ex- Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D. as Second! pression through a score of revolutions and coun- Class Matter. - fi ; @EOGE DN D. MANN ase < Se for | ter-revolutions. Their rulers exploited the peo- G. LOGAN PAYND COMPANY, a ple to the last limit in a vain attempt to hold the Special Foreign Representative western line—and then the worm turned, worm- NEW YORK, Fifth Ave Bldg.; CHICAGO, Marquette like. Bldg.; BOSTON, 3 Winfer St; DETROIT, Kresege 2 . f oe Bldg; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. It is plain that poverty and starvation, political MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS and economic oppression, and ignorance are the Asoc: Press is exclusively entitled to the use for E garde 55 scochiiention et all news eadited’ te {t or not otherwise |Symptoms of Bolshevism. But it is just as plain credited in this paper and also the local news published | that the symptoms lie dormant until a weak gov- , ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are /ernment, or utter political disorganization and pub- also reserved. = —— jlic disorder comes along to fertilize them. stusen SE ee ee Tea TN ADyANGE It was not until the power of the French mon- Daily by carrier per year ......- 3 Daily by mail per year (In Bismarck). archy had been overthrown a century and a quar- ter ago that Bolshevism and the “Terror” arrived. ly by mail per year (In State outside of Bismarck) 5.00 | ter a : evs 2 i a Duly by mail’ outside of North Dakota...........+- 600 Similarly in Paris in 1871. The same in Russia. THD STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. Also in Mexico. If Bolshevism wins in Austria (Established 1873) | 4 % é . é ‘and Germany, the above rule will again come true <> j}except, perhaps, as to uneducation. ee To have Bolshevism in a country therefore, the ISN’T IT TIME TO WIPE PRO-GERMANISM so) owing evolution is apparently necessary : OUT OF OUR SCHOOLS AND | Long continued denial of the right of free ex- COLLEGES?. YES! i pression. Mass conviction that it is oppressed. James W. Gerard, last American ambassador to Ignorance. Germany, in a recent issue of of Collier’s tells how, poverty. Hunger. Misery. the deposed Hun government shaped public opin-; 4 weak government. ion and debased the moral fibre of the German’ pjsorganization of government and general dis- people. | order. The means through which this rotten govern-| ment poured its poison into the minds of its peo-| Bernstorff as foreign minister will certainly be ple included, according to Gerard, “university | foreign to the Huns’ best interests. professors and school teachers.” | AREER Cee Huns sought similar mediums in the United | Germany has cut the Hohenzollerns off the pay- States. In the diary of a German agent produced | yo}j, thereby showing some sense. at a congerssional hearing in Washington are) written names of 33 Americans, “practically all) “Codfish sent to Wilson.” If it had gone to who were actively pro-German prior to.our e%-/ Colonel House, the donor’s intention might have trance in the war, and a few who were active in! heen questioned. the war.” : j Bill Hohenzollern wanted to make of our chil-| Count Karolyi goes to Paris for Hungarian gov- dren what he had made of Germans, In this he! ernment—perhaps to explain why there are no was—and still is—ably abetted by one Philander! Chyistmas carols in Hunland this year. Priestly Claxton, United States commissioner of | 4 education, who was not only an outspoken advo-' Qffhand solvers of the Irish irablers are hereby} SUFFRAGETS FEED AND SCOLD SENATORS cate of German classes in American public schools |eminded that there are three major faction in before and during the war but who now insists Treland, and no shortage in-the shillalah crop. that he will put German back into our schools, down to the seventh grade. | Apropos of the resumption of dancing in ISN’T IT HIGH TIME THAT AMERICAN COL-| Munich, a Bavarian paper says: “Our enemies FACULTY, AND THAT KAISER CLAXTON AB- 'wi}] be robbed of the last vestiage of pity if they ERY STAIN OF PRO-GERMANISM IN THEIR hear of this.” On the contrary, we don’t want to RACULTY, AND THAT KAISER CLAXTON AB- | stop the Huns from daneing ; we're going to make DICATE? ‘ j them dance+to a new;tune, however:, = Bene vs SPRAY NIGHT AND MORNING TO STAMP OUT “SPANISH FLU.” | Contact spreads “flu.” It doesn’t travel in the air. * ing.in Washington. PICTURE WITHOUT WORDS FRIDAY, DEC. 27, 1918. rades 2°: :winh»that <1 cauld; give to each one of you the message that I know you are longing to receive from those at home who love, you. I can- not do that, but I can tell you how every one has put his heart into it. So you have done your duty, amd some- thing more. You have done your duty and you haye done it with a spirit which gave it distinction and glory. “And now we_are to hail the fruits of everything. You conquered, when you came over, what you came over for and you have done what it was ap- pointed for-you to do. I know what you expect of me. Some time ago a gentleman from one of the countries with which we are associated, was dis- cussing with me the moral aspects of this war and I said that if we did not insist upon the high purpose which we have accomplished the end would not be justified. “Everybody at home is proud of you and has followed every movement of this great army with confidence and affection. “The whole people of the United States are now awaiting to welcome you home with an acclaim. which prob- ably has never greeted any other army, because our country is like this coun- try, we have been so proud of the stand taken; (of the purpose?) for which this war was entered by the United States. “You knew what ‘we expected of you and you did it. I know what you and the people at home expected. of me; and I am happy to say, my fellow countrymen, that I do not find in the hearts of the greater Jeaders with whom it is my privilege now to co-oper- ate any difference of principle or of fundamental purpose. “Jt happened that it was the priv- ‘\ilege of America to present the chart for peace, and now the process of set- tlement has been rendered compara- tively simple by the fact that all the nations concerned ‘have accepted that chart, and the application of these principles laid down there will be their application. The world will now know that the nathons that fought this war, as. well as.the soldiers who represented them are ready to make good, make £000 not jonty in. the assertion of their own. interests, but make good in the establishment of peace upon the perma- nent foundation of right and justice. “This is not.a war.in which the sol- diers of the free nations have obeyed masters. You have commanders, but you have no masters, Your very com- manders represent you in representing the nation of which you constitute so TO GET VOTES AND EXPECT EARLY VICTORY |‘istinsuisted, a part. “Sunshine” . and. “Tempest” Plans to Win Senatorial Sup- port Are Being’ Fried- by the Two Parties of Wonten Work- By CAROLYN VANCE BELL Washington, Dec. 26.—Two women’s parties working in: Washington for equal suffrage expect early victory for} the suffrage amendment proposal in the senate. It isn’t a bit like “grip” of 20 or 30 years ago. | : CARRY ON! ‘i ee ciara These are the opinions of doctors in signed in-|| The war has given us one phrase more eloquent} “Thars the “sunshine way" of work- terviews in the New York Medical Journal. ,than a speech: Carry on!” Born of the war, it ing for. Passage of, eho Suman B. An- ¢, j 7 2 ry - cy =. iOny @ ms r b a They, say the disease spreads from person to,is heard on every side in Britain and France.| oping SENATORS person | + 3%, What do the words mean? _ ‘i aay | IS THE NEW WAY, Parents working in office, shops and factories', When the battle goes against you,*carry! on! eee Ee ent ten ea get it and carry it home to their children. When you come back from the battlefield, carry | banquet in the Rhode, Island: avenue It spreads easily in a crowd. on! When you sit where home fires burn, carry ena rel oF te A. A Cates You can’t stop all the crowds. To do so would on! When you acquire citizenship in an adopted miest of honor Suriday“évening ‘next P i ! National Woman's pi y leaders take paralyze and starve the nation. country, carryin on! When you have grown to} omer tack. They're tying the What can we do ,then? maturity and citizenship in the land of your birth, 'stempest way.” They say theyTl keep Follow common sense—use disinfectants. icarry on! on storming the senate wing of the capitol until the senators vote for the Get a “sprayer” at any drug store. Get a good, Wounded soldiers, cared for at the Walter Reed ¢uffrage amendment, to get rid of them. safe germ-killer from doctor or druggist. Spray hospital in Washington, now edit and issue a your nose and your throat every night and every paper, “The Come-Back.” In the first number, morning. Do the same for the children. ‘just sent out, the opening editorial, after review- SPRAY! SICK OR WELL, “EXPOSED” OR ing the aims of the publication, says: “We are NOT, SPRAY! j here to help you. The world needs you. Carry If you can’t get anything better, use diluted on to the last ditch!” cider vinegar as a sprayer solution—half water. | And so let’s carry on. Let this fair land over But .spray.! os) which floats the Red, White and Blue, be and re- — main the abiding place of the free. Let no cold WHAT ABOUT BOLSHEVISM? WHERE DOES socialistic program of “internationalism” get foot- UNCLE SAM COME IN ON IT? hold here. To permit it would be to lose the war HOW ABOUT BOLSHEVISM, ANYWAY? It —not to gain it. started—on-a big scale in Russia. It has spread) The boys who fought and died at Chateau-Thier- through Germany and Austria. Allied countries ry would want no bolshevism here. The boys are tainted with the germ to some extent and the! who will soon be coming back from the Argonne danger is freely discussed by high government} will want no red flag here. This is America! Why officials. Of the allied countries, Italy is generally | temporize with these things? The men who died accredited to have most of the virus. ,; at Lexington and Concord had no such project in WHAT IS BOLSHEVISM? In plain American, mind as the red flag denotes. The red flag is it is much the same thing as the doctrine of the; treason. Let those who seek to unfurl it here be, These are the women who burned President Wilson’s-books in public the other day. -They (promise more action of the. same kind. . One'party is led-by Dr. Anna Hoaw- ard Shaw, the other by Alice Paul. Alice is “militant.” SUFFRAGISTS THINK VICTORY IS NEAR The suffrage amendment was heaten in the last session of the senate by five votes.” f Suffrage workers: belleve they need only One more. vote .to.win next time. They're concentrating now on try- ing to win SenatorsBorah of Tdaho, Moses of New Hampshire and Gay of Louisiana. Pe They hope to have the suffrage amendment up and passed in the sen- ate within a fortnight. In Sanuary 48 state legislatures meet. Suffragists, want to have the amendment through congress ready in time to present to ‘these legislatures for ratification early in the mionth. If the amendment is not brought up and disposed of at this session of the senate, which ends “March 4;*the bill will have to go back to the house when more wild-eyed of our I. W. W.’s when that doc-| sent back to the lands whence they came. This|congress meets again. This, in all trine is accepted by a majority, as it is in Russia | is America and they do not belong here. by the Soviets. It means industrial warfare un-| And so we must carry on. We have problems restrained and unintelligent. It means blind revo-|to solve; they can be solved under the Stars and lution that loses itself in fury. It means today/|Stripes. If we carry on, with patient and tolerant what the “Terror” and the Commune meant in the! consideration, every problem can be met and early days of the French revolution. Because out} threshed out. of that “Terror” and the Commune grew the pres-| This grand old Republic of ours must free it- ent French liberty we know that Bolshevism is! self of the easy-going habit that tolerates de- not altogether hopleless. But it is a mighty un-| structive doctrines under the guise of free speech. comfortable and devastating and brutalizing con-|It must apply the clamp. Freedom is not license. dition, and to be avoided. io Schools must be purged of false teachers. Elec- WHY IS BOLSHEVISM? Americans recently | tion methods must be so reformed that the clear returned from Russia, who ought to know what|and easy path for demagogues will be barred. The they’re talking about, say that want, hunger, and|blunderings of the present direct primary system economic human misery and political oppression| must give way to discriminative judgments of the ‘of the masses were the causes there. In other|tried and tested representative system. States- words poverty, poor pay for the worker, denial of; manship and able leadership must take the place manhood right and political rights, exploitation! of facile opportunism. and degradation of the common people. The ex-| The people must carry on or the transition from plosion came, and it was what might have been|the old regime to the new .and better way that expected. Bolshevism in Russia is no strange! is to be made in every land’ will be fraught with growth; it-was inevitable. Ng . _ |disturbances and sorrow. Travelers of: the time have written that the| Do you want to see realized the vision of Lenine, _ same condition that preceded the-optbreak of Bol-|or the vision of George Washington? Away with shevism in Russia preceded the “Terror” in the the curse of the red flag that has beaten Russia French revolution. 8. s to her knees with suffering! Send the unpatriots ~ Since we have hed reliable news from Germany| and the anarchists back to their former home and Austrig: we learned it was poverty andjlands. Or if they belong to us, shut them up. =near-famine, in these cases suddenly brought/They must have no footing in this beloved land probability would delay its’passage for two more: years -or even’ ‘four. ~ . Here From Minot. =. J. G. Bellanger of ‘Minot, transporta- tion inspector. for the Soo line, is a visitor in Bismarck .on business for the raflroad company. ‘Mr. Bellanger is accompanied by his daughter Miss Irene, who is the guest of Mrs, Geo. E. Munger until Saturday. F —————$ $ “AT THE PEACE TABLE” Who shall sit at the table, then, when the terms of peace are niade— The wisest men of .the troubled lands in theiy, silver,.and yol( brogade? Yes, they will gather:in solemn. state to speak for each living race, “ But who shall speak for the unseen dead that shall come to th» council | | Though you see. them not and youshear ‘them not,:they: shall sit: at she They_shull.throng. the room.swhere he innovent dead ‘f the peace is made-and, know, what it 45 rom the Koa, shall rise to stand atthe wise man’s side, And over his shoulder d béy~Shall look+-a ‘boy that ‘they crucified You may guard the doors of that council halt with barriers strong and enter there, and. never you'll shut them out. And the man that died in the-open bout, and the babes that suffered: worse, Shall sit at the table when peace is’made by’ the side of.a martyred nurse, But.the dead unbidden' shail y see them ‘not, but they'll aff be there ; when: they speak’ vou "may Yoii'may think that you're making-your pacts alone, but their spirits will And whatever ‘the terms of, the peace you make with the tyrants wh hands are red, You must please not only the living here, but must satisfy the dead. PERSHING’S AND PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS TO AMERICAN TROOPS|":,'2 tack, zou,up, “And now Tam (By The Associated Press) Dec. 26.—Immediately after a reception at the Hotel DeVille. President Wilson. with General shing and party motored to Hume: where the president re ment of the First army of the Ameri: ean ‘expeditionary forces. Addressing the troops, General Per- “You;:Mr. President, ist fence and by your support,-have ‘made, tn the rible scenexSthrough Whie ss “your ¢onfid- | upon Pun “Mr. President and. fettiw soldiers: We are-gathered here \today to dv’ honor to the commander of our armies For the first time an American president will. American army on foreign soil—the EVERETT TRUE LOOKING POR A SLICK GUY BY THe the success of our army, and to you, as our commander in chief, may I now| the quiet! of peace; the tranquility of present the nation’s yictorions. arm; Jn replying President Wilson said:| And, while it-is hard, fat) away from “Genetal Pershing and fellow -com-| home to: hid you a-Me “And everyhody concerned in the set- tlement knows that it must be a peo- ple’s peace and that nothing must be done in the settlement of the issues of the war which is not as handsome as the great achievements of the armies of the United States and the allies, “It is difficult, very difficult, men, in-any-normal speech like this, to show xou my real heart... You men probably da, aot Henge thie What pnxidus at- : ‘and eh¥e: we heve followed ev- Vp § avg iy d and how patient thet fees was in wanée dnd ‘dot ih! Mtreaé; that every time you s¢t..your.face in any direc- tion you kept your face in that direc- Aptiong::) trois oe ale “A thrill has gope through my heart, as 4 SHAR a rela the henrts of every ‘Americar With almost every gun was struck in the gallant fighting that You'shaye done, and there ‘has been only‘one regret in ‘Amperita, ‘any that ye the ‘régret that’ very’ maf tyre ake that he Was ‘not 'thére ih “France, “Ht has been 4 hard thing to perform thé tusks fit the United’ States; it has been’ a hard ‘thing ‘to’ take part in di- recting: what’ you did without coming over and ‘helping ‘you"to.do it. It has taken a lot of moral courage to stay at home. But we are proud to back you up everywhere that. it was possi- happy to find what. splendid nanies you have made for yourselves among {soil of a sister republic beside whose}the civilian population of France as gallant troops we have fought to re-| well as among “your comrades in the store peace to the world. peaking for you and your com-j testimony to you men that these peo- s. I am“proud to declare to the} ple like you and, love you and trust president that no army has ever more} You, and ‘the finest part of it all is loyally or more effectively served its| that you deserve their trust. country and none has ever fought in| — “I.feel.a.comradeship with you to- armies of the French, and it is a fine day which is. delightful, as I look down isturbed fhe} sand you. have gone and réatize how settled shopes\ has descended stipon: us. Christmas, r can.-T think, prémise you a Happy New Year and Ican from the bottom By Conde of my heart say. God bless you.” After the review President Wilson and party went. to. Montigny le Roi, where he and Mrs, Wilson took their Christmas, dinner, In the afternoon the president -visit- ed the troopsShr thelr ‘biflets; He res turned to Chaumont in time to leave at 6 o'clock for London. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of { TONIGHT The Popular Young Star Charles Ray In an intense drama of thrills and heart-appeal en- titled “fis Own Home BISMARCK THEATER ‘ ay r I t 3 ” ‘ f ' \ i 4 (4 sas », wl og ' ” y F é if oe me | ’ ‘e § ‘ ¢ ee et 3 ~ 4a

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