The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 28, 1918, Page 2

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. Gen BISMARCK. DAILY TRIBU LETTER DESCRIBES ATTROGITIES — _ PRACTICE BY THE TURKS UPON SYRIANS IN JERUSALEM iS La Crosse, Wis., Dee, , with such punishment as hang- one relatives of La Cr , torlure and other means of exe- have died during the war in the Holy | cation. Many people were eating the Land, according to a letter received from Palestine. The letter in part | 20dies of their dead babies follows: ot animals which lay in th “We have suffered with famine, lep-;M lived for months on acorns and rdosy, cholera, and many kinds of fe | ra and flesh PRESIDENT WILSON CELEBRATES HIS BIRTHDAY IN LONDON, KING GEORGE IS | FIRST TO OFFER HIS CONGR: ATULATIONS | (Continued From Page One.) PRAISE FOR WARRIORS In the course of his speech, the president declared the sailo: had fought to do away with the old order and establish a new one. | The old order had for its center the “unstable” thing called the} unbalance of power. The men who have fought the war had been “men from free |¢ nations who were determined that this sori of thing should end | now and forever.” The suggestion for concert of power w: ery quarter and from every sort of mind. The concert, to come, | he declared, must not be a balance of power or a group of power- | ful nations set off against another “but a single overwhelming | coming now from ev-; group of powerful nations, which shall be the trustees of the peace! i MUST BE BACKED BY POWER i The minds of the leaders of the British government, he said. | were moving along the same lines as his own and their thoughts had been that the rey to peace was the guarantee to it and not! the items of it. The items of it, he added would be worthless un-} less a concert of power stood back of them. Whereas it. had been eae of close student and of the world.” get it. “I am particularly happy that the ground has been cleared and foundation laid,” he continued, “because we have already accepted | the same big principles. Those principles are definitely enough stated to make their application settled. The people of the world; want peace and want it now.” Such an achievement, the president added, would be the finest ! enterprise ot humanity. There had been just a hint that the president's address w ould! be the key to the conferences he has been holding with British statesmen and his address was interpreted as conveying the in- formation that these conferences had been satisfactory from the president’s viewpoint. The president concluded his address amid | a great demonstration. The oldest spectator at the Guild Hall! today declared that no demonstration ever accorded a notable | there rivaled in enthusiasm and volume that given president Wil-! son today. | The president with Mrs. Wilson entered their carriage and as| they drove through the lines of foiterous and handkerchiefs wa) ing throngs someone proposed “Three cheers for Wilson.” They were-given with such a will that the president rose with a dAjehted Pile and bowed three times. NOAH, TAKEN ae LEAGUERS. Jmarck was the first to take Noah's | [trail He discovered that Nowh hid | spent a day or two in Mandan follow Jing his eseape, Tle ferretted out seme ‘| of the people who may have jNoah in making his ge’ | au up letters whieh N A i ten at paramour here, and positively | 4 Jestablished the fact that he had vis- | pales) ie “dl several different cities in the miid- | re He west. about “Capture” So Generally Hailed | the Tu tive when MeDoualt é fand in an effort to give the fe In Townley Press Never | mer « apture “spilled the | 3 beans" by giving a premature story to Came Of. the press, This tale was flashed oui jae over the coantry, and Noah dropped | from sight. From the JUSTICE AGAIN DEFEATED jjiecsion of this | formation wh: to con- Hil trace of the fugitive has been lost. It is now believed that he ' succeeded in making his way ‘the border into Mexico, where he} ; Would find it ¢ to lose himself. j CHIROPROCTIC IS FIRST aid to re. Your nerves must be in per- ‘t condition—free from pressure | or you cannot remain well. If the! ine is right the man is it. Seel the Chiropractor, in Lucas . Bismarck, N. D. Net Which Was Drawing Close; About Fugitive Kicked to Smithereens. across | mirder convict from ked out of the) about three |! D. M. Noah, lif Kenmare, who Wi North Dakota penitent weeks ago, is still at lar Two possible clues, to his where abouts have been run down by Wa: den F, 8. Taleott and both have preven false. A man arpested and held a Advt. iWA $75.000 WORTH OF BONDS HELD © AMONG INDIANS. | | Standing Solidly Behind Government. JERM ACK Superintendent Tells for War Work Made i Eleven hundred and eighty-five In- diag of the Berthold reservation now | have 000 invested in the four Lib:! have at last forty of their erty young m and have contribute: ted Cross and iaztions and have ji in the recent Chi call. ‘Major BE. W. ent of the Berthod age. {casual report las juest for some information con- | cerning the patriotic activities of hisj redskin wards. : The’ iros Ventres. 3, (Sanish) an $4,500 to’ the! . made this Mandans, (Minit- lation of Berthold reservation invest-} ed_ $10,500 in ibe first Liberty loan; |» imed responsibility for half) on raised, although McLean county aia not stop with its quota; the third, and $11,000 in the fourth. On the Fourth of July the Berthold) ojouded by doubts. Indians of Raub and El staged the great tion in North Di ;of the Red Cross. Five ple attended; the gross receipts were d the net income for the; $3,000. 3s Was ther of this ing on a hospital cot cost-! i said Major Jermack never been more | ¢, are today. in tribal funds | y Londed defositor- Jur Indians,” ae t night, “have rosperous tha they ih uve Fr on deposit ies in North uth Dakota to the | jeredit of the thold Indians. We) joWn one of the best purebred Hereford. herds in North Dake d we have} B1s.000 acres of alleles Indian lands under fence. We 4,500 head of good cattle. 4,000 ead ot horses 1400 active | rega| ed to white, farm- Last year the In- es had under cultivation | acres, and we le d for graz- g purposes 245,000 ac! During the -ear the Indians on eBrthold built; ‘ame homes, costing | whic y, ranche is themse. = 22: st became inter- irs when he went} to Washington in 1897 as seeretary to) ‘ongressmman Reeder of the Sixth Kan- | sas distr He entered {he Indian} office in March, 1901, and. his first agency position wts with the Osage Indians in Oklahoma, where he super- vised the making of inany of the oil leases which have made their owners! the wealthiest Indians in the world.; He came to Elbowoods in 1913, and | this r tion ha hown constant | progre ince that time. The major} is proud of his Berthold Indians, will-| ing to stake them against any nativ Americhns | in the country for prog: ; 1 good d_ citizenship. | A. Finch Lum-' ber Co., phone 17, for Old Hickory Lignite. Have your old hat made like new at the Eagle Tailoring Co. | ested’ in 1 Indi 1 Brownsville, T about 10 di and whose capture was widel, ed as a victory for Deputy Warden ©. LOOK, FOLKS, IT’S KARL AND ZITA 7 F. MeDonald, a protege of Attorney | al William Langer, was proven | by his photograph, which Warden Tal- cott procured, to look no more lik Noah than any other man of his general build might. He ve was not North Dak Other an the fugitive’s capture came to when they were run down. he is in Americ: is cessfully concealing his identit Noah. it will be malled, was sen- tenced to life imprisonment upon be- ing convicted of the murder of his em-| ployer, a Kenmare farmer, with whom he accused of having made way. burying his body under a. granary or barn. Noah, it was alleged, then pro- ceeded to haul his victim’s grain to town. where he procured payment for it, pocketed the proceeds and de | camped. He was captured and convict: ! ed after a long chase. In the North} Dakota state prison. where he had spent several years, he was considered a model prisoner, and when he recent- ly’ petitioned for a pardon a former warden under whom Noah had served was among. those who endorsed his papers, Up to that time Noah had, not one serious. black mark against him. He was permitted to go and come much as he pleased. handling business of various kinds for the: pri- son officials. During his incarceration he mustered the printer’s trade. and | he was editor and mechanical staff on, the prison. publications. His fellow | prisoners thought so much of him that} they made him custodian of a fund of about $25 which they. had raised with | a view to buying some Christmas; goodies. This fund went with Ngai when he decamped. Chief. of Police Martineson of Bis-! OLD PAPERS Noah, if y sie | j lace. used, to kowtow. Here’s the first picture: of Emperor Karl ; and’ Empress Zita, former Austrian rulers, in exile in South Germany. ikin | rainy day—we bet they: miss the state carriages to which the Viénna pop- “They went walking on a R’S GREATEST MYSTERY: | IS THE EX-€ZAR DEAD? Mother, Gets Notes Signed With His Which Do Not Tell | His ted war orgat-|taken to 1 Jor mack. superintend-! made his patriotic celebra-| yeritied, akota, for the benefit! jacked proof. Name, ‘Where He Really Aliv N. E. A, Special to The Tribune. London, -Eng.—If \Nicholas Romat- streets. Three Tribes of Fort Berthold of is dead, where's s alive, where is he hiding?! He writing to hi: Marie Dagmar Romanoff, his moth-} er, living in Livadia, , letters every 10 said ti s that ‘PROUD OF THEM, jams. ae is reported. s mysterious lett The story reaches Warsaw through Polish army officers escaping trom By His Wards. R At midnight, signed his adbication of the Russian 1 in active service overseas | throne. He was immediately arrested and Tsarkoe-Selo palace. Later st paid in $333.70 /ne was exiled to Tobolek, in Siberia, mas Red Cross rol! starting his jqurney in the night. Plots to restore him to the throne revolutionary evening in response | cyye prison. Then came report That he had ja railway train while leaving Ekat- (Hidatsas) Arick | Suinbure. e That he had who comprise the Indian popu-| guards while on the way to Perm. That he had personal ) in the second, when the reser-! suards. That he had been publicly executed h the reserva-/ py order of the Urals Soviet. it clue sholas is becoming the Great Rus: [3 ian Mystery. Midnight Arrest Starts Mystery. quarrel in Livadia, Is Hiding—If He’s e, his grave? If Whe is mother’? Russia, recei signed with o recognize the hand- There is as to where these ers are posted. of her s lined at $40 to $65. SILK HATS - SHOES GLOVES March 15, 1917, he guards de- cide to move* him to some more se ssassinated on bee: ‘been shot by his deen ‘killed during 2/{ with one of his And the body has not ‘been found. Nor does anyone seem to know That he had been secretly raed where the grave was made. 36,500 iN} in a house in Ekaterinburg. Until the grave is found and the All these reports were denied or| body produced. or until Nicholas ap- as and his son. 100. las of blood, on the floor., let holes were too high on the wall|alive or dead? Documents said| peats and proves his identity, there Ibowoods | ig pe his farewell letters were never} always will be doubt as to his fate. Reports of his last words What has happened to his wife, two daughters and son is an almost equal thousand Pe"! No Grave, No Body - ily great mystery. | Yet Discovered. i An investigator found bullet holes; In addition jin a room in a house in Ekaterinburg, wed with the proceeds | said to have been occupied by Nicho- ONE RUSSIAN PRETENDER' CZAR FOOLED THE WIDOW OF ANOTHER, There were stains,! But the bul-} Russia was: Is Dimitri Iv4n the Terrible died question in oO have resulted from shots fired at}in 1584. leaving two sons, Feodor and short’ persons standing or sitting. (Dimitri. Feodor ruled until 1598, At New models in Full Dress Suits, very best of fine tailoring, perfect fitting Suits in soft un- finished worsteds and vicunas; all richly silk Alksizes. FULLDRESS SHIRTS Wedding Outfits a Specialty. CUSTOM" TAILORING EXPERT REPAIRING G.E Berseson & SON Between 1608 and 1613, the great}) Full Dress Head: quarters [ WAISTCOATS BUTTON TIES . - AND “ COLLARS HAND PRESSING DRY CLEANING his death his younger brother, Di Call C. A. Finch Lum- ber Co., phone: 17, for | Old Hickory Lignite. We buy and seit and make toatis on: mitri; was reported dead from. acci- dent, and: Boris Gudonoff grabbed .the throne. | } In 1603 a man claiming to be Dimi- ‘tri appeared in Poland. Prince Wis- niewski believed his story. Revolu- tion seated Dimitri on tle throne for awhile. Appearance of his Polish |-wife proved him an imposter, and he ; Was' dethroned and killed in 1606. Bond 2 ‘Now came the dramatics. In 1607 Stocks ee is lanother Dimitri. appeared, started a full Bese the = {revolution and started for Moscow.! ° , risand Ton” Marini. widow of the first falso, dead! “FINANCIAL INDICA’ Dimitri, acknowledged the new false | furnished free Dimitri as her husband. He nearly; }won supreme power before he was SMITH-MARTIN co. ‘ jEilled. in 1610. : } 206 $.ha Salle St. WHAT G MUST PA Germany has had her war-dance and must now pay, the piper. the full price of defeat. If she had won the present ERM NY In 1871 Germany made France pay war, to use the words of a German business man, “she would have dictated peace at Buckingham Palace and annexed the entire continent from the Ural Mountains to the Bay of Biscay.” There is no indication that the Allies. will dictate!any such robber’s peace, but they are determined, to judge from the pledges of Allied rulers, the emphatié declarations of the Allied press, and the stern comment of the man on the street in London, and Paris, and Antwerp, and Chicago, to make Germany pay for the wreck and the ruin she brought upon the world: If you would know quite definitely the demands that will be made upon Germany by the allied coun- tries that have suffered from the war, you should read the leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week—December 28th. -doubtedly represents the force of public opinion in It is a careful compilation from the-~most authoritative sources and un- the allied countries. Other articles that will entertain 4nd enlighten you in this number of “The Digest” are: Expert Medical Advice on Influenza : A borer of Suggestions for the Prevention and Treatment of Influenza by High Medical Authorities in Am erica and England Mr. Hearst’s Americanism The Seizure of the Wires Will the Kaiser Retire to Canada? Harvesting Salt Lake’s Salt No Clash on the “Free Seas” Baby Tanks and What They Did foes omer Artists Picture the ar The Songs the War Brought Forth ner in etd Indicated and De- ‘fen War-Time Food Problems. (Prepared by U. S. Administration) News of Finance and Commerce Mr. McAdoo’s Railroad ‘Depth Bomb’ Germany’s Rival Revolutions: Who Aire the Spartacides? ‘The Hun’s “Undefeated” Soldiers Electrically Heated Tools Wireless; Fettered or Unfettered A British Drama‘of Lincoln Trees t ae: Keep Green the Memory of Hero Dead Cost of Running the Red Cross Current Poetry Personal Glimpses Many Striking IHustrations, Including Cartoons ANNUAL, MOTOR NUMBER—132 PAGES __, Motor Car, Truck, Tractor, and Motor Ac .eessory. buyers --will save time and money by . consulting this week’s DIGEST... It is THE DIGEST’S Annual Automobile’ Issue and con- tains: announcements of the leading manufac- turers in these lines. If you will read this:‘num- ber of THE DIGEST, the advertising pages will : tell you what these motor manufacturers and makers of accessories are going to do to meet the public demand.

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