Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PACE ~ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE pe Tenacity Entered at the P nahaftion, Bismarck, N. D., us Second | that have only been breeders of more and more} ——fditer| wars. They were fictitious documents for all their s Matter. GHORGE D. MANN - = = é \ 7G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, trumpery of seals and fixtures, for they pretended Special Foreign Representative NEW YOFK, Fifth Ave. Bldg; CHICAGO, Marquette Bidg:; BOSTON, 8 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresege Hide; MINNEAPOLIS, £10 Lumber Exchunge. . MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Pres: exclusively entitled to the use for republication of wll news credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- All rights of publication of special dispatches herein giso reserved. MEMBERS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year .. edi aneeieeiace Daily by mail per year (In Bisma: Daily by mail per year (In State out K) Daily by mail outside of North Dakote.—. 5.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWS Established 1878) WELL, WHY NOT KEEP CHEMISTS HUST- LING IN PEACE AS IN WARTIME “The chemical laboratory of the bureau ternal revenue discovered and developed during the year 2 process of producing glycerin syntheti- cally by fermentation of sugar,” a para- graph in the annual report of the secretars of the treasury. There was, at the formal entry of the Uuited States into the world war an insufficient supply of glycerin for making explosives. price went up as the supply we down. was a scurrying for fats from which to extract glycerin. Even the garbage were hed. tes was the The condition in the Uni condition in wll the county Jy involved in the war. So gre age in Germany that it was said the methods of the ghoul were resorted to in the frantic effort rin supplies. directly or indirect- tal Was Lhe short- soap went up, too. In some countries soap be- came a rarit The circumstances acted as a spur to th ists—and synthetic glycerin is the con ence. Sugar is thus to become in a sense a weapon of war. And in future soaps may be made witt gar-derived glycerin. In all the years of peace glycerin was not de- rived from sugar. Why? Stimulus was lac ing. Chemistry made great strides under the propulsive force of war. Why not stimulate chemical development and research as liberally in pearg as in wartime? chem- _ MODERN INDUSTRY Women who have tasted the sweets of econ- omie independence will not give them up with * without a struggle. Such is the deekuration of PREUREEIIIS. . one of the spokesmen for women workers at a/ labor conference the other day. THE WOMAN QUESTION THREATENS TO PROJECT ITSELF PROMINENTLY IN INDUS- TRIAL AFFAIRS in this country and abroad. Here it is less of moment than in Britain where ‘the government by entering into a written agree- “ment with labor organizations, pledged itself to * a reversion to pre-war labor conditions at the end of the Great War. There are 4,500,000 wome in Britain in industrial employment. In the United States few women have entered industrial lives compared with the Britain total. American figures are merely estimates, for there has been no survey, and the highest only appro imates 1,000,000. In mechanical undertakings requiring care and exactitude woman’s outturn in many cases has been equal to that of six men. In some depart- ments women are classed as superior to the aver- age male worker. ; In street car and transportation tasks they have been 2 disappointment. The conductoret is not likely to be retained. Dress probably played a part in woman’s fail- ure in the field of transportation. In shop or fac- tory she ygarbs herself sensibly in working clothes. Jn street car empolyment her uniform has not y been of good selection. Generally it has been ill-fitting and unbecoming and she knows it. Gen- erally, too, the strain of standing so much has taxed the nerves of car women and impaired ef- ficiency. With the lessening of demand owing to the stoppage of much of the war work there has been ee 2 reduction in the number of women workers, | but not to a pronounced degree and here, as in Britain, labor unions may find trouble if they do not accept women into full membership with equa! pay and privileges as the male worker in any branch of labor where they can perform the same work as men. SPEAKING TO THE PEOPLE News dispatches indicate that President Wil- son is not going to confine his discussion of Amer- ican peace views to private conversations with diplomats and politicians. He is reporied to be “writing speeches” for delivery, not in Versailles, not in Buckingham Palace, but in the great in-} dustrial centers of England and France, to work- ingmen, to the soldiers. Wilson has studied his Lincoln to some purpose. He knows who they are that bear the brunt of wars, that give their blood and sweat to the great equses. Asid he knows that, whether a politician should wish to or not, it is impossible to fool for or to make any lasting international ar- without the approval of the temmon and woman. $7.50 7.20 THE ETERNAL WOMAN ANDER PEACEIN | lof us know, what has been the trouble with solmn- hy negotiated European “treuties” in the past, |to convey the pledge of nations which as such had | no voice in their terms. Whatever we may hope for from the present | peace ference, there is reason to believe that |what we will get will at least be something real ‘und binding. And that is an accomplishment for which cur president will have been more directly ry other of the statesmen in- responsible than w volved. s begins, most of the pronouncements of the long Lac feverish editors who predict this, that and the other thing with regard to the League of Na- tions, Freedom of the Seas, Trade Restrictions und the like, each from his own jealous angle— will turn out to have been mere wind-juamming after all. For they are not the high court; rather it is the high court that the president is appealing to, over their heads. And the high court—the people—will finally decide in spite of these gentle- men, not by or because of them. For the first time in the history of great wars they are given the opportunity, and they are ready to seize it. Paderewski as Poland. Of course Mexicc is entitled to self-determina-/; tion, but which is.Self down there? Spain now wants Gibraltar. Doubtless as 2| reward for lack of distinguished services in war!| | Jane Addams says it would be “simply stupid” for her to run for mayor of Chicago. Or for any- body. | Bolsheviki in ia have plenty of money— such as it is. They've captured the printing presses. the world is being made fit for democracy, they’re having a fit of democracy | in Germany. i | Familiar street spectacle: Ordnanee officer, with six months’ desk service, haughtily receiving the salute of 2 medabed doughboy just. back ‘from [Francet ; A.BYTRANGE ALMANACH DE GOTHA We pity the colleagué who at present has‘to edit the Almanach de Gotha, the directory of al] courts. |The next edition, which, by the way, had almost been ready for the printer when the great tumbl- ing of thrones happened and therefore will have to be radically revised, will look very different. We cannot imagine that the good people who used ,te place the bible of aristocracy and the court di- rectory on the most conspicuous shelf of their bookcase will ever again have the desire to inquire “who is who.” No fewer than 278 names belonging to former reigning princes will be missed. And those are of ruling families of Germany exclusively; not to n jon the Turks, the Greeks, the Bulgarians, etc. The new almarach will no longer have to speak ‘in cringing humility of the Hohenzollern, the Wit- telsbachs of Bavaria, the Zaehringers of Baden, lof war gains. Of course, it does not compensate ‘entirely for all the sacrifices which hundreds of \thousands of better men had to suffer because | USvel. they wail. ‘these 278 highnesses of divine right were per- | mitted to become ordinary mortals, but it is, nev- j ertheless, one fruit of our victory. And the house-/ ) cleaning still goes on—German Democracy Bul- Jetin | | SIR THOMAS RETURNS TO THE CUP | “As we were saying,” Sir Thomas Lipton might jremark in prelude to his message concerning a | post-bellum race for the America’s cup. For really the Irish baronet’s net challenge is only a renewal | of that which was to have been met in 1914. What lwe were all saying more than four years ago was {that Shamrock IV and Resolute ought to make a |pretty race of it. Then war intervened. | A fine contest for the famous cup in 1919 would | bring a great sport back very happily to a sea upon | which for the last four summers there has been no | place for playthings. U-boats and piracy having \done their worst and vanished, white wings and | sportsmanship may return, and in doing’ so fur- nish by no means one of the least striking features of a lingering celebration of peace. It will not be forgotten by those watching the delicately turned racers that other members of the big yacht family, \not sailing craft, but boats built with a first aim to \pleasure, turned themselves to useful purpose in the world conflict. America has agreed generally that no cup-chal- lenger has ever met more signally and manfully than Sir Thomas Lipton the requirements of sportsmanship. Three times he has attempted the feat of lifting the American trophy and carrying it | back to the Old World. His qualities as a loser and his pluck as a sailor are sufficiently, in evidence in the speed with which, as war's echos begin to die away, he returns to the challenge. An American The probabilities are that, when the real busi-| -d pundits—the political fire eaters andj \ \ ident may bring harmony to SATURDAY, JAN.°4, 4919. - 1 | SAY, ARE_. You Trvid T ; START SOMETHIN ot WHISKERS PFS OxxERE 1e(>—— Fourteen Points Like Rules Fiv- |" ed by Germans—With Cruelty Barred. By HAROLD EDWLN BECHTOL Duropean Muenager of the Newspaper) | FKinterprise Association re THE ch, Germany, J oa, ns itthis northern Rhine@lis-/) trict -accupied by the little Belgiu'| anny, are getting o tuste—but only | taste—of bow the Germuns ruled Bel-) gium for 50 months. i Let it be understood at once that! there is no cruelty and no vindietive- | | ness ubout Belgian oceupation. & i No torturing of prisoners andthe | priests! x No shooting of the populace, s {4 No desecration of churches | No wholesale Jooting. j 4:4 No stripping af factories, od But the Belgian command here isi: ladbach ‘thus. posted over the egtire district. Tist, of 14 rules—Belsifiu's | ; 14’ poluts, the “soldiers call them—gend | meuy of these rules follow almog# ‘to | a letter the Greman rules posted> iui | Belzium for the conduct of the Bel-| \giuns. | Somebody with an upeanny sense of | ; justice conceived that phuraphrasing | jidea. No cruel or oppressive German | rue has been used, only those that gov-| | ern the saluting of atficers and of the |! jflag aud which prohibit gun-toting amd |) require the Germans to remain in their | jhomes. after weven o'dlock. } | The Belgians ure “strietly enforeing these rules. ens of Germuns have complained. to me of the seven “o'clock rule. “Mh eanpot go uny place or do anything it was one of the German rules in elgium. The Belgians bold frequent parades. | They march proudly down the streets | of Gladbach and otber towns behind | flying flags and bagners and with abe | bands playing “Brabanconne” and the ‘“Marseillaise.” i The residents are not permitted to | forget how gravdy Germavy érred in} believing she could cruxh und German- | ize and absorb her little neighbor | ‘Belgium. H In AixJe-Chapelle, a black box hangs over the statue of Wilhelm I- | over horse and all. -It has been there! \sinee the biz military review of the French and Belgians and Americans, Allied banners and pictures of allied heroes are everywhere. The little Belgian army is proudly! conscious of its victory. After news gf the armistice was received, most of the battle fronts quieted down. - In} some places intermittent firing con-| tinued, in others there was not a shot, | but on the Belgian front. when the} news came, the guns let loose and fired | continuously until exactly 11 o’dock, | when the armistic became effective. | This was told me by an Ohio officer ‘who was fighting alongside the Bel- gians pear Ghent. iy I have taken notiee of what the Bel- | gian soldiers talk about as they go about their duties in the occupied re-j gion. It ix not of thé’ days of German eccupation, but of the days of 1914. when they fired the first shots agafnst the outlaw invaders-and bled and.were pushed back fighting; bat délayed ‘the oncoming Germuns until the line he hind was formed. ae a But. most of all, these Belgian sal- diers talk of the future, in which, if the peace congress does its work well, bi cecarrdorgs ao will never again be a matter European convenience. ‘They talk of 2 future in which they an restore their country. with the as- gurance that fhe days of Belgium as 4 cockpit are gone forever. of the full percentage may becomingly wish for ‘This is real genius: not only to sec the truth,| very best of good fortune—even to the point of Call C. A, Finch Lum- ber Co. phone 17, for | | BELGIAN ARMY GIVES HUNS TASTE OF MEDICINE: A PROCLAMATION: | tain mortgage, €: The great war now huppily end- ed has brought ed iby those who have been fortu- nate enough tovescupe its full fury. Four millions of sturvin itents of Armenia and have been crushed and spillaged by the Tufks and Batrds Joak to Mines ied “for rekief that “v ready fur advanced, aud help must titiktes may live lint] spring, und also to enable them to put in some future suntenaner, North, Dakota las been asked 10 $100,000 of \ithe premises in such mortgage and] Joke. Nmpting , hereinafter described, et «the front} toon Hummel. (worthy people, aid a icipution to.this fund incurged and J, : {| day of January, A. D. 1919; to satisfy Believing it to, be the duty aud 4 |,0n the day of sale, The premises de-j, wer possible in > fuvoruble condi who heave borne the* brunt of the war's burdeus and sorrows. J here by -set aside the week of January 1219 in which to @onduct an ae- | ) dn the interests of en people of the near of our help and Tone at the capital at Bismarck, i d.day of January, the governor: LYNN J. FRAZIER, \i@ay of December, 1918. | THOMAS HALL. 5 3 A aie The attitude of most of the Germans |g. the Coburgs and the Schaumberg-Lippe’s, is a list }is sulky. They are poor losers. Doz- Call C. A. Finch Lum- ber Co., phone 17, for 1 told one German store keeper that Old Hickory Lignite. “Ach, th var i 3 ig! plied ieitaby "| EVERETT TRUE iWOULDEIKE'SECRET ‘FOR LOOKING 'WELL Two weeks ago | weighed 96 Ibs. Now I weigh 15 ibs. and feel per- \fecuy well. Anyone I see suffering |1 tell them of what Mayr's Wonderfai \Remedy has done for me. ‘hey all want to know what makes ine look 50 |well. Your medicine bas also been a jreal life-saver for my mother. 1 can- not recommend it too highly for stom- jach trouble.” J. is a simple harm- less preperation that removes the ca- UNCLE SATS tarhal mucoustrom the intestinal tract (ay und allays the inflammation which 3, Acie pook. igauses practically all stomach, liver B |und intestinal ailments, including -ap- pendir ;. Gne dose will convince or money refunded. For sale by drug- | gists everywhere. { ———— ¢ ¢ | Fallen For Freedom | ®, o Killed in Action. Private Hzakon Anderson, Ryder, N. Dek. | ‘Died of Wounds. | Private Charles E. Kern. Pembina, tN. Dak. | Wounded Severely. Sergeant Casper L. Johnson, Devils ‘Lake, N. Dak. | Private Lewis Lembberg, Ryder, N, D. Private Peter B, Dunue, Casselton, N. Dak. |HELLSTROM WILL CONSTRUCT SILOS Under date of Dec. 31 the Unicad | States putent office granted Jesters put- ent 10 F. 0. Helistrom of this city for improvements .in ‘silo construction. Mr. Hellstrom, when interviewed to- day, stated that “it is a fact that his upplication for # patent on siio son- struction had been allowed and also that be had been advised that all the cluims asked for under his application for 4 patent on a process for making silo and other building blocks had j heen allowed under his process. There jis.2 great saving in the cost of cement wall construction, and that.you can joak for great ketivity in coment con- | stru wu work in the future, and that ~ his process will be the means of sav- NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE BY/ing n lot of money. ADVERTISEMENT. ana ie A enue PROCEEDINGS OF CITY COMMIS- SION DEC. 30, 1918. ecutved und delivered) The a“ umm ion in regular I a acral eres s, _) session Monday evening, December 20, by C. V. Wilder, mortgagor, to North 1918. There were present Comm: jern Land & Investment Company|erc Bertsch, Best and Thompson. The |Mortgagee, dated the 2th day of; minutes of the meeting held December |Januery, A. D. nineteen hundred and ine. were read and approved. The | ten and filed for record in the office He Gaal eine a 2 Feeer Coad ibe the ese ot Geade ot ihe) Somtn | of assessing the cost of cleaning the jty of Burleigh, und state of North! now from the sidewalks, where the | Dakota, on the 20th day of May, 1910.) tity aid ihe work. Notice is her given thet that cer- ; {and -recorded iin Book 89 of Mort-| "my is OG pian aes at page 405 und assigned DY | ne he Pyepuiy ype ects || said mortgagee by on instrument in! ,. ap B NG ao Seng the ferjout ps ithe ‘writing 40-40 EH. Wauebon, ,..trustes) ee? This tar. ran.into. ibe sewer i i uy aPe& | froin thelr plant.) If ‘they failed to jdnted ahe dth day of May,A. D.1610,) qo this the city was to do the work ;;and filed for record in said office of| una museas dhe come against the Gas the register of Deeds on the 30th €8y |. Gompany.: The follawingabills w. = Of January, A. D. 1811, and racerded loved and ordered soho dtundss Ren in Book 24 of Assignments on page |aminting: m2 S31, will be foreclonad by a sale Of| Mike Getz... door of the court house in the city of} John Alsbury ;Eismarck, in the county of Burleigh 1 7 |and state of North - Dakota,-at thei hour of 16 o’clock A. M., an the 18th. Juke Empting . jthe amount due upon said mortgage) John, Hummel ribed in said morigage and which will be sold to satisfy the same. are}. situated in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, and ae scribed as follows, towit ‘ George W. Little | Northwest quarter (NW1-4) of sec-]Brown & Jones | ‘tion Twenty-nine (29) Township (141) | Brown & Geiermann . North of Range (76) West of the|J. 1. Roop & Go. | Fifth Principal Meridian. Kupitz Go. ... There will be due on such mortgage) St. Alexius Mospital at the date of sale the sum of $615.80) Bismarck School Board dollars. ¢. L. Burton .... Dated st Bismarck. N. D., this 3rd/ Beatrice Waid s Washburn Coa) Co. sees 16.88 F. N. VAUGHAN, On motion the commission adjourned Trustee, Assignee of Mortgagee.|to meet again January 6, 1919, at eight | F. E. MoCurdy, odock p.m. | Attorney for Assignee of Mortgagee. Attest: Cc. lL. BURTON, 12-714 21 98; I—4 11. | City Auditor. CITATION HEARING PROOF, OF WiC. . | Have your old hat | je like new at the Phe of North Dexia, County of | 4 7 In County Court, before Hon. L C. |Eagle Tailoring Co. Davies, Judge.) ie i a a pee of the estate of Nellie . McCormick, deceased. - e . By Conde John C. Oberg. petitioner, vs. M--. i zr Pr Mrs. John C. Oberg. Mary McCann, Mary Buchho! STRIKE ME THy, Alexitis Hospital, Charles H. Da, ana Wav—ne's ONLY; Hattie A. Lewis, respondents. |. The State of Narth Dakota, to the #bove named respondents and.all per- | Sons interested.in the estate of Nellie R. McCormick, deceased: You and each of you are hereby no- | tified that Joha‘C. Oberg, the petition- es pereany prone ae in this conrt a locument in ing. purportit to he the Last WiN and Testament ot | Nellie R. McCormick, late.of the City of Bismarck in the county of Bunleigh j and state of North Dakota, deceased, with his petition, praying for the ad- mission to probate of said dooument as the last Will and Testament of said deceased, and for the issuance to him {of letters testamentary thereon, and that the said petition and the proofs of said purported Will and Testament will be heard and duly considered by this court on Tuesday, the fourth dav of February, A. D.. 1919 at 14 o'clock in the forenoon of that day, at the court rooms of this court, in the coun- ty ort pease in the city of Bis- marck, county of Burleigh and si of North Dakota; and = 1s You and each of you are hereby cit ed to be and appear before this court at said time and place and answer said petition and show cause, if anv there be, why the prayer of said peti- tion should not be granted. By the Court: (Seal) 1, C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. Nated the Nth day of December, A.D. 1918. ‘Let the foregoing citation he served by publication once a week for three weeks, in the Bismarck Tribune, Ris- marck, N. 1D., and: personal service on all respondents -who are residents cf te Sate of North ‘Dakota. ea 1. C. DAVIES, ““Itdee ot'the County Court. 12— 21 28 1-4. Phone 75, City Fuel.Co. For the Beulah Coal ”