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(ai rt een eck Ala eee allies Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as ‘ond Class Mf i 7 8 Bee ? atter. 4 GEORGE_D. MANN. --_ -. -. +2 Editor : G7 LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative NEW YOFK, Fifth Ave. Bldg; CHICAGO, Marquette .¢ BOSTON, 3 Winter St.; -DETROIT, Kresege ig; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not other- ‘wise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. ‘ i All rights of publication of special’ dispatches’ herein | are also reserved. i MEMBERS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION + SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year $7.50 Daily by mail per year (In Bismarck) 7.20 Daily by mail per year (In State outside of Bismarck) 5.00 1 mail outside of North Dakota... 2. 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. Established 1873) _—OOO— INDUSTRY FOR. SERVICE; LET US CARRY IT ON, AND THEN ON The war went far in creating an industry for | service rather than for profit. It went so far that we will not go back, though profiteers rage and tug at political wires. Things were once made only when profit prom- ised. The war came. Every unit of: industrial energy was needed for the national defense. We called upon all our resources in the name of serv- ice. Soldiers did not charge “what the traffic would bear.” The Red Crcss did not buy its bandages in the cheapest and-sell them in the dearest market. The navy did not wait upon dividends hefore hunt- ing submarines. er Profit became incidental. .At spots, it became an obstruction-,a source of friction to be removed. Its removal was one of the expensive losses of the war. Price restrictions, taxation, direct prosecu- _ tion were some! of the weapons used: upon the profiteer, and there was no closed season for hunt- a) ers. To be sure, the dark jungles of society con-| ealed sufficiently such beasts to make them a hreat to successful fighting. _§ But no man will boast in his autobiography of “millions made in this war. The tales he will tell to-his grand children will be of service given, not. gains gathered. He will record for the glory of f his descendants the amount invested in Liberty § leans-and Red Cross funds, not the Profits made in'waF contracts. - ; : i War made industry serve society. If a factory > ed, it was because its product was needed. jen guns were more needed than automobiles hships were more eXsefflial than, sky-scrapeys, Mpats wore WBE ‘allowed: to (icliNe; ifoduction ’ the less-neéded goods. ...’ shomenate thy “Ope thing industry: had to-sexvésthe glefense Me ik Bon Lhe enn orr: lie” ae gr i Pa i aiWe will carry some of this ifft into “péegce } nes. We shall salvage a share of the spirit £ ligervice. We need it to fight: poverty, ignor-| “& ce and disease. Wate : uN e will think more and more: about producing 2 ieserve our needs, rather than to‘inérease profits. Ph BOLSHEVISM ..;; ;.: ~ Shall the world be Russianized? Not by forcibly seizing the territory of other nations, as under the czar rule, but by the other and just as effective a method, to wit, of compell- Bolshevism? “The Muscovite (Russian) Nightmare” has been the fearsome dream of European civilization for more than 200 years. Latterly it has been over- Jooked in the more recent “German Menace” which is'now ended. The “German Menace”, was com- { paratively a recent one. It lived a half century 7 / \d died. “The Muscovite Nightmare’ has lived more than two centuries and lives today stronger at@i dealier than ever. i t Every boy who has studied his history knows H ea hcw the Russian emerged from semi-savagery { in; the middle ages and began. his triumphant a march of conquest over the old world. Nation fel Sfter nation in Europe and Asia succumbed, until the Russian flag of death and tyranny waved from ‘mid-Europe to the Pacific ocean, and from the frigid Arctic to the warm sands; of squthern Asia 4 j —and ever reached toward the great prize, Con- stantinople, on the strategic Mediterranean, whence Russian power was to start an@w, by sea, to conquer the world politically and economically. At was the Ryssian who divided’ Poland—and took the largest slice. It was the Russian who; just as the world war started, was reaching over | L to claw out of existence the most ancient king- dom of them all—Persia. Pete ® ~ Mothers and babes in half of Europe and half ‘of Asia shuddered at the cry, “The Cossacks!” ‘The very name of this typically Russian, institu- n-became a byword for cruelty and oppression, roughout the world. * eee eee . Fi het ” h 1d to adopt Russian’ “kultur” through | ¢ 1 q 5 ae e | jobs, to say the least, and boycotted in every other factory’ in Russia,:if they had refused to join the rs | Bolshevik movement.” EUS throne. Their péople saw ‘the march of conquest}* halt. The weakest czar of-all could not lead them even to the conquest. of the puny Japanese heathen. Instinct in one’ hundred. and eighty, million people is a tremendous, unmeasured force, | working through many a cog and wheel to a relentless focus. And who shall say that the revo- lution of 1917 was not the-subconscious will of the Russian people to cast out a leader who halted them in their destined march to world domina- tion? fs Their new leader+the cold, far-seeing, brilliant Lenine—is the strong man who took the ruling scepter of, the weak czar. No one knows better than he the characteristics of the Russian mass. A mystic himself down in his soul, a believer in the overpowering destiny cf Russia, what is there more simple than that he should decide that, czar] . leadership having failed of world conquest by force of arms, the better and more direct way would be universal Russianization by the propa- gande. of Bolshevism? , : Nothing less than Bolshevism could unite the great masses of uneducated, semi-civilized people in a country like Russia. Nothing less than class /{ feeling where practically the entire population ig of one class. Hence, the appeal to the peasant, to| ' the poor workman. “And having handled and hoodwinked the Ragsian common people en masse, oe why not reach across the earth and hoodwink and. handle the ‘plain pgople of all other lands,. com-| pleting the Russianization of the whole world? oe * “The Bear That Walks Like a Man” Every word that comes from Russia makes it plain that Lenine is only another czar. _ Nothing less. There is no people’s rule in all Russia except through Lenine, who is himself the soul and heart of Bolshevism. The peasant, the workman:thinks he rules, but all the ruling he does is that which is necessary to further the plans of Lenine, the autocrat, the absolute king. * i Do the working people of other countries think there is freedom in’Rassia under the Bolshevik Lenine? We have expert testimony as to that from W. G. Shepherd, the noted American war correspondent, who was in Russia during the revo- lution and after the Bolsheviki seized the govern- ment. “Lenine,” writes Shepherd, “believes in ruling like aking. Lenine, Trotzky, and all. their apos- tles, :dd-not:helieve in majority rule... Their plan and this is what. the: Bolsheviki themselves say’ —is to persuade’ as many people as possible to their way of thinking, ‘and then force: the people,” the Bolshevik Jeadets themselves told me. ‘We, who, see the. light, must lead the magses, if we.can Jif we dan’t lead, we must drive them. But they mustigo ‘our, way." 5 He ig “I saw hundreds of workingmen in- Petrograd and other places:in Russia, who didn’t want, to be Bolshevik; who didn’t want to carry the pl ‘oY go’out”orto the streets to shoot civil help terrorize the masses,” continues “But the’minority was controlling them. i. I found, many. factonies. in Petrograd where a Yniniority committee of. Bolsheviki was in complete control. The remaining workmen ,were just as much afraid of this committee of workmen in their factory as they had been of the Russian police un- der the czar. They would have been put out of i ‘Majomtyéfule, j & The French revolution was a great and holy up- rising of the common people. It rooted,out oppres- sion in Fraene; it set up the rights of man and uhited ‘the common pedpie under the banner. of “liberty, equality, fraternity.” Finding a. great mass thus united the Lenines and Trotzkys of. :| France, set up the; “terror,” as in Russia today. The lasting effect of terrorism made it easy for! the Lenines.and: Napoleons to drive France to con- .quest—attempted. conquest, of the world, until the French people became the dread’ oppressors, sof other peoples everywhere their armies trod the] soil. ; - 3 46 There is your great.historical precedent for Rus- sian and world-Russianizing Bolshevism. today. Beware of “the bear that walks like a man.” “Scalp” the Liberty. bond sca}pers Se : 4 Europe’s labor shortage may be solved by put- ting the American tourists to work. iS British fix kaisbr’s status.” ‘The boche reds | havé been’ “fixing” his statues, too. \ re) Wilson wants to set up a “new international psy- chclogy.” Representing, let us hope, no German psychclogy. ee é Congressman-eléct Berger thinks Uncle Sam|o “The, Bear That Walks Like a Man” .. iThe Russian, be he noble or. peasant, is half iatic, and he is a mystic from his bristling head. his fron heel. He never accepted civilization. eply religious, religion never wooed him from am. The educated few still believe in signs d tokens. The Russian is a fatalist;in the mass » believes that his is world destiny, that the lom of God is at hand and that it is Holy destiny to prepare the earth for resutrec- these mysticisms in the pedple*be- morh. The clergy in the hands of ‘the czar| was altogether wrong in the war. ’Pears like the wrong. triumphed, ‘anyhow. A * “A-surgeon is: working on the ex-kaiser’s ear. Hope he fixes it 86 the old skunk can hear what,| Sortie everybody says about him.; ; Wilson’s European triumph doesn’t ‘seem to| cheat have been seriously affected by that suffragist “watch fire” in front of the white house. oe One by all. parties. tion is understood oS 900000 HUNS ON WEST FRONT BY JACOB FRIIS reports ii "2 Porte feeling of unsatisfied hunger: At the Harry Eggert died last Thursday middle’ and_ upper-class restaurants, | morning, of pneumonia, after an at- however, the food is fair, and one can|tack of influenza... His funeral serv- t i | rest} ‘a seat in front’ " me an-the train. going, out of-Sassnftz.|:* The waiter smile ind;,explainéd |ing and Hi ic Pave -abent two avaet te Germany.) that our ffiena: laa hist: come:in from business spithmetic; and penmanship eir 8 ut nish, in-) the country, ~bringing. the. t ii jiza.and ‘how it was nging. the two, eggs | will be offered. rible thing that had ‘eve: neigliborhoad of Sasan} Thpy . spoke, of; marty as five, six; or living under’ the sanie’-roof, and ‘all dead »and (buried. Two women took bout*“one : cemetery jere the sextons ‘an; o | Corresponden S. S$. Flor- during er. ‘visiting. at. i tee enoving ts farlo 15 .days. le. was, . : . fleet .and.: witni he «; Miss Lena Mische and Miss Esther 7 the Genta eee te ated naval rane re last Wednesday on No. 2 For the;Beulah Coal forces recently. » Where. they will .atten 5 C. L.. Robertson, who; returned nef Phone 1, City F uel Co. yearly, last. month, | “~~ $ resumed ‘his wark:in'the, Hepron school On New Yéar’s night. in'the school! gymnasium:a basketball’ game tween the high school‘and town teams ; forthe latter by The contest was ienditg ‘with be: resulted ‘in’ Vict a score ‘of ‘37to very close, the cough can be conquer this famous old honie- H e, and: really othing better for coughs. 214 ‘ounces of |. plain «granulated make} acfull pint. arified: molasses, . honey, Path int * Paes arations, |” ) etleetive y. ant. tastes — . the plank in the education program put forward]! HOLDING DOWN THE’SAFETY VALVE © 4 Set satisfaction, , eating -two fried: eggs. “1 ‘asked. the ted that more ;than}waiter too bring ‘me two (fried; eggs, | call cemetery. 200,000 men in the western front army} exactly like) those—which 1 i i nt at with’ my" finger ito make: sure; t waitei understood. !, of. yds : with -him.: He said. they were. perfect- Now, ‘they pat.each other on tl back, .. “"Phey-'sing “songs. There _ ig’ rv ‘many, T- doubt whethgr!it is: ‘more | dancing © ‘and*- footishness.. on:: ‘thi serlode thére than “in” the neutral | streets, ‘They have found fous’ ind I could ‘buy of a joy that is new to them. How much the’ saghe kind of*meals, and ‘at | long will it last, I can’t tell. But I only, slightly higher prices,,in Ger-|saw it, and noticed it—Germany’s many. ‘ag jin Norway and: Sweden. ; i new joy. superior weight of their opponents. school for:the next few months. Miss Elva Urban’ returned rt Wednesday afternoon to Teneston ner, was! Served’ to. the: guests -pres- ugh of |college :to resume her work there aft- ent, and the festivities continued dur- jer _a&.vacation at home. ustender of Miss Erma Stelter, who has been enjoying a vacation at home, returned last Thursday to her duties at the Bis- marck hospital, where ‘she'is a stu- dent nurse. Neil Robertson of Glen Ullin took in the New Year’s dance here and visit- ed at the W. D. Robertson home. ‘dichttise’ ee Moreeuien Government Cheap. meals at the “poorer-class obo Burda left last week for rare rehivist to gian ve r 2 2 a , where he will enroll in an a obile Christiahia-—I: have seen restaurants always leave one with ‘a nm utom: from a number of countries on the ‘ravages of Spanish ‘influenza. Ihave’ a’ distinct Germany has logt' more vittins “to’‘th) school. ices were held..Friday afternoon in In a Berlin restaurant I. saw. axman|the \German_ Evangelical church, the body’ being interred in the Evangeli- -Hf present plans “are carried out, Hebron will have-sznight:gchool. this winter..-.Courses. inteaize hip, ready usitiess. English, At the annual election of officers of ly willing I: should..have .two fried |the Congregational Ladies’ Aid’ the 2; 4eB@8 for my breakfast, and. all. they following officers were chosen for the coming year: President, Mrs. A. R. Bolke; vice. president, Mrs. Theo. Bolke;, secretary, Mrs. H. Funk; tre: suret, .Mrs,.C. L. Robertson, ? * dance at Richardton on New Year's “laieht,.and,at Glen. Ulin, wsidey,. ning. uilding has been completed. Furni- pare jerbeing installed fod ne Brades which now occupy .the Evangelical church basement and ‘the Fleur-de-Lis building will~move: into, their new quarters this:‘week. A large number of friends of “Bil- ly” Rueter gathered at the Favorite Saturday evening and had a party in Sa ROC IRC RTS ORT RR STIE his honor. He left Tuesday to go back putting his team well in the:lead.: The {to his duties on the U. S. S. Florida. high Sehool team played well but could| Sunday afterrioon ‘at the home of not keep up their attack against the |the groom occurred the wedding of Miss Gertrude Oehmke and Profeasor |' A. C. Riess. A bountiful wedding din- ing the evening. SAPP ey : Me FS Zee iv By Conde certain mortgage, executed ands de- ee sby C,H, Pierrill end i The Hebron orchestra played at the} ‘The “addition to the: Hebron’ schoot RAIL-LABOR™ 77"; NOT ASKING LEGISLATION in North Dakota. are said to favor some such measure. * Workmen's Compensation. It is a° foregone conclusion that North Dakota~is-to ‘havea workmen's compensation. fpasmuch as farm help and domestics. are to ‘be exchud- ed trom participation in its benefits, it will affect a comparatively sniall proportion: of the state's working or employing classes.":"It 13 undexstood, however, that organizedJabor in ‘North Dakota favors legislation along this line, doing away with the present com- mon law doctrine of the fellow ser- vant, under: which courts sometimes have held that when an employe is in- jured through the carelessness Or ig- norance or inefficiency or negligence of a fellow. empoye, no matter how much unfitted the latter may be prov- en tobe, that the employer cannot pe held responsible for any damages. This is a survival of an individualistic area when every “servant” was pre- sumed to be familiar with the capacity or incapacity of his fellow workers and to corespondingly guard his own safety. Workmen's compensation ad- vocates. contend that it hardly squares with modern industrialism where one worker. may. never meet another, up- on whom his safety may chance to be entirely dependent at some time. Workmen’s compensation legislation would also abolish the theory that whenever a man accepts employment under another-he personally assumes any risk. which may he inherent in such employment, :and it will greatly modify the present doctrine of “wil- ful negligence.” holding the employer responsible for the assignment of his workers to tasks which ‘he knows are within the limits: of their ability and their. intelligence, Tt seems probable that the Washing: ton state plan of pure state insurance will be adopted under the North *Da- kota compensation act. This means that every employer of labor, accord- Ing to the hazard of the hyusinesa in which he is engaged, andthe number of men*employed, will be raéyuired to pay into’ the state insurance fund, from which the workmen's compensa- tion commission will pay workers or their survivors indemnity for person- al injuries or death, hospital bills, medical attention and compensation for time -lost, i Protection for Women, Proposed labor legislation will, in- clude protection for women workers in the form of a law limiting hours to @ maximum of 54 per week and defin- ing the minimum wages at probably $20. per week, which : is regarded .by laborites as the.very least upon which a woman can live .decently and °re- spectably in this ‘state, Similar safe- guards willbe thrown around the em- ploynient.of minors. In all of these matters organized la- ‘hor’s wishes will be followed togthe letter. The league and union lgbor appear, to be in.cgmplete 3 cords ex- cept ‘as 10 the matter .OF fal es and. working: conditions, which th sides are tacticall yavolding. 4 NOTICE’ OF MORTGAGE SALE, BY ADVERTISEMENT, = Notice is hereby. given, that bat axrill, raortga, 0’ HatsaC. Cfris- nson, mortgagee, dated the 27th day of May, A. D. nineten hundredand 5 aNd: iled<fogmecord-ingke of- fice. of the Register of Deeds. of the county of Burleigh, and state of North Dakota, on the 19th day of May, A..D. 1916, and recorded in Book 140 of Mortgages, at rage 54, will be fore- closed by-a sale: of the premises in such. mortgage.and hereinafter de- sertxed, at the fro: * door of the court house: in:the'¢ity of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and’state of North Dakota, at\the hour of ten o'clock A. M., on'the 18th day“of January, A. D. 1919, to satisty the amount due upon sald mortgage onthe day of sale. The premises described in said mortgage and which ‘will be sold to satisfy the same, are situated in the, county of Burleigh, and state of.North Dakota, and described as.follows, to-wit: Lots Fifteen. (5),-Sixteen (16), Sev- enteen (17), Eighteen: (18), Nineteen (19) and Twenty (20) in Block Twelve (12) in Coffins’ Addition to the City -of Bismarck, according to. the official plat thereof on file fm’ thé office of the casi of ‘deeds, oe ‘ There will be due on such mortgage at the date of sale the sum of $632.54 Dollar . the ‘sum of $632.59 Dated at: Bismarck, N. D., this day of Dec., 19485” a HANS C. CHRISTIANSON, Mort . F..B. MeCURDY, » nie ate Attorney for’ Mortgageo, ‘Bismarck, North Dak 19-12, 19 2916 ——————_—_——, NoMorePiles A Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treats ment In ‘One of the dent Events You: Ever Expertenced. ‘You are suffering some! with. itching, . bleeding, pre radi piles or hemorrhoids. Now, Bo over to an igaoe for matt au