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\PAGE 4. BISMARCK ‘DAILY TRIBUNE ac iN a FRIDAY! MAY 9, 1919.7 HG Expectant Mothers | , = + ¥ ont § K is ier- The bank’s lease becomes effective| the house chamber, no other room be mG BER $ FRIEND THF BISMAR( K TRIBUNE ree nO one who read ;the Courier: me petore FIVE DIRECTORS | ame, morning. This contract,| ing available at the capitol. | Wal i ——_____________________ | America entered the world and after. The Courier- TO ASSIST BANK which runs for two years, was approv- \ FOR Entered at the Postoffice Bismarck, N. D., as Second) News has never found aught to criticize except OF N. D AKOTA | °4 and signed by bho! inguelclal cote, : if —-—. : . a ; mission hursday, iS =] a e = “7 Baitor| our government, and this, not so much because it} Ce | Director Genoral Cathro will move] | 9 WW PAYNE & OMPA NY,” eine was OUR government, as because it was A gov-: «Continue from Puge One) ' | ale forte: into the ney auartete Mon- IT’S UNW ISE. ENETRATING LINIMENT 3 CHICAGG, gst att . in the southwestern part of the|day or Tuesday, although the rooms o put off to-day’s nat AP R. ') DETROIT, Kresege ernment. Its principal objection to the treaty state, where he is best known. jeannot be equipped inside of two or rcow. If your stomach is : ‘ 10 Lumber Exchange. which has been offered Germany is the fact that Bids Opened. ‘three weeks. Mr. Cathro is now using ‘d-disturbed take — i wD - OCIATED PRESS 5 c a . . Bids were opened of the furnitur c Te eee oe a cee chr entitled to the use| it Provides a form of government which the Ger-|and ijanic fixtures whieh the commis I( Buick Roadster for puitication of all news « edited to it or not otherwise|mans must adhere to. fen will require for the bank hom | Pre lM | For-Sale red ted is pa and also the local news 8 Hae in the Missouri y Motor 0. | AS TO R | "OV Ee Pe ee ae era a published) Saturday, May 3, the Courier-News editorially building. ‘They ranged Irom $1,779 fos! Cc the net ald te digestion comfort ae sits: NP rehts of publication of special dispatches hereia are| criticizes U. S. army officers who commanded /Plain wood | txtures to. § on For Infants and Children today. A pleasant relief from Pete a ed wil takie st { sls vesereil <UDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION — | Private soldiers in uniform to remove from that committee consisting of the ma In Use For Over 20 Years | | the discomfort of copes 5 C KOBER ts 7 AU Ma ? . rector a Lec ar r Q NI wf Si ESCKIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE __| uniform the red flag of the commune. These offi- director. Botley a and feat oath Always bears Pe By BeOS EMULAION iets Bee ae He iy aT er Der Hea aa $7.20 cers in the Courier-News category are “anarchists | recommendations at the nest mecting Sgtanaes at y dis cm ee ate eh _ ; * Be, “on | 2 avin tale: ?? jot the board, | a Aa ee ae Daily by mail per year (In state outside of Bismarck) 5.00 and criminals. ‘The sib! eoiminitiee be a ee aine orpast MERE Sit §.00| What one loyal American thought of this edi-j to secure bids on typew | j 6 enreac} Pere hae ’ . machines, posting machines a (Established 1873) ; toyial expression was reflected in a letter written) mechanical equipment for the bank. Phone 211 the editor of the Courier-News by F. O. Hellstrom, |On motion of Attorney General Lan} 9 nor EB -who said: ger it was resolved that all printing SS we sald land similar supplies covered by the } : uh i state’s contract with the public print- CALLS FOR A SOFT PEACE TE you thoroughly understand the meaning of | er be obtained in the usual way! ey | both flags, then your editorial means just One | through che state printer. thing, and that is that you put the red flag ahead To Meet Committee Monday. * ._; At the request of the commiii of the Stars and Stripes and that your flag is|the North Dakota lankers’ as RED; that you regard the American constitution | tion which is:to confer with the indus. " eee . * \ trial commission on the policies of the as a repressive instrument of oppression, and that! bank, this conference, originally sei | you believe in the doctrine of communism and all] for 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, was Ne i * fs til, 10 Monda; orning. that it implies. The-red flag is an enemy flag in geterred sumllelp: Monday morning: every sense of the word. Trotzky is openly threat- ren et kes ee ening to overthrow all governments, and he has 7 - his apostles, agents and propagandists in every |’ BROWN & JONES IN EG Q.S. S. country and is today plotting the destruction and downfall of our government. In the face of this, you expect your readers to swallow the doctrine VEGETABLES New Potatoes Green Peas With the opinion prevalent in local official and private circles that the terms of the treaty of- fered Germany are extremely moderate, there is little sympathy with editorial utterances found in Townley’s daily press of the day. | Writing on the fourth anniversary of the sink- ing of the Lusitania, one of the most atrocious violations of human rights ever perpetrated by any nation, the North Dakota exponent of Bol- shevism and supporter of Lenine and Trotzky, heads its comment upon the peace treaty: “A TREATY OF WAR NOT PEACE?” and it goes on to state that “the peace terms which were pre- sented to Germany yesterday were founded: not on the high hope of Christian brotherhood which had animated the world during the last bloody “We Thank You” ORANGES--A whole window full that t: to. sell—Small. and. Juicy Per dozen, 24¢; 3 aren LOVE te Nir is eae 68c 2162 Ibs. Fresh Roasted Coffee sold during April. We sin- cerely believe you are missing something. You can expect ‘a raise in Coffee shortly as all classes of Coffee advanced from 8 to 7 cents last week. A40c Our price, 85¢ and that it is a crime to suppress the red flag.” There never has been a man or a woman ac- cused of sedition or of treason or of espionage or of any other crime against the government in|.; days of the war, but on the same old Prussian! Nonth Dakota who has not found an ardent cham-| Spinach ae paganism which the allies affected to hate so fer- pion before and after the trial in the Courier- Cucumbers National Biscuit Cookies and Composed of Ripe Olives, Pimen- vently. : an News. There never has been a riot or an insipient Tomatoes, etc. Crackers arrived fresh today. In tos, Tuna Fish, Olive Oil and “It is a treaty, that brings down in ruins the] rebellion against federal authority which has not FRUITS fact they are fresh all the time. Spices. hope of world peace,” says the North Dakota) been excused by the organ of Mr. Townley’s. Now f Premium Crax in cub in- KREAM KRISP—A real _bar- as ii d be rejected. Th Strawberries remium Crax in cubes are ga’ R Bolshevikiblatt. “It should be rejected. The|the Bolshevikiblatt of North Dakota asks the ee \ nig favor continually. Put up in gain. 1 Ib. 30 treaty of Versailles provides for the most onerous 30,000 North Dakota soldiers who offered to lay yrape 6 | boxes weighing 6 1-2 to 22 CANS 455 git atetnt manele: Cc terms ever imposed ae beaten foe. They are) own their lives for their country to join in a plea ranges ‘ Ibs. at, rer Ib a eusteierets c 2 Ib. 2 on. terms that almost certainly will be rejected, and! ¢o, mercy, for extreme unction, for the Huns who Sweet Cream temper hs a are a last Pe eens ie a tow 60c 1 that can be enforced only by armies.” gouged out the eyes and tore out the tongues of Stapl dF | eects cf LOCREreS 41b. 7 on “Let the European nations if they will revert|/their comrades, who crucified them before their ® taple and Fancy Sandwickola—The " latest and eek Weg Maman $1 20 best sandwich special, at, per glass 15c BUY YOUR SUPPLY Fresh Strawberries—Leaf Lettuce—Head Lettuce Celery—Cucumbers—Radishes—Asparagus Both Phones: 211. ' 118 Third St. Weekly Deliveries: 10:30-3:30-——Saturday: 9:00-10:30; 2:30-4:30 to imperialism of the ancient type,” says the dis-| eyes; who used outraged women as shields in their Groceries ciple of Trotzky. “America should withdraw from| trenches, who violated every known rule of hu-|_ : i : their plunderbund and devote herself to the res-|manity and of civilized warfare. Meats Delivered with Groceries toration and development of her own sadly im- * € le paired democracy.” The day the editor of the Courier-News cele- : ‘ brates with a plea-for mercy for the conquered Huns and with an attempt to stir up disaffection between America and her allies and to defeat the league of nations, is the fourth anniversary of the sinking of the Lusitania. 4 ehh ‘Four years ago Wednesday this princely Cu- narder, nearing the British coast, entirely unpro- tected, and with several thousand helpless. civil- ians on board, was torpedoed without warning by a German submarine. The explosion and the chill waves of that north sea claimed 1,154 lives, largely those of | women and children, all civilians and non-combat- ants, many of them American citizens with whose country Germany was not then openly at war. And the Courier-News says that Germany should not be punished for that crime—a crime which was heralded in her press as a victory and which was glorified by her emperor in the award- Delivery daily, 10 a. m.-4 p.'m. Delivery ‘Saturday, 9 and 10:30 a. m.; 2:30 and 5 p. m. ee eee - * tok The Courier-News has been becoming more and more open in its championship of Bolshevism, in the spreading of propaganda which America through three. years of sad travail has learned to recognize by its pro-German stench. It is in keep- ing with its policies that it should now picture to its readers, when peace is about to be accomplished P that “appropriately enough the peace treaty was | = handed to the German delegates by Georges j Clemenceau, the old tiger of France, because it was M. Clemenceati’s treaty.” "°° We are informed by the Courier-News that he, (Clemenceau) “had scoffed at the American and British demand for a treaty that instead of perpe- trating old wrongs. would inaugurate a new era.” We are told by this spokesman of the Revolu- tion that “The deliberate intention of the treaty is to leave Germany utterly prostrate and helpless for at least a generation to come. She is to be | ruined industrially, militarily, politically and held in bondage by allied armies.” The Courier-News seems to express a hope rather than a conviction when:it says: » “It seems certain that, if the German government does not} repudiate the treaty, the-German people will.” “Germany’s repudiation will mean war,” chor- tles the pacifist press. ‘The effect will be to stim- ulate radicalism in Germany, and also in the allied nations. Failure will mean-world revolution,” crows the Fargo Bolshevikiblatt. “And,” it asks, “how can there be any other result than failure when the very maintenance of the present peace means big armies:?”” “There can be no real peace until it is founded upon that principle of good will even to the enemy, AS SOON AS THE ENEMY RENOUNCES HIS EVIL AMBITIONS.” * ing of an iron cross to the commander of the U-boat which did his bloody work. The Courier- News says that Germany must not even be.dis- ciplined, because someone has informed the Courier-News that Germany: has. “renounced her evil ambitions.” The whole civilized world has paid for Ger- many’s crimes. Now that it is Germany’s time to pay, the Courier-News pleads forgiveness and asks us to love our enemies and to cherish them until such a time as they may become strong enough to rise up and destroy us. For the victims of the Lusitania; for the blood- j France there is not a word. And this from the authorized spokesman of the! man who dominates North Dakota politics and who presumes to speak for her honest farmers. soaked remnants of Belgium, for riven western |# OUR SMOKED AND SALT MEATS are popular, because they are best in quality a and properly cured Picnic Hams—Per pound— Whale—Per pownd— 34¢ 22c : Pickled Herring in bulk— FRESH DRESSED Per pound—. CHICKEN 22c SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY best at the least price. When you see the name KUPITZ think of | Leave your orders for Whale Meat, Catfish and Lake Trout for next week, so they will he taken care of. - We Specialize in Cottage Cheese Canned Peaces, 2 1-2 Ib. cans. 3 cans for— 63c Canned Apricots, 2 1-2 Ib. cans, 2 cans for— 49c SpE a ui i seaea| * * * ‘ss , a: : ; sae WITH THE EDITORS |: Here are some of the Groceries that we handle junt's Baking Powder, 1 Ib. P : There is not one word further as to these “Evil |___WITH THE EDITORS _| that are sold at popular prices and yet are cans. 2 cans for— ii aa Ambitions.” There is a mere mention of the sinking of the Lusitania—it is dismissed as an incident. Nothing is said of the devastation of j Belgiiim and of western France; of the slaughter of innocent children and the rape and ruin of| chaste women. Now that the German beast has been temporarily beaten into submission, all of these “evil ambitions” are effaced and, by the Courier-News, most readily forgotten. The great crime, in the estimation of the Courier-News, is not that the Germans should have sent to their death hundreds of helpless men, women and children on the Lusitania; not} that they should have ravaged and sacked and| ruined vast areas of defenseless country in Bel- gium and France; not that they should have treat- ed the women in their power with less considera- tion than beasts; not that they should have sought} to breed a revolution in America, nor that their! agents are still busy in this country, but that a council of the victors should seek to mete out to Germany the slightest modicum of punishment. * * * * This fact is the less remarkable to anyone who has,foHowed the: Courier-News editorials ex- /succeed in doing it at that hour. “Do it now, and do it with all your might,” should be the motto of | BUILD IT NOW Build that house now; construct that highway | at once; build that school, that church, repair that , broken pavement; build that garage, and even' that chicken coop, now—not tomorrow. Go ahead | with your plans; speed the nation on the road to, full employment, and thus hasten the day of in- dividual and national prosperity and safety. Preach this from the pulpit, ye ministers of the. gospel; act it from the pews, ye laymen who pro-, fess a love for humanity; put it into effect, ye county, municipal and state offiicals, and remem- | ber, ye business men of America, ye men of “big' business” and ye men ‘of “little business,” that | there is something in this infinitely higher and, more important than the small amount of money | involved which you think you could save by wait: | ing. Some men put off salvation, expecting to at-| tend to it on their deathbed, but not many ever | every man in America who expects to do construc- tion work in the near future. “Do it now,” and thus do your part toward individual and national business salvation—and even more. Procrastina- the Bolsheviki, the communizers of women, ‘oyers of church and home. ‘It should sur- cateate tion is more than the thief of time; it is the mur- derer of opportunit; noted for their purity and excellence: Hershey’s Cocoa, 21-2 pound | Grape Marmalade, 45c value. cans. Per can— Special—- (36c 33c Japan Tea, in 2 1-2 Ib. pack- | Apple Butter in quart jars, 45¢ ages. Per package— value. Special— A7c 35¢ Peanut Butter in bulk— Canned Tomatoes, 25c value. Per pound— 3 cans for— 2i1c 48c Quality | is the most essential of all in Groceries. It means ‘purity and good health. We give you QUALITY at low prices. 38c EXTRA SPECIAL WHITE BORAX NAPTHA SOAP 10 Bars 48 Cents 15c aoe