The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 4, 1917, Page 8

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WHILE WE ARE FIGHTING FOR DEMOCRACY IN EUROPEA MAY WE HAVE DEMocRACY aT Home? SOCIETY WOMEN ACT REFINED, INTELLIGENT, AS PICKETS ANOS ‘ i frage White oF CHICAG TYPE OF BANNER USED BY WOMEN IN USING THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT To PETITION THE GOVERNMENT. 4 Miss ARE THROWN INTO THE WORKHOUSE WITH NEGROES AND CRIMINALS, MBS 4 CatHERINE, Flanagan | d Luey wing, Now IN OccOQvAN . - Miss LAVINIA . Dock, "WHO ASSISTED CLARA BARTO IN REO Cross WoRK IN *98) The jailers weren’t going to let him, all reporters and artists having been barred. But as a congressman Baer was able to obtain admittance where non-official sketchers and writers failed. He gives you here in a few graphic sketches his impressions of the suffrage ‘‘Joan of Arcs.”’ jtiss Geay, A CoLomapo VOTER. Imprisoned In Occoquan Jail for Heckling the President) inst i's swore wees “MISs Eona Dixon, “, | (EIGNT, 98 Reunos) TYPE OF WOMAN - ' ATTACKED’ BY MOB IN THE Nation's CAPITAL. John M. Baer, concressman from North Dakota and caricaturist for the Daily Tribune, visited the Occoquan jail, where the suf- louse pickets are penned. SOME TRA,” SAYS CHARLES All About the Myraids of Ther. tmometers on the Walls, the Pink: and Blue Satin Drapes, the, Double Silk Curiains, (1c Sacred! Ikons aad tho Grand Drchess Olga's Hand-Painted Cold Orcam Jai. s This is another of the series of articles hy ‘Charles Edward Rus- sell, staff writer of The Tribuxe, who has just returned from Rus- s'a, where- he spent ihree months as a member of the official Unined Ctatzs commission to the new Russian government. CZAR'S. PERSONAL TRAIN-IT WAS. | in the private train of Mr. Nicholas omanoff, late czar of Russia, now srowing potatoes about three miles northeast of Tovolsk, Tobolsk-co, Sil It was an extremely Nandsome train and I don’t know anythink that better illustrates in compact form, the huge and expensive folly of autocracy. ‘There were nine cars, each a mar- yelous specimen of workmanship, in- side and outside. They were made of stecl and yung upon specially con- structed springs of the finest tem- pered metal, so that they rode as if they were floating in the air. In the original train there was a By CHARLES EDWARD RUSSCLL (Copyright, per inter) Going and ccm 800 miles across Rus lod 10, and Siberia THE OF ‘ar for the czar and his wife; a car for the children a car for Baron Fred- cricks, the old chief boss of the im- perial household, and for the immed- ito staff that attended upon the czar FIRST THE NEW ONES T= first permanent molar is the large est and most important tooth in the mouth, Look for it between the ages of five and six, and when it youngster to the dentist. This is the best time to over to the tooth brushing comes, send the win your child habit and good health. Give the child a tube of S.S. White Tooth Paste for his very ewn. It is a pure, wholesome, non-medicated cleanser, a3 do lightful to use as it is efficient. It is made by the world’s best known man ufacturer of dental equipment and supplies according to a non-secret formula approved by the highest dental authorities, Your druggist has it. Sign and mail the coupon below for a copy of our booklet, “Good Teethy How They Grow And How To Keep Them.” THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO. MOUTH AND TOILET PREPARATIONS 211 SOUTH 12tb ST. COUPON 2255 iy kins 2Y can PHILADELPHIA "Good Ieeth; How They Grow and ey EDWARD RUSSELL and his family; a car for those that | attended upon the immediate ‘staff; ' two cars for the armed guards and _ those that attended upon those that! attended upon the immediate staff that attended upon the czar and his family. | There was also a kitchen car giv- en up entirely to the repairing of the imperial dict; a car that contained the ‘imperial dining room at one end ana , the imperial other; and the imperial baggage car. | . drawing room at the For a reason that I shall tell you later, the 1s car was not used on this occasion. Most of us had rooms in Baron Fredcricks’ car or in the children’s car, fi In my room there was a book case, a writing desk liberally equipped, a small closet, a great many shelves, a chair, and d comfortable couch that became the bed at night. There was also a wash stand with running wa- ter. The wood work was all exceed- ingly handsome and castly. The walls were covered with some kind of satiny stuff in pink and blue, I think it was. The windows had double curtains of heavy silk. There was a beautiful thermometer fixed outside of my window, there was = beautiful ther- \ X mometer fixed in X side of my window, here was a heauti- | ful thermometer on the wall of the ‘corridor just out- side the window of that corridor op posite my door. There was a very handsome —_barom- eter done in brass on my wall and under it a very handsome clock. All the rooms on simt- ry ay a luxury. The ‘room of tne crown prince, the czar’s only son, was done in blue and gold. I believe, or something like that. It larger and contained two couch- sy chairs, a very good desk in the young man had left some of his papers, and a double allotment of thermometers. 1 judged that the prince could lie in his ded and read the temperature in four different spots at once, and it there is y hamen felicity greater than that, what can it be? All the fittings in this room were silver plated ¢ to the door handles was whict His prince) slep' behind a curtait that was a peachy thing of a delicate shade the name of w h I have for gotien but exper id it was per rand. Water was conveyed sh bowl through a silver plate pipe. The next two reoms were equall One was fur me other color laree and imposing nished in blue and si mauve, It , and hac beautiful rol airs and ther Mometers to deat the band. AlN th rooms had thermometers and barom eters and clocks, suggesting that the weather must have been the favorite subject of intellectual discourse when the imperial party went out to ride. Also, the Grand Duchess Olga’s room had a hand decorated cold cream jar, said to be extremely choice and a work of art. de All the rooms had very thick, soft || carpets and hand, painted ikons. es ) In the drawing room part of the, dining car there jjvas a marvelous Vitable, which being opened in the cen- ter disclosed out- (its for every kind of game known to man, from roulette and faro to crib- bage. and craps. It was sweet, to ride along in thar train and compar M) (ts barbarous pro- fusion of waste and ; axtravagance with some things you saw out of the win- window: For - in- stance, the railroad was cfippled for lack ‘of freight cars and ldtomotives. At one place there were 800,000 tons of reight piled up, much of which had been there three years and some Ob} which had’ begun to rot. ‘Much of it was freight imperatively “demanded for the carrying on of the war and even for the feeding of the armies. Yet at every division point there were locomotives . and cars awaiting re pairs. They couldn't be repaired because the, grand imperial mismanagement, which made a hash of everything it touched, hadn't provided the toos or the material to repair them. Silver plated wash bowls and voor handles for the princelets and no tool, steel or machinery to keep the road going. Satin hapgings and hand paint ed cold cream jars and. no lathes. Carpets an inch thisk and all kinds of fol-de-rols for a band of parasites and ‘he road’ shy of hammers and jack- screws. It was also swect to pass a train of fourth-class cars and see the people on whose broad backs used to be Jaid all the burden of this thing, whose toil supported it and whose sweat paid for it, jolling along on boards laid across trestles. * You peeded to see a few of them before you could get all the sweet- ness out of the | reason. why the } ezar’s car was not | there. It started with the rest from Petrograd to meet us. But some of these horny” hatid- ed ones that had with their labor supplied all this in- sane extravagance recognized it and got the idea that the czar was in it, escaping from Pe- trograd. So at one of the first stops a party of husky gentle- nen in high black boots cante aboard, ‘fle in hand, and insisted upon ‘earching the’car to'make sure Nich- las Romanoff. wasn’t hidden away | ‘omewhere. And they poke: their ‘ayonets into so many corners and) hrough so many hangings and they nussed things up so gencrally, that it was deemed best ‘o take that car out of the train. Yes it was a grand coxtraption, that ‘rain. But observe wha: its glories really amounted to. Si: months ago wherever it appeared in Russia it was ‘a-thing before which men bowed as Ya’symbol of autocratic power that would Jast forever. And on June 1. THE PATT The Soo Hotel 50c, to $1.00 eee Northwest Hotel had signed’ his abdication, «4. tha yépresentatives of three democracies, the Unifgg States, hina and Russia, A Hii Cis Ehcel ot Hei ond cold water in every and mocked at vanished autocracy. wee ig 4 — a gone—but tHe people suse ben The McKenzie |“ a — pas for fall secting, Bis Rees tot cedead ee fier ern Eon EUROPEAN marck Elevator & Investment Co., See Hotel Sy tal aa ote (Calc in connecn }00 rooms with bath. The NORTHWEST, 100 Rooms __ The McKENZIE, 210 Rooms The SOO, 125 Roome THE HOTEL CENYER'IN BISMARCK, N. D, _EDW.. PATTERSON, Owner and Prop. BisiPOe BAAR Puilding. NEW-YORK'S DRAFT | commanded by four hundred officers + jJevery man, who has been passed by ia the local exemption boards, has been of the U. S. A., most of whom receiv. “ aa requested to join in the parade as the ed their commissions at the recent of: v4 guest of the city. The men are to be ficers’ training camp at Platisburg New PO, Sept"}—Untrained, ana — without, egitorms, young men who have -bcen drawn to represent this eity in the new national army march- ed up Fifth avenue as. part of the progrant arranged in their honor by the city -before they leave for their training camps. Each man will wear! aii arm band, stamped with the let: ! ters N, A. Although it is expected that not more than one-fifth of the city’s quota of 38,621 will leave for de training camp on the first call, “Exclusive Service” Lahr Motor Sales Company Day Phone 490 —_—_ unnnnuannevaveneneanueueasene ————$—$—$—$————— OUGANAAUOOSONCEHONCONBONONEOUSOUSUEANONOOOND ananunnannngyl PO CUNNGnnscacagnangans MUU who are training and fighting for the cause . of Democracy SEND THEM THE TRIBUNE | whether that place be now their training ‘camp of at their post over-seas. It will be | the Most Complete and Best Daily Letter they. can have from their Home City and Awan State. To the Boys of ve Drafted Army ‘3 of the ~ National Guards the Tribune makes its Lowest Subscription Rate of : $3.00 per year IN ADVANCE weed TTT TITTIES CT OT I i seaneas ae “The Tribune is with the Boys and wants to be their daily Companion. If your Boy is to go, io Ee or is there, PHONE 82, OUSDULUAOGRONGEDNNNCQONNagoucnguccgausansent » or Write Circulation “Department and order the Tribune sent to his post TTT PO DT 4

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