The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 26, 1917, Page 8

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BISMARCK DAILY. TRIBUNY WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 26, 1017. - exemption board today transferred its { examination of their second, classes of DROUTH INSURANGE |Hark! Hark! Hark! The Girls Are Marching! cies om te capt the i Fea floor of the federal building. The | Holy Land's Only River. MEN BELIEVE THEY 4000 British Tommiettes Aid British Troops at Front, ers ores rats asta 2s, On ome oe ae ek from decisions of local boards as well! 599 mites from the’ roots of Anti- , ial clai ; f CAN FIND WAY Wie Women Prove They Can as industrial claims coming direct to Excel in All War Work Ex- Seer cept Actual Fighting the district boards from registrants Ask State Insurance Department thd coated By KENNETH W. PAYNE. included in the second call. Many counties are only now completing the F to Keep Hands Off Till | (staf Correspondent in London of the Daily Tribune.) Tangle Is Unwound London, Sept. 26,—And now it's the MANY FARMERS WILLING Ty.) Behind the zone of fire at the Pri- TO TAKE BACK PREMIUMS tish front in France, billets for 4,000 ! girl soldiers have just been com- Representatives ui the National) pleted! Union Fire Insurance Co., of Pitts-| And the girl soldiers are already on burgh, Pa. which has written inj the job, actively helping their brother North Dakota from its western head-|Tommies win the war. quarters at Waseka, Minn., more thi They are snappily disciplined mem- $2,000,000 worth’ of “drouth" i bers of the Women's Army Auxiliary ance, called upon Ins corps—the “W. A. A.C.” They have sioner A. S. Olsne enlisted for one year or the duration a heart to heart S|of the war, Which implies that it's they were encountering in adjusting | likely to be a long war yet; and when Flickertail losses. it has finally been won there will be Risks, they declare, were written Dy] serious question whether women or their agents as late as the middle of| men did most. July, when crops already were gone.| Short of actual fighting there are They find hundreds thousands of|few kinds of work behind the front dollars worth of this business on their] these girl soldiers will not soon have books. in a majority of instances,|taken over. Drivers in the motor they claim, the farmer, when the transport service, orderlies, military uation is explained to him recogn: telegraph and telephone workers, air- Lebanon to the hend of the Dead sea., Not? a single city ever crowned the banks of this river. Coming Our Way SUEEORELTSRELCSESOUSOREGUSECESEEEDEESUSOUONS! Of course Yuu are. You want to see the new models, new fab- Yics_ in - iridescent . thades, greens, browns, grays, in checks, plaids, stripes UNUROCEOOAEONOAEONEEL rueaiieeintaainyieecinanrumnnTnttT the ableness of making the | plane repairers, mechanics, cooks, car- é eee ariel ie Me took out | Renters, shoemakers, tailors and mes-| TOMMIETTES OF BRITAIN’S WOMEN’S ARMY AUXILIARY CORPS IN THEIR LAST DRILL I aid mixtures, Mili- his insurance, and is willing to iecebt | roeeeaaene list of their occupations PARK, LONDON, PRIOR TO LEAVING FOR THE FRONT IN FRANCE. =) 8 ins pand 1s ne:toine is endless. ' tary touches, yes. {= what he has. paid in premiums and re-|" For every four Tommiettes, three Suitably accommodated in camps —— = pk ae 2 i turn his policy. " . Tommies are released to do actual] and barracks behind the front, and un- jands in Montana. Drouth conditions 1 All prices, = Reports Misleading. fighting, the only war work in which|der strict military discipline, their \ ayes pad there that th a DISTRICT BOARD NOW FA rts coming to the office of the | men can still excel. numbers are continually increasing,! VCTe 8° bad there that the young men 5 1-4 Ba ce commissioner were to the It is hardly 60 years since any war| and the importance of their war work were discouraged, and declined to file | . $u .00 3 effect that the drouth insurance Com) service was though impossible for] cannot be over estimated. ‘on any of the claims. offered. Both HEAD UARTERING IN i 3 panies were repudiating just claims.) women, Florence Nightingale opened| The women soldiers at the bases in|are drafted for servige witi the na- $20.00 FH agents of the National Union de-) yy the hospital field. Today almost| France and on the lines of communi-|tional army and will go to DesMoines : i B: is not a fact. They are et! the only men in the big military hos-| cation are paid from $100 to $130 a/ with the next North Dakota contin- = deavoring to get out from under a/ pitals are the wounded soldiers and| year with free board and lodging. gent. They had hoped to pick up $25.00 f Joad of bad business which they claim) tne surgeons. In the Third London| If the name “Tommiette” sticks it| homesteads under the special terms \ oy aves Spee general hospital, caring for 2,000 sol-| will be not as a joke, but as an hon-|which Uncle Sam grants his citizen 7 to neglect, it 1s said, on the part of its| {ers are 500 women, nurses, order-| ored title, poet: Offices Moved Down Town for % west headquarters in not paying] myo, Seay. . : " - ; closer attention to the mass ot econ hey are quicker, gentler, more effi- f 08 \ WE sitent'as WERDER m: | Greater Convenience Regist- $50.00 pe PE eae meta eae The munitions works are practical- CH MP LAN | Ss] husband can st an operation? trants and Members probabl was swamped. ly run by munitionettes, 25 to 50 per Doctor (absently)—“My dear madam z=. 2 New Proposition cent more efficient than men. ] SHEYENN BOYS you know his fi affairs bette: | For the greater convenience of reg Drouth insurance isa. new thing| "The ministry of munitions has just than T do.” istraniseaeho conte to Bismarck |to ‘ present claims in person, the district , Expert Dry Cleaning, nnnestocaneaerseausstoenannarniannite Hand Pressing and ene ; j Repairing tae o é sompanies|#8ked for more women to make air- eae eS purines planes. In this work of extreme deli- FIND ON LONG UEST the actual investment in crop up to|C@c¥, Such as measuring to the ten- $7 the acre, and their policies cover| thousandth part of an inch, their losses from any number of causes, in- hands and Gaiian cechoutlons trom |p, 7 Ate D cluding hail and rust. Agents anx- . EC 2 ‘eturn From Montan: ‘ter De- fous for business or misunderstanding| Which they have released men for the : ad their business, it is claimed, wrote] front, the efficiency of the women has! lining to File on Homestead policies long after it had become an| long been familiar here. Thousands established fact that crops in their| ate on the farms, hocing, harvesting, Tracts Offered vicinity were almost a complete loss.| dairying. In London the girl bus con- a "The farmer, naturally, was glad to get| @uctors, working 10 hours a day six] Harold Aaslakson, brother of Dep- this protection, and it is now diffi-| days a week, for about $2 a day. with| uty Insurance Commissioner Ale) 5. E. BERGESON & SON UNION STORE—Closed Evenings except Saturday. “Exclusive Service” cult for the insurance companies, af-|@ War bonus of $1.25 a week, have be-| 42 taxson, and Carl Hagen, both from |= . A ter accepting the farmer’s money and| come such models of cheery public Shevonnion were in ‘the She calling oni Lahr Motor Sales Company Within the Law—Closed Sundays. i lesulng ee potley te convince the Saieee that nobody wants them to / fiends enroute home from an unsuc:/= Day Phone 490 a policyholder that the bargain was es A : 5, i ‘ Dolley-holdar that TE the postoffice 10,000 women have| etal quest for good homestead “atqarantstnitantovatanasiuusiananatstustuaceacezeanetegececeenasenasuuiit om oy Business Was Heavy. taken the places of men. Policewom- — } i X’ SEE ESR ESRC OEE A big touring car for five people eee in premiums. It operated in a section| been a tendency the past summer to’ ty of the state particularly hard hit smile patronizingly at the uniformed drouth, and if it paid every loss| girls patiently drilling in Hyde park. claimed it would be strictly up| What were they good for? against it. And suddenly London has been But the companies and the farmers| awakened to the fact that they are are getting together, the former con-/ actually members of an officially rec- tend, and all they ask of the state in-| ognized military force, the Women’s’ surance department is an understand-| Army Auxiliary corps. Their drilling ing of the situation and non-interfer-| has been in grim earnest, and now The Eankers’ Insurance Co., of|en are familiar personages now in 5 ‘ a : g Montana is most heavily hit by this| Hyde park and Leicester square. 5 : “ug. business. It wrote more than $2,859,-| And yet, while all London was fa-' ‘ : * 600 insurance and collected $285,000} miliar with these successes, there has é i was out of sight of the naked eye in Ks 20 minutes. ence until grounds for action appear.| they have marched off to France as a ¢ —_—_ soldiers to take up the work only en- tS wy T listed Tommies did before. = LIGHTEST SEASON SHOPS SSSESEOOOEES , * GIRLS’ WAR SONG. * “ The Tommiettes haven't yet + ” e 9 + developed their own songs, but j the “land girls,” since early @ q spring replacing men on the % “ farms, have a whole bookful: ° HAIL INSURANGE Tune, “The Long, Long Trail.” 4 “There's a long, long line of hoe- if ° ing Farmers First Didn’t See Need |~ Before my lunch draws nigh: @ 4 insid for Protection and Then Had . eee Pave ame Nai cy ce ‘ © For that piece of apple pie. & Nothing to Cover 3 its a long, long time since break- j ‘The season just closed has been the | ® fast, a 1 . lightest for the state hail insurance| * But when my dreams come # Y e oom department since the fund was esta)-| % true, : ‘, j lished, Insurance Commissioner Ols-|%# I'll be tearing down yon path- | ness advises. The total amount col-| % way aa : lected in premiums will not much ex-| To my pork and rabbit stew!” e ceed $12,000, as against $20,000 inj SSeS ESOS Sooo soos Motor ar rices ure oO Vv ance 1916, but out of this fund the state} = = pays 6214 percent of the losses as ad- ‘ justed, as compared with 38 percent N R § HE STARS . aid last year. N} 1 ly el ed th full mil “Farmers put off insuring their Buy your Saxon ‘‘Six’’ now and you buy at cars selling for more than $3,000. Saxon so largely eliminated that you get mileage oa : c til they wi in th y your ea y igen i Would have something to insure: ‘hail Of ALL AMERICANS the bottom of » market that’s going up shortly. Six’ costs $935, « from each atom of gas and oil. storms early in the season were few, 4 ana ines ee, meester protee, ee , Wait and you'll pay for it. Fe 0+ Again, another of the important features of It is important to consider that Saxon ‘‘Six’’ : panies, writing about $5,000,000 worth .: >) Saxon ‘‘Six’’—Timken axles—is also found on is a six-cylinder car. . of business in the state, cut in on us,” A : Ri 1 { . a : seven ling f re 1,700. - sses were 1 : . : , has far more vibrati fricti ‘Bix,’ ae ee aud: eau Nene and material. Many have already.done so... One more. Still another important feature of ¢ vibration and friction then Ws ‘Bix, ” a. son, but old-line hail insurance com- - * Saxon ‘‘Six’’—Spiral bevel gear—is also found — ang it is this vibratio: ‘cti if Fr aeiGe did litle bacdnoes + +m : 2 ration and friction ceaselessly ) punorlunliy: 1 tecoup, extremely $035 is probably the lowest price at which Sax--. on 12 cars selling for more than $1,350. tearing at the motor and parts that impairs 3 heavy losses of 1916. on ‘‘Six.”’ will be sold for a long time. as : flexibility, slows uo acceleration, makeg a dif- ; —— And there are 7 other of the big features of ference of degrces in the quietness of its oper- be Perhaps you are thinking of buying a car cost-. Sayon ‘‘Six’’ such as Timken bearings, Timken tien, increases repair-service costs, and finally | ; The charm o { ing $239 or $300 more than Saxon ‘‘Six.’’ .~"_ axles, Continental motor, Stromberg carburetor, takes nearly 50 per cent from the standard ef- ‘ f ‘ Remy ignition. Fecélers radiator, Spiral Bevel ficiency of the motor. : the Gordon lics If you are, then by all means cee Saxon ‘‘Six’” gear, found on 30 cars selling for more-than ; ‘ i in: smart lines. at first. And you'll save the $200 or $300... $1,150. i These being facts—and facts generally known : ‘ f pat ‘ ; now—it is obviously not the best of business © : : j tractive colorings For we can prove to you—or you can prove'to Now consider the matter of upkeep cost. You judgment to purchase any ‘‘four” priced be- 24 and its mellow rourzelf{—that there is no car costing $200 or will find the cost of running Saxon ‘‘Six’’ quite par $800 and $1000 when Saxon ‘‘Six”’ can be ee | ‘ | £300 moze than Saxon “Six” that will match visibly less than the cost of running a car priced Purchased at $935. f. o. b. Detroit. It_may ; | quality. A hat it in fine-cor ouality. : several hundred dollars higher. not be that low for long, so buy now. worth your while Saxon “Six” Sedan $1395; Saxon ‘Bix’ j d th 1 i For instance. One of Saxon ‘‘Six’s’’ important Its six-cylinder motor has been so refined and Chummy Roadster sas ben Roadster oe: an the price. | fcatures—Tedd:rs radiator—is also found on 8 _- developed, and vibration and friction have been Prices, f. 0. b. Detroit. 5 ; et your dealer F - ‘ : ‘ L y DEALER Wanted---A competent business man is desired to han ile Saxon cars in ths territory.’ WRITE AT ONCE TO-- - : i “§ Gordonize you to- ; t af officer at Mineola aviation field, wh s i \ ; a hi rt t ived hi: ‘ission. é , 4 _ day. a ee ee _ Northwestern Automobile Company | oped at the camp. He made the rec- Minneapolis, Minnesota | ; din a bipl ipped Gordon hats [22sec wa 231 Se»

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