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ALL BRITONS 10: “DO THEIR BIT” Government Begins Final “Comb Out” for Men to Swell Military Ranks, WOMEN MUST. CO SHARE ’ Those Unable to Fight Are Called for Other Necessary Service—Econ- omy of Effort, Expense and Material Demandcd. London.—With 5,000,000 men in unl- !form, and with other millions, bow: jmen and women, engaged in occt tions hardly less directiy concer with the war's prosecution, Engl is organizing one more “comb out’ find men for military service, and both men and women for other essenti:t employments. The appeal for men to don uniforms and for wor companied by a renewed insi upon the utmost economy of ev fort, expense and material. is the watchword of the new 1 service campaign under the of Sir Auckland Geddes, 1 national service. “Woman's clothes are the grave of an enormous amount of human enc gy,” he said. ew hats done absorb the work of millions of fingers, and to whatever effect they may have that) effect certainly does not include help- ing to beat the encmy, “Ig we are to make the great ef: fort that we should make, if we really are going to’ make the greatest effort | in our history, our imagination must be quickened to understand the effect of our smallest actions. Everyw in practically every home, we are ing something. I am sorry to we have great organizations which ex- ist to encourage waste.” Only Necessities of War. Sir Auckland insists, the govern- ment is beginning to insist, the people are beginning to understand, that con- sumption to a great extent has got to stop. The producing capacity of the country has got to be saved to turn out the absolute necessaries of life and of war. The case is’ being laid before the British people now in the very sim- plest terms. Not only is everybody urged to cat the least possible amount of food necessary to maintain good physical condition but everybody is told that he must wear his clothes longer, must be satisfied with patched boots, must cut down his expenditures for every kind of luxury, for amuse- | | such conservat | many factors md | ban ad J.. Burney 8h from Tr Gasoline, {dea Originated Abroad Where ft Has Been Used With Complete Success. Washington—Oflicials here are itly interested in a new plan for rving gi by substituting utomobiles ing gasoline, ed abroad, where nis vital, Details of rmula for the substitution have ‘nt to this country and the and other engine The idea or the fo) | been | Idea nises a speedy development. Besid) the high cost of gasoline, e a substitute desir- able. | So successful has the substitute proved in England, for example, that charging statio! avery five miles in some parts of the sountry. In view of this success much attention is now being devoted to the development of tke plan here and abroad. About 250 cubic feet of coal gas is required to equal a gallon of gasoline. Por this reason suitable containers have not been found, The best ar- | rangement now cons of a gas bag | made of balloon fabric, fastened to a | light wooden rack on top of the car, | rom this a supply pipe runs down the | edge of the wind shield on the carbu- i retor side of the engine and 4 | charges the gas either directly into the | carburetor or into the intake near the | ‘carburetor. A check valve obviates ithe danger of a back | enables the driver to us Are, and a cut-off gasoline while 1. In the carrying gas, or vice v eaal that is only the beginning. The! same’ pipe is‘a connection for the gas homie ea re supply main to be used wlien the gas hands that would have been occupied is filled, The operation requires it the new dress that my lady He i is vot going to buy and thet theres will mot-be mude; tie fingers that would have employed themselves pre- paring the confection of a hat that is going to be forsworn; the skill and handicraft that would have found oc- cupation producing suits of clothes that are not going to be bought or worn; all these must find employment of another kind; employment at pro- ducing the things necessary, and ab- solutely necessary, to national life and) ~~ KISSES national war. | Domestic Service a Problem. Particular attention is being given to the problems of domes service, which represent immense wastes of human energy. Nowadays a woman is likely to lose her social standing if she advertises for a servant, especial ly if she mentions in the advertise. ment, as many English housew lo, that her establishment is based on the butler and three maids model, or the butler, houseman and four mnuids model, or something of that sort. I° her advertisement is likely to beco: the basis of derisive comment by 3 who wonder why the butler is not in uniform and some of the maids at least in a munitions factory. While the adthorities who are hunt- ing for man power and woman power insist that altogether too much of it is wasted in domestic service, hou: holders declare that it is becor practically impossible to get se at all. Moreover, it is likely to con- tinue so..for a long period, because = Women, young and: old, who have tasted the satisfaction of that more independent existence that is vouch- safed to other workers are almost without exception determined that they will never go back into domestic serv- Ice, Here is the formula for the mobili- vation.of national man power and na- tional, financial resources: Discharge your servants and see that they get enlisted in national service. Save the money that you would have paid them gine propelled by coal gas develops only 90 per cent of the power that is soline. Tt is neces- ta high speed to get One remedy, how- ing in of a regulated » Which sary, to dr the best results. ever, is the m supply af ae the necess: ING RECRUITS Miss Antoinette Elliott, a in wages and buy war bonds. The Pretty New York socicty girl, in a government will pay that money to speech at a navy uiting rally in} New Yor offered to k your former servants as wages for making munitions. The. rest of the YOUNS man to enlist. Twenty-five money. that you save by reason of cir- YOUNS patriots in the audience made a cumseribing your, domestic establish. "Sh for the platform. As they all a ments will be deftly taken away from you by the government through its in- strumentalities of taxation and used to maintain the armies in France and rived at the same moment, it was im- possible to decide which was the first. Miss Elliott wishing to be strictly im- partial, kissed each and every one of SVELELLES Tuas Bata cwekics. otkas anes in almost all the other quarters of the them. world. : Another energy that is being | tapped {s the. great class of women Capicai Punistimerit. ° | who have never imagined that it was| Capital punishment prevails in all | part.of their life to engage in gainful the states of the Union except Kansas, occupation. There are'fewer-of them Maine, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Wash- in England bya good-many.:hundreds ington and Wisconsin. . In Michigan of thousands than there were’ before’ the only crime punishable by. death is | the war. But there are still many of treason. The death penalty was abol- them, and the effort is to enlist them ished in the state of ‘Washington: in} for useful service. i ‘jn 1901. Hanging is the ordinary modé cention, bat im Todi New York, ka, Ohio, Penn: . Special meeting of Degree of Hon- ior willsbe held in K. of C. hall this} evening. : 1 ‘All officers and members are asked | tion is the legal method. In Nevada 1? 11913, in Jowa in 1872 and restored in) | 1878, in Colorado {n 1897 and restored | to be present.’ The meeting will be | hanging or shooting is optional with called ‘at 8 o'¢lock: tha condemned verson, —Advertisement. ee AMERICAN SPIRIT: ON FRENCH FRONT Yankee Push shown iby Signs : boards Bearing Legends of Various Nature. “Keep Off the Grass,” Is American E. gireer's Warning to Avoid Une:- ploded German Shell—France’s Trizute to Fallen Alties, Among all the legends thut tandn he irit nev Bye. The fi c of bust t pew thor. way, and at the s room: has been propped v streeture to mark the This Tunchreem, ef four custome tivo seated on be Gesolation ef the pre © town V cheerfully av red by a holds nailed to the side ef ihe linchroor —=7 BOOST FOR C- WATSH H IT GROW! | Not so far from this cvidence of pulsating Yankee push we passed a German internment cap, a coliection s may be found about of black huts surrounded by several | barbed wire fences, the center one probably charged with electricity. This is the second stage of internment for Hun prisoners, the first being in wire cages at the trenches, More Americans were close by. On the front of one of these huts ; a hasty arm had chalked in white let- ters: a ABODE OF LOVE i t $d “Abode of Love” rau the w lived in ¢ When I ago cer- re spend- other a y in Ame: igion of the 1 n hands (1 for a little ¢ ‘ pintked Within a huge un ed German shell that bad deseend- cd on too great a slant and had not fed it Such shells, and hun reds of Ast-W to-he-slightly ys are found on the battle- » the front, “where the labor have not yet removed or ex- of them are « T have deseribed, and 1” or “Do Not Touch.” in engincer letter: 2 CFF THE GRASS. eur boys still consider it a pastime to devise wayside fter they have lettered a few of another sort . Por exam- “i the Memory of ——, One of the Bost Defenders of His Coun- He Lost Life and Tdentifica- at the Same Time, Yet His Com = Know Him as Tero,” ‘These epitaphs Our troop train ‘ance pass signboards familiar y Ameri- can, among them the insistent 're- minder of “57 Varieties” and the three malted milk cows, The biggest war sign is at the Butte de ‘lencourt, on the Ba ne-Al- bert road: Tt has the dimensions ofvin American bill board and reads: “To Be Kept Intact by the French Govern- ment. Do not The butte, a rocky cone hillock, is surmounted by fivi British troops who lost their the thousands in storming the butte in October, November and December, 191¢. -The big signboard is a moving testimonial of the appreciation of. the French for their loyal ally’s sacrifices. sere FEW WOMEN CAN CAN ; AS MRS. BRUN CAN CAN ; i 4 Hutchinson, Kan.—Mrs. Jack Brun of this city Jays claim to being a strong of Herbert # C. Hoover. She has put up 321 £ quarts of all kinds of frui z Vegetables, There is & vegetable or fruit she does not ; have in her stock. Besides, she § has jellies and spices of all + kinds, and relishes and butters. All this work she has done ia addition to her housework in § / caring for a family of four. et Who Cets the Kies? t have been | * in a little cottage | n, Which they | and a Regular Man?” or “To Une | BISMARCK EVENING TRIBUNE (DR. BUZZELLE WILL ORGANIZE JUNIOR RED CROSS AUXILIARIES Yongest distancé on record at which | thing that will lift you up wT Oy Rev. George Buzzelle, reator of St.) operation of th scopal church and vice; partment, which ofthe Burleigh county Red| pathy wi chapter, hag keen nominated by | . Young of Fargo, state an for the Red Cross; of the orgaiifzation of j ies in the schools of the fy. Buzzelle will co-| never find | | { | i senenanenty “Sinee you worked your examples so” nicely.” sald. the pretty (eachery “TF her, 1 shall give you a kiss,” “Te: responded the honest urchin, “It's only fair to tell yott that my big brother did them sums,”—Life, . Fed to pli {work of the Red Cro south- many homes where it might other Long-Distance Talkings. Getting to the Top. Bighteen miles is said to be the To succeed take hold ef the | a man’s-voice has been heard. This} take hold of the next thing 2: thehle educational de-| occurred in.the Grand Canyon of the! to lift youestill a little high: wh s thoroughly in sym-| Colorado, where one man, houting the | you will go to the top With reusoud name “Bob” at one end, was plainly} ple rapidity. heard at the other end, which is 18 miles away. It is recorded that at Gib- Just Pork CHops. ugh th raltar the human voice has been heard} ponald often goes’ to the store with Pereaen | Ht 8 distance of ten miles. Nis mother, who Is a frugal’ buyer. One day he went alone to the bytcher's, “I want free pork chops,” he svid, “but no bones, or fat, or lean.” . this wo pol aux an important p aries are expect- rt in the | e children the Red a welcome. Rey. Copperas. k upon this new work as Copperas is an iron compound, and he receives formal notic tains no copper. tment —_— Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. rack him among the great of the generation, this young Russian’s visit to America aroused unusual interest. 3y the astonishing magic of his bow, he has established him- p fuuhviiwhwniw) bps rage Sure R dn dem ,® Vic — Poa ark, EOF quality, always 3 of yflis: Master's Voice j the Victor Talking Mach I MTR A RU TA ‘this brilliant genius of the viclin RATA AURA UII nA MYRNA ce Y Hout Rurope as a violinist whose gifts Eis successes abroad have been duplicated in this country. y self in the affections cf the American public. And he has Soa cken his place with the world’s greatest artists who make Victrola Records exclusively. The four Victrola Records by Heifciz iy: just issued bear convincing testimony to his wonderful mastery cf the violin: Valse Bluette (Drigo) Sascha Heifetz Chorus of Dervishes (Becthovgn) Jascha Heifetz Victrola Red geal Records 64758 and 64759. Tea-inch, $1 each Scherzo—Tarantelle ‘(Wieniawski) Jascha Heifetz Ave Maria (Schubert-Wilhclinj) Jascha Heifetz Victrola Red Seat Records 74562 and 74563 Twelve-inch, $1.50 cach Wear these new Heifetz records to-day at any Victor dealer’s. He will gladly play any music you wish to hear and demonstrate the ‘ous styles of the Victor and Victrola—$10 to $400, Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden; N. J. Important Notice. Victor Records and Victor Machines are scientifically coordinated and synchronized inthe processes of manufacture, and their use, one with the other, is absolutely essential to a perfect reproduction, New Victor Records demonstrated et all dealers on the Ict of each month Victrola “Victrola” is the Tofistezed Trade-mark of the Victor Talking Machine Company designating the products of this Company orly, * Ui H ad eA UMMA TRAUNAYRAUNALOAY y [a[BAURAYRAUNAYEAY Fee UA URN RANA RAIMA RATA CAAA TRAN UIA NNY Ta AURA AA TRA RAURAU AUMUND MUNA MOAT AA ae ae. ISMARCK TONIGHT | THEATRE i / IN HIS NEW FEATURE SENSATION 6 Acts-“Wolves of the Rail”-6 Acts WED “BiG TIMBER’