The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 23, 1918, Page 2

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i | { ; i 4 Adi: ity HE HO tis 4 4 2 i = SEG CORR rabbi abe rettein tree: i FOOD 42 AUTOMOBILEIN 1918 ONNTCEDOE SES CE LOLOL SE EOLIEC ROOD EOE LOLOL ETON: M’More Valuable and Important in War Than in Peace, an Absolute Necessity of the Nation Buy your automobile now! | the farm greatest time-saver. The development of the automo-| light, swift-running car takes him to bile. and its marvelous powers in the) town and _ bi in a few minutes, saving of time, labor, money, energy, are more important to the nation thi year than ever. than ever, it is the duty of govern: ment and of public-to eacourag2 and} uphold the automodile industzy, We need in war tho fall product of | every man’s energy, the complete ef- fort of the able mind. The au.omobile, saving ume for the individual, multiplies individual effi-| ciency, and capacity, The valuable worker, moving répid-j ly from place to place, ‘hiak!ng as be goes with comfort aud :peed, is made} infinitely more valuabic by the auto- mobile’s power. The great problem of. the day is} transportation, The automobile Lelps to solve that provlem. | The light, powerful gas engine, in-} dependent of r id roads, inex-| pensive, swift, adapted to all work, is} the helper of the professions, of trade, of ‘industry, and of the railroads. What the telephone has done for.) the human voice, carry.sng thought, | the autonobile does forthe human body, carrying personality where its work is needed. It is personality | that solyes problems and wins wars. | Our chief lack is of men of thi higher grade. One first-class man, plus an automo-} bile, becomes three first class men, for he can do the woric of thre The army general no longer gallops for five hours, i and brain, killing his horse, fifty miles. The liigh-powered automovile car- ries him fifty miles in less than an hour, he thi: and pl arrives fresh for h to cover as taken more than hit) of the best doctors. The automobil> works in the place of those absent| men, enabling one doctor to du the The war iness man, manufacturing, ving his factories to their nohile for him saves th, and. multiplie, The farmer is the foundation and ornerstone of the nation’s pros ssential to success in bullets that kill—for he alive those that do the fight:) kean: ing. ‘Fhe automobile of all inventions is| AWAIT DECISION. Washington, Feb. 25—The situation esterday in the shipyard gohtroversy as one of waiting on the part of the carpenters until government, officials have acted on the proposal of William L. Hutcheson, president of the broth- erhood of carpenters and joiners, that a representative of the carpenters be given a plaée on the shipbuilding ad. justment board if the board is to have the union’s sanction to settle dispute. | Seventeen unions engaged in ship- yard work have agreed to leave all ad- justments to the board, but Hutche- And this year, more} at plow or harrow in other hands. |ernment in "| prepare for this nation the equipment Ae His yed from exhaust- whil contiue their work ing, fast driving, Take the automobile from the farm- er and you take the foo dof millions |from our national production. Con- | stantly you hear of the farmers’ in- creased prosperity—few realize what the engine and the four wheels of the) ;. automobile have done to create that prosperity and the farm's productive: ness. ' of The modern automobile represents American efficiency most highly de- veloped, and the miost valuable asset, industrial and mechanical, of this na- tion. Thanks to the automobile produ cers, the government found ready- made, great bodies of highly organ- ized mechanics. Thanks to the automobile men the| government found, generously ready,| magnificent factories equippel for! | most important war work—the mak-| jing of flying machines, the production | of the thousands of trucks and high| | speed automobiles upon which our) army must travel. The man is not a statesman who! fails to realize the value of the auto-/ mobile industry and the duty of gov-| protecting, encouraging | pand building yp that industry, now in| war time especially, Material and transportation should | be supplied to the automobile industry s to any other great branch of war manufacture. What the automodile has done in the past to prepare the factories and the mechanics for the war need of to-| day, the automobile is doing now to that will be needed when the war ends, and international competition | begins. It is the duty of government to up- hold and encourage the automobile industry. It is the duty of the individual that can afford it to encourage that indus- as an individual, buying the ma- ne that he an afford—AND EV- N CAN FORD SOME MA- ouly the man whose time has no cal value, whose brain amounts to jitle, whose energy is not worth while, can truly say, “I do not néed | an automobdile.” BUY YOUR AUTOMOBILE NOW.— New York Journal. hile willing to let the board questions of wages and hours, cisions regarding conditions of labor, ENIGHTS OF PYTHIAS | ATTENTION! | You are urged to assemble at the Castle Halil at 10 o’clock a. pose of attending our Annital Ser- mon, which will be delivered ‘by | Rev. Bruce &, Jackson at the Bap- tist church. Visiting Knights cordially invited to attend with us, L, M. SATHER, C. C. Mii To TWO Men who'd like to : save some money on a Studebaker Demonstrator Here’s your change—this wi this town are going to have the chance to buy a Studebaker 7-passenger, 6-cylinder car $950!—driven less than 1000 miles. We have just TWO 6-eylinc here that we have been usi season, new. Technically, they. are To get them off the floor QU just about our cost. tion in any one of them, we $2 This price will never again ing too fast. If you want a in‘now. And if you want'a SIX, th quick sale vat ee 1 = = = = S = = ing as demonstrators this past i They are new cars—better than new ears, in fact, because they have been driven a few hundred miles by ex- perts and given the best of care—but we can't sell them for And while you can’t see $100 dupreeia- the TWO carly comers, a chance at next year’s clearance of demonstrators. GOOD ear at a gift priec, eome | Hlerd, supervisor of Armour & Co.'s | till refuses.to allow it to make de-/ m. Sunday, Feb, 24, for the pur-| Mr. Ellerd said the object was to furnish free medical attention to all —| VETERANS OF Die DYING AT R. employes: unable to pay for treatment, OF 100 PER DAY nptoves’ vigorousty \attackot the | statements ofthe witness on cross ex- Philadelphia, Feb, 22 Feb, 23. —Veterans of ¢ mation and sought to show that the the civil war are dying at the rate of charity work done by the packers was 100 daily, acording to Orlando A. Som-| ;eiiuively unimporiant. ers, commander-in-chief of the Grand Public Charities Army of the Republic. Mr. Somers} Attorney ‘Walsh read a statement made this announcement during pa-| showing there were 13 public charity triotie exercises in this city in honor | agencies’ in the stockyards district, of Abraham Lincoln and the Union| which last year furnished relief to! defenders. | 13,000 families. He said at the Free Mr. Somers said there were now liv- | Tuberculosis dispensary there are at) ing approximately 367,000 veterans,| present 2,309 cases of consumption accoraing to the pension office at/ either now under treatment or under Washington, and he added that the| observation, and that the principal country would have suffered a great | predisposing causes of the disease in loss after they had all passed away | the district as given by the attending inasmuch as they had been command | physicians are bad living conditions, ing factor in keeping patriotism alive | improper food, bad conditions of em- in this country. | ployment and lack of proper rest and “We may have to send 10,000,000 | recreation, men across the water before the war-| “Don’t you think it would be better crazed maniac of Europe will admit he | i¢ the stockyards firms paid their men ig crushed and beaten, but in the end | g fair living wage so they could take there can be but one outcome—our | care of themselves rather than have armies will return victors,” Mr. Som: | | somebody. else do it?” asked John ers declared. fe" | Fitzpatrick of the Chicago federation | | of labor. lecel suppose it would,” replied the! i witness. | | Albert Grund, employed by Morris | ‘ing unloading coal, said his wages | averaged $26 a week and that he 1 day, averaging about 62 hours a week. Uy |, it was brought out that nearly all/ the employes had purchased Liberty | loan bonds and were paying for thent| NOT CONSIDERED | & Co. for thirty years, and now work- ‘ worked from nine to thirteen hours a | Armour & Co. Social Service DEX. in weekly payments. pert Doesn’t Know That It Is an Issue Chicago, Il. b. 23.—Harvey G. employes’ welfare and relief depart- ment, testified in the stockyards arbi- | tration today that living conditions | “back of the yards” are better than in Chicago's ghetto and other congested, overcrowded tenement house sections of the city’s industrial centers. He admitted there were many fami- lies in the “back of the yards” district, who. lived in overcrowded, insanitary| 3 quarters, and who might not be prop-} erly clothed and fed, but he said all) 2 of them were not employed at the; steckyards and that many of these | cases might be accounted for by gs fact that the husband was either dead or had abandoned his family. Bad! personal habits, lack of thrift and poor management of household affairs by either the husband or wife or both were mentioned as other causes which led to poverty and suffering by pack- ing house employes. The witness did not discuss wages, saying that he had no information on , that subject. Cost of Living “Not an Issue” He said he did not know whether the big packers ever considered the cost of living when fixing wage scales. | The witness said the question of the | amount of wages employes should re- | without a fault Made of high grade cocoa beans skil- fully blended and manypfactured by a perfect mechanical process, without. the use of chemicals. It is absolutely pure and wholesome, and its flavor is deli- cious, the natural flavor of the cocoa bean. GR The genuine EN) bears.this trade- Fath and is ceive was always open to discus: The witness explained in detail the | work done by the welfare and reliet | department of Armour & Co. A,m: | cal department with five staff 3 geons and three nurses, a cozsulting | surgeon and a pathologist were em: | ployed in connection with the oper: & CO. Ed, tion of an emergency hospital and lab- DORCHESTER oratory. Last year 7,904 surgical and a MASS. 2,113 medical cases were given treat-| : is en ‘ . Me... Established 1780 ment. Thirty-two thousand persons ‘rs. were vaccinated. | = eek only. Just TWO men in at the breath-taking price of ler Studebak on the floor used cars. ICK, we have cut the prices to ‘Il give you, if you are one of to save much more than not even are jump- buy a ear like this Price ere are TWO. here priced for adunurnunancescanenezessenguase RURaUT ARATE Bs cccisnniinsivrvnuunnmi you wakeup some morning and find the price of a BUICK you are going .| to buy has advanced $100 you may well regret that the order was not placed in time. 35 H: P. Touring Car 60H. P. Touring Car poe Motor Co.| MUOCKOANUAGAAAUAGDUOUGQGAANGQUCQUSOOAACANOALAGRLUCEOLOTELACOUOUAUROGAUOUUOUAMs Au nents sea TaA nNOS Bismarck, N.D.. The Thrift Car Men and women can not hibernate in winter — —they must keep going—‘hzs winter more than ever! This all-weather sedan protects health and energizes activity. 4 Ample room for five adults — staggered doors— adjustable windows! , Because it thriftily provides all the essen. tials of -complete satisfaction, its sales steadily increase. . Appearance, Performance, : : ee Comfort, Service and Price 3 : \ d Light Four Model 90 Small Sedan : i * 90.0. Toledo—Taz Free Price subject to change without notice es q LAHR MOTOR SALES COMPANY Haggart Block Distributors , Bismarck, N. D..- e OURDEDRANGRALNESOGESONNROUENE anenauananaaaniye t © i 1 ae Runabout = $435.00 Cad guarantee i Touring Car - $450.00 livery and price for F.O.B.Detoit 2) 30 days--buy now and be sure of your Ford when wanted — OGUOSUROCQUUGORNODAUARUDLANONEROQAUDSOLNANOONONENSRULISE:

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