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t i i fis) Diz ‘wd BES. 3 NE HOLDS, UNCLE SAIS HY RELATION, THE U, §. A. FORE , TRIBUNE WAR - DISPATCHES, READ THRONG Rev. Withers Applauded by’ Packed Auditorium When He Curses German Emperor FORGET - ME - NOTS | GIVEN MRS. WILSON MARQUIS’ MUSICAL ADIEU Enthusiastic Audience Sings and Cheers Itself to Exhaustion ‘Through Long Program Fighting America—“Red( white and | blue blood,” as the movies character- | ize it—was manifested at the com-) muniy sing, held in the auditorium, yesterday afternoon, The men and! women who sang and cheered from} their hearts, loudly and almost un-} ceasingly, were not the same men} and women who sang and cheered on previous occasions there. The great! German drive, and possible victories, stimulated and animated the grea‘ throng. They are no longer liberty-; fed, satisfied Americans, but fighting-| mad, earnest Yankees, transformed 'by the iron heel and mailed fist which | meant to crush their spirits. Tribune Dispatches Read. “And the line holds!” read George | N. Keniston, of the Bismarck Com-| mercial club, chairman, from an Asso-' ciated Press dispatch furnished by! The Tribune. Wave upon wave of ap-| plause swept the house, The great, nat Re wp god of Liberty might have been per-| MADELI-E van COMBRUGGE sonified by this thousands-unit mass. | 7 cee ‘Again, when Mr. Kenniston read a; Madeline van Combrugge is © the later. dispatch, he said, “The Tribune daughter of the chancellor of the has'kindly furnished us with news | Gelgian legation. She is holding the from the place where our hearts all| bouquet she presented to Mrs. Wood: are,’ ‘and started to read the dispatch | TOW Wilson, wife of the president, in-| telling of the bombarding of Paris,|2Usurating forget-me-not day. The on Palm Sunday, | proceeds from the sale of these flow-| but the audience; 1 o bade him wait a few moments until| TS Went to the support of Belgian they had ratified his statement about | babies. the location of their hearts. When} the message was read, and the thou-| \yTr THE KAIS sands of patriots learned how the! most lovable city in the world was being destroyed by an incention of} th the minds of blood-lusting savages, then, the house was silent for a mo-|«?Q PELL WITH THE KAISER!” ment. The proverbial pin, if dropped. eee rere tocar ements would have sounded like a shell ex.| /2€2—an inspiration of the program plosion. Suddenly while the speaker, | arrangers, who did not know what platform as song leaders, looked into| would be the trend of Rev. Withers’ j @ sea of earnest, angry eyes—a tu- (alk—“The U.S. A. Forever" was sug- mult, not of cheering, but of hate,| j ij % arose. Bismarck is awaking. The! gested. This song is by Edmund Vance} Da German drive has caused the great Cook, sung to the tune of Dixie. It de. jb deép love of America, Our Country, to; clares, in a truly American w ibe intensely felt by the people cf this ‘ele Sam's my best relation.” Is it city. necessary to here renest thar the No Voice Slackers. whole audience sang? R, F. Marquis, Everybody arose when “The Star|director of the entertainment cit Spangled Banner,” was proposed. And them they created a larger volume of Many ia the) sly applauding throng repeated } cere condemnation of the man- cal personification of reckles: his | ato! BES | BYBELGIAN CHILD NONPOLITICAL, DECLARES BOX ‘ican citizen | stamped out. aoe S28 AN a A piche, powsobuppic Asi wa jesu, VER, AND TO as HELL WITH THE KAISER! SPIRIT OF SING 'DEFENSE BODY ‘Only Question Council Will Raise Is Between Patriotism and Disloyalty NO “50-50” AMERICANISM il Have Boys Over There, and ; I'll Not See Them Stabbed | in Back” | “One thing to be strictly under | stood at the outset is that the Nort! | Dakota State Council of Defense i {absolutely non-political,” said Secre | tary Thomas Allen Box as he forma’ | ly opened the executive office of the | new state council at the capitol today i “The state council will never questio nor concern itself with a man’s pol tics—the one question uppermost wit! | the council is, ‘Are you a loyal Amer Hee: | An affirmative answer {is all that the council will ask. “I have a boy in France and anoth er in training in Kentucky who soor will be over there; other members 0 this state council have sons in the ser i the executive committee repre sents a citizenship with probably 4, 000 boys now in the trenches, ané | which soon will have 6,000 more or ; the way. Cne thing the state counci {of defense absolutely will not stanc for is to see those boys stabbed ir the back here at home. Disloyalty in any form, no matter where it may crop up, no matter who the guilty party may be, will be mercilessly No Fifty-Fifty Proposition Patriotism 1s no ‘fifty-rifty” propos’ tion with Secretary Box. You are witl Uncle Sam or against him; you are: | vatriotic, clear to the backbone, truc to the core, or you are a friend of thr kaiser. He can recognize no ground for neutrality in this great struggle and with the strong views which he holds upon the question of American ism, Box is being relied upon by those who are familiar with his curves tc make the state council of defense ¢ bigger factor than ever in the Ameri ization of North Dakota. a big man physically, and a: | him to f | of the California state cavalry for | vers, and he palled on the coast wit , J. Ham Lewis, now United States ser ve one. He landed in Nort! kota in 1878, and the state ha: een home to him ever since, alth search of adventure has carrie: ar places. He was'a membe i ” from Illinois, and then a risin: young lawyer, and with “Frank” Lane everybody sang. The very roof throb-; music than the big community sings bed with song. There were no voice! in Minneapolis. slackers at yesterday's sing. The na-| Marquis Bids Good-Bye. tional anthem was honored from the: H, S, Marquis, ‘brother of the di- throats of many, to whom song has' rector, played a cornet solo, Young been a stranger. | Mr. Marqui is going away, to the) Rev. H. C. Postlethwaite delivered | training camps, and then possibly to the Invocation, asking the aid of the; the blood-stained altar of scrifice for creator of liberty in this great strug humanity's caus Mr. Keniston told; set gle for its salvation. the audience. And Mr. Marquis! He Mrs. M. J. O'Connor Ill. “smiled as he said good-b musical-! M. J. O'Connor, customary leader of to the folks at home. But the fol! the orchestra was not present, Mr.} prolonged the good-bye, through ap- Keniston caused a solemn hush when plause which demanded two encor he-told the audience Mrs. O'Connor,, The Girls’ Glee club then sang “Na: wife of the popular director, was seri- tive Land,” and an encore, displaying; ously ill. The overtures and accom-: good voice: paniments, however, were played by the remainder of the regular orches-| Gem of the Ocean,” accompanied by tra. the audience in the choruses. “Old Folks at Home,” three part; Caspary’s magnetic personality and = ter it. st chorus, directed by Miss Mary Boy. efficient direction are deserving of} council s ! more from my private means as th The Camp Fire girls presented “The | Case may demand.” said Box today “All de world, notice. She sang an encore. sen, was then sung. am sad and dreary, eb’'ry where I, roam—!” A song distinctly American,; Camp Fire Work Song,’ ‘and an en-: and <containing the undercurrent of) core, avout knitting, knitting, knitting, | sadness that is America’s today. wl ‘working newspaper man, at that time content to be a hard and littl “In order that and remarkable ability. | guestion as to my object in acceptin: Miss Caspary sang “Columbia, the| this position, I wish to state to th | press that Miss! been appropriated for my | going back into the work of the stat: dreaming that some day he would be EC The new secretary of defense saw | a great deal of life and of America be | fore he returned to North Dakota t retary of the interior. tle down on a C went into agriculture county far with th same vim he had put into other en prises, and he made a success 0° Today he is a man of independen’ means, and’ owner of one of the fin farms in the Red river valley. there may be ne every penny which ha salary i of defense—with as muc* Endorses Big Drive “It is needless for me to say that ich caused a stir among groups uf, 4m back of the ‘On to Victory’ driv A War Song of Other Days, Julia Ward ‘Howe’s “Battle Hymn, of the Republic,” sung by all present. followed. There is in that song, also! -Mnes which make for heart throbs to-| day. “He is sifting out the hearts of) men—” and the last lines: “As He: died to make men holy, let us die to! inake men free, while Cod is marching | on!” A song of previous American wars. (Miss Margaret Smith and Miss Mary Atkinson then sang the overture from! “Fingal’s Cave,” and an encore. iMr. Keniston appeared upon the stage and read another war dispatch, | from the American Army in France,| ‘by the Associated Press, sent over by! The Trfbune. The packed house ex-| pressed its interest noisomely. | “We must set aside all social and| political differences, and concentrate our. hearts and minds on winning this war,” said Mr. Keniston, after read- ing The Tribune’s dispatch. Ameri- cans showed that was “their senti-| ments, too.” Hl »And they endorsed the statement! more unmistakably when Rey. Mr.} Withers, of the Bismarck Baptist church was announced. ] “We Can’t Suffer Defeat.” * Rev. Withers is an Afro-American.! But the hyphen was dropped yester- da; Let us say here, there is no rea-| son‘for the use of the hyphen, except: for identification. Rev. Withers is an} American, as sincere and loyal and | true-blue as may be found anywhere. He told of the progress of the war, making his remarks clear through Instrations from often-read passages ofthe Bible. ‘“—And we can’t suffer to‘see the kaiser lick us at this time—| quite!” he said, with a tinge of humor, | summing up the causes of the war, and) reviewing thte principles which} ‘Hunnism seeks to destroy. The tone} of the mighty cheer which shook the! Bouse indicated the declaration} touched. responsive chords. » , Condemns Kaiser. ‘Down with the kaiser, and—TO HELL WITH THD KAISER!” ended Peto aid Bites women who were obeying. “America,” sang by all, standing, closed the program. Rev, Withers delivered the bene- diction. “The line holds, and to heil with the kaiser!” in Bismarck. SEEKS 500 GIRLS FOR) POLISH RED CROSS ‘Madame Laura de Gozdorva Turezy- nowicz, author of “When the Prus- ‘sians Came to Poland.” is now in this country to recruit 500 young women to ae iwes'th Polant enbu overran. that counts nds seven months in a Ger- man prison. = 1k in sictsheds 8 SICK STOCK “when Hind-; | to a finish,” said Secretary Box. “Th j State council of defense went on rer | ord in favor of this loyalty movemer | at its initial meeting. and those resc i lutions stand. I am thoroughly i | sympathy with this drive, and 1 war } to say most emphatically that I ar | Preciate the splendid support we ar receiving from the commercial trav elers of the state in this drive and 1 other war work.” | Lieut. Allen Box, the secretary’: | eldest son, enlisted in a South Africa “foreign legion” for service in Franc soon after the beginning of hostil’ | ties. Young Box enlisted at Johanne: | burg as a private and won speedy pre | motion in the aviation service i | France, where he is now a lieutenan | instructor, Byron Box, a younger so | of the secretary, enlisted in the signe | corps shortly after America’s declare | tion of war, and is in training 2 | Camp Zachary Taylor. Louisville, Ky {where Major F. L. Shuman is com | mander of a battalion. HUMPHREYS’ WITCH HAZEL OINTMENT (COMPOUND) For Piles or Hemorrhoids, External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding, Itching or Burning. One application brings relief. at all druggists Sead Free Sample of Cintment to hreys’ Home. Ledicine Com 156 Willam Street New York. sue lot War Savings Certificates. lof the food and fuel adiminist and of the Army, Navy and Marine f catchy : LOS Dr. Ben L.-Reitman, his bride of a year, and their three- weeks-old son. Special Staff Dispatch Chicago, March 23.—Consider the ase of Dr. Ben L, Reitman. “Pretty tough,” his friends pretty tough.” Reitman used*to scout adout the ountry with Aanarchist Emma Gold ian spreading the doctrine of birtl ontrol. A year and a half ago he ag arrested in Cleveland, after dis ‘ibuting. pamphiets;.on “Why anc ow the Poor Should Not Have Child on.” Judge Dan’: Cull gave him ¢ ne of $1000 and costs and six month: 1 the workhouse, Then about a year ago. Reitman go arried. He quit the birth contro’ ublicity work. He settled down i hicago to practice medicine. Hi rvactice grew. ‘He was made head o e Chicago Health Department. H- | say Lire nea aba "BISMARCK BVENING TRIBUN! DIDN'T PRACTICE WHAT HE PREACHED AND THEN, JUST AS “ BABY ARRIVED CAME WARRANT | sidea the draft boarde in making phys- puGp beobye Vo eHow ape Tbe. phowdgess ical examinations. Three weeks ago a baby boy arriv- ed at his home. Ax then, in his first proud days as a father, word came that the court of Di Gr iGe +) apows OuG vt {hy Ai Yd UNIVERSITY LEARN KNITTING FOR EGNITE MAY BE ASKED Conference at Fargo ‘lomorrow | to Have Important Effect | | on Industry |REPRESE T. THREE STATES Minnesota, South Dakota’ and | North Dakota to Discuss Tariffs | | Fargo, N. D., March 25,-—Railway | appeals at Cleveland had upheld Cull’s decision and that lie would bave to serve his sentence. “Pretty tough,” repeat Ben's friends. ‘But Ben announced that he'd go, in a few days, to start his sentence. He still believes in the birth control movement—‘involuntary motherhood” as he puts it. Friends of Reitman at Cleveland asked Judge. Cull whether, in view of Reitman’s change of occupation, ‘he would have to serve. Cull replied that “he certainly will, so far as I am concerned,” IMPRESS ALEXANDRA ASKS FOR PERMISSION TO SEND FORMER HEIR. TO. THRONE TO. HOSPITAL Jealth of Young Alexis Romanoff Imperiled by Siberian Climatle—Ece Russia Becoming Serious Moscow, Thursday, March 24.—(By he A. P.)—Former Empress Alex-! adra has requested permission from! he Soviet government to send the; ormer heir to the throne, Al Rom- | noff, to @ sanatorium in ithwest | tussia, is physicians say that this | sojourn Siberia is impairing his} ealth. he government commission- | rs are considering the application. | M. Dibenko, the former commission: ; r of marine, has been imprisoned in| ne Kremlin charged with failure to -bey orders and advance while com-/ aanding troops seat to resist the Ger- nan entry into Harva. He will be; ried by a revolutionary tribunal. ! Orders have been issued for the ar-! ast of eleven heads of ‘bureaus in 1e food ministry, charged with brib- ry, speculation, the illegal appropria- | fon of money and incompetency. everal of the accused men escaped afore the order to arrest them could e caried out. Economic Situation Bad. Prices of manufactured articles in ‘ussian cities fell slightly with the ‘ming of the peace, but food prices ‘ere not affected. The shortage of. toney is forcing merchants to sell oods to raise actual cash for their xpenses and this is said to have been artly responsible for the decline in: AMERICA’S WAR SLOGAN HELPS n Many Ways Publicity is Stim- ulating the Enthusiasm of ~ . Yankeedom tHEY ARE” YANK IDEAS 25.—From . every Chicago, March glaring billboard and shining window, from the stage, the motion picture screen, the .magazine and newspaper page and from the lips of 100,000,000 citizens, thre'is going forth today what government publicity: offic. ials characterize as one of America’s most effective weapons against her enemies. It is ihe war slogan. “Slogans ere no new thing tojAm erica,” said one locul government, of ficer. ‘Remember the Maine’ atthe beginning ‘of the Spanish Ameri¢an war set the hearts of 75,000,000. people aflame and.brought about an .unpre- cedented flow of enlistments, Used for Thrift in Money and Fuel In the floating of the Liberty loan bond issues the value of the slogan was quickly: reatized as a most valu- terest and enthusiasm, and later has been employed in promoting the sale ons, ity lignite could be laid down in the Twin Cities at $4.50 the ton, which is considerably cheaper ithan the poor-| est grades of Illinois, Indiana and Io-| wa bituminous can be had for, ; Many New Mines. Stimulated by the prospect of an prices. Woolen goods and-shoes are| increased consumption of lignite, pro-| dropping in price, probably in part be-| duction in. North Dakota outstripped onomic Conditions in commussioners of Minesota, North and South Dakota, representatives of the HES tuel administrations of these three! This girl student of tne University states, lignite producers of North ana|°! New York is shown mastering the South Dakota and traffic officials ot} knitting machine. The co-eds take the Northern Pacific, Great Northern, | 0rders for knitting socks—3¢cents a Soo line, Milwaukee line and the Chi-| Pair. yarn furnished; one: dollar, if the cago & ‘Northwestern, are assembling | Wool comes out of their own’ knitting here for a conference to be held to-| ass. morrow to determine the advisability | of making joint application to the in-| terstate commerce commission for! more favorable rates on lignite from) E North Dakota to South Dakota and Minnesota points. i The conference was called by the} North Dakota railway commission, after consultation with the. commis- sions of South Dakota and Minnesoia, 5 which expressed themselves as favor NNOR ably disposed toward better lignite rates, in view of the fact that the northwest during the coming fuel year may be required to rely very largely|Great Iri: S on this fuel. An informal meeting of : jen , Statesman: Pleased the railway ccmmissioners is being With Spirit He Finds on held at the Waldorf hotel this after-/ noon, and a program: which the rail the Coast boards will suggest at we senera! conference tomorrow, is being formu- . lated. | DOESN’T FEAR FOR ALLIES Old Rates Revoked ‘A few years ago the Soo line had in eftect from Kenmare and Wilton; San Francisco, Calif, March 25.— Ngnite mining districts a through rate| The German drive has awakened the of $2 to the Twin Cities. The rate| West to a realization of the serious- was withdrawn when it was found| ness of the war, said T. P. O'Connor, that {t resulted in the movement of} Noted Irish journalist and member of little new business. Lignite then was|the British parliament today. He an unknown commodity to.the greater| spoke before the Burlingame country part of North Dakota and a mystery | club. to the people on the other side of the| “It was especially gratifying to me Red river. Today the value of lignite|to see the universal interest shown has become very generally appreciat-| throughout the west in the story of ed throughout North Dakota, while/the battle.” Mr. O’Connor said. “Gra- Minnesota cities as far east as Staples|tifying also was the undisguisedan- have take advantage of reduced thru|xlety of the people that the allied rates inaugurated by the Northern Pa-| forces should win. cific in 1917 and have learned to use; O'Connor Optimistic. ‘gnite, ; “I make. no pretensions to speak Lignite coal prices as regulated a.! as a military.strategist; all the opin- the mines by the United States fuel|ions I express are the summary of administration are $2.50 for selected| what I have heard on various occas- lump sizes, with gradually diminish-| fons during my six trips to France ing prices. for.. ruh-of-the-mine and since the’ war, and talked with offi- slack. At prevailing prices, under the| cers in many parts of the world. J old $2 through rate to Minneapolis! have heard, from all the same story - and St. Paul, stove and furnace qual-|- - - that it is within the power of any of the armies, British, French’ or: Ger- man, to capture by a ‘big attack the first defenses of the enemy, but that the difficulty’ really begins on the second and’ third line, by which time the enemy is ready to turn on thé of- fensive ‘all the defensive forces of cannon and rifle. “I see no reason to doubt that this cause of the mild weather. M. Kenjinksky, commissioner of ft- | nance, has been endeavoring to relieve the demand, and while Minnesota shiv-| is what happened on the western front ered and.shirked on heatless Mondays,/un to the present. My explanation North Dakota, lignite mines were fore-| then is that the German offensive the shortage of the circulating medium | ed to shut down for lack of orders. | by having the government pay the| The state engineer's office has just | Petrograd workmen in checks, but! completed a survey of the lignite in- the workmen have refused to accept} dustry which, owing to the many new | them. ‘ |} mines in operation, consumed a full will go for a certain distance. and then will stop. and be driven back avain. [ have not the smallest fear that the Germans will produce a de- ‘on, for a decision means that the The Soviets in many cities are fore-| month more than the same task did ing the merchants.to. deposit their re-| two years ago, when the total produc: | ceipts in the banks and are making | tion for the state was about a half-! levies on the capitalists to provide} million tons. | the banks, with’ currence, | Representatives of the North Dako-! Captain Leo Schmand and Lieuten-j ta ignite Producers’ association who ant Berger, representing the German jare. here for the conference assert) Red Cross, have arrived in Petrograd there is no question. as to the mines’) where they are working with the Swe | abtlity to take care of an increaseed dish legation in an investigation. of|.demand from South Dakota and Min- the condition of German war prison-| nesota, South Dakota has a few pro- ers preparatory to their exchange. ducing lignite mines, but their out-' from Russia since the German occu-| put is-insignificant, and but-for a Joan pation of the city. Herr Mumm, is|of anthracite from North Dakota, the directing affairs there as Germany's] sister state to the south would have special renregentative. Direct train| suffered during the past winter. South service with Berlin and. Vieyna has! Dakota would ‘draw on Soo line and been established and the newspapers} muwaukee line mining fields largely, are printing chiefly German dispatch-} while ‘every railway crossing the bor- es, German money is circulating free-| der into Minneapolis would have a} whelesale destruction by death and surrender, of a great portion, if not the whole, of an army, such ag oc- | curred for instance at Sedan. Canzéian Forests. The extent of Canada’s woodlands and forests is suid to exceed 865,000,- 000 acres, ‘ Tribune Want Acs Bring: Resulte DONT SUR WITH NEURALGIA show | able aid -in’.crystallizing national’ in-| of her allies. ly in the town, with the rate of ex- change seventy kopecks ‘to one mark. Ukranian prisoners are daily arriving from Germany and Austria. ine Corps. The corps jumped.to the fore at the outset of the war with its “First. to Fight,’ and this’ phrase, coupled with the romantic title ap plied to the marines—‘“Soldiers of the Sea"—carried enlistments to a high figure, More recently the corps has coined another slogan appealing’ to ithe same trait of the country’s man- |hood: “Climb to the Shoulder Straps. (All commissions in the Marine Corps \ will be given to enlisted men during the period‘ of the war) thet slog: anes of the corps are | service join the U. S. Marine: , “Serve America on Land and.Sea.” ; i “Our, First Line of ‘Defense | The ‘navy, forced to rely entirely up. lon voluntary enlistments, instituted an energetic ‘slogan’ campaign. ‘The most widely uséd navy slogan hag been, “The Navy—Our First Line of Defense.” A poster that serves well [its purpose portrays a young girl in i gatlor’s garb, the caption reading: “Gee. | wish I were a man, I'd join the ‘Navy.” ; Food and fuel administration offie- lials have-delved deep into the slogaa ‘cauldron in their numerous thrift | campaigns, some of the most cominon ‘being: “Food is Fuel for Fighters,’ save, Luy, for Victory,” “Uncle Sam Needs that Exrta Shovelful,” ‘Food Will Win the War,” “That ‘V’ You In- vest in War Savings Certificates Will Put ‘V’ in Victory,” “Save. on. the Feedings, and Feed on the Savings,” “Help Your Country by Saving Mon- ey,” and “Who Saves, Serves.” In the matter of crisp, compelling slogans France has kept fully abreast Much good work .has \ peen done by the “Remember League” Corps agdert that the use , {BOOK on treatment of Horses, Cows, Humphreys’ pathic Vet- since, 156 William St, N.Y. are ee RPP ROEZ a ibid lat tcngge bie-An | the country is. avenged. des which, through a propaganda of slog- Leaders] ans and posters, has burned into the French mind the German atrocities, fn oriler thet the fight might not be an average of 78 bits out of a possible! nerve force. SCOTT'S is rimes Allemands (foot whieh. eat ts that made by thel ing. the nd: wi dozen or more active mining districte —— to draw upon. The: largest lignite Use Soothing Musterole mine in North Dakota, the Washburn | — es Lignite, at Wilton, is located on both| When those sharp Pale go Aeseten| the Sco line and the Northern Pa- through your cific west of the ‘river, on the Soc |secms 89 Ba soul sont coun gob 8 line all the way from Wilton Ao; the | Betle. Mo bere ai on ne a northern state line, and on the Great) A inflammation Northern from Minot west.. There are soothes omy the pain, usually giving scores of: places where with little or ‘etsterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Better than a maustard and coes not blister. no expense new mines could be open and nurses frankly rec- throat \° ed by stripping and operated most economically with steam shevels at ‘Many ommend Musterole for sore t, bron: chitis, croup, stiff neclc, neural- a trifling cost per ton. Bera anh aches’ of the back of Burglars, “Beware! pimbago, pains ‘Women Are Learning] Sint, P2% 278 must, ra gel | chest (often prevents paeamoaie) wt MOTHERS, LISTEN! When work exhausts your sirength, ee you nerves are tition I and you feel Tindows: you and need quickly the tich, creamy, nourishing food in SCOTT S EMULSION to check your wasting powers, liven your blood and build up yo Burglars beware! Women are learn- ing to shoot—to shoot straight. 'Mem- bars of. the Women’s Motor Corps of America are taking up revolver prac- tice all over the country. In New York the police depratment has turn- ed over the revolver range to the wo- men.. Their record the first day was cookie: ie e Shows one of the ‘New York girls at practice,