The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 20, 1918, Page 2

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Ne tio . FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1918. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE ARE WINNI _WOMEN A Here’s a birdseye view of the day’s work of a chauffeuse of the women’s motor corps, affiliated with the National League for Women’s Service. Young society bud (figure 1) gets het orders by phone the night before; then we see her next morning (figure 2) dressing in her khaki and (3) walking to report (4) to the “officer of the day.” Next she gets her car (5) from the mechanician and spend the day (6) driving army men on military errands. These pictures were poséd especially for the daily Tribune by Top-Sergeant Alice Pickslay of the women’s motor corps. Soares aes { | mobile on the great profits he has | bell of the National Milk Producers’| gon Grange, N. J. > ichols of the Oil made.” | Federation, John A. McSparren of} Grange. {| | V V ELC @ I [E, FL 6 V V i 'S f \] I 5 ILES ‘ | Among those present at the confer-’ Pennsylvania State Grange, A.+A. El- The farmers have appointed a*com- “ ” ence are Charles S. Barrett of Georgia, | more, president of the Washington | mittee to consider plans for recon- e lot the Farmers’ Union; Milo D. Camp-) State Grange, A. F.' Swift of the Ore- struction after the war. WOUNDED YANKS ARRIVING.IN “BLIGHTY” | 7 : | New October Numbers of BY HAROLD EDWIN BECHTOL. (Europkan Manager of the Newsoance| Enterprise Association.) London, Eng., Sept. 20. ajor E. H. Hisk, commanding officer at the new} American army hospital at Dartford,) « England, looks at his watch. | “Convoy time!” he calls out. | He and his ft grab their hats} and jump into flivvers waiting outside |! the door. | They lead the way for a bunch of} waiting ambulances with big Red | Urosses on the sides, to a little way-| side station nearby. | Already many British women and} kiddies are hanging about the station | platform. A bunch of wounded Amer-} icans are coming in in a minute. | The Red Cross train pul in. All} the men about, members of Major} Viske's staff, Britishers, station em- ployes. grat = stretchers, and, the) wounded Yanke ure gently carried | out. Women and kids: line up and! smile at them, talk to them, hand! them flowers as they are carried to/| the. ambulanc From anothe! art of the train, men | with arm wounds and the like, who] can walk, pile off the train, all smiles. | « A, young Britisher of) three, looks »at the apple he has taken a huge b out of. carefully puts the bitten i | down in his palm and offe: | ee = os ple to one of the Americans. i An old, familiar melody of exquisite { American in: s they're not allo H < SH A a to eat fruit, and. has a-chaq w i charm, sung by this brilliant soprano with \ Noung a Jona ull about the fishin’ | the rare color and iritense’ feeling that ole i orhood. H 1 ~ A The ambulance train finally have placed her so ‘swiftly and surely out for the hospital and ar | ° ROL * +e i an hour later. Every wound in the foremost rank of American singers. 49443—$1.50 that’s how they f The pictures show: | No. 1.—Carrying wounded Ameri-| cans from the train. No. 2,.. Young Britain, perched on the driveway fence, welcomes the Americans as they're carried to the! ambulances and taken to the Ameri-} can hospital at Dartford. No. 3. The “New arrivals” being lifted out of the ambulance in the hos-| pital grove. | yw —- FARMERS AVER WHEAT IS RAISED “AT ACTUAL LOSS At Conference Called to Form National Federation, lisse | Charge of Profiteering and Object to Price Fixation. - Hamlets “Drinking Song” by George Baklanoff 9 . The greatest Russian baritone of our time, in | ~ the role of Shakespeare’s tragic hero. © Bak- Janoff ‘is possessed of a warm, rich voice and a fine sense’ of emotional values. His power- “ful interpretation of this .immortal aria- is marvelous‘mn its virility and its reckless mock- ing gayety in the face of overwhelming tragedy. e 49452—$1.50 By 3 (N. E. A. Staff Corre: ‘Washington, Sept. 20.—The farmers of the nation have decided at a meet-; ing just held in this cit yto build and | open a permanent headquarters in Washington, D.C. Funds were appro-, peated and plans definitely formulat- ed. The conference, called as a ‘“win- the-war” conference. was made up of 250 representatives of farm organiza- tions of the country). representing 37 states: The first subject was. how ‘ PHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM |S Oe be: A Eee Almost any man will tell you |best to wih the war and to ‘win. it it! prices at which the wheat is-sold does | munitions man gets on pean ‘o that Sioan’s Liniment possible in 1919. ‘The second was how’ Hot pay the cost of raising the wheat. He would take’ less, ei Ent he ef \nest the farmers of the country may! , Want Figpres: Published. jdoes not see any reason why mens ee 4 ecome united on lihes similar to the} The conference passed a resolution ibe di criminated against ‘and imade to r « |Federation of Labor. It was officially: asking for the publication of figures’; S611 his product @t) less than cost For practically every man has used | noted that organized labor, by reason |compiled by the department of agri-| while in other industries the govern: pM SM Asa Med jof its solidity} of ‘orgafization, had'|culture, after an investigation by ex- | ment permits profiteering. : joints, the resulta of weather exposure, {Deen given anything it demanded as peat shomine cacti cost of raising | Ca ree by ee Lh ale = ‘Barbara Maurel ~ Newest Columbia Star, ‘Sings “Long, Long Ago ” Alsace is the motherland of this gifted | _ young ‘mezzo-soprano, whose wonderful technical perfection is duc to the tedch-3°: ing of Jean De Reske. | She comes ditect 2.2 from Covent Garden’ Opera apa House to make her Columbia’ @& debut in' two well-loved ballads, “Long, Long Ago” and “Ever of Thee.” A2608—$1.00 fomen,. toa, by. the hundreds of {soon as war began, whereas the farm} “Qne of the. speakers expressed the |the present war emergency is one nds,. use: ior H Ris, Cbg ers not being, well organized, have | sentiment of the farmers as follows: | calling for the greatest admiration. | /. ; Y : gia, sick headache, | received little! dr nothing. s | ‘In the case of wheat only has the |He has not stru¢k; he has not com- ; . . SB othcr Deautiful Selsctions inthe v ears oothisic ornttc In disctissions and resolutions the | government dealt in direct price fixa-.! plained. The first aed took as ber S \ ‘ * “October List ‘\farmers expressed their belief that|tion. In other industries, the govern- {cent of its men from the farms. iy _ z : oldie: »* 4 of ae practically all the wheat raised this; ment hts confined itself to limiting | there’ are,J,400,000 women working on x att . pecpeistertingead ents grills Ar Ruska 0. af ee -{season had been raised at an &ctual| the percentage of profit. The farmer|farms at™man’s labor. The farmer | n New ji é Z y tt 2 loss. The farmers, they said, were would be glad to be treated in olen accomplished an almost impossi- | i a en ccs Ceuta ae a i O a fi & the most patriotic class of peoplé. in| same way. He would be glad to have |ble task in this year’s production of P i He Jamba Pf . f the country and expressed no hesita-| the cost of his farming operations in-| wheat and yet the general opinion SA ' COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY © oe Yairiment tion in making this contribution-to'the -vestigated'and then be'given the same | throughout the country is that-he has » i ls: Pain war. ‘They did’ feel, however, that| percentage of profit on his wheat that} been profiteering and that he does the country should-Know-that the! the steel man gets on his stefl or the! nothing but ride around in -bis auto- j ‘ . ;

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