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PAGE 6 ; H , THURSDAY rican Girl Travels by Aeroplane, Tank and Wheelbarrow to Sing CTPESSES who have their A owt cary or the use of ele- rent limousines may well thei: beautifully manicured netic with envy of Miss Kate Horis- berg, who has been singing in y. M. Ame ~ bit . A: huts to entertain the American expeditionary Force soldiers in France. In one tour she was conveyed from one stand to another variously in A side-car. A limousine, An airplane, A tank, > A camionette, = A saw-mill carriage, drag, On a railroad handcar, and fin In a wheelbarrow. An army truck among her prospective conveyan: but it became mired and could be used. was Before the United States entered a Balti- vas a dramatic soprano light he toured forty » Woman,” playing Horisberg, the war, Mis more gir, ¥ doing church, opers 8 weeks in the role of © and conce: t ence. When task of entertaining the Ameri boys in addition to furnishing them with mental, spiritual and phys! refreshment and recreation, was enlisted by the Red Triangle’s entertainment bureau for concert She went \ over with the first quartette sent by the “Y,” the Liberty Quartette, work in the war zone. in December and has not signi her intention of quitting the work after more than half a year. Miss Horisberg’s the Y. M. C. A. huts, the soldi theatre in the war zone. audiences greeted her, for Yankee boys in France have learned to depend on the “Y” to keep theny best, clean, healthy entertainment of the sort The supplied with the that is a link with home. young men in olive drab who fighting abroad for democracy preciate thoroughly the unsel: work which the men and women of the Red Triangle are doing for thent there, the majority of them at tisk of their lives. ALLIES PREPARED TO MEET HUN SUB * CRUISER FOTILLA London, England—Desperate to find some justification for their U-boat ruthlessness in the form of “results” the German chiefs are now reported to be rushing out great submarine cruisers, capable of operating out in mid-ocean instead of in the “barred zones,” where allied protective meas- | ures are strongest. The object of the cruisers is, of course, to “get” some American trans- ports. But the allied chiefs are not alarm- ed. Measures are already prepared to! meet this reported new form of sub-| Atop a pile of logs on a timber ‘ included Y. M. CG. A, took up the gigantic singing tour took her to man: Americdn camps where she appeared on the stage at Overflow The remarkable series of rides on unusual vehicles to which the boys treated Miss U. ally“ ces, not the can ical she Horisberg was « manilostation of their appreciation of the “‘Y” work as well as of their delight: at chape- roning an American gith through the war zone. Her novel tour started’tn a speci- men of that quaint but/usetul type of army vehicle known /popularly as a “bathtub,” the rakish. comvoy of a motorcycle. Having swallowed enough dust while in this, she was transferred to a more:prosaic limou-. sine, in which she arrived at an avi- ators’ camp. She sai her way into the affections of the:flyers, wha took her by airplane to her next stop. are This concert was for'the boys af the @p- first American tank division in fish France and, not to be outdone by the aviators, the tarikers insisted that they must “treat ’er rough” by a ride in a traveling fort to the next stand. “It wasn’t as comfortable as the airplane, but it was morerthrilling,” ified ers’ the the marine warfare, and more plans are being worked out. This is not the rst time submarine cruisers have been reported and the allied navies have not been asleep to the possi- bility. Some idea of what the allied operations against the U-boats have cost Germany is given by Archibald! Hurd, who estimates that at least} 200 submarines have been sunk. Lloyd: George stated that 150.had been sunk | some time ago. But ‘he didn’t say; that that was all, and it is general! ! believed in Europe that the number will run well over 200. This, Hurd. says, means a loss to} Germany of from’ $225,000,000 to $240,- | 000,000, It means that from 8,000 to 9,000 officers and men have been kill- ped. BLY W. 5. S. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. | | You Can’t Rub It Away; __ Rheumatism is in the Blood | Liniments Will Never Cure. _If you are afflieted with Rheuma- tism, why waste time with liniments, lotions, and other local applications! that never did cure Rheumatism, and never will? | Do not try to rub the pain away,| for you will never succeed. Try the} sensible plan of finding the cause of | the pain, and go after that. Remove} the cause, and there can be no pain. You will never be rid of Rheuma- tism until you cleanse your blood of the germs that cause the disease. S. S. 'S. has never had an equal as a blood purifier and scores of sufferers, | say that it has cleansed their blood of Rheumatism, ahd removed all trace of the disease from their system, | Get a bottle of S. S. S. at your drug store, and get on the right | treatment to-day, If you want spe- | cial medical advice, you can obtain it free by addressing Medical Director, 23 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga, | Frank'G: Successor tp GRAMBS & PEET For Up-to-Date Plumbing and Heating call on or write Celie | said the singer, when she arrived at the next “Y” hut. “The boys kept taking short cuts that. seemed’ to necepeiiats going over the tops/of young forests and across huge ditches and shell holes. If they wanted to amaze me, they suc- ceeded. I held on desperately and hoped for the best.” The tank Ianded her in a division of engineers, who promptly trotted out the greatest luxury they pos, sessed, offering it delicately but firmly, although it was not Saturday night. They isolated Miss Horis- berg in a little shack beside the railroad and backed up a perfectly good American locomotive, to which they attached a hose with its busi- ness end‘in the shack. And thus, “for the first time in France,” Miss Horisberg had all the hot water she wanted for a bath and shower. Thus refreshed, the singer went on by camionette—called a flivver in HUNS SEEK TO PLAY RUSSIAN TRICK ON U.S. | Would Duplicate Peace Treaties of Brest-Litovsk if Granted Armistice. William G. Shepherd, Who At- tended Parley, Tells of Dangers. By William Shepherd Vashington, D. -Thi 's Brest-Litovsk trick, all ov- er again. The German answer that Maximilian fepresents the Prince German fre they went to Brest-Litovsk. I was in Russia at the time, and in all the earmarks of the Russian trick. The Russians asked Germany the Russian question was: resentatives of the German people? Th answer was exactly the same answer that has been given to Presi- dent Wilson. The Germans said: At Brest-Lftovsk the representatives of the Russian people will meet, face té face, at the peace table, the rep- resentatives of the German people. Stories of Democratizing Germany Rife in Russian This message was taken to the Rus- sian government by different messen- gers. The Russian newspapers, just like the American newspapers of*to- day, were flooded. with’ stories of the -democratizing changes going on in Germany. Interviews with Schneide- mann, the German socialist, and with other German so-called Ifberals,. were sent.past the German censors into Russia. : The Russian newspapers, one year ago, were just as full of ‘Germany’s democratization as the American pa- pers are today. When I came out of Russia, later, and discovered that the kaiser. was still in full power and that the mili- tary leaders still ruled over the lives and destinies of the German people, I was astonished. Every American who was in Russia the United States, to a lumber mill, where she entertained the men of the night ‘shift who had missed all the shows which had visited that neck of the woods. So that there would be no competition with her voice, the ‘machinery was stopped during tke concert. ,To fatten her average as champion diversified rider, of the world, the lumbermen' had her mount a saw-carriage and ridé through the process of sawing a log into boards, thus making her an actress who not only trod but rode, the boards. through the forest’ atop a mountain of logs dragged by a tractor, a bumpy’ journey’ to which the tank ride had hardened her. lowed the hand-car ride to her next stop where, because the truck sent for her was mired, she finished her strange tour in a wheel-barrow. 5 AAA ARR RITER SOUNDS WARNING | looks like | people is exactly similar to an answer | that was given to the Russians be- the new German note to Wilson I see; same question that Wilson asked. The ; If we go to Brest-Litovsk to talk | peace will be meet there the real rep-} Handcar, © for Soldiers. | | | i one-and-abalf inc On the following day she rode Then fol- democrats and men, who could speak |for the German people. Instead, they |met men who represented nobody but ithe German kaiser. . Between the Ger- man people ‘and the Russian people th German kaiser had.erected a stecl wail of militarists. There the mili- tarists were at Brest-Litovsk, haughty, insulting, crael, just as ‘we shall find them at the peace, table, if we sit them now. Americans who were. in Russia in | those days and who followed the Ger- {man knavery through to its finish, cannot be fooled twice. We heard this German peace song sung one; it was {down wit of newspaper cables about democrat- izing changes in Germany, the same talks. by Maximilian Harden, and Scheidemann and the German social- lists, the same Silence from the kaiser Jand Hindenburg and Ludendorff and {the other masters of Slaughter. We w it all in Russia; and here we're |seeing it again. It is ‘more subtle ihere, because the German, having iplayed: it once in. Russia, finds it |possible to play it even more subtly the second time. “Me nrepresenting the German: peo- ple ‘will come to the peace table,’ Germany tells us. like the same lie that was siShown Americans Hew Not tp ‘Peal- With Germany If we g9 ‘to the peace table now there is every chance that we will find the Gerttan militarits there; a steel wall between us and the German peo- ple, whom we are trying to reach, with our peace-forevér plan: \ The kaiser and his six sons, Luden- dorff and Hindenburg, and a whole flock of those German professors who reasoned Germany into the War, must be placed in cells, and the allies must inave the keys to the cells, and Amer-. ican, French, British, Italian Serbian, Belgian and other'allied soldiers must guard these cells}to see that no word goes trom them to. the peace table, in his note was talking to the German people, not, to jl the. American people. He couldn't {of peace in Yie mings of the German | before we even dare say that we will sit down at a peace table. Russia tried to blaze the trail for us {n peace talk with Germany. She has shown us what NOT to be- lieve; what NOT to do. If we sit at a peace table with Ger- | many now we may be following Rus- | sla's route to defext, by deceit and intrigue. ; . The biggest thing I learned in Rus- | ; sla, ‘then, is this: \ “Don’t: let anybody talk your hearing. Don't let any! debate peace. Germany expec: friends here in the Unitcd States to M did in Russia; to spread ber note gives y'll come out of they did in Rus- | the Fatherland, | Ik to both peoples at the same time the same note. He raised the hope | people; he d’dn't intend gr wish to raise the hope of peace in our minds. It's OUR job to FIGHT on; to BUY H on. » sooty Wes, ’ 4 | OLDIER COMES TO i LIFE; BOY,EXPECTS - | MEMORIAL REFUND | ‘Washburn, N. D., Oct. 17.—It is uni-| versally known that Washburn chil- dren are bright but the stress of! present conditions apparently ‘is de- velopigig a sense of humor-that is re- markaible, So far. the Spanish influenza appar-! ently has ayoided this town, with only one stispicious case. Asked Karl Klein, chairman of the Liberty bond \ campaign for McLean county, of a lit- tle boy: pares “How is your father?. What is the matter with him?” “He’s sick,” replied Charles, “He’s got Spanish influence.” This is about a boy who belongs to one of the lower’ grades of the school and contributed to a fund for buying flowers for the memorial services for Carl Knudtson, one of last spring’s high school graduates, who was sup- posed,'to have been killed in France Th death to listen to ‘it. We are Hear Issued to ing the, same strains again, here in our own United States; the same flood Address Address f Dated last month. When the boy heard the “Do we get our monéy back?” repor twas false, he went ‘up to_ his He’ had contributed two cents to teacher and’ ‘inquired: > ag the fund. ee 3 Children ‘Cry CASTOR SON ee SSN ww -The Kind You Have Always Bought, -2nd which has been ‘in use for over thirty years, has borre the signature of 3 e e and has been meade under his per- Lthn Sonal supervisica since its infancy. Od do Allow no one to'doceive you in this, Ajl Counterfeits, Imitations and “‘ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger, the ‘health of Issued by Infants and Children—Experience against. Experiment. What isCASTORIA | Castoria-is a. harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and ‘Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its. age is its guarantee. For more than thirty yéars it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the. Stomach ‘and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and ratural:siecp. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYs Ja Use For Over 30 ¥ - The Kind You Have Always Bought . THE CENTA | Positively No Old: Cards Accepted After September 1 - NEW FOOD CARD ISSUED . Food Administrator Ladd has changed the style of the food card for |” this state. Old cards must be replaced with new ones. Here.is a fac- simile of Customer's Card No. 2, which supercedes No. 1. FEDERAL FOOD ADMINISTRATION Customer’s Card No. 2 > Bears the Signature of Grocers of'State 4 Date of ONNUiannandeAASaNaneRAEOCAEAReREcCansat! purchase Lbs, on, hand Total It ’ : Supply permitted ARURORORCAAEUOOAANAERARONCCORUagoNCHORaROtaN Z 3 SAND. in lots of one , wheat flour, sugar or rules of the Federal Administrator. | It is especially requested that all Grocers “fi t Pipe at that time had the same experience. | We all thought then, from reading the | Russian papers and from listening to | Russian -street and parlor talk, that ‘ the common people’in Germany had} or protrud WB\ won their fight against, autocracy. ea h The talk I -hear in America today, © all ‘and ‘the newspaper reports I read, even the official statements ffom Ger- matty that ‘no longer mention ‘the kaiser, but that purport to come from imen. who represent.-.the | Gerinaii |’ masses, bring back~ ‘mind-all those dayg tn Rus mthe Rus- sian people thought the day’of peace and fair play had come again. crats but Militarists .~ Pyramid. Pile: ‘Treatment gives avick: SS ply 29 stops itenine, ected 304MAINST, BISMARCK,N.D. Boe JOBBERSOF Fittings & Valves All work positively guaranteed = PHONE SOL fue nigral so B' gates expected to meet socialists and: — : FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. SE 688 Pyramid Bldg. 11, Mich. .- Mat Romy eats me « Free xaruple hd Name. < 4 : files, hemorrhoids i fonbiles, oHaeiee : Bismarck L.certify that the within information is true and that I have not bought nor hold in my. possession @ther foods contrary ‘to the ‘ Signed..... (To be retained by déaler and mailed to Federal Food’ Administrator, Agricultural College, N. D.,-at the , end Of each month.» The Federal Food Administration requires that each and every Grocer or Dealer of Flour and substitutes as well as Sugar, must have on hand and #ee that each customer signs the food card facsimilie“of which ap- pears in this advertisement. : "In ‘order to cooperate with the Food Administration The Tribune ie supplying the Grocers with these cards at See thousand or more. : faentiotied place their orders-for these cards at once. Every custo i sign one of these cards and there should be no excuse rest Grover fone without thm. Under ‘penalty of the federal food laws every Grocer must have the personal signature of the customer when foods mentioned oh the card are purchased. : MAIL IN YOUR ORDER TODAY. GIVE NUMBER OF CARDS NEEDED. ONE OR TWO THOUSAND OR MORE—BUT ENOUGH FOR FUTURE USE. _ BISMARCK, ND: the rate of $2.50 PER THOU- or ‘Dealera in the foods 5¢ HALEUSEDELENAUOUOEUUUUAGUOOCUUALUCacauuuocateeustterrierénnigh 4 | ;