DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. ' -- . ! 'I "-1I ir k,oj v a? X' B?xjrv,' TmA-w? - 1 iHbs ,ffi' t-,'v, Warn Ttihw BSmm: fHf f f ft HB1 fflfi I America is going to save thousands of French and Belgian women and children from death by starvation or freezing this Winter, but every American must tend a ha?id to the work KOM "Everywhere In Prunce" there are being brought to the United Stutcs wlih the nrrlvnl of nearly every pas senger ship tales of devastation and misery which arc even moro tingle than the cabled dispatches which we are accustomed to read under the vague dute line, "Somewhere In France." Many of these nnrratlves have been JJL In ought by men and women who, under the aus !K5 pics of the American Red Cross, have been Inves tigating conditions created ny tne invasion or me Hun. The range of vision of these Investigators extends from the battle front to the cottage hun dreds of miles away where war's misery moro In sidious than boa 6b on the lighting front has pene tinted. Woven together these accounts make a composite .story of devastation and suffering on the part of noucombatnuts comparable with the torture en- iiiroil by the soldiers in the trenches; of refugees ttirini; blankly) nt crntered areas where villages unci- nourished; of thousands of children, too young to understand, crying for mothers who can not hoar their cries; of children poisoned by gas liombs thrown from German mortars ; of emaciated 4'hlldreii unt by hundreds from behind the German Hue; of crippled soldiers to re-educate and of Milan men and women to comfort and provide with the necessaries of life a story of battling ij;:iiiKt disease and of the heroism of mercy. Sometimes the cable supplements talcs told by I'Hirnod travelers. A day or two ngo, the war ouneil of the American Red Cross received a cable p'lain from the Paris headquarters of that organiza tion containing n simple statement of every-day leeurrence on the French frontier, yet graphic In its portrayal of one phase of war's f rightfulness. It road : The Red Cross at Evian. "There arrived last week at Kvlan, where the rep. ililos from France and Belgium are received l.neK into France, a train loaded with Belgian chil li en. There were C80 of them, thin, sickly, alone, ill between ages of four and twelve, children of men who refused to work foi the Germans and of mothers who let their children go rather than let them starve. They poured oft the train, little ones flinging to the oldest ones, girls all crying, boys trying to cheer. They had come nil the long way alone. On the platform were the Red Cross work em io meet them, doctors und nurses with ambu lances for the little sick ones were waiting out side the station. The children poured out of the trt.itlon, mnrched along the street shouting. "Meat, moat; we are going to have ment," to the Casino, horc they were given a square meal, the first In iiiiiny months. Again and again, while they ate, tiny broke spontaneously Into songs In French tgidnst the German songs which they had evidently ) Mined in secret. The Red Cross doctor examined l hem. Their llltlo claw like hands were significant f their undernourished bodies, but the doctor said: 'Wo have tlipm In time. A few weeks of proper I 'i ding and they will pull up." uv" IjYiuii is :i I'leiicn rt-sun un i.uue vituuwi, unu It" (wrr day one thousand homeless people arrive V beic, CO per cent of whom are children. Thirty Rfc"Ntier rent of the older people die the first month IS from exhaustion. They were once the occupants IK if happy homes in northern France. The lluns IK invaded their country, swept on past their homes inu iert mem ucninu me enemy s nne. xne invauers, now their masters, Impressed them Into labor and transported thousands of them to work In German fields and factories. Those who are returned by the thousand dully by train through Switzerland are all that are left of these men and women and hlldren- manhood and womanhood sapped until the vital spark Is almost out and, no longer of use as German cnptlves, sent bnck to die or to be !W eared for In their helpless condition by their own 9 people from whom they had been ruthlessly taken away In their health and strength. Hope for Kaloer's Victims. Thanks to the American Red cross, coming to the abslstanco of the overburdened French agen cies for mercy, there Is hope for these unfortun- y.s. Besides a hospital and convalescent nome ' children at Evlnn, the Red Cross Is operating arabulanco service for the returning repatries. i automobiles are in commission for handling k and Infirm persons, and a tubeteiilosls hos pital near by Is planned. When the returning rc liutrles rench the railroad station and have been Jieerlngly greeted by crowds of compatriots, they are taken in charge by Red Cross workers. Nour ishment Is provided and medical attention be--towed. Baths are made available and fresh dotti ng is supplied. According to American eye wit nesses of scenes at the railway station at Evlnn, there are men in the ranks who have suffered iroken arms, the bones of which have been sei by he (icriunuH so that the hand Is turned the wrong vn. They present n horrible deformity, denoting i form of cruelty which excuses itself on the rround that tho man, should he ever regain his ormer strength, will be unfit for military duty. In many of these cases American Red Cross doc or have been put to the doubly painful task of Igaln brenklng the arm and resetting It, so as In rmiwivii flwi torrlliWi ilnfiii-ml t v mirrwiinlv in. k lifted. William Allen hlte of Kansas and Henry J. Al ien, who Is prominent In the public life of the ,ame state are among the Red Cross workers vho recently luac returned from tours of Inspec lon in France. According to their statements It Is scarcely po.shlble to exuggerato the suffering rought upon tho Chilian population of the couu jy; a suffering, however, that Is being alleviated M t mo greatest jiu&muiu t-Miuju uy mo American S Ked Cross, which is sending Its experts, Its army jf volunteers and Its treasure without stint. Ac- ordlng to Mr. White, the real work of tho war, so tar us America Is concerned, will he carried on by jrje Red Cross in France this winter. Not only Wt K 1 , W yT JPj xii S. rtSrtGEGS &Cyyjf?iD CXO3SJU0 is It planned to deal with all the acute suffering, such as is summarized aboc, and to reconstruct mnny villages in the devastated war zone so ns to give the refugees a fresh start In life and pre pare the wny for again cultivating the soil, but It Is the purpose to apply the American system ct "Home Service" on n scalo bo grand that It Is bound to have n heartening effect on the whole French military organization, for the French sol diers fight better when they know their loved ones are being cared for. In furtherance of this great scheme, designed to bring comfort and cheer In the family of every French soldier that Is needy, General Pershing, General Petaln, commander In chief of the French forces, and Mnj. Gen. M. P. Murphy, American Red Cross commissioner, have formed themselves Into n committee of co-operut!oi. Company oflleers will go through their ranks and ascertain from each soldier whether he has any worry on his mind concerning sickness or want nt home. Reports will be made to headquarters weekly and not a single case will be overlooked In the relief work that is to be guided by the addresses of fnmilles listed. Special attention will be given to the treat ment and prevention of tuberculosis, which hns as sumed proportions almost ns deadly as tho Infernal machinery of war Itself. Food and clothing will be supplied when necessary und the spirit und courage of the previously depressed soldier In the trenches will be enlivened by the news that his family Is having Its wants nttended to. "The great struggle of tho winter will be the economic struggle," said Mr. White. "The Red Cross practically will fight the American fight un til our boys take their places on the firing lino next spring. It should be kept In mind that every French soldier who Is buved this winter means the iy - , - ,- r - - , i A Bomb Raid by Shell-Light The picture of a night nttnek executed by the English on n German trench In Franco Is drawn in the Cornhlll Magazine by Boyd Cable: "Tho hour chosen for the raid was Just about dusk. There was no extra-special preparation Immediately before it. The guns continued to pour In their fire, speeding it up a little, perhaps, but no more than they had done a score o! times In the Inst 21 hours. The Infantry clambered "but of their trench nnd tiled out through the nnrrow openings In their own wire entanglenientb. "Out In front a falut whistle cut across the rour of fire. 'They're off,' said the forward officer into his 'phone, and a moment later a dNtinct change In the note of sound of the overhead shells told that the lire had lifted, that the shells were pass lug higher nbove his head, to fall farther buck In the enemy trenches and leave clear the btretch Into which the Infantry would soon be pushing. "For u minute or two there was no change In the sound of bnttle. The thunder of the guns continued stendily, a burst of rifle or niachlne gun tire crackled as spasmodically. , "Men gulped In their throats or drew' long breaths of apprehension that this was the begin ning of discovery of their presence in the open, tho first of the storm they knew would quickly follow. But there were no more shells for the moment, nnd the rattle of .machine gun fire di minished and the bullets piped thinner and more distant ns the gun muzzle swept around. The In fantry hurried on, thankful for oery yard made in safety. "But at the attacking point the Infnntry were almost across when the storm hurst, and tho hhells for the most part struck down harmlessly behind them. The men were Into the fragments of broken wire, and the shattered parapet loomed up under their hands a minute after the first shell burst. l'i to this they had advanced In silence, hut now they gave tonguo and with wild yells leaped at the low parapet, scrambled over and down Into the trench. Behind them n few form twisted and sprawled on the broken ground, but they were no sooner down than running stretcher bearers pounced on them, lifted nnd bore them back to the shelter of their own lines. "In the German trench the raiders worked and fought at desperate speed, but smoothly and on what was clearly a settled and rehearsed plan. There were few Germans to bo seen, and most of these crouched dazed and helpless, with hands over their heads. They were promptly seized, bundled over the parapet, and told by word or gesture to be off. They waited for no becond bid ding, hut ran with heads stooped nnd hands above their heuda straight to the British line, ono or two men doubling after them as guards. Some of the prisoners were struck down by their own guns' shellflre, nnd these were Just ns promptly grabbed by the stretcher bearers and hurried In under cover. saving of nn American boy when tho big drive begins a few months hence." L. D. Wlshnrd of California, n schoolmate of President Wilson, well known for hla Interest in Y. M. 0. A. work ns well ns thnt of tho Ameri can Red Cross, Is another re cently returned observer from France. He brought a doubly Interesting story. First, the nwfulness of mnny conditions existing; and, secondly, tho grcut work tho Red Cross la doing and the much greater work It Is preparing to do to meet nil the conditions scien tifically and energetically. Mr. Wlshnrd expressed tho same view as William Allen White regnrdlng the Importance of giving primary attention to the economic slJe of the equation during the winter months. He quoted General Pershing ns saying that tho greatest thing thnt the Red Cross can do at present to Insure victory is to stand by the fam ilies of From.li soldiers. Gas Bombs PoiEon Soil. Au Interesting fact dwelt upon by Mr. Wlshnrd during u visit to Washington was that of the pois oning of tho soil In agricultural regions by tho gases spread over the country by the GermniiR. It Is stated that this gas has worked Its Insidious wny deep into the ground, bo thnt unless heroic means are discovered nnd npplled it will he yenrs und years before the land Is fit for cultivation of nny sort. The devastation, he says, Is beyond anything in tho history of thu world, with shell craters so thick that plowing of once fertile fields is abso lutely Impossible. Yet In this hopelessly devasta ted region the Red Cross has set to work to repair some villages and to restore certain agricultural communities, not ulone for the humanity directly involved with respect to the people who will thUE have shelter and means to go to work, but nb an example to the thousands of others and nn Inspi ration to them to start In and begin life anew. The hopelessness of it nil might seem complete from a single lnstnnce cited by Mr. Wlshnrd that of a man who had bwned n mill In n village near Ver dun, who told him Unit when he went to look for the spot on which It stood he hud to taku n survey or along to locate It. It Is Into the hopelessness of hundreds of situa tions akin to this that tho Amoricnn Red Cross If advancing with Its banner of mercy und Its bugle blast of Inspiration. So help the Red Cross 1 "Up nnd down the selected area of front line trench the raiders spread rapidly. There were several dugoutb under the parapet, and from some of them gray-coated figures crawled with their hands up on the first summons to surrender. 3'hpse, too, were bundled over the parapet. If a bhot came from the black mouth of tho dugout In answer to the all to surrender, It wus prompt ly bombed. At either end of the urea of front line mnrked out us the limits of the raid strong pnrtles made n block nnd beat oil' the feeble at tacks that were made on them." NEW WRITING IMPLEMENT. A writing Implement composed of a inlMuu of wux uud finely ground pumice stone contain ing purtlcles of Ink lias been Invented by William C. Geer of Akron, O., to tnke the place of ordinary and fountain pens, pencils, crayons und all other writing Implements, says the Popular Science Monthly. As the body of the new writing device is composed of a mixture of wax nnd pumice stone, which Is easily worn awny when rubbed against a paper surface, tho Inventor claims that the cells of Ink intermixed with the wax und pum ice stone will also ho libera ted, giving a uniform supply of Ink. Thu device Is imde by mixing the wax, pumice stone nnd ink together. When it is heated to the proper temperature It Is suddenly Immersed In cold water. This chills and solidifies the wax mixture, producing a b.dy having a cellular struc ture, each cell being filled with Ink. SOLDIER SCRAPBOOK' Have you begun saving jokes and plctuies for "Snmmle's" scrnpbook? Kipling started these scrnpbooks In England for the wounded "Tom my," so of course It's a good Idea. A SAD CASE OF SUICID There Is n very pompous artist in New York who used to have n sense of humor, Ills quips were known everywhere. Now, however, Mnce lie has gained considerable vogue, ho Is taking himself nnd his work very seriously. Owen Johnson, tho novelist, saw him In n res taurant the other night, bitting solemnly nlone. "Too bad," he nld, real pity and tenderness In Ills' voice. "Poor Arthur! lie has severed his Jocular vein." HIS POINT OF VIEW. "Mike, didn't you tell mo oucu you have r, brother who Is a bishop?" asked the contractor. "Yes. bor, I did that." "And hero you nre n hod cnrrler. Well, things of this life arc not equally dlvldpd. are they Mike?" "No, sor," replied tho Irishman, shouldering hli bod and starting up the ladder; "Indnde they It not. Poor fell 1 He couldn't do thti to save hit lolfe, sor!" Y Two Types of Tailored Suits. Two different types of suits nre rep resented by the conservative models nhown In the picture given here. The tiext offerings of designers will be innde for wear in the spring, nnd, the chances are, will show little variation from these, especially hi tho case of the plainest suits. These two mod els are not presented ns novel, but as representative of tho styles that have won approval and arc worn by the ac tive and busy women of today during their usual rounds. In line with the conservation of woolens, women are depending upon tailored suits for two or three seasons' wear, and for this reason tin plainest models are the safest choice. Coats for these work-o-day suits are of me dium lengths and skirts somewhat nar rower than those Introduced for fall. Bone buttons provide tho finishing touch nnd fabrics nre selected with nn eye to their fitness for withstanding wear. The rough finished worsteds, cheviots, twills nnd serges, gaberdine and glove-finish cloths, stand up well under the hnrdest iisugc. A model of simplicity nppearn In the suit of chic, unfinished worsted, with straight belted coal nnd plnla skirt. It hns one of those high, nmf ller collars that may be buttoned op about the throat for warmth, nt the same time adding n touch of nmnrt est style. The big patch pockets uro practical if the wearer chooses to na them, but are really placed ti enrry out tho severe stylo of the eoat with u masculine detail. Such a suit, with a little varlnttan in the collar, will pass without crltklssa from season to season. For dressier wear u suit l Attown made of Potrct twill. The emit nhomi Ingenious cutting, but hnngn almost straight at thu back. The roiwcrtlbfe collar is edged with cinbrokSi-ty a several subdued colors, and fcus an Inlay of kolinsky fur. Cuffs of for and Hues of buttons elaborate the sleeves. A more or less dressy lint worn wltb a suit of this kind, will emphasise Its character. In the picture n small hat with crown of stitched (dlk nnd brttn of velvet contrives to look military by means of Its shape nnd Its trlmmlug of cords. X rfSim v ' m rx.Wm mat .. w am s&n .. tv? 4 ', , TO Wk 'ziri ji ,'T fP . lSXi? ovV' -rocn.'' ".'.TaS y :x&? f 05 t ; ' l ' - 'J' ''. K W , jr ' '.N X , s ' ! I 0m I J itf & I J& & SA i&25K8!KttMB4g;ttfi S-9' KSSiii3sS43SUirfia JV. v sassaBBsSaf Aristocrats Among Shopping Bags. Bags made of rlblion continue to flourish and tliev account for Immeas urable yards of rllihons that flow In n glowing pageant of colois ucross the busy ribbon counters. Beginning with the most popular of all, (ho knitting hag, ribbons contribute their bounty and elegance o shopping bags, sewing bags, opera bags, and every other Mirt of bag and tboro Is no end to tho variety. From tho little powder bag up to (he capacious knitting bug there are all sorts and sis-es. The knitting bag appears to have reached the limit In size und facetious men declare It will carry anything to be found In u furnished fiat, except the piano. Like the tllvver, It thrives on Jokes. Tho most elegant-looking shopping bogs are shown made of heavy bro caded ribbons hued with the richest satins and mounted nn silver or gilt mountings. Tho body or the richest brocades makes them available for bagw of this klild as a substitute for leather. A pair of aristocrats In this particular bag family appear In the Illustration. Heavy black stitlu ribbon brocaded with gold, is used for them. The bag at tho left la made like n outlier bug, with piped seams and n ultig of gold-coloied plain satin. It 'wis a gilt framo prettily chased sus- ended by u gilt chain. Tho frame need for Um buy nt tho rltdlt Is of i-ilt and hlnued tu lluit It opens In n hquuru. It Is also fined with gout sunn in u nan; snaiic nuu tms nended liv a irtlt cbnlii. A lmiir. vlet- der gilt tassel hnugs from thu bottoia edge or tins uamisomo example or rib bon artistry. Similar bags, made or sliver bro cade, are lined with satins In bright green or deep lose or vivid cerise, nnd are as splendid as those In black nnd gold, They are more gay In -color ami therefore more youthful. Then there are the dark brocades in satin wllr raised velvet flowers. Considering the richness of appenrance of the.so bngn they may be considered Inexpensive for It takes only .short lengths of wide rib bons to make Ilium. Sometimes a shell shirring of narrow satin ribbon mnfce n finish for the lining at the top or tho bag. Mink Is Liked. Mink takej, a specinl prominence -u this winter's furs It Is workisl with so much sill, uud com en in such won derful colorings that the wraps ond scurfs of this fur are of ouaraaL beauty, fir-W