DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. S1AL ' Ullllillll Jl lll ! III! , ass u - Hr QD,FJ2! mJTjLL , i r ?r 3y If N4f ! A Glorious Story of American THOmlvCTiiriT' x" fft Saiors Mav Never Be Tod 1 NElwAlU IfflJlT I .sf' MBk hti&vr' J aZJM3I3SM fcKmiXk nfli "V4U'U'7' VftSOT I l 4 3 nS .. 'A' JCB1, uKWJB'W E- y MMm'MMJl.smmmwK x ini&fi vv- f 'MiHHHiHnRflHndiBflMiHMIHHHH !,: !$sdli VkaMHPMHmKHMHsii ! .gHHHiiB Hat: Jtira&i7?&AtfK M:S'BZHniP(V HT KM& rKh..V3' '-"m tfd'MMM'i.fWOk . Jlrjr "V. . V j,V1 'OOI I HVW " inr" T-f !f nSa & SiJS2& - . " W i ANY hnve told of the deeds of tho de stroyer men, for the exploits of those who drlvo the swift war bonta to their double task of slaying and saving makes line and Joyous tolling. To the credit of the killers of tho U boats and guardians of the eonvov lot it bo said that n half of tho splendid talo has not yet been told. Tho men of the lean hunter craft are tho pick of tho navy and their ships come close to be ing the best in the world. They know It, their countrymen know it, and Frlta of tho submarine is learning it to his own sorrow. Much honor ts also paid to the men of tho grand fleet the bluejackets who are waiting at -some unnamed sea rendezvous for a chance to .loose the destruction of their great guns upon the ships of Wilhelm, sea lord of the Kiel canal. These are our buckler, and our shield. They man tho first lino of tho nation's defense. They -are fighters, skilled In their appointed tasks, and eager for that battle that they believe cannot be so fnr off now. No one tells of their brethren of the trans port service. Only the brief official announce ment gives their history, and this comes but Tnrely. Occasionally the powers at Washing ton lift the curtain of secrecy that hangs be tween our coast line and tho Atlantic to an nounce that troops have been landed to an un mentloned number at an unnamed port in France. Only once so far has it named tho ships that car ried those troops. To the average American mind tho transports leave our shores and reach tlioeo of Prance, and -that is all there Is to it. There Is much more. Most of tills prolmbly will never bo told. The endless chain of ships, "most of them bnllt in Germany, that carry men and supplies to the immediate rear of tho war. and then return for more, havo no his tory. Yet the history Is there, latent and waiting for birth. The fate of America's part In tho war, perhaps tho fate of the war itself, rests on tho blue-jumpered shoulders of the transport men. Their business Is not to fight, unless cor nered. Their task Is not to defend so much as -to evade. They are responsible for the lives of thousands of temporarily helpless soldiers. They and their ship play a desperate game of tag, In which every U-boat tho kaiser owns is "It" and they and their vessel tho lone and unhappy tagee. Day by day they come and day by day they go, and of their doings only tho high lords of the navy know. Peril of storm and torpedo are theirs. Unrelnxed vigilance and eternal wenri Tness arc their duty. And they are doing their -work. They are getting tho men across. Up to the time this was written, no transport fly ing the Stars and Stripes and carrying her pre clous load of men and munitions to Franco has lost In her deadly game of tag. Tho Tuscanla, it should bo remembered, was a British ship. That is what the men of tho transport serv ice, most of whom enlisted to fight and were chosen to run, are doing, now they are doing it Is only a partly told tale, caught here nnd there from letters sent homo from French ports by pallors-) from descriptions of tho trip oer "Over 'There" recounted by soldiers, recovered from tho terrible qualms of seasickness and filled with a new-found gratitude and admiration for their Ibrothers in the navy blue who brought them safe ly across. Let us call her the Ilamapo, because that Isn't Jior name. Let us say still further that she wns formerly, before sho hauled down the red, white nnd black and hoisted the Stars and Stripes, the Fuerst Adolph, whig! she wasn't, and one of tho crack liners In the Germun merchant ma Tine, which sho was. In tho dusk of a winter afternoon sho sllp iped down the river and out to sea, unobtruslvo In her war paint Several ' thousand troops svero in tho "troop spaces" below decks. The troops were all kept below while the trans port slowly slipped down the stream and tho shores prow blurred behind her, Then her en ;glncs quickened. Her low made Its first curtsey to the ominous Atlantic swell, nnd sho wns on her way across. From now on, for day on day, n torpedo rightly plncert might enuso a greater loss than tho attack of an army corps ashore. Down In tho troop spaces soldiers were singing to keep up their courage. In the quarters of a megro regiment nt least n hundred crap games were already In progress. Up In the crow's TiP.st) lads only a few times at hon were already on the watch for submarines and seeing peri scopes in every wave top. That night, the htorm hit them. All through tho night, the section on wntch Imd no -time for penceful thought. They pro gressed puss-ln-the-cornor fashion ncross tho leaving decks In the Inky darkness, making fast davits that were wrenching free with tho roll tng, securing a hundred different objects that strove to burst away. The phosphorescence of the wave tops was to only light thoy aaw. Save for two or three ex ceptlons thero was absolutely no illumination on fhe boat. sis :..-vv SM&4&yt!lrS JMCv. V?S . ,j.;.'.?A!8A " r.wm :HV 'A &' jHr, 'jm sm3 i &&" Far up on the two mnsts, switching back and forth ncross the sky In great arcs, were the foro and main tops tho "crow's nests." In each of these four men were stationed tho eyes of tho vessel. In n pent house at tho foot of each mast dwelt tho commanders of tho foro and aft guns, In constant communication with tho look outs above. Dawn broke over a thousand ranges of gray, rolling mountains. Behind the Itnmapo, two oth er transports ducked and graBhcd through tho waves. Before her the bulk of an armored crnlser showed now nnd again through tlw foam. Waves were breaking over her all tho time. She plowed straight through. Sometimes to tho men on the Itnmapo it seemed as though only her fun nels and masts wero above the sea. The first night, when the Itamapo behaved more like n drunken acrobat than a stately ship, was merely tho forerunner of worse things to come. All winter, storms havo rnngod up and down tho sea lanes of the Atlantic. Calm days on tho trip across are always n rarity In December, Jan uary and February. This year they have been unique. There were windstorms when the vessel rolled in an arc of 82 degrees. Thero were days of ice when tho sprqy froze wherever It struck nnd men came off watch, cased In mnlh There were days of snow that lashed tho lookouts' faces llko whips. Thero were days of tremendous seas that reached up CO feet from tho water lino to rip lifeboats from their davits. , Thero was little time free of hard work and no leisure for tho seamen. To sleep ono had to clutch tho sides of Ills bunk, and usunlly when he relaxed as slumber overtook him, ho fell out with a dismal crash. Day and night, they fought tho seas, making fast, repairing, defending their vessel against tho unending ussault of the waves. A petty officer was going through tho mess hall, progressing cautiously, never letting go of one stable object until he had grasped another, when his grip slipped. Ho wns thrown the whole length of the hall, and wns carried a limp piece of bloody wreckage to the sick bay. Thoy had to operate to save his life, tho sur geon said. Thnt In a storm that was making tho Ilamapo lehnvo llko nn outlaw horse. But tho navy cares for Its. own and they operated, and the man Is still alive. Tho wind was from tho north and wns making tho ship roll terribly. They 'turned her bow Into the' galo and faced Into It for two hours, becnuso tho motion thnt way was easier. The cruiser and her convoy passed on down over tho horizon. The storm got worse. For two hours the Itnmapo steamed slowly Into Its teeth, alone on tho ocean, sho nnd her thousands of men wnltlng, while In the operating room the surgeon balanced himself to the, more regular plunge of tho vessel nnd saved the man's life. The ordeal of tho never-ending series of storms wns sulllclont to try men's souls, occupied by other worry. But over tho Ilamapo hung nn ,othor threat the menace that envelops any ves sel thnt faces out ncross the Atlnntlc. "Watchful waiting" the men of tho Itumnpo grow to know the true Inward agony of tho word. Always to watch. To stand for a four hour watch In tho crow's nest until your eyes nched from scanning tho battling waves for tho sight of tho white perlscopo trail. To tread tho deck, your cars ever strained for the dull boom below that might tell of a torpedo driven homo. To sleep, with one-hnlf of you wide awake, ready to jump to your appointed post while tho vessel dropped swiftly nwny beneath your foot. Tho thing got them. For tho first day or so they talked nnd Joked about It. Then Into the talking camo n note of defiance, as though each man wero tolling his fellows that ho wasn't nfrald. Then they stopped talking about It en tirely. Then one morning tho section thnt nwoko to the twitter of tho boatswain's pipe caught a new emphasis in the old navy cry: "Third section on deck, relieve wheel, lookout, speed cone and ninmunltlon." Especially the lookout. They had reached tho far-flung limit of the war zone. Tho llanmpo nnd her consorts and the nrmored cruiser wero nil zlg-zngglng now. Nnvy men know how long after n vessel has been sighted It tnkes to aim und dlschnrgo a torpedo. Say that It takes five minutes. Every four minutes the vessels changed their courses, dodging back pnd forth from nn unseen foe that might not bo tlv:re at olL interminably. GASTQRIA The lookouts wero ordered to report every thing they saw. Not a bit of driftwood or a patch of floating seaweed wns to be missed. Al most every nilnute n call enmo down from tho tops to tho foro or aft gtin control. All at once down the speaking tube to tho forward flro control camo nn excited volco: "Foro top, foro top, foro top." "Aye, ajx?, fore top." "Steamer nt 185 degrees; range, 2,000 yards. "Aye, aye, fore top." There was a steamer, and she was coming down fast, smoko boiling out of her single stack, her bow driving white bursts of foam along nhcad of her. The cruiser charged toward her. Tho i gun crows on the Ilamapo wero fighting to bring their pieces to bear. "It's a German raider," tho whisper ran nnouc the ship. "Sho hove to only a few hundred yards away," relates a member of tho crew. "All of our guns were on ber. You could see their gray muz zles rise and dip ns tho ship rolled and the gun pointers held them tree on their mark. All at onoo I ronlized I loved those guns nnd tho men who were handling them. It wns funny I'd never thought of them at nil before. Now they eocmed to be the biggest tiling In tho world to mo." There wns a sudden gasp of relief all over tho ship. The tramp had broken out tho British flag. On her bridge someone was semaphoring fran tically. The Ilamapo men picked up tho hysteri cal message. "Submarine encountered ono lwur direct oast. Believe It Is pursuing. Advise caution." Tlen tho smoke came bursting from her fun nel again and sho went blundering on lrcr way over the sea, llko a frightened duck. "Then all nt once n whisper ran through tho shin. It wns repeated ns those on the walls of Luck now must hnve told of tho advancing British col umn. Tho destroyers wero coming. Somowhero out of thnt gray, cruel sea the American war boats were sweeping down on tho convoy. Our destroy ers, our men, they were coming to soo their breth ren safe through tho war zone. "I shall never forget tho way they came. It was n gray afternoon, when the maintop reported tho flicker of a blinker signaling far out over tho waves. We didn't sec them when thoy came. They seemed Do materialize suddenly out of nothing. "All at once, wo snw the first one. She wns only n few hundred ynrds off our bows, nnd wo had to watch her closely to see her at all. That sounds foolish; but It Is literal fact. She wns camou flaged streaked and dotted and splnshed in a dozen colors, nnd she melted away Into iho back ground of the sen as though she weren't mnde of steel, but of mist. "Then wo realized that they wero all around us. Eight of them. All dappled nnd harlequin patterned, nil practically Invisible nt half a mile. "Their flagship hung for a moment on a wave, then there was u spurt of white nt her stern nnd sho came flying down on us. There wns no foam by the bow. There was no smoke from the short, rakish funnels, only the quiver of hent from her oil flres. She slipped through tho water llko a fish, and as she pnssed us, slim, high bred, with her razor bow nnd her lean curving flanks, driv ing through the wnter like an express train, with no visible effort and ns smoothly ns n canoe, sho broke out the Amcrlcnn flag on her stern. Wo br.ike out ours, nnd thnt was our greeting that nnd tho yells of the soldiers who wero acting llko madmen. As she flashed by we caught a glimpse of her guns, all cleared for action and tho depth bombs ready nt her f-teni, Ono of her men, bin feet braced to her roll, looked up nt us, grinned nnd then yawned. We knew that was only show ing off. He couldn't Miamo tho troops by be ing blnse. They acted like a hunch of kids." Tho worst of tho war zono was ahead of them, but thoy didn't worry nny longer. They knew tho destroyers were on the watch. Thoy ranged hero and there. They shot nwny for a mllo or ho and ennio back to swim circles nhout them. They were all new boats tho best ever built. Tho British will tell you so, too. They aro modeling their new boats on ours. Tho submarine couldn't trouble tlw transports' men now. If ono started to worry, nil he had to do was to look over the side, and the picture of the destroyers, running the hills of tho hea llko hounds, wns full comfort to him. A few days Inter tho Itnmapo and her consorts woro shepherded by the destroyers Into tho har bor of "A I'ort In Franco" "Tho troops stood nt tho rail nnd cheered and laughed and hhouted, but we didn't. Wo wero too tired, just plain worn out. Anyone who has been on n transport's crow knows all there Is to know nhout the agony of anticipation. Wo Just sat and looked tit the green hills and tho green roofs and tho green waters of tho bay, and presently those who weren't on wntch went to their bunks and hud a good sleep. "Thoy had brought their men ncross snfe, which has como to be a hnblt of tho trunsixn-t Horvlce. Somehow, I wus glnd that they put mo on a trans port, Instead of a dreadnaught. It seems as though wo woro doing moro to help win tho war, somehow, oven If no on wver boars about ua." ' :JW5 me TUi?iTj KHZMT mm r ?! M MiHiy jp j wj m LOjorr. AVcectuojcii-j""" fTr u. ???SiwShrf U iinpuio:K)maupuun"-;i- G 2 SSSSSiM Kk ?rtii JCAWHH r.-n 'JtmST&Wcsu'an i . . jnvtrmtitns uiccnumes a" "v"-.-1 . i.i n.ln. fnrnmnCnOi.l Mineral. NoTKAn0TICa . "I . i...in.n.fbfa ftlSBSSfflKj- onu ra"'Avpp rtstfWn$thatfron NEwjLyiy For Infanta and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria ilwaya Bears the Signature of ft iXv In r 4 Use For Over Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. NEIGHBORS COME IN FORCE Their General Calling Rather a Mat ter of Surprise Until Little Etta Explained Things. Little Ettn and her- parents hnd moved Into a new neighborhood, and the child had expressed tho hopo to her mother that tho now neighbors would be friendly nnd call on them soon. Mother assented and expressed tho snme hopo. Baking day arrived the latter part of tho week, and moth er baked tho customnry cake and broad nnd rolls. In the afternoon, much to her sur prise, n number of tho neighbors ar rived In a sort of tako-lMor-grnnted, expectant manner. Little Etta ap peared on tho scene und was greeted moro like n friend thnn n stranger. Tho delight nnd satisfaction alio evinced over tho preseneo of tho vis itors puzzled her mother, fond of com pany ns she know the child te be. Ono word brought another until the fujl explanation cninc forth: Etta had broken n plcco of mother's cake, as It stood "cooling" under a paper on tho pnntry tnble, early In tho nfternoon while mother wns tnklng a nap up Btalrs. Sho visited tho homes of neighbors and gave them a plcco of cake, saying sho wanted them to como over nnd sec her nnd bo friendly with her. "And my mamma wants you to come and callvou her, too," sho hnd ndded Innocently nnd persuasively, tho call ers explained to the surprised nnd em hnrrnsscd hostess. TH OtNTAUH OOMMHV, NKW YORK OtTt. SAVED SOLDIER FOR FRANCE The Kalser'a Dream. "The kaiser's dream," snld n sena tor the other day, "wns a dream of world domination, but ho has already begun to experlcnco n rude awaken ing. "The kaiser Is now In exactly tho same position as Wnsh White. Farmer Cornelius Husk heard a noise in his chicken house ono night, tiptoed down with n shotgun, and discovered Wash In tho act of filling a burlap bag with chickens. " 'Wash, you rascal, what tiro you doing thero?' fcnld Corny Husk. '"It's all right, sail,' Wnsh replied, 'I'm hero on account of n dream I llad, sah.' "'A dream? You black scoundrel, what tiro you tnlklng nhout?' " 'Well, snh,' said Wash, I dreamed I was goln' to have chicken fo' dinner tomorrow; but I see now It huln't true.' " Sympathy of American Red Cross Woman Worker Restored Lost Courage to Downcast Pollu. Forbes Watson, driving nn nmbu lnnco in France, dropped into ono of tho canteens which tho American Bod Cross is operating In Franco ono eve ning, ho says In the Red Cross Mngn zlno: "Opposite mo wns n Pollu with th saddest face I havo ever seen. IIu spoke to no one. Some personal losa hung over him, too poignant for mo to approach. He took away his bowl for some more coffee, nnd nt a counter which hnd become n little less con gested I snw him In conversation with ono of tho Amcrlcnn women, no talk ed to her as ho never would havo tnlkcd to n man, becnuso she knew how to tnlk to him. Later I asked her his story. Ho had lost four brothers In tho war, the youngest recently. "Two weeks Inter ho wrote her n letter telling her thnt her sympathy had torn apart tho black veil that seemed to havo settled down forever botween him nnd life. And he wrote simply to thank her for having given hlra bnck tho courage to go on. 'Vivo l'Unlon Frnnco-Amerlcnlno I' ho wrote. Wns It nn exaggeration to Bay that these Amcrlcnn lied Cross women nro the front ranks of our diplomacy?" Camouflage Saves Rabbit. On tho prairies of Kansas camou flage Is being mnde uso of by tho Kan sas Jnckrabblt. Two residents can testify that nt lenst ono "Jnck" in Bar ton county owes his llfo to tho fact that he knew the value of this nrt. The two men were hunting on a farm near hero when close at hand n Rus sian thistle Jumped up nnd stnrtcd off ncross the pasturu tit a 2:40 gnit. When tho thistle hnd got out of range, a rabbit emerged from Its pro tecting cover nnd loped off nonchal antly, while to tho bewildered hunters slowly camo tho realization thnt they had been victims of n clover camou flage on tho part of n western Kansas Jnckrabblt. New York World. Her Good Taste. "Say, listen!" uttered Clnudlne ot tho rapid-fire restaurant. "The for tune teller told me lust night thnt 1 was going to be married next month." "Geo!" breathed Helolso of tho snmo establishment. Who to?" "Aw, I didn't think It wns just ex actly proper to ask his name. You see, I ain't got my divorce from Sliver yet." Kansas City Star. Quite True. "They say the packers aro prepar ng to mnko a corner in eggs." "What a plot to hatch." Heroic Rescue. Father Come right out In tho back yard, my son; I'll make you see ittirs. Son Are you going to make tin American fing, father? Father What do you mean, you young rascal? Son Why, I'm going to provide tho stnrs, whllo you furnish the stripes. Father (fnlllng on his neck) Where did you Inherit this brilliancy? Oft with your coat, son, I must savo you or perish In the attempt. Paternal Piquancy. "Sny, pop, do airplanes light in tho wnr zone?" "No, my son; thoy fight In tho ozone." They love their land because It Is their own, and scorn to glvo aught oth er reason w hy. Hallock. What has becomo of tho good old stock of meii who went through the school of hnrd knocks? As Age Advances the Liver Requires Sm&ll Pill, Small Dose. Small Frico But Great in Its Good . Work occasional alight etlmulatloa. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS correct Genuine bears Isnuture CONSTIPATION WStfSsc Coloy!eS8 Or PfiJe Faces y dlcate the absence of Iron la a condition which will be greatly helped by Waiter SlronJrlllS