r,, it? i H ' 1 ' DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. Wounding Father. Daughter (admiring n sot of mink skins from father) I enn lmrilly real Izo that theso beautiful furs coino from such n sinnll, sncnklng henst. Fntln?r I ibn't ask for thnnks, my dear, hut I must Insist on respect. Williams Purple Cow. "YES, I THINK SO." Most any good soap will do, but Rod Cross Ball Dluo Is tho only blue. Makes tho greatest difference My clothos aro a dream snowy white. I can't uso liquid blue. No, not mo. GIvo mo Red Cross Ball Bluo and I'll show you somo beautiful clothes. Adv. yjnsunp Heroes ' vi aJ Cattle Lines Parrots can learn our language, hut wo nre too dense to ncqulro theirs. Right wrongs no one. if t w r M M nun i mi i . I .'I.' : ' : " m JjsWsVs'-)oJiyVTmi? rfrS1. CKi HI 4bV !SKsSksfi!sBKsCslR$slvsOisM!N hSt III cwJ iff . w."Nt?i-.' rj . ir j TT-.. - .x.--r lh tr -v'-. TWiP' ilPfX -. JYWL1U .Bill. jw3r i i ii i i i i i ii s'waw mm ixrxmimt-. ifrs. kuu i m uri: f :i e r m . v jv- 'a vMwTikiife . s sir1crftt;fta.aJ vniii i -icv v Tk. .4 . ..jr 'Ai.-Ji , - ."vt .." wn: 'i'j it ; vt'v :.' cw.v . s-."i mr If w What is Castoria C ASTORIA Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor otber Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guar antee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverish, cess arising therefrom, and by regulating tho Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. "The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30years,hasbornotheBignaturoof Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been mado under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Juat-as-Good"aro bat Experiments that trllle with ana endanger tho neaitn or lntants ana jy , - Children Experience against Experiment. ST , J!S7---fi- f-G6CG.ViA Genuine Castoria always beam the signature of f Steals swTY k HP PATONIC BttfFOR YOUR STOMACH'S SAKE) 1SMA0 W If Jl Zi . I Most Startling Endorsement OHieS oaCK I - Ever Published and Fays For It It's the Acid Test of Man and Eatonic They Both Win I ilt takes a bis man to stand no w snaesy i am widqk nnawiuioff id do right": nnd it is needless to say that this poor sufferer will not want tor EATONIC as Ions ns ho lives. To stomach sufferers and those not getting full strength out of their food, suffering from Indii CfsOon, dyspepsia, sour stomach, bloaty, gassy feeling titter eating, -stomach distress of nny kind, WO ay. Go. get a box of EATONIC to day, use it according to the direc tions and you will know what real stomach comfort means. Tens of thouatnds all orer the land are oslntt EATONIO and testify to its powers to neal. If you soger another day it is your own f salt. .XllNlU costs little a cent or two a EA1 JUT. Mr. A. W. Cramer. Registered Pharmacist and Druggist of Piano. Illinois. Writes under data of December 12, 19161 , "Eatonic Remedy Co, rtW'' Chicago, 111. Gentlemem Tho following tocldentwhlch hap pened in myplaco of business I know will bo of great interest to you, and, I hope, of great benefit to humanity, morally and physically. I keep a quantity of EATONIO piled on m? show case. I recently missed a bos, and knowing neither myself nor cleric bad sold it, I could not account for its disappearance. Yesterday morning a man walked into my storo and said: "Mr. Cramer, I owe you fifty cents for a bos or EATONIC which 1 stole from your show case. I tun bothered with stomach trouble and, not har 'ng the money to spare to set a box, I took it. EATONIC has done me so much good my consci ence bothered mo until I bad to come bads aad payforlt., This is tho most wonderful testimonial state ment in all my experienco in tho interest of anyprcparation. It is positire proof, to my mind, that EATONIC is all that is claimed forit. If it bad not helped this man his consclencewould nave left him unmolested. Very truly yours. A. w. uramer. Sxul fur th "litis" Book, Addnu Eatotlo Bonxlr Co.. 101J-24 So. Wtbub An., Chicago As Age Advances the Liver Requires mmmmWz. t .sLHCflRTFR'S .MmrmrTZtMm BSaiTTI S7 utmr vfr 4r - ?'&' A Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price But Great in its Good Work occasional slight stimulation. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS correct Genuine bears signsture CONSTIPATION y&SfcfcSS Colorless or Pale Faces SJteedia q condition which will be greatly helped by Carter SlronPllIs Some men imike friends and others make them tired. An honest man never speculates with another man's money. None Needed. "What walk In life do you Intend to select for your son?" "Oh, we can nfford to buy him an automobile now." Appetizing Vienna Sausage THE aroma of Libby's Vienna Sausage tells you that it is delightfully seasoned. The first taste that it is made of care fully selected, meat seasoned to perfection. Have Vienna Sausage for luncheon -c-iv. Your husband your children v. ill ak for it again and again. Libby, M?Neill & Libby, Chicago HIIIIIIIlIlllllBaBBBIIIIIIllliaHllllllllllKRIIHBIIII Sapolio doing its work. Scouring lor UD.nanne orps recruits. Join Now! tMOCH MOSOAir ONS CSV APPLY AT ANY POST OFFICE for SERVICE UNDER THIS EMBLEM xjuftsWriowsr jBra Bble S MARINES Daring American Line men, Fresh from Civil Life, Maintain Commun ications Under Fire ff vL la JLx. S &WVm OROK&t JLZfT HE two great means of commu nication on the modern battle Held, tho means by which gen ernl headquarters keeps In touch with every sector of tho lino and by which tho perfect co-ordination of all branches of the service Is possible are tho airplane and electricity. Tho romantic appeal of tho aviation service, the stirring stories of high adventure that have come out of the war have mado tho work of the blrdmcn, tho superscders of cavalry as tho eyes of the commander, fa miliar to the people at home. On tho ground chnrglng Infantrymen nnd roaring cannon cap- turn the Imagination. But th heroic labors of men who keep open Uio tele graph nnd telephone lines which make co-operation of Infantry and artillery possible are almost un known outside tho serv ice, save, for Instance, when one rends of a medal bestowed on n lino repairman for magnlll cent disregard of danger. For their losses nnd their honors nre alike great. They go over the top with tho troops, smoking their pipes, coolly string ing lines behind the ad vancing first line so that the gun crews may be kept Informed of the ad vance or told to concen trate their fire on n par ticularly obnoxious ma chine gun, says a writer In tho New York Sun magazine section. They clamber out of dugouts Into the slush and the freezing wind of a winter night to feel their way along a broken wire, sometimes over the shell-pitted open ground behind the trenches until they And tho break, then sitting In lco water under Are they repair It as carefully and skillfully as If they were at work In the shop at home. It often takes three or four men to repair one of theso breaks; tho first men sent out may never come back. Repaired at all costs the wire must be, and dan ger does not excuso a slipshod bit df work. For the signal system of tho army Is what the nerv dus system Is to tho human body. Without It the modern army covering 100 miles of front cannot see, feel or move. Tho army com mander wishing to move a portion of his lino CO miles nway or to chnngo tho rapidity of his artil lery flro or to receive Information of enemy move ments Is as helpless without tho slender threads of copper aB ho would be If he wished to move his right arm and found tho nerves paralyzed. "There are still peoplo of Intelligence who think that the transmission of military thought Is summed ap In tho uso of the notebook, tho orderly and his iorse," writes Brig. Gen. Georgo P. Scrlven. "But these aro passing, and the trained soldier and tho educated volunteer understand the vital Impor tance of Information. "Hence the necessity for a signal corps or Its iqulvalcnt, for without Its aid modern armies can bo more be controlled than can great railway sys tems; the commander In the field remnlns blind and deaf to tho events occurring around him, In capable of maintaining touch with conditions nnd out of reach of his superiors or those under his au thority upon whom he depends for the execution of his plnns. Tho brain lacks tho power to control because the nerves are lacking. "Time is the main factor In wnr; to nrrlvG first with the greatest number of men and with tho clearest understanding of tho sltuntlon is to suc ceed. The last, and often the first, of theso condi tions depends upon tho lines of Information of tho army." And these lines In turn depend upon tho obscuro but daring work of tho repairman, tho grimy, mucky, hard-fisted mechanic who crawls on his belly through shell flro calculated to appall tho stoutest heart and connects tho break between tho commander and the point ho wishes to reach. Somehow the lines are kept open all the tlmo or are broken for only short Intervals, and tho con stant tending of them has made posslblo In Franco a system of wire communication that Is a marvel of efficiency. Indeed so perfect Is It, thnt London and Paris aro In direct connection with general headquarters on tho British front, which In turn Is In touch with every division and brigade staff on tho line. A wlro could bo put straight through so that Lloyd Georgo If ho wished could hear tho bursting of high explosives and shrapnel on the Amiens front. This tromendous uso of tho telephone nnd tele graph In warfaro Is partly the result of tho Im petus arising from the American application of electrical communication on n largo scale in tho Spanish war. Tho signal corps us It now exists Is a comparatively recent evolution. In the American army tho Idea first arose in the mind of a young army surgeon, Albert James Myer. Tho office of signal officer of tho army Was croated In June, 1800, tho first of Its kind, nnd Myer was appointed. Ho was at onco sent with an expedition against Navajo Indians In Now Mex ico, and his crude apparatus at onco demon strated Its worth. When the Civil war began ho was ordered East and opened a school for signalers, and In that was the definite beginning of tho present signal corps. Wires were curried on horse or muleback then, tho Instruments were Imperfect and telegraphic com munication was a rare and precious thing. Tho service took on tremendous linportnnco In tho Spanish wnr and followed the troops through Cuba omJ tn Philippines, and in China was tho only Mkfx f rLzX .ijHftsV V sy SnsHsBaLix&dBS v ?.. l AdsaViaBBi v s ! B I . nC'',VrWsl T rwBBBBBBBBBtXflBf V7 7sWsiarV vfVRJvtCa&SBsssBsissySSifME M k- sasaiaflsasH ltiV"L.3 "? T8 w ssAUHBtsHsasaDMssaiB J&M !'' . -- 1mmmtJKmmmmmmmmwllmmmmJtB ffj 2s'rf ff wJrmf eek between Pe- 'ft iWmtSStmmSi means of communication for a king and tho rest of tho world. But tho tasks that confronted our signal men In these wars were pluy compared to the work that is being done every day on the western front. Our signal men tliere have an area to cover about the size of Pennsylvania and they have gone at It with a vigor and efficiency that spell volumes for the superiority of Amerlcuns In this particular Hue of work. The hardy linemen who have strung lines nnd repaired breaks on tho Western plains or battled with great floods and storms In the Rocky moun tains have taken to this new work with a zest which Is Inspiring. On tho foundation of tho French system they nre building a signal system that will be a model of Its kind. Up to within four miles of tho front construc tion Is not different from what it Is hero at home. Tho wires are strung on poles nnd most of tho poles havo been planted by tho French. But when ono gets inside tho shell-torn section that stretches at least four miles from tho front wires havo to be protected by being burled from six to eight feet deep, so that only n direct hit by a largo shell will disturb them. Within half a mile of tho front not even this protection is sufficient, as tho shells churn und re churn tho ground. Therefore nil wires In this zono are duplicated and are strung along both sides of tho trenches. Somotlmes a trench wall is covered with wires. In tho battalion hendqunrtcrs signal office, whero tho hundreds of wires from tho trenches and ob servation posts centtr and whero tho receivers hum with tho constant tremors of a world under flro, plain BUI Sinlfh lounges in a corner rolling a cigarette and occupied In his own particular thoughts. It Is a dugout, this headquarters, and the air Is vile, but BUI got used to that long ago. "The wlro to A battery Is down," Smith's su perior officer says, turning to him. "All right, sir," Is tho answer. And BUI climbs out of tho dugout, repair kit over bin arm and tin hat on his head. In tho trench ho finds the wire that Is broken and begins to follow It along. It is hot work In the trench, shells nre dropping thickly, but Smith doesn't mind much. Ho follows tho wlro down a communication tronch and then after a long time out Into tho open, where ho has to crawl ulong looking for tho holo that will mark tho placo whero tho lino has been broken. ITh gets nearly thero when a shell lands near him nnd Bill Smith? his faco townrd tho break, goes west. After a tlne, back In tho dugout, an other repnlrman Is sent out nnd perhaps ho Is luckier than BUI and finds tho break. Then ho has to sit down In tho shell crater, tho smash of bursting shells' so closo that somotlmes he Is half burled In dirt, cnlmly making the con nection that will ennblo tho observation officer up front to got In touch with his battery again. If ho gets back to tho dugout ho will bo sent out again and yet again If tho bombnrdmont Is heavy, and often for days and nights at a tlmo theso men are under Are, snatching a nap now and then In tho dugout between brenks. But thoy keep tho lines open. In an attack the signal men go over tho top with tho Infantry, generally with tho second wave, in charge of tho observing officer. They mako for n point whero they can establish an observation post, and as thoy pass on nnd through tho enemy's bnrrago they unroll their lino and ono of them car ries a Hold telephono, through which thoy somehow manngo In tho din of battle to mako themselves heard. That telephono Is llko a battlo flag, and many a man goes down with it, only to havo It picked up and carriod forward by another of theso noncom batant troops. Their business Is only to servo, not to light, and they do It with a cool daring which la not surpassed in any branch of Uie service. They are in tho forefront of every advanco arvJ In tho retreat aro sometimes tho Inst to leavo tho front Hue, whore tlwy stick to tho end of their wires under terrific shell fire until ordered to re join their commands If they can get through alive. "An experienco of this kind happened to mo a short tlmo ago In n lonely chateau of tho Ypres Mcnln road," an English officer wroto homo. "Tho clmtcnu was tho center of a perfect hell of Ger man shrapnel for nearly n week, until lt-becamo almost untenable and was abandoned by tho head quarters staff. "Tho general gnvo Instructions that n telegraph ist wns to remain behind to transmit important messages from tho brigades, and I wns left In charge of tho instruments In this shell-swept chntcau for a day and a night. "On tho second day tho Germans broko through our trenches and tho wires wero cut by tho shell lire. I was given orders to evacuato tho building and smash up my Instruments. Theso I saved by , burying In a shellproof trench, nnd then I had to escape between our k own flro nnd thnt of the enemy's ncross a field under n tcrrlblo tornado of shrapnel. "On tho early morning of the samo day ono of . our cable detachments was cut up and another captured by tho Germans, only to bo rotnken by our sappers and drivers after a despernto and glorious fight." Tho linemen also havo regular patrols, stretches of lino which havo to bo constantly exnmlncd not only for breaks but also to mako sure that they havo not been tapped by enemy spies In such a way that every bit of Information sent ovor them finds Its way to tho Germans. In the Alsno onco, whero tho hill country offered good cover to splea, tho wires wero constantly being tapped. Ono day a lineman passing along tho road no ticed a lot of cablo lying at ono side. Ho started to coll It up and found that a piece of wlro had been tied to the main line. When he traced It he found that it ran to a haystack. Ho wont on, tapped tho lino nnd sent In word to hendqunrtcrs and an armed escort found a spy hidden In the hay with soverul df.ys' supply of food. Thoy are autocrats lu their way, these wlro re pairmen, and no ono Is permitted to lnterfero with the swift execution of their work, Word coming ovor the lino that tho wlro to a battory was re paired Is often tho sweotest sound In tho world to an observation olllcor up front, oven if It comes in a rough brogue which French weather has not Im proved. So when anybody elso breaks In on tho lino and Interferes with tho repairman ho gets rolled, es pecially If ho has been sitting for soveral hours In n shell holo with an ley rain dripping down his back. An English officer told of what happenod to a general who broke In once. "A general camo In tho hut and told me 'I taag up the telephono Just now nud said, "Give ma the brigade, please," but somo one with a loud volco replied deliberately and distinctly: "Got off tho blinking line." I got off remarking that ai soon as convenient I should like -to speak. I apologized and explained that tho lino had been down nnd was being repaired. Ho went off with . u merry twlnklo in his eye.' As tliq number of men In tho American army abroad grows with tho weeks, tho number of lino men, thoso who mako posslblo all that tho artil lery and Infantry together accomplish, will stead, lly Incrcaso until they aro a small army In them selves. And probably It will not bo long before an nouncement will bo mado that somo plain Bill Smith, wlro repairman, has beon given a medal for bravery under lire, which attracted attention even among thei hundreds of bravo acts which then, men perform every day.