THE 8EMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE. NEBRA8KA. SHOWS GERMAN AS HE REALLY IS Brutal Acts of Hun Graphically Described by Major Murphy of Red Cross. BEAT BEAST AT ALL COSTS Must Dulld and Build and Sacrlf.ce to Win the War A War of Natlono In Which Every Man, Woman and Child Is Factor. Now York. Ono thousand seven hundred men nml women In the grund ballroom of one of the big hotels saw tho German us he really Is through tho eyes of MaJ. Grayson M. I'. Mur phy, Bed Cross director In Europe. Major Murphy arrived hero recently, after being In Franco for nearly ten months, ami ho Is going back again, lie camo to make a report to Henry P. Davison, chairman of the Ited Cross war board. Major Murphy said In part: "I want to ask you to consider for a moment tho fact that up to this day Germany Is ontlrely victorious In this war; that nny penco that Is mndo toduy on the basis of today's conditions or on tho basis of the status quo unto would be practically n complete victory for Germany and for tho German Idea. Germany has lost nothing In this war except blood. Sho has fought her war on tl)c ter ritory of others. Sho has drawn from tho territory of others vast supplies of materials and vast sums of money. 8he has had between forty and llfty million pcoplo working for her for practically no wage really as sluves. Sho has established her cursed hold on Austria, on Turkey und on garla, and sho has at her feet dcred Serbia and unfortunate mania. Hun Stops at Nothing. "You don't know what these Bul-mur-Bou- Ger- man people arc, I bellovc. "I cannot begin to descrlbo to you Uio horrible, brutal, beastly, consist ent official things that Germany hns done, not In Isolated cases, but gen erally, to tho women and children nnd tho poor old suffering people In tho countries where sho hns sot her dreadful foot. Sho lias stopped nt nothing, British olllcers told mo of seeing their wounded piled In heaps and hand grenades thrown In tho midst and exploded to kill them whllo they lay there. "British olllcers have told mo of tho men being taken ns prisoners through Germany nnd German women coming nnd offering them n glass of water and spitting In It ns they handed It to them. I enmo back across tho water with n prominent British olllccr nnd statesman. Ilo told mo of a friend of Ills who lay wound- r AMERICAN AVIATORS These two American olllcers hnd Just been decorated with gold eagles nt tho Aero club of Paris when tho photograph wns taken. They aro aviators In General Pershing's force. WORK AMONG ALIENS College Women Training for Americanization Campaign. Opportunity for Splendid Service by ThoBe Having Knowledge of Foreign Languages. Washington. The knowledge of for eign lnngungcs which before tho war seemed nlmost superfluous equipment nnd of llttlo practical use except ns n finishing touch to nn education of cul ture, Is now being appreciated by tho demand for volunteers to work with aliens, nnd spread tho Ideal of Ameri canization. Ono of tho four war courses nt Vnssnr college, Poughkcep sle, N. Y Is "training for work with aliens," tnken by thoso who hnve con versatlonnl command of n modern lan guage. This course will fit young wom en for work In censorship, translation, tho education of aliens nnd other social work connected with ullen supervision. Young collego women In Cleveland ro giving evenings to educating for eigners. War news Is printed dally In od nnd suffering horribly in front of tho Germun trenches. Ilo lay there for n day and a hulf or two days, nnd tho Gcrmnns camo out nt night, stood nround him and scoffed nt him and kicked him and made fun of lilm, nnd then went awny and left him, and when somo of his own pcoplo went out at tho risk of tholr lives and brought him Iti before ho died he told them of those things. "Did you think that the men In that British regiment would bo will ing to make n half pence with Ger many? Do you think that the Cana dians who went In the trenches and found their olllcers crucified whether those men will ninke u half peace with Germany? I tell you It Is only n short tlmo before our hoys who,, nre over there now are going to ho suf fering those same things, und you have got to understand It here, nnd you have got to build nnd build und sacrifice, no matter what it costs, to boat that benst. A War of Nations. "This war Is not n wnr of armies. it Is n war of nations. There Isn't n Canadian Officer Praises Officers and Men of American Army in France. EXPECTEO TO WIN THE WAR Come In at Tlmo When Strain of Lonn Fighting Is Beginning to Show on Both Allies and the Foe Ger man Tactics Simple. Chicago. "The Germans must strike now or never," wrote MaJ. Gcorgo W. MacLeod, second In command of tho Forty-ninth Canndlun battalion, nnl ono trf tho veterans of the hardest lighting tho Cunndlans hnvo seen in France, In a letter to Capt. A. AVul laco Owen of tho Brltish-Cnnndlnn re cruiting mission In tills city. Captain Owen Is uttnehed to the Forty-ninth battalion. "All wo can do Is to sny, 'Lot tho bat tle commence,"' tho letter continues. "Every one Is nntlclputlng n big Ger man offensive either ngnlnst ourselves or tho French. There never has been such closo co-operntlon ns exists at tho present tlmo between ourselves nnd the French, and If tho Bocho sturts any thing ho may get tho surprise of his life. Pleased With Americans. "Every one Is very much pleased with tho Americans over hero. They nro n splendid looking lot of ofllcers and men, nnd their mnnhers nnd atti tude leavo nothing to be desired. Once GET GOLD EAGLES various languages, and posted In the school conters and questions aro en couraged und nnswered. The University of Wisconsin Y. W. 0. A. social service committee Is con ducting a Big Sister movement among Italian children, and works with n neighborhood house in tho Jewish quarter. Tho Collegiate Alumnao as sociation of MInnenpollx. Minn., has n national aid committee- which supplies volunteers to tench English to foreign soldiers nnd civilians. Miss Edith Bennett, head of tho Chi cago Collegiate Alumnno Bureau of Oc cupations, reports ninuy tails In the fall for secretaries nnd translators with a knowledgo of French nnd Span ish. Svvarthmorc classes in elementary German hnvo shrunk this year, whllo Spnnish has wpn n sudden populnrlty, the classes having tripled In enroll ment, Miners Show Patriotism. Seattle, Wash. Members of tho Is saquah (Wash.) local union of tho .United MIno Workers of Amerlcn nro giving 1 per cent of their earnings, or nbout $200 n month, to tho Bed Cross. real mum mm u. s. stmts - man, a woman or n child In Grent Brltnln, In Belgium, In Franco or In Italy that Is not it factor In this wurv I tell you thnt if you should go, as i have gone, about those ruined dis tricts In France and see the llttlo children, little bits of tots, four and five yonrs old, driving In the hen' nt night, seeing the little boys rm tng down tho road little bits of to. with their arms full of fnirgots tine they were accumulating ngnlnst the winter; old men anil old women work ing In the Holds until It was so dark that, ns you looked, you could Just, make out those vague ghostly form.j gathering In the crops for Frnnce. "I hnvo pnssed through those towns nnd looked In tho windows nt night, whore you could see u little hero and thrc, and they wore always working, working, working, to carry on this war. It Is not tho armies of France that arc tho essential thing to Frnnce in this war, nor tho nrmies of Eng land, nor tho other countries. Those armies wilt do their part, and do It to a finish, If they nre supported by tho pcoplo behind, nnd the grent cry ing need In Europe today Is to build up the spirit and keep up the spirit of tho people behind tho lines, nnd It Is thnt great work In which tho Red Cross tliunks not to us on tho other side, but to you on this side hnvo performed nnd become the Inrgest known single factor since our entry into uio wnr." they s.irt in I think that the Germans will lm-e somo real lighting to handle. "On is gradually beginning to renl Izc ti e meaning of the expression n 'war c-JT attrition.' With tho enormous slaughter which hns been In progress for ov,.r three yenrs tho Germans nnd ourseves nro beginning to show tho strulr Wo seo It In tho typo of olll cers nnd men as regards physique. Our training possibly counteracts to n certain extent this loss of physique, but I would not core to see the aver age unit of today placed alongside Its former self. Similarly with the rest ,of the belligerents. It is at this junc ture tHnt tho Amerlcnns arrive, und ono Is Immediately struck with their appearance. Tho first million men from tho United States army should nearly be able to finish tho wnr pro-' vldcd they are not used In driblets. Given af completely now nrmy, say of two full corps, or possibly three, In tho spring and the end of the war should be not long postponed. German Tactics Simple. "I do not think thnt we nro at tho last ditch by any means. We hnvo been in tight corners before, nnd will no doubt sweep our way out of tho present one. A German offensive put on simultaneously ngnlnst the French, and ourselves nt the present time' would, however, make it fairly stiff going. "I doubt, however, if tho Gcrmnn Is really sufllclently strong to do this: 1. e two determined sustnlned offen sives. That he will uso dlverslve tac tics Is probable. Ilo must finish tho job this winter, or he never will, nnd nil wo enn do is to meet tho blow when It comes, or, possibly nntlclpnto thnt blow by one of our own. The German grand strategy has never been nny thlng but simple. Ills tnctlcs nre dif ferent. Ills strategy hns been simply to wear down tho forces opposed to him until n stngo Is reached when ho can uttnek." RED CROSS SAVES CHILDREN Responds Generously to Important Work of Conserving the Future Generations. Save the children I This cry nrises nppenllngly ,ln Frnnce, Belgium, Serbia and every ono of tho wur-strlcken countries. Tho American Bed Cross respond ing generously to this most Importnnt work of conserving the future genera tions. It is caring for 2-1,000 children In France nnd 0,000 children In Bpl glutit, Somo of these children had not had n hath In six months when tho Bed Cross nurses took them In chnrge. Tho relief of their sufferings touches n uni versal heart-chord and perhaps does more than nny other form of relief to nrouso tho lasting gratitude of for eign peoples for the United Stntcs. Your gift to the Bed Cross Is wreath ing in smiles the faces of llttlo chil dren who were starved, sick nnd ter rorized. 000OOOtOt-OO5.0O.j0 o o o HUSBAND COURTS WAR, BUT NOT WITH SPOUSE t o o o o o o o o o Independence, Kan. A mur- , rled man of this city recently o returned his questionnaire and waived all his rights to exemp- tlon. When nsked why, rs n married 9, mnn, ho didn't take advuntagc of o them, ho said: "Exemption bp d d. y0n don't know my wlfo. Sny, man, I'd rather wnlk across No Man's land and hack barefooted than live with that wonmn." o o fr0'fr00000000't.0..004,n Women In War Work. Pittsburgh, Pa. Munition plnnts nnd shops In tho Pittsburgh district now working on parts of Liberty motors will soon bo employing women. All of the largo plants nre renovating their buildings nnd Installing sanitary equipment and restaurants In order that they may comply with the stnto laws for tho employment of fcmnlo help. Women of Interior Department Doing Big War Work if ASIIINGTON. -Under the dally, personal direction of Mrs. Franklin K. " Lane, wife of the secretury of the Interior, nenrly hnlf n thousand women of tho Interior department nro using every spare minute set'Jng. knitting and packing things which will comfort nnd cheer sick und wounded American sol diers In Frnnce. When the offlce day ends they hur ry from nil parts of oinclal Washing ton to the rooms in Secretary Lnno's big building, where tho Interior De partment Wnr Work nssoclntlon Is In continuous session, to turn In finished work nnd get material for more sweat ers, sheets, towels, pajamas, stockings, slippers and the other nrtlcles which nre packed In big shipping cases, ono of which hns gone to Neullly, France, every ten days The Interior Depart ment Wnr Work nssoclntlon is an auxiliary of tho American Bed Cross. It hnd Its beginning almost Immediately after wnr with Germany wns declared, when the Home club, which Is n social organization of the department with nearly a thousund members, began plnnnlng for relief work. For n time tho nssoclntlon met In tho Home Club building on Jackson place, nnd In the early days of the movement Its output wns distributed through tho American French clenring house. Here Mrs. Lane, surrounded by the wives nnd dnughters of her husband's nsslstnnts, commissioners, directors nnd chiefs, manages an organized patriot ism which ramifies Into the far North whore the Alusknn engineering commis sion Is pushing u rnllrond to reach precious coal deposits; into isolnted res ervations where the people of the Indlnn service are; Into the nrld plnJns where the men of tho geological survey nro working; Into tho depths of coal shafts whore tho bureau of mines' experts gather; Into pralrlo towns where tho men of tho general land ofllco work; into the green-clad irrigation areas where tho engineers of tho reclamation service are constructing canals nnd ditches; Into the mountains nnd canyons nnd great forests of the big trees where tho rangers nnd flro fighters of tho nntlonnl park service climb the trails, and to tho desks and ofllces of tho bureau of education, the pension bureau, tho patent ofllco nnd nil tho other branches nnd divisions of the Interior department. For the men of the service nre back of tho women with their money. Thousands of dollars have been pledged nnd pnld and the enthusiasm In the good cause has been so practical In Its nature that though the work Is only just beyond tho stake of Inltlnl organization. Tragic Little Story of Washington's Icy Streets SHE was a large, fat "cullud lady" and wns coming along tho street early Monday morning, with u milk bottle In oue hand nnd a package in the other. Evidently she was tho cook. Dat sho' wns n slippery moruln. Every where the eye could see there was Ice, r 'My. .a s this natural law, "here for the first time announced," ns General Crowder said In his report to congress on tho first draft under the selective service act. Swinging tho quart of milk in one hnnd nnd balancing her lee side -with the package extended at the full length of her nrm, sho made her way safely across tho Ice n la Eliza. Sho came to shoro on n trail of sawdust "thoughtfully sprinkled In front of nn apartment house by n man whose name deserves to go down In the nnnnls of 1018 ns the Abou Ben Adhcra of janitors. "Uh-uh," sighed tho cook, happily, as sho hit the sawdust. "Now I kin walk." So firm were her steps that when she got to the end of the sawdust sho forgot thnt tho ways of life nro slippery when It rains nnd then freezes. She thought sho wns still on sawdust. But sho wasn't. One foot went to the left nnd tho other foot shot to the right. The hnnd carrying the package went down, and the milk bottle went eky wnrd. She nllghtcd. Tho milk bottle followed, crashing Into various pieces, the contents splotching tho landscape for yards around. 'Twos a InDd flowing with milk nnd words. S Senator Smith Rouses Pity for Girls From Dixie SPGBBED by n heartfelt appeal by Senator rioke Smith of Georgia, for the hundreds of "lonesome" young girls who hnvo come to Washington to help bear tho nation's clerical war yoke, tho Georgia society of the city In special session laid certain plans to remedy this Inmentnble condition which an emergency has provoked. Mothering nnd caring for the Georgia girls, Senntor Smith pointed out, Is the plan of the organization. "Pitiful letters nro coming to mo from parents of these girls," Senator Smith told tho Georgians. "They nsk mo to look out for them, nnd I urn anxious to do thnt. I would like to meet every Georgia girl who has come to work for the government during the Inst six or twelve months. I would ltke to shnko her hnnd nnd talk to her ubout her parents." The senntor Is proud of girls who nre reared in Georgia. Senator Smith wrote to the chief clerk In each of the government depart ments asking them to prepnro for him the nnmcs of nil the Georgia girls under his direction. These names he turned over to Commissioner of Patents James T. Newton, who, ns chairman of the spcclnl committee, wns to apportion personal sponsors for each of the listed girls. Senator Smith seemed deeply moved over tho "lonesome" girl problem In view of the fact that some Georgln girls were coming to Washington beforo they had received definite appointment. Girl Gives Up Society to Help Director McAdoo A WASHINGTON society girl, Miss Frances Hawthorne Brady, who gave up parties, dances, and tens of the debutante set In Washington to help tho government during the period of the war, is tho first and only woman on tho staff of Director Geueral of Ball- I'm cm MR. MDOQ picked flE poa HIS STfNFf 7,1 jsTi I Washington, Miss Brady, who Is but twenty-one, nnd consequently not n bit dlffldsnt about telling her nge, has been prominent In all of tho affairs of the younger sot. Her two grown brothers entered tho regular army as engineers in tho first days of tho wnr. She offored her services to tho government nnd was appointed n clerk In tho Liberty Loan bureau. Kiss Brady has no tlmo for tens or parties now. For months she hns b'. working from nlno In tho morning to ulmost nny hour nt night. The hours will certulnly not bo nny shorter In the railroad ofllco. The streets were coated with Ico and the sidewalks were glazed ns well. As far ns the skating quality of the sur faces were concerned, tho lco might just as wen nuve neon n root thick. ua feii-uk uu u mm uuuuiig ui ice us on lco two feet deep. It is only possible to skate on the outside of Ice, anyway did you ever .think of that? The lurge cook was well aware of IT WAS VERY KIND OF 5FNAT0R. ,3UR.g J roads McAdoo. Miss Brady was selected becauso of her ability and elilclency In Liberty Loan work in tho treasury, nnd she wns the second appointee of Mr. Mc Adoo as director general of the rail roads. Miss Brady's ofllclal title has not been fixed. Sho Is acting, however, as general assistant In the director's ofllco. Since leaving a finishing school In 1 ilSa, , mm 11 jji itjj The Pre-eminent One By REV. B. B. SUTCLIFFE Extension Department, Moody Bible Institute, Chicago TEXT That In nil things ho might havo thi pro-eminence. Col. 1:18. This is the fundamental truth which underlies till of God's revelntlon to man. Wntit God has done, Is. doing t.nd will yet do, Is done with this pri mary object In view, viz., that lit all things Christ might have the-. pre-eminence. The Object of the Father's Counsels We ure danger ously n e u r t h e tlrce when w e plnce mnn before God ns the object of his counsels. But before ever time began it wus Christ who was dally God's delight (Prov. 8:30). And nil during time ho ls still the pre-eminent one, for It has pleased the Father thut in Christ should all fullness dwell (Col. 1:19). Not man but Christ has been made heir of all things (Ileb. 1:2). After tlmo will bo passed this will still be true,.ns Is stated In Eph. 1 :10, "that In the dis pensation of the fullness of times ho will gather together In cne nil things In Christ, both which nre in heaven, nnd which are on earth." Tho error of humanltariauism rises out of a de nial of this truth und the consequent attempt to put men In Christ's place. Humanltnrlanlsm is nothing more than the exnltatlon of man, lending to his deification and the enthronement of the human above the divine. Mankind can come Into the purposed blessing from God only ns. Christ is given his proper place that of being the pre eminent object of God's counsels. And what Is true of the human race Is true of tfie individual. That life Is blessed In the measure In which Christ is pre eminent therein. As the Object of the Scriptures. The object of the Scriptures Is not to give the world n history, although the only absolutely true history In the world is found there. Neither is tho Scripture a scientific book, although wherever the Scripture touches science It touches it with a true hnnd and Is never unscientific. Neither do the Scriptures set forth n system of philos ophy ns the object for which they were written, nlthough the deepest philos ophy Is found there. The pre-eminent object of the Book Is Christ. Without him they would uever have been writ ten and wo rend our Bibles to little purpose If wo fall to find him upon Its puges. Ho rebukes those of older time by saying In Jno. 5:39: "Ye search the Scriptures, for in them ye think yo hnve eternal life and they are they which testify of me." Eternal life Is In him and he Is In the Scriptures. They would not receive him of whom the Scriptures spake nnd so missed the eternal life for which they sought. Through the books of history, prophecy nnd psalms the ono radiant object in type and symbol, ceremony and pre diction Is this pre-eminent one Christ Jesus the Lord. He Is the only key which will unlock the mysteries and the only light making plnln tho dark places. As the Object of Our Faith. Our eternal destiny does not rest on what wo do with certain things but n certnln person. It Is not the faith but the object of the faith that counts. I may have splendid faith In a noor bank and lose my money. I may have much fultli In a rotten boat and lose my life. And I may have first-class faith In some other object than Christ, such as a good life or charitable deeds, and lose my soul. If it Is salvation I need I am to believe In him und be suved (Acts 10:31). If It Is justifica tion I want I nm to believe in him and be Justified from all thlncs (Acts 13:39). Freedom from condemnation. etcruul life, sanctlflcntlon, all that has to do with my snlrltual well-holm.' hangs on my faith In him. No wonder, men, tnnt we read, "this is the work of God that ye bellevo on him whom he hath sent" (Jno. 0:29). no Is to be the pre-eminent object of my faith. Will my reader stop and ask from the beurt, "Am I really trusting In ChrlBt alone or Is some other object nre-eml- nent beforo my faith?" no must do ill for us or he can do nothing for us. "If ye bo circumcised Christ will nroflt j-ou nothing" (Gal. G:2). Adding any thing to him nnd his work makes him to be of no value to us. He is to be the alone Savior, Justlfler, Sunctlflcr. Dod will give all things through him, nothing npart from him. The error of humanltnrianism will come in when any other oblect tlmn this pre-eminent one Is beforo us. We win oe kepr from the leaven of tho Pharisees when we seek for him nlono In tho Scriptures, and the eternal In terests of our souls will be safeguarded and mnde sure when he Is the- sunreine ' abject of our faith. Thou O Christ art all I want; More than ull In thee I Unci. When from our days of feverish, anxious toll we come home at night too tlred to pray, we huve doubtlo defrauded God of n part of his re sources upon which he depended more than upon our direct activity. N. K. Host