Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1917)
KID CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF HELP ! The Pa) Gross Lungs Arc Weakened By Hard Colds CASCAR At? QUININE Th old family rtmtdy la tufcfat form atfe, turt, easy to tak. N 2latt no unpleatant afttr 0Nt. urea colda In 34 hour Ort la oajri. Monty back I fit fall. Octthi U. 8. DE8TROYER JACOB JONE8 TORPEDOED WHILE ON . PATROL DUTY TJNasd TWO-THIRDS OF CREW LOST First Decisive Blow of German Sub marine Aimed at American Navy frnulna bos with !ed Top and Mr. Hlll'a plctura on It S4Tatlatafoa(. At Aay Drag Star SUNK BYSUBMAR1NE m () -W-WKt aaaaaaaaWTf A n0 HB & flft t aWaaaVBr nK(MLMlf7HB2w lmMBl j-r WHVIuiKi IK IXWte s iou m ( zr aaar 1BB!7 K. jaWSE AllviIBaaaalaaaaaSSMaaaaaaaSJ era -agaaael LiaaW . JmtKLmWwFifflJfM3R Br ABulfliVr yfH'B'Kw n,mmWt faI rrr Py- , , "And above all things have fervent charity among your selves: for charity shall cover the multitude of sins."--1 Peter 4:8 Agonized Europe cries for your aid. Make Christmas really worth while by answering generously the ap peal of the Red Cross Society. Read this stirring article by Charles Lee Bryson K CHUlfJ DtHM CI8J0" fa Tit Her (nil UtpUn T WILL tnke not fewer than 15,000, 000 members of the Amcrlcnn lied Cross to take en re of the Kick uud wounded soldiers, look after their families, nnd relieve tho suffering of tho women nnd children nnd old men of war-trodden lands. Fifteen million members! That means 10, 000,000 new members, and tho lied Cross has set out to get them before the sun sets on Christmas day. They are to be known as Christmas members, these 10,000.000 new ones, nnd It Is In the Christ mas Bplrlt that they are to be recruited tho spirit of unselfishness, of caring for the nflllcted, of alleviating suffering. While It Is getting these new members, tho fi.000,000 who now wear the Red Cross emblem are giving nil tho Christmas cheer they can to the boys in khaki. They need it. Tens of thousands of them, nnd It may be hundreds of thousands, are now In France with Pershing, facing the terrible XJermnns across the desolate waste of No Man's Land. Millions more nro to go nftcr them, and other nnd still other millions until tho foe which claims the wwld for Germany Is willing to go homo nnd behave ns a civilized nntlon. They will have n cheery Christmas this year. F.very man In Franco will have a little packet from "home," with the love and good wishes of thu American people nnd that mentis n lot to tho young fellow who porhnps never before spent Christmas away from his home folks. It will put j.. - Mt into Mm for the task ahead. Tho men on this side, watting in the training camps for their turn to go across, will nlso have as merry n Christmas ns tho Red Cross con pro vide. Cliristmas trees, with gifts of some kind, bearing n world of cheer and hope from the grent heart of the American people, will greet every man in uniform, wherever he may be. This Cliristmas will be n merry one for the whole of tho army nnd navy. The boys have not been long nwny from home, they have had almost none of the hardships of war, and they come to tho feast with light hearts. War has tnken nlmost no toll from them thus fnr. Belgium nnd France, Serbia and Roumanln, Great Britain nnd her colonies, Russia and Italy, have borne the brunt of frlghtfulness nnd our boys hnve heen spared. So It will be a merry Chrlstmns for them. Next year It will be different. The pinch of privation will be felt In the lnnd voluntnry, to n great extent, but It will ho felt. There will be less to cat nnd less to wear, and millions to be fed nnd clothed who no longer produce, nnd nil the nation will save all It can to give to those who are fighting, nnd to those defenseless ones on tho other side who have nothing. And there will be gaps In the ranks, and there will ho full hospitals. There Is where the Red Cross comes In wherever there is dlsnster. Tho hospital buildings, the equipment, tho surgical sup plies, tho surgeons nnd nurses nnd orderlies, the ambulances nnd tho drivers nnd the stretcher shoulders of the Red Cross. It will carry It, be cnuso it has the backing of the American people ; and In the meantime It must carry the load of' ,the nations which have nlreody suffered more than three yenrs of frlghtfulness. Here nro some of tho things the Amcrlcnn Red Cross Is rlpht now doing in France ; where It has spent $10,000,000. Theso extrncls were token from n report by the Paris headquarters to Henry P. Davison, chairman of the Red Cross war council, which rnlsed n fund of $100,000,000 for Its work : "We have Just given $1,000,000 fnr needy sick nnd wounded French soldiers nnd thclr'fnmllles. "Our hospltnl distributing servlco sends supplies to 3,-123 French mllltnry hospitals, and Is laying In n lnrge Btock for futuro needs. "Our surglcnl dressings service supplies 2,000 French hospltnls, nnd Is preparing Immcnso sup plies for our own armies. "Wo nnorptlnt? nt tho front line, In co-opcrn-tlon with the French Red Cross, ten canteens, and are preparing for 20 more; nnd nt six can teens for French soldiers nt railway stations we nn nrvlnt? about 80,000 men n day. "We have opened n children's refuge nnd hos--pltal at a point where several hundred children hno been gathered to keep them from danger of gas nnd shell fire. At" nnother point" wo have established n medical center and n traveling dis pensary to accommodnto 1,200 children. "We arc making nrrangements on a largo scale to help refugeo families through the winter with clothing, beds, shelter, and for this work tho on tlre'dcvostflted portion of France has been divided Jnffi 't fltrlct with n resident Red Cross dele gate In each. Warehouses hnve been established nt four points to which nro shipped food, clothing, bedding, beds, household uteuslls and agricultural Implements. "Wq hnve n large centrnl warehouse In Paris, and distribution warehouses nt important points from tho Swiss border to tho sen. Two hundred tons of supplies are nrrlvlng In Pnrls dally, and 125 tons are Bhlpped to branch warehouses." From other authorities word has come that tho Germans nro driving hack Into France, through Switzerland, the ragged, Mck, hungry nnd home lass women nnd children of the conquered districts of France nt the rnte of 80,000 u month. Held In captivity for moro than threo years, they nre l'ow driven forth oven from the ruins In which they hnve existed, so that the Germans tuny no longer be responsible for their starving to death. The Red Cross would not bo truo to Itself or to tho people who hnve founded It and are supporting It, If It did not do everything It could to comfort and help theso sorely tried ones. Tho relief of human suffering Is Its solo object, nnd It has never withheld Its hand when there was anguish to bo soothed. But In this case there Is another object to bo attatned cnll It selllli If you will. In bucking up France, and making her people stronger to en dure, tho Red Cross is saving the lives of Ameri can soldiers. This wns admirably expressed In the great Chicago Red Cross conference by Henry V. Davison, chairman of the Red Cross war council. "You may ask how nil this work among the French people Is of any help to our boys how It Is saving their lives," said Mr. Davison. "I'll tell you: We nsk General Pershing what he wants, nnd he says, 'I don't want anything, for our boys, but for God's sake buck up the French. Glvo them courage. Hearten them. They have been lighting for threo years, nnd If you "want to do anything for me and our boys, make the people understand that we are here, and are going to take our places In the lino ns soon ns we can get ready.' " Then Mr. Davison went on to show the strain under which the French have lived for more than three years, with the German terror holding much of their lnnd nnd hammering night nnd day at their Hues to break through nnd take Paris. "And If that French line should break," ho said, "you know what that means. There's nobody but those boys of Pershing's to stop tho Germans, nnd, ready or not, they'll have to fill tho gap. If we can help the French lino to hold, wo snvo our own boys until they arc nil ready to take their lnrt." Mr. Davison pictured the wenry French soldier coming out of the trenches for n ten-dny rest. He Is tired half to death, covered with dirt and vermin, his clothing worn. Does lie go home? Ho hns no home, perhaps. His wife nnd children were swept nway before the German tide. Ills home Is gone. He says, "I can live In hell lu the trenches, but I don't Bee why my family should he In hell too." But now the American Red Cross Is In France. It meets the soldier when he comes from the irenches, takes him to n house prepared with your money, and he Is mnde comfortable. He Is given a bath, his clothing Is cleaned nnd sterilized, his hnlr cut, his whiskers trimmed, nnd he sleeps for nn hour mnybo ten hours. Then he Is tnken to his family, If the Red Cross has been nblo to And his, family. He finds his wife nnd babes, or his old mother, In a house or n shelter of some kind supplied nnd furnished by the Rod Cross. AVheiT tho days of his leave are up, that soldier goes back to the trenches a new man. Ho knows now that America, with her millions nnd millions of fighting men, nnd her billions and billions of money, nnd the tender core of her Red Cross, are behind him. And he goes back Into the war with a new determination, nnd says, "so long ns I live, I will fight." "And bo long ns he holds that line, -lie Is taking the plnco of some Amerlcnn boy who Is not yet trained to take the trenches. That line must be made to hold for months yet, for Gencrnl Pershing has said that If he can help It, his boys shall not go Into the hard fighting before February. When they do go In, then will come the real test of the American Red Cross then will bo the days of harvest, of which today Is the day of sow ing. For when the wounded begin to strcntn from the evacuation-hospltnls back to the bases, tho warehouses of handnges nnd pnds nnd gauze nnd splints nnd hospital garments nnd surglcnl sup plies will melt away like mist before tho sun. And in thnt day. If the Red Cross hnve not n member ship of something near tho desired lf5.000.000, trained to make and ship all these supplies in n great, nevcr-fnlterlng stream, tho American soldier will be nshnmed of the land for which he Is fight ing, nnd many will lose limb "or life which could have been saved. These nre not the opinions of n novice they nre the convictions of men who nro now nt the front In Frnnce nnd Belgium, nnd who see, every day. the horrors of war which It Is the work of the Red Cross to mitigate. It Is only n few weeks since MnJ. Grayson M. P. Murphy, nn ofllcer of the regular nrmy of wldo experience nnd great ability, now Red Cross commissioner for France, cabled his convictions on this subject. And what ho said was, In substance, that unless the Red Cross Immediately sent n vast supply of all man ner of hospltnl supplies, tho American nrmy would stand In danger of disaster and disgrace. He used those words "disaster and disgrace." Few whohavo not been through a modern mili tary hospital can conceive whnt nn enormous amount of supplies It requires. French surgeons report thnt It often requires an entire box of 7,000 gauze dressings for n single patient. There has been such a scarcity of dressings In Franco that they havo been driven to use theso dressings over nnd over, trying to boll nnd clenn, nnd sterilize them ns well ns they can, Instead of throwing them nwny nnd putting on fresh ones. There hns, nt times, been bucIi n dearth that wounded soldiers havo had their bleeding wounds stanched with old newspapers, with the result that they have always been Infected, nnd gangrene nnd lockjaw have clulmed many a poor fellow who could havo been saved. Terrible ns it Is to think of, they havo at times been driven to operate in France without chloro form or ether nono wns to ho had. These, no doubt, are tho things which Major Murphy had In mind, when ho said thnt disaster and disgrace nwnlted" America Jess the supply of surgical necessities Is hastened. Even It the lnds who are about to go into the lighting line were not our own Atnciiain boys, the Red Cross would be hound to do all It could (or them. But they nre our own. We do not fully realize It yet, but we will later on. From every city, every village, every farming community, from almost every family In the whole land, one or moro hoys will help fill the lines In France nnd It Is for them, for your friends and mine, for your rela tives and mine, that the Ited Cross Is working. It Is going to take men nnd women by the mil lion, working all their spine time, ami n good deal of time which they do nut now think they can spare. And It Is going to take hundreds of mil lions of dollars all we can spare, and maybe all we have, whether or not we think we con spare It. Belgium is crushed, Set bin Is obliterated, Rou manln Is little more than a memory, Russia Is Im potent, Italy Is bearing a heavy cross, Franco Is Immortal In spirit but growing thin. There are left chlefiy the British Hon and the American eagle, and tho Kiigllxh-Mieaklug boys who bear them aloft. If they fall, tivlllnitlon Is dead. There is no longer any question that civilization Is fighting for Its very life. Germany has set out to force tho whole world to live under the German Imperialistic plan. President Wilson, In IiIh now famous Buffnlo speech, said: "It Is amazing to me that any group of people should supposo that any reforms planned In the In tel est of the pcoplo can live In the presence of Germany Btrong enough to undermine or over throw them by Intrigue of force. . . . Any man who supposes that the free Industry nnd enterprise of the world can continue If the Pan-German plan Is achieved and German power fastened upon the world, Is ns fatuous ns the dreamers of Russia' There never hns been any question that tho American soldier will tight to death, If need be, when once he begins the Job. "It Is the tnsk of tho American Red Cross to so supply nnd fortify those boys thnt Just as few of them as possible may be sacrificed. That Is what the Red Cross has lu mind when It comes to your house, or your office, or your kitchen door, or wherever you may be found, nnd asks you to bo one of the 15,000,000 Red Cross members to stand back of those boys In khaki. This Is not to be a money campaign. Money Is the least Important matter of this moment. What la wanted is members. The Red Cross wants these 15,000,000 men, women nnd children banded to gether in chapters, organized Into committees, nnd trained to the minute to do whatever Is needed for the boys in France nnd for their families at home, and for those suffering ones who have lost every thing but bare life. If the call Is for worm clothing. It wants these 15,000,000 trained to make nnd turn out the kind of garments needed so thnt they may go by train load and shlplond at once. If It Is for knitted goods there hns already been n call for 0,000,000 knitted urflcles nnd it is almost or quite filled by now these 15,000,000 must bo organized to get yarn and knit, or get others to knit, and deliver the goods nt once. And If It Is for hnudages nnd gauze dressing? nnd other things for the wounded, as 8srei!z u jyiu H wm.'i m,)cr mil be a trained Red Cross tneiiibcrshlp to get them inndo nnd in the hospitals In time to save life. God help the Amerlcnn nrmy In that daylf the people have not been quick to unite with the Red Cross nnd supply the things tho wounded boys must hnvp. And God pity you and me In the days when the boys come back from over there such of them ns come home and listen to the excuses we will try to mnkc If we foil to keep them sup plied with everything they need In their fight for us. There will bo another call for money beforo long. When the country gave $100,000,000 to the Red Cross war council lost summer, the great men at tho head of it estimated that, by careful spend ing, they could mako It last six months. Tho next cnll probably will bo for a larger hum, may bo ns much an n qunrter of n million dollars. If so, tho Amerlcnn pcoplo must give It. Every cent goes for relief work. In whnt he termed his "pub lic accounting," Henry P. Dnvlson, chairman of the Red Cross wnr council, said In n recent speech that of every dollar given the Red Cross for relief work, nbout $1.02 Is spent for relief. What ho meant Is that not ouo cent goes for overhead expense, which Is enred for In nnother wny, but that the wholo fund, together with about 2 per cent Interest which It accumulated whllo in bank, goes for relief, All that will come Inter, when the Red Cross needs moro money to carry on Us work of mercy. , Whnt It needs now is members 10,000,000 add " cd to tho 5,000,000 It now hns. Every member should bo at least of the class called "Magazine Members." It costs $2 a year, nnd entitles tho members to the really wonderful Red Cross Maga zine every month, filled with news nnd colored pictures of what the grent order Is doing all over the earth. If you are a member, renew; if not, become one when the Red Cross commltteo comes. It is mere ly trying to get you to help win your war, and caro for the unlucky who may be some of your own family. Washington. Lurking in tho storm swept Atlantic hundreds of miles off shore, a Teuton submnrlno Thursday night sank tho Amorican destroyor Jacob Jonos with tho loss of prob ably Blxty or moro of her crow. Caught unnwnros, tho dostroycr valiant center of other U-boat en countersapparently nnnk without a chance for a fight, tnklng with hct moro than half of n crew of as fine scamon as over trod n deck. Thlrty-sovon mon, hnstlly scrnmb ling onto life rnftu, had been rescued, nccordlng to Inst Information tho nnvy received from Admiral Sims. Seven found n haven on merchant crnft near by; thirty on n second. And, whllo hopes for tho remainder of tho crow nro meagre, It is barely poBslblo somo other vessels without wlrolcss may hnvo taken tho frozon, struggling vic tims from tho seas. The Jacob Jones, one of the crack ships of tho foreign destroyor (loot, was fully BOO miles off tho British Isles when tho attack occurred. What tho Jonos' errand was In hor distant Journoy Is not revealed, but tho prosoncu of merchant craft noarhy suggostB who wns perhaps convoying valuable cargo as sho had dono many times boforo. Tho complement of tho Jones In penco tlmos wus flvo olllcors, five potty officers and clghty-Boven en llstod mon. Undoubtedly this has been increased to a hundred or moro. From tho first report it would appear that tho loss of life would bo upward of sixty. Tho attack, which was at 8 o'clock nt night, was delivered by torpedo. In tho rolling, icy seas of tho north At lantic winter weather tho submnrlno probably had plenty of opportunity to pick her tlmo for tho shot. Tho sub mnrlno probably camo upon tho de stroyer patrolling her courso in tho duBk and had all tho best of tho on gagomont. No details woro contained In roports, but It has bcon tho caso heretofore that when a submarine gets a hit on a destroyor, it is moro duo to a chanco meeting and good oppor tunity than fighting skill on tho part of tho submarine. The large loss of life would indicate that tho torpedo with Its doadly charge of high explosive, made a fair hit plump on tho destroyer's thin hull and that tho submarine hunter probably was blown fairly In two. That sho wont down quickly Is evidenced by tho fact that nothing is said of survivors getting off In llfo boats. Those saved got off on rafts that probably floated off tho sinking nhlp ns sho plunged down in the ley darkness. Lieutenant Commander David Worth Bagley, and Liout. Norman Scott who were at first reported as lost, woro among thosuryJjrB rescued after tho sinking of tho destroyer. Admiral Sims' reports said that Commander Bagley and tho five other mon saved with him got away In a motorboat and were picked up and landed uninjured at the Scllly Island. The Jacob Jones, one of the largest and newest American submarine chasers of her type, operating In the Atlantic, was the first American war ship to fall a victim to a Gorman sub marine, but was the second American destroyer to be lost In foreign waters. The Chauncey sank with her com mander Walter E. Reno, two othor of ficers and eighteen enlisted men aftor being cut In two by tho transport Rose Early on tho morning of November 20, TYPHOID cxparleoea baa aer, tadhtrmV youi family, H l mara rKal than aaAmaltpox. Ann tnaaSaaaitf ciMileneabaii tha almoat mltactsleaa aftt ieaa. of AnUtypboM VacctaaOoa, B vtctlaatad NOW by your thnlclaa, yen aaa) f t imllr. n la man vital thm boats liWKnc, Aik yoar vhyileKa, draiiUt, or tend far "Hare aoo bad Typhoid!" tttllai of Typhoid Vaectoa, rttoiu rroa oae, ana aaeter nam lypnon uinn PrWoitni VatlM a4 8iro U. S. UtMM Tat Catttr LaitrtUry. Bwitlty, Cat Caltaaa, III, I-- ' - Five Generations In Wars. Five generations of ono fnrally have icrvcd In the United States wars, the chain being completed by tho recent enlistment nt Los Angeles of n young mnn named Rcnnett. Not only did hla two grandfathers, Dennett and Brook over, serve In the Civil war, but hla grent-grandfather, Daniel nennott was also n veteran of thnt war. Tho young riuui's grent-grcnt-grandfather, Asa Rcnnett, wns In tho war of 1812, nnd his two grcnt-great-great-Krandfnthore, Dennett and Harris, were In tho Rev olutionary war. Although not In direct lino of ancestry, young Ucnnctt's ua cle, Harry Ilrookovcr, represented tho family In tho Spanish-American war. BOSCHEE'S GERMAN SYRUP Why use ordlnnry cough remedies, when Uoschco's German Syrup has been used bo successfully for fifty-one years In all parts of tho United States for coughs, bronchitis, colda settled In the throat, especially lung troubles. It gives tho patient a goo night's rest, free from coughing, wltfc easy expectoration In the mornlag, gives nature a chance to soothe ths Inflnmcd parts, throw oft the disease helping tho patient to regain Ms health. Sold In nil civilized countries. 80 and 00 cent bottles. Adv. Would Save the Cake. Johnny had often Been tho now food signs posted up everywhere, telllag peoplo not to waste food and use what is left. Ono day ho was Invited to a birthday pnrty. In a short while the birthday enke wns cut up and cacH child bad a piece, and thero was a big piece left. Tho maid was going to take this piece nway when Johnny call ed to.her and said, "I think I cob use the piece that Is left." One Worse. Friend I suppose you'd rather lick the kaiser than anybody else oa earth. Recruit There's Just one fellow W like to get my hands on worse. Friend Who's thnt? Recruit The guy that hollere4 "Firel" Just as I got my clothes off for tho physical examination. Judge. RED CR088 GOODNESS YES. Red Cross Ball Blue, yes. Nothing else will do. Red Cross Ball BUe makes my clothes a beautiful clear white, uot the dingy yellow gram tinge of liquid blue. Red Cross BM Blue for me. Tes sir-o, Bob. Adv. The Reason. "What makes wheat nervous, ar I guess It Is the way they keep thrashing It, son." j If the man you are talklag to looks t his wlfo it's time to shut p. Washington. VlccAdr.ijrnl Sims has cabled tho navy dopartmont that forty-four officers and men were saved of 110 known to havo been aboard tho destroyor. Ho added to tho list of dead Ensign Staunton F. Kalk of Omaha, Neb., who diod from ex posure, and to tho survivors an un identified man picked up by tho sub marine after the destroyor went down. HAD LITTLE DESIRE TO ROAM Navy officers and officials took pride In tho fact that tho Jacob Jonos and her crew had written new honors into navy records beforo tho vessel fell victim to an enemy torpedo. In Oc tober the Jones went gallantly to the roscuo of the British converted cruiser Orama, accompanied by an other Amorican destroyer, when tho 'irmer P. and O. llnor was torpedoed. They attacked and put tho submarine out of commission, and then, when the cruiser began 'to aettlo, trans ferred all on board to their own decks without accidont The poorest excuse in the world is "I didn't think." Airman Again Raid England London. -1- About twenty-five air planes raided England Thursday. Ot theso six reached London. Two of the raiders woro brought aown, the crow of threo men on each machlno being captured. Bombs dropped by the raid ers caused r numbor of fires In Lon- The Amcrlcuns hnvo contributed largely to the European spirit of patronage. Each year, In hordes, they trnvcled to Europe, breathless with curiosity nnd with haste, curious of dress and bearing (to European eyes) und nasal as to speech, , "" "t all them l were nulcklv with reverence and familiarity nmnzlne contend! ' don' .b?1 1JLof " m, w'e. quAcy Ing. "Why do the Americans love bo to tear ov.er , J Sved to bo light This tho world?" I once heard nn old French lady nsk. 1 "s8 "0 St aermn air raid ovol JenvZ homoPrtCr 8,r, t0 ""i" ,UUn'a '" ! IZ FJX S tE FriTJ' IIcrldcB,r of happiness was to I la8? proviOU8 rald 0CCUrrcd on the stay forever In ono place.-Exchange. it of October 31. Why That Lome Dock ? Morning lameness, sharp twinges when bending, or an all-day back ache; each Is cause enough to sus pect kidney trouble. Get after tht cause. Help the kidneys. We Americans go It too hard. We overdo, overeat and neglect our sleep and exercise and so we ara fast becoming a nation of kidney sufferers. 72 more deaths than In 1800 Is tho 1010 census story, Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Thou sands recommend them. A Kansas Case Bjv -mm,HM s lr-JFuSiJS.ilXr HaM ii u i ot., iicuuoniitt, iman kn" Kan., naya: "Tho first ymntom of my kid. ney troubla wos dlctU neaa and It often got o bad I had to atop work. .My head ached Intenaely and I had pains above my hips, day and night. Doan'a Kidney PUIa removed t h e a e ailment and whenever I have felt the illKhteat return at tack, from a cold, this m brought good results. Get Deaafe at Aay Star. SSe a Baa DOAN'SSSV rOSTEaVKUtmN CO., SUFFALO. K. Y. Lf flwr t Am Mlctnetias Save the Calves I SIMM AM1TMN ffs ! Ymv erlMiKssp II Oat I Apply treatment roii raelf. SaaaU eapeaee. Write for free booklet on Abortion, "Qaeatlone aaS Aniwen". Bute ana her at cattle In herd. r. kaaarte M. to, Ml Imi Imn, VaefcNae, Ha a PAftKlrVl ' .SAM . HAIR BAL: AJolUI preparation of nurtl For fUetorioa Color . Beauty toGray or Fadad HatrJ teaaaaat.0OHrurlla, 1 W. N. U LINCOLN, NO. 80-1917. 4' ". t- ,-rf. jCdP!ys&';i 4sx rK z. k&jz'- "tiLte"x "- ,T '" !' ll .1 1 i.l C-.,ii.,'.i.i.,h. U. .-i k -li-4 -. w i 3. i