RED OLOUD, MXBRAfKA, CHIEF UnJtefalde eWap WHAT CAN i WE( 1 JTJm JOflMB ' 'v 11 .v--. '.-.-v ir I .in ( rm,m0 -jf ft i I-' ft II . t Heroes were made every day during the war. Unusual deeds of bravery became so common that Utile attention was paid to them. Some times they found their way into offlcial dis patches, but often no one htard of them. Hut now many stories of these brave acts arc- being told, usually by the pals of the men who dared and died for their country and for humanity. Jlclow are a few of these unusual Tories: X How Two Yank Soldiers Held f, $ Enemy Street Till Help Came $ T "I n"H,-HJ-j;MjA,j,fi.jj,.s,,jjj,tf,,jtMj,jMj.2ii2iiiHj..fHji NO INDIVIDUAL or group of Individual can step Into the limelight tmtl Mtny any time without becoming the subject of criticism of one sort or another. Anil the Ameri ca u soldier dining his comparatively short par tlclpntlou In the great world war has come In for his share. One of the most outstanding criticisms of the American soldier as a tighter Is that he doesn't know when to stop, that he'r. reckless In his coinage and seemingly devoid ol all care as to his personal well-being or sttfolv In &. V iv y.isf-. &&. hsK'-ZiM tlic uccomplMimciit of &&&?&-,oK; ' l",,, 'I'lainies or tne .ijfr&X&v iC"-, Yankee lighter were ZzjfQ. fJ,X$ l"wn tectntly at tne "AKlW:4MJftfitftJ capture of the town of fciM s Sergy by the American forces. It was Sunday morn ing. A platoon of HO men was ordered to go Into Sergy and to hold a cer tain street. The Germans were still In the town and were raking all rouds approaching with a storm of machine gun lire. The platoon emerged from a wooded shelter on the notth hank of the Ourcq mid made Its way across a slotting Held toward the outskirts of the village. There It was met with u withering hall of bullets that Immediately began to-thin the ranks, but the men kept on go ing. As the little company drew nearer the town the lire from the Gcrmun machine guns Increased. It heenme so deadly accurate that by the time the platoon had entered the village only '20 odd of the original HO men remained, and James Ily Inntl of Brooklyn, N. Y., was one of those 20. Immediately on entering the town the platoon made Its way to the street It hail been oidereil to hold. The men sought shelter behind a pile of debris at the head of the thoroughfare, a poor shelter Indeed and one swept by machine guns and snipers from three sides. Hut the lieutenant In command, who Is now dead, decided that Inas much as his orders were to stay there until re lieved, there he would stay. Kvery Hun In that end of the town seemed to be directing his undivided attention to the little company of Amci leans behind Us lllmsy shelter. The snipers were everywhere. A particularly deadly lire came from machine guns placed In ii Bod Cross building; so llerce was It that the men spent nearly all of their ammunition trying to get those guns, and tlnally ru.-hed the building, but they had to come back. Foodless and waterless, they stayed there all that day. As the hours dragged on, the gallant band grew smaller and smaller. By afternoon all of the olllcers had been killed and the privates elected commanders, who one by one were shot down. When relief reached them at seen o'clock that evening Hyland and one comrade whose name Isn't njen were till that wer left of the f0 who started out In the morning. Hyland was in com main), and the two men were shooting their last cartridges at the machine gunners up the street they had been ordered to hold. HjMjKiHj.lJMjK5MjllMjMjMjMM2HjHjn;KjK8MSMj3Mj5. JkJhJ . How Former Circus Clown Bore $ His Message Through Barrage $ .HKJlfltJlKjtlJMMjlHjM2HMjM5KMjllJMjM3K3M3tt.S.Mt.JKJl EVER since we hnve all been old enough to think behind the tilings we see we have won dered as we have watched the antics of a circus clown Just what kind of u man he really Is when out from under the big tent and moving around in the everyday life of the ordinary man. It isn't likely, however, that we ever thought of n clown as being of such stuff as heroes are made, but here Is the story of a former circus clown who became n real hero In the great war. Charles Klein of Brooklyn, N. Y., became n member of the American expeditionary forces. Burly In the spring, before General Foch turned upon the Germans ami began to drive them back to where they eamo from, Klein was detnllcd to the motor cycle squad as a dis patch rider. One day early In May, Klein was sitting In a dugout watching the big shells as they went screaming and whis tling overhead. But while Klein was watching the bombard ment he received or ders to report to the commanding olllcer of the unit to which ho was attached. This olllcer gave Klein a messago to do liver at once, tho carrying of this message meaning that ho would have to rldo straight through a hot barrage that had Just been laid down. Without a moment's hesitation, with eagerness oven, tho former clown a mighty serious-minded courier now took the message, mounted his mo torcyclo nnd started on his perilous ride. "Tho racket sounded as though n hundred boiler factories had broken loose," said Klein Intor, yfpC: f ii f'fl n J ; .i4J sn .As.y-3.f f.i i V d;r4?K tfS ,SK JT ft.vi., .3'W U ;v,r,y "but I put on full steam, and the old tnotorcyclo leaped ahead like a kangaroo. "Blngl A big shell busted only ten feet from my machine. Bung! Another eploded to the left of tne, and 1 put on some more steam. Then a whopper hissed over me Just missing the top of my tin derby, but I kept on going. "Say, once 1 rode n white mule In the circus that no one else could ride he broke my arm and tattooed me with cuts and bruises. The mule's name was Snowball, and that animal seemed to have a hundred heels oery time 1 tried to get on her back. But, believe me, one Boihc shell Is woise than a hundred Snowballs. "It was the hardest woik 1 ever did to dodge the holes in the road. Blng! A shell plunked behind me and ripped olV my back Mre. Blng! A piece of shrapnel knocked off my helmet, but never Hatched me. Then I began to smell mustard gas. My eyes watered so that It was hard for me to see. I don't know bow 1 did It, hut I delivered my menage, ami when I woke up I was In the hospital. "Talk about mule-. In a clicus! Mu-tard gas Is mighty tough stuiT. I'm telling you. and It doesn't help to make speed on n inototcclc, either." Aial then, because ol Ids smile and hi ability as an entertainer In the hospital, Klein was nick named "Sui'iij Charles." eK' ll ,: .JhJ, :ij ,K ,j .tt.,j;$.A, ji ttjHOl' t?M? ;t; How English Aviator Exercised :J; t the Commander's "Privilege" AVIATOBS were nfu-n compelled to destroy their own machines to prevent the Ger mans from obtaining some Jealously guard ed secret about the new type of nlrciaft. This Is a stoiy of an aviator who did that at the cost of Ids own life. There were two men the pilot and his observer In the latest Hying boat which Bngland's aircraft builders hail turned out. The two dyers weie well out to sea when a fog came down and cut them olT from their companions. The pilot headed lor home, but the engine suddenly ' died." A hasty examination thnwei the pilot that oidy a repair shop and a squat) of expert mechanics could hope to make the engine run again. He told the observer so, ami the two men the ob server was really little more than a boy sat down to watch and wait with the hope that a British patrol boat would come along and pick them up. The night came on and the young observer fell asleep. The pilot sat on the deck-coaming nnd listened all the night through. In the morning the fog lifted and the observer, looking out over the waters, caught sight of a little black smudge on the horizon, which grew steadily In size, and behind It another smudge, and another. It was n patrol flotilla rapidly approaching them. The boy was elated. "It Is Geiman, my son," spoke the older man In a quiet voice, as he turned his eyes from the smudges to Ids rock ing craft. "Have you your life bolt on se curely?" "Yes," answered the boy. "Then go over the side and swim for all you're worth." "But don't you want me to stay and heip you?" peisisted the hoy. "Get over the side," commanded th pilot sharply, "and good-by, sonny. It Is my priv ilege, you know." About 200 yards away the boy paused and looked back at the dis abled plane. The pilot was crouched on the top of the under plane Just over the bomb rack with a heavy wrench In his upraised hand, ready to strike a blow. A mile nway the first of the German destroyers was tearing the sea la Its haste to take the broken plane ami get nway before the British patrol should appear. The hoy turned and swam nwny from the tragedy which he knew was about to take place. A few moments later there wns the mighty roar of an explosion, and he heard the swish of tho nlr blnst along the surface waters and the rush of the approaching wave from the sea disturb- w , re vi .: ri s1. .? ii. syLy'r-zts j? s !&& ,1 Vixr'MX'K. .V3d(3'J I'rf'tLV' "-vT , cciiics suddenly ClWSSfSfe ." IndeserlbaNw mmi. SeH5te5Hr7 t iiriil beasl. s n sK''mjf chine which trafi ' 'ifM&aMM wl ,- r? f r fX- - y fs. (3&2 Lij-fi&rA rji -ai :-cjf- ct .- .sTnt&V -"! -i,r"-" Sir - .- '- - -. - -zZLgS - L ?&ZS'. & nnce. The wave engulfed him Just as he began to hear the splash of tho falling debris, then he knew no more. lie was still sobbing deliriously when the Brit ish patrol boat picked him up an hour later. The pilot had exetclsed his "privilege." iHM3M3i.3M,M3.i..3MK3..j,jirf.;H(MjH;3Mj.jMjii3Mjii3.jH.1i.i3.ii.it..;..t How Man "Tackled" a Deadly Depth Bomb and Saved a Ship s I"?' 'J3S ?'' ..-;, . . .a, jtMj3t,3,M;,.SMj.A.jM3.Mt IT ISN'T recordeil that .lolm Mackenzie, chief j boatswain's mate in the L'nlted States naval ' reserve force, was once a great football play- , er. but he was leconnuendeil for mi honor medal . and a gratuity of loo for doing one of the great- est football stunts ever teported. The navy depailinent repot t shows that on the j tnoinlng of December 17 u depth bomb on hoard the destroyer Uetnlll; broke loose from Its posi tion on the stern ol the crnll. and. bursting Its hosing, went boiindng about the deck. A heavy sen was on at the time; In fact, the wncs were breaking far over the stern of the destroyer, and the rolling and pitching of the little ciaft sent the big bomb Hying backward and forwiud to port and s(ni board, crushing into the rails of the ves sel and hitting eei.thlng upstanding on the deck wiih a force that threatened to explode It at any moment and blow the boat to sci.ip lion. The actions of this i engine of destruction recti 1 1 Victor Hugo's gicat descilptlon of the gun which bleaks loose ficm Its mornings on shlplmard and "be- somo ernii- ma- sforuis Itself Into a monster. This mass turns ujkm Its wheels, hurt tho rapid iuoeiue:iti of n billiard hall, rolls with the rolling, pitches with the pitching; goes, to meditate; resumes Its ...,,i-v.. .mwIii.b nlmiL' the shin from end to end like an arrow, circles about, springs aside, evade, rears, breaks, kills, exterminates." The bomb was n regular sized depth charge, weighing hundreds of pounds, and It would have been Impossible for anyone to have lifted It nnd carried It to safety even If one of the crew had cared to take the risk of catching It In Its wild rushes nnd rollings about tho dock. So the ofU cers and men stood for a time watching the charge as It thrashed madly about, wondering whnt to do, and not knowing whnt minute the In fernal machine might explode and send all hands living Into eternity. Suddenly someone cried "Tho pin has come out!" Whether Mackenzie had been In some other part of tho ship until that moment, or whether he had been standing with the others staring In hopeless wonder and was only aroused by the cry, reports do not say. But It Is recorded that less tlinn.n second after the shout was raised the plucky Yankee boatswain's mate dashed down tlie deck nnd Hung himself on the rolling bomb, much after the fashion that football phiers throw tliemselvis on the hall. Three times he had his arms about It, but each time It tore nway, once almost crushing him as the roll of the' ship hulled It upon him. Tho fourth time, however, he got n firm hold on It, nnd with nlmost superhuman effort heaved It up right on one flat end. Then Mackenzie sat down on the deadly charge though even In that po sition the bomb might have exploded and blown him to ntoms nnd succeeded In holding It until Hues could be run to him and the charge lashed safely to tho deck. The commanding olllcer of the Itemllk In his report recommending that the 'mednl of honor be conferred on Mackenzie, says: "Mackenzie, In acting ns he did, exposed IiIb life and prevented n serious accident and prob able loss of the ship and the entire crew. Had the depth charge exploded on the quarterdeck with the sen and the wind that existed nt the time there Is no doubt that the ship would hnve been lost." Mackenzie Is a native of Massachusetts. Ills home Is South riadley Fulls. ygiplpiEIZ The needs of the refugees and the French wounded still keep the workers of tho American l'und for Trench Wounded busy, even though the war Is it an end. I.n.cttcs, pajamas, hos pital garments of nil kinds will be gratefully received by the American I'linil for l'lench Wounded, and they will supply patterns. These should be secured from their hendquniters nt (0 Kast Washington street, Chicago. Among Hie things most needed an1 surgical shirts of twilled muslin, These shirts open In the back. The left sleoe Is left open from wrist to neck, the edges hemmed. It is fas tened by sliott sltlps of tape sewn on in pairs, the Inches apart. The back Is fastened In the same way. Many handkerchiefs are needed. They are made of new material 111 by II) Inches when cut out. and hemmed on the sewing machine, measuring 18 by IS Inches when finished. These the recovered patients are allowed to take with them, and the. like to imtll them selves of this pilvllege. DO? the late James A. Scrymser, a Now York hanker. This Is tho largcBt be quest ever made to tho organization. Miss Julia Stlmson of Worcester, Mass., chief nurse of the American Bed Cross In France since Inst April, has been appointed chief nurse of tho American expeditionary forces, accord ing to a cable message received nt Ucd Cross headquarters, For ten months previous to entering the Bed Crosa service Miss Stlmson, a graduate of Vassiir, was attached to one of the 12 American hospital units assigned to the British forces shortly nftcr this country entered the wnr. Sho enlisted for the work before tho United States declareil'Avar. NEWS OF THE RED CROSS "The Greatest Mother in the World," nnd "Hold Up Your F.nd." two Amer ican Bed Cross posters familiar to ever.vone In this country, were the most elTcctlw postern used In the re cent British Bed Cross drive. A re production of the former, said to be the largest Bed Cross poster ever dis played In Gieat Britain, covered the front of the rojnl exchange building, opposite the Bank of Kngland. sc rJ The American Bed Cross Is to re ceive .$1,000,000 from the estate of 1'arls showed Its appreciation ol the work ihsne by the American Bed Cross In Franco at ji celebration plan ned by the municipal council to take place on November 14. An nouncement to this effect was made by Chassiilgnii Guyot, leo president of tho council, at a reception tendered to Henry 1'. Davison, chairman of the war council of the American Bed Cross, at the Hotel do Vlllo. Mr. Guyot said the city of Paris owed the Bed Cross a debt which was growing every day and that It showed Its grati tude at the celebration. Secretary Baker's first call on hla recent trip to France wns on tho Misses Katherlne and Kninui S. Lnn sing, sisters of Secretary of State Lansing, who are engaged In American Bed Cross canteen work In Paris, The Misses Lansing provided food nnd hot drinks ior American soldiers nbont to return to this country. conies, pauses, seems Elegance in Sport Skirts I'M m V$ if ii FUTURE HIDDEN FROM CLAY. Could the shade of Henry Clay, roused from tho slumbers of more than threescore yenrs by the pandemonium as 100 engineers tied down their whistle cords and shrilled forth exultant shrieks, have trod the atmospheric space from his haunts In the Blue Grass country to Sault Ste. Mario a few weeks since, and looked with dull eyes on the newly finished engineering feat spread out be foie his astonished gaze, lie would hnve been forced to admit that his declaration back In 1810 wns at least shortsighted. "It Is a wink quite boond the remotest settle ment of the United States, If not In the moon," said Henry Clay on that memorable occasion, when by the power of his silver-tongued oratory he Influenced the congress of the United States to defeat a measure by which a canal could he dug around St. Mary's falls. He was believed, and the project thnt now In finished form ranks In world Importance fur great er than the Suez canal, and In some minds greater than tho l'nuntmi cntml, was condemned ns Im practical. It was not until 12 years later that congress snw Its mistake and yielded to tho per suasion of Inlluential citizens of .Michigan and New York to grant an appropriation of Innd whereby the state of Michigan could finance tho excavntlon of a canal. J. I'aul Chandler In Detroit Free Press. " HER VOTE. "How how you going to vote, Grace?" "Depends on the weather. If It rains I sttpposo I'll have to vote In n mackintosh," Judge. Y. M. C. A. IN DARKEST RUSSIA. The rural group (of the American Y. M. C. A. In Ilussln) dealt with another need of national mngnltuiK Tho mighty Volga basin, covering more than half a million square miles, Is unable even In normal times wholly to feed the huge population It holds, k. t. Cotton In Association Men says n floating exhibit wns made up to visit nnd Impress the teeming riverside communities with (lie Importance of more sowing, better pro duction and fuller conservation. A staff of ,t5 wns organized to demonstrate with models, moving pic tures, lnntern slides, chnrts and lectures such neg lected subjects as seed selection, cultivation, dairy ing, horticulture, animal hushnndry, bee keeping, domestic economy, plnv JIfe for children nnd other aspects of community welfare. This association conception and undertaking won Instant recognition, the government furnish ing a steamboat, a barge and some funds. FINDS FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH. No plnco In the United States or Canada 'has a lower death rate than Kelley's Island, Lake Krle, according to Dr. Paul Fitzgerald, chief of an east ern Insurance company's bureau of statistics. The Island, tho homo of a large stone quarrying Industry, Is tho homo of approximately fi.OOO "peo ple. For years the Insuranco company has been In suring a large percentngo of tho population but never hns been called upon to pny a death claim, says Doctor Fitzgerald, who In his report to head quarters will refer to tho Island ns "tlw head of the fountain of youth." Whether sport clothes Inspired the weavers of silk to make their splen did new products, or these heavy, crepy silks inspired the elegnnco of sport clothes, Is an unanswerable question, but tho two things nrc meant for one another. A niuno Is needed to fit the hats nnd skirts, made of fine mnterlnls In sport styles thnt are at once very Btnart and altogether in formal. Some ono hns called hats of this character "veranda hats," slrco they aro quite nt homo on tho cTub house verandn, but hardly sturdy enough for the links. It Is nn de quato description of them nnd might also serve for skirts nnd conts. The skirt In tho picture above Is nn example of elegance In t?Vrt clothes. It Is made of n heavy ellk with n largo checker-board partem woven In by alternating square of plain silk In tho others having n crepe surface. The hold checker-board de sign compels u plain skirt, nnd this one hangs straight, with its fullness gath ered In at tho waist and Is finished with a straight belt of tho silk, frs tenlng with a large button having a white center In a black ring. Flo of these big buttons nro set down tho side, and a pocket, pointed nt the bot tom, finishes the brief but snappy story of this classy garment, If any doubts of the Informal char acter of so rich a skirt Ho In tho inMid, Its fatr wearer has taken pains to ills pel them by wearing a blouse of fine whlto batlsto with It. Thero Is not much to bo told of this, except thnt It depends on tho ulwnys dependable vn lenclennes laco In Insertions and edk lngs for Its dainty and spnro decora tion. Both tho b'uUsto nnd lnco aro &Si fine ns silk, and the blouse Is beaattn fully tnado and therefore belongs to the same company with this aristocrat In sport skirts, which proclaims Itseli superior to whims of fashion by be ing quite plain. This Is ono of many handsome skirts In silk and In wool, that will enliven the beach nnd bote) verandas In tho sunny South. A Cheerful Bedroom. Bedrooms, of nil tho rooms In thi house, should bo gay nnd cheerful, and tho short cut to an effect of cheet and suushlno Is yellow wall paper. la working out n schema for u yellow bedroom u bluo nnd yellow chlnti could he used nt the windows, with the sumo chintz ,ou some of th furniture, nnd a plaid bluo linen on the rest. Lamps made of powder blue vases with yellow lacquer shades done In n Chinese design would emphasize tho hluu note delightfully nnd work out tho lighting problem In nn Inter esting way. Tho furniture might be painted gray, and a two-toned gray rug would be very good on the floor, Silk Sweaters. Somo of the shops nro showing heavy silk sweaters for winter wear. They aro especially desirable for In door wear when tho low supply of coal makes It Impossible to keep up .ho normal degroo of heat. These new sweaters hnvo many odd bits of finishing, such as vests, very deep col lars, fringed edges and unusual cuff anything for the sake of novelty.