RED CLOUD, HB1RASKA, OHUBF . t v ( xGOOD TiriE mm tmum l.,-.j$lmH' 0 wuvAz. rtfr & V Cft4 1&2? 4Mt, s -UlllZ. JVSr 9 &td mu 4&&C' ? -&& 7t" SZZ. -&-' 9UZ- en. ,, 2&c4jpok6-6k o acryevt -Jfcicao iHiSL ? m& r m $& &. tm&&tx , -.3& -.' Sss. VLh sr : ssfc.(ra..- ,v asssi Bfev - i. T flfSPV' 'A I 1 m?sv f- mmMYr I iKiw, 5 immSLf J2 M H&fi.. &, bsjAJs.VAi . J r H "ftW- Shinto V . . iV.., SfllPiR? 1 TTft llni k T7o4i&XHBiSBL19 x ..ll?Pllii iVeaHTiyaa&tflHIHH -yev C ." TIT : m,- mmm"WM$ i, I ivsiW;? --.- fsm. -w . . mmm . mt &&'!&sar!8BNM;tt . t .. ,fcv . rij!B v 'wnnH y&3HHWW$&&r ar ws nmig 4 ElikaHflk JmBfei.VaR9M":$li ! wwrTW ti'TBt''' I B IjK ( : K'raBHE. ?ffM3yJIWHWBr iWi i&dMtofKmym. Ill aaPIMHaat --' JaKwiiaafe ' w " f'aaHaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa! WSKKfKKtKfsfmltKKKKKKKMvM- JWWaaaTMSiaaa7 f v ?KKKKiWNKKRKKKIm&BKtEKKBL jVT&rm&j&zrj&s&zc'siSz' T WAS noon, and tlio blc whistle nt tliu pliint of n largo manufacturing concern In Sclionuctndy, N. Y., hnd Just summoned the shop-workers nnck to ninchlue und bench, whqn I.ulKl'fl foreman toudiod htm on ttio Klioulder. "Five o'clock tonight, Lulgl, nt the Works Itestntirnnt," lie said briefly. "Good supper, good music, good time, tenrn English." Lulgl, only dimly comprehended, but n fellow-workman passed the message along 'In Italian. "Good supper, good music, good time" those three phrases danced through his mind all the afternoon. At the close of the dny's work he made tils way to the restaurant, designed by engineers to serve a million meals u year. Crowds of men were surging through the doors nnd tio rushed Ills way In and to a seat, his black eyes hlniug with expectation. Yes; the'ro was music to set Lulgl's blood ting ling, and his feet tapping the floor, for the bund ivns sending our Its most spirited strains. And ( ins for the supper not once sTnce lie had been on American soil had Lulgl so enjoyed n repast. IIo glanced over at Cushntr, his Polish neighbor, whose face was lighted with smiles. Then n keen-eyed, pleasant-faced man mounted a platform, nnd n whisper, followed by a hush, ran about the assembly, for the speaker was Mr. 'Emmons, vice president nnd general manager of tho company. He spoko with such goodwill that LuIgl caught tho spirit of tils message, If not the actual meaning. To his delight, Futher Ney roz, of Lulgl's own nationality, stepped forward with an interpretation of Mr. Emmons' words In Italian, and n Polish priest also Interpreted like wise. Lulgl and Cnslmlr listened eagerly and joined In the applause nnd cheers. "Wo have Invited you here tonight," explained Mr. Emmons, "to tell you nhout n new American llzutlou plan. Wo represent many nationalities nd races. Tonight I welcome you ns Americans, nnd hope '.lint nil of you who have not made this country tho land of your adoption, nre thinking of doing so. The company Is glad to have you ns Its guests nt this Amcrlcnnlzatlnn supper, and lioiles flint many of you will be Interested In tho work to be undertaken, which will not only tench you something of our language, but nlso teach you our American standards of thought and life. We have much to learn from the nations you rep resent. You nre well able to tench us many things. "Wo wish, however, to tench you the language fn which nil our shop work Is done. Several reasons make It Important Mint you should talk English. You will lie snfer In your work und less liable to accident If you understand alt safety Instructions. v You will progress faster In your development you understand better nil that Is Bald from dny to day. You will enjoy more of tho shop life If you enn share what other men ure talking about. "If this country Is now your home and tho homo of your children, you should know Its language, should possess Its citizenship, should obey Its paws, and follow the spirit of its Institutions. "I wnnt you to feel that the company for which jou work and the executive officers nre Interested 1n helping you become Amorlcnns of the best kind, not forgetting tho hinds In which you were born nnd their languages, but remembering flint Amor Jen Is now your homo und the homo of your chil dren. Your sons fought In the American armies. JMuny of them died for their country. Wo honor i them for tho sacrifice. You niny honor them ulso by sharing tho citizenship they fought nnd died (for. "I greet you as Americans of, tho future, If not iof the present, and appreciate your interest In ithft meeting." Tho lnternrotcrs then told how an Amerlcnnlzn tlon secretary had been engaged by tho company, to devote all his tlmo to tho foreign-born workers. First, thero was to bo Instruction In English. Tho shop was to bo tho classroom. Regular classes were to be organized with sessions each wek. The clnsses were to bo graded so that tho I iL'li"tors might study together, and -those moro j&zpj?' cz.4&zi&&y&zri&- advanced be grouped uccordlng to their knowledge, of the language. It was emphasized that these opportunities wero to be purely voluntary. No one wus compelled to lenrn against his will. Then, when sufllclent progress hnd bon mnde In mastering English, ft would be possible to take out citizenship papers und to become u real part of the country of their ndoptlon. At G o'clock, If any one had told Lulgl nnd Cas Imlr that before they reached homo ut night they Nvould not only understand but speak, live sen tences of English, they wouldn't have believed It. Hut thnt Is precisely what occurred and all In tho short space of twenty minutes. Fred Itlndge, Jr., an industrial service worker, brought to pass this seeming miracle. Grouping fifty of the men before him, Mr. Itlndge named five simple words see, find, nwnke, look, nrtse. Pronouncing ench word distinctly n number of times, he nsked his henrers to repeat them after him. When this hnd been thine to his satisfac tion, nit was In readiness for the first lesson. "Getting up In the morning," said he, yawning nnd stretching his arms. "Now altogether re pent after me. 'I' (pointing to himself) 'I, 'I.' No-, 'nwnke,' 'awake,' 'awake,' 'awake.' Now, 'from bleep,'" nnd so on, until within twenty minutes the entire class s,ald fluently and with perfect understanding: "I nwako from sleep. I open my eyes. I look for my watch. I see what time It Is. It Is six o'clock." Deep down In tho heart of Lulgl, a new respect for the company which employed him, a new sense of responsibility, nnd a new ambition took root before long. Ho felt that ho had been given an opportunity. IIo wns not going to spend his best years ns a strnnger In n strango lnnd, strug gling with nn unfamiliar tyngue, unrecognized, n mere cog In tlio wheel of Industry. Soon lie would speak English readily. He would under stand all that wns going on In the shop. IIo would work hnrd, would buy n little house, would give up the Idea of hoarding his money nnd some dny taking steerage piiBSiigo ,to Italy. IIo would give Mnrtn nil sorts of comforts, would touch her, English, too. A uew day hud dawned In tho life of Lulgl. As for Caslm!r, It hnd seemed to him thnt he wus no fnrthe: nlong than when he hnd first came, years ago, from Poland. Ho hud mnde no effort to learn English, for tho simple reason thnt nobody enred whether ho. did or not. Now he had chnnged his mind. His employe'rs were mak ing uu effort to undorstnnd him; very well, ho would mnko nn effort to understand his employers. Thero wns no question hut thnt If ho understood nnd could tulle English, ho would get ulong bet ter, Lulgl and Cnslmlr ere typical of tho men In whoso behalf tho company bus launched this Amerlcnnlzntlon cnmpnlgn, which Is being watched by Industrial managers tho country over. A cau vuBS of tho alien workers wns made In tho Sche nectndy plnnt, disclosing tho fnct thnt thero are 1,000 Italians, GOO Poles, and five hundred of other nationalities, all aliens. Of tho Italians :sr7 do not read or write their own language, nnd cannot speak English, 302 rend dnd write Italian, but have no similar knowledge of English. Tho remainder can speak, write und rend both Italian nnd English. Of the COt) Poles, 179 neither rend or write tho Polish language und have no knowledge of Eng lish; and 231 ure wholly unfumlllur with Eng lish. Tho campaign undertaken by tho company hns given nn Impetus to Amerlcnnlzntlon work In the city proper nnd all Industries and organiza tions have expressed hearty Interest nnd sup port. E. E. Fink, superintendent of night schools, is perfecting nn urrungement whereby clnsses in English mny be held in tho homes of the foreign born. The foreigner is naturally Inclined to bo sociable und hospitable and it Is thought thnt If ho may invito his friends nnd neighbors to study English nnd citizenship nt his own fireside there will be more pleusure und less effort In the now tusk. A. L. Ilnhn, tho Americanization secretary of the company, has hnd yenrs of successful experi ence. Mr. Hnhn's ofllce Is In building 44, nnd his duties nre not only to mnko 100 per cent Ameri cans of tho foreign-horn employees, but to nsslst them In the problems thut they mny bring to his attention, from matters of personal hygleno to the bending of money to relatives In Europe. The company hopes thnt this cnmpnlgn, which Is so unique In muny respects, will soon grow from an experimental stage Into n permnnent and successful work, incidentally It Is supple menting Us shop work In tho plnnt by nn Inten sive advertising cnmpnlgn In the forelgn-lnngunge newspapers, showing tho foreigners of the city tho many opportunities they have to lenrn Eug llsh nnd become real American citizens. HUSBAND FIGHTS FOR HIS BRIDE Now Faces Murder Charo for Killing Bandit Who Abducted Woman. Chicago. The strange story of how n pretty bride of u few months wan kidnaped by it band of thieves, held prisoner until her husband rescued her and how later the husband wan forced to kill one of the gang whllo protecting a small boy, will form an Interesting chapter In the records of criminal court hearings when the ease comes to trial. Oscur l'ngstrom Is charged with murder, l'ngstrom and his young bride were living on u two-ncro tract near THE WISE YOUNG LADY. "Tho successful man," said Viscount Grey at a farewell dinner, "goes straight to the heart of every question. He envisages all Its features. He Is like the yoling lady. "A chap, nftcr proposing to this young ludy, wound up with tho words: If you refuse me I bhnll never love another woman.' "'Hut, said sho, 'does that promise hold good If I accept youV" MN BAD SHAPE. "What seem to bo tho matter with your fa ther?" "1 don't know, but I gues-v it must bo some thing iivul, because I henrd tho doctor say It would tnko a trip south to cure him." WANTED TO KNOW. i "I always menuuro my words," said the garni lous man. "Whnt do you use?" nsked tho bored llstoner, "a barrel ox a tub?" Boston Transcript. SALTS IF BACKACHY AND KIDNEYS HURT. Stop Eating Meat for a While Your Bladder It Troubling You. If Engstrom Killed the Leader. I'osen, III. The husband was making u good living, selling automobiles, and the wife worked the little truck farm. Their nearest neighbors, with one exception, wero several miles distant. There were two sons nt the nearest neighbors1, and men of rough character begun to visit this place. One day, when tho husband wus absent, these men abducted his bride. Several days later he found her at the other house nnd, after a hard fight, rescued her und took her home. A few evenings later n slx-ycnr-old boy came to Engstrom's house nnd begged to be taken In, iih the men hnd threatened to kill him for telling Eng strom where they had hidden his wife. Two members of the gnng came after the boy nnd In the ensuing light, Eng Htroni killed the lender. Police sny nil tho gnng nre murderers nnd fugitives from Justice nnd thnt the house wns n resort nnd hiding place for n no torious gang of professional murder om, many of whom nro now In custody and awaiting trial. When you wnke up with bnckach and dull misery In the kidney region it generally mentis you have been entlng too much meat, says a well-known au thority. Meat forms uric Held which overworks the kidneys In their effort to (liter It from the blood und they be come sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all tho body's urinous waste, else you linva bnckaclie, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue Is con ted, und when the weather Is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine In cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scnlds nnd you nro obliged to seek relief two or threu times during the ulglit. Either consult a good, reliable physt clan nt once or get from your plmrtnn cist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tiiblespootiful In n glass of water hefoie breakfast for a few days and our kidneys will then act fine. This famous suits Is made from the acid of grapes nnd lemon Juice, combined with llthla, nnd has been used for generations to clean nnd stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize, acids In the urine so It no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jnd Salts Is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It Is Inexpensive, cannot Injure and makes a delightful, effer vescent llthla-wnter drink. Adv. Forlunnto Is the man who doesn't go lumo when he ban occasion to side step temptation. RELICS OF ANCIENT TRAGEDY Camper In California Makes Interest ing Discovery In Plnon Min ing District. Whitewater, Cnl. While on a enmn lng trip In the Painted Hills In tho Plnon mining district, northeast of here, O. I. Kennedy of Snn Iicrnnrdlno discovered whnt mny prove to bo the relics of n 100-year-old tragedy. In nn Inaccessible spot, but ono dis tinctly visible from the foot trail, In the fnco of the mountain, he discovered n musket nnd a row of Indian water vessels. On examining the weapon through n high-power glnss, It proved to be a flintlock of ancient design, nnd Kennedy believes from the pecullnr fnrmntlon of the stock It Is of Spanish origin. Kennedy expects to return In n short tlmo with n supply of ropes by which ho will have himself lowerei' Into tho dry sea cavern where the relics wero discovered. He brought with him sam ples of Inrge sen shells, which ho gnth ered on the edge of n great deposit of shells located at un altltudo of 2,050 feet. Htato of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County B. Frank J. Chenoy makes oath that ho Is senior partner of the llrm of K. J. Clienoy & Co., dolnn buslneHs In tho City ot To ledo, County nnd Htutu aforesaid, and that sold firm will pay tlio sum of ONK HUN DUHD DOLLARS for any ciso of Catarrh Hint cannot tm cured by tho uso ot HALL'S CATARRH MKDICINR. KKANK J. CHENEV. Bworn to before mo nnd subscribed In my presence this Cth day of December, A. II. 1SS6. (Scnl) A. W. Olenson. Notary Public. HALL'S CATAItUH MnDfCINE In tnk en Intornally nnd acts throuKh the Blood on tho Mucous Hurfarcs of tho System. V. J. Chenoy A Co Toledo, Ohio. P. J. Choncy & Co., Toledo, Ohio. A small hoy's Idea of liberty Is to eat the cako'nnd then ask his mother If ho may have It. . i Sure Relief '&YT7SKrfB55S SSMs BI 6 Bellans Hot water Sure Relief LL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION .. .. .... Used Body to Stop Leak; Saved Lives of the Crew When the trawler Clnra rnn on the rocks nt the harbor en trance, nt Plymouth, Englnnd, In n fog und stovo n hole In her side, one of the seamen stopped the grent rent with his body nnd enabled the boat to keep afloat until help came, thereby saving the lives of his comrades. The snllor remained, wnist deep In wuter, for four hours until the bont was towed Into harbor. 4-4-l4,-l"NI"."-4l-4--f4-4". Nebraska Directory koeTajks . Developing, Printing I and Enlarging Lincoln Photo Supply Co. (Eastman Kodak Co.) Dept K. 1217 O St Lincoln, Nak COLORADO LAND t FOR SALE BURLINGTON DISTRICT, 160 acrrsun. improved; good farming or investment $25 per acre, $1,500 cash. Balanco easy terms. Address, FRANK GASS, Owner, 4005 North 25th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 7 PER ANNUM TAX FREE The Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Com pany, Lincoln, Neb, la ottering to Inveatora at par, f 100 per eharc. eomo of tta tax-freo 7 itock that baa paid quarterly dividend for the paji( It years. Thla Ii a aafe and con venient Investment, checks for dividends be !nr mailed to your address for J1.75 per 1100 share In January, April. July and Oc tober. For Information or for shares ot stock address C. P. Russell, Secy. Lincoln Tele- Bhone & Telegraph Company. Telephone IUg.. Lincoln, Neb. PAINT UP! BUY Bradley & Vrooman House Colors for the House Sold in every town Write for color scheme Woman "Buys" Husband, Hnjcrstown, Md. Peter Guy, tho pypsy, who, at Des Moines, In., wns "bouslit" from his wife by another womun several days hro, Is well known In HnRcrstown. Tho bltl of snlo wns drawn up by nn nttorney of Des Moines and placed on record. By tho terms of tho "salo" the new wlfo gave tho former Mrs. Guy ?5,000 In Kold for Guy. Appar ently Guy hnd been transferred In a similar manner before, for Mrs. Guy No. 1 told tho nttorney who drew up tho papers that she pld $5,000 for him. WESTERN GLASS & PAINT CO. LINCOLN, NEB. m SANITARIUM .SULPH0 SALINE SPRINGS Located on our own premises and used In tho Natural Mineral Water Baths Unsurpassed in tho treatment ot RHEUMATISM Heart, Stomach, Kidney and Liver Diseases. Moderate charges. Addrcu OR. O. W. CVCBE IT. Mar. I th M Stt. Lincoln, Ntfc. rv I