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Crittenden record-press. [volume] (Marion, Ky.) 1909-191?, August 15, 1918, Image 2

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CRITTENDEN RECORD-PRESS, MARION, KENTUCKY
HAIG GAINS 3 MILES
OVER A WIDE FRONT
MANY TOWNS FALL WHEN THE
BRITISH AND THE FRENCH
OPEN PUSH.
10,000 PRISONERS TAKEN
English Go Over the Top After Shell
ing Hunt, While Poilut Charge
Enemy Soon Afterwards In
the Amiens Sector.
London. According to advices re
eedved In London, the French and the
British forces which attacked In the
Picardy sector have advanced at some
points to a depth of more than three
miles. A very considerable number ot
villages have been captured in the
Franco-British offensive, and substan
tial progress has been made, according
to news received here.
Troops Leave Trenches With Dash.
On the French Front in France. A
combined attack by the French and
British was begun along the front be
tween Albert and Montdldler. Satis
factory progress was mad, despite
trong enemy resistance.
Along the French front the artillery
preparation lasted for 40 minutes, and
then the troops left their trenches
with wonderful dash.
Prisoners Taken Exceed 10,000.
Paris. The number of prisoners
taken by the French and British in Pi
cardy now exceeds 10,000, according to
the latest news from the battle front
the allies have also taken an enormous
booty In guns and material, says Mar
cel Hutln In the Echo de Paris.
Heavily AttacluGorman Positions.
With the BrttM Xrmy'tf Fntiee
Franca tad British taoWhavjt'ct'oyfed
tie Acre-Luce Valley in the new drive.
The' German 'poeitlone $uit" south lot
the-Ancre rtoeT.wf. heavily attacked
by the British. uThs'r, assault extended
to Jbe south, where their, fight 'wing
Joins the French lines.-ThreVqnlKerB
Of an hour after the British attacked
the Germans, the French took, up. the
utile.
In their offensive east of- Amiens
the British have taken Hahnef Wood.
The British attacked over a 12-mlle
front on both, aides . of , the.Somme.
They gained all their objectives within
four hours end 'haver captured' ' con
ldarabka. number of.: prisoners -and.
W!' -!' i - .' ,,;
Details of the fighting are coming
to the rear slowly. "Going flne'-eoti-atltatea
the heat: available 'Informa
tion. . The British launched their at
tack in a mist after only three min
utes of artillery preparation.
Prussians and Bavarians Fled.
With the British Army In France.
Fighting their way. through' the; -fler-
Eans at-dawn on front of about 20
lies aBtrlde the River Somme, British
and French troops reached points front
Cve to six miles Inside lines which be
longed to the enemy.. t The Prussians
and Bavarians fled before the advanc
ing Infantry and tanks! leaving many
of their guns'' behind them.' Large num
ber of prisoners have been taken both
by the British and French and -heavy
casualties undoubtedly . have been . In
flicted on the enemy. '-1 ' ril'1 u 1 -'
Thus far everything ha been aecom'
eompUahed with excessively small los-
e to the allies. Of one entire British
corps, for roitaaco, two hours after the
attack began, only two officers and It
men of the ranks were reported aj caa
aaltles. ". "" ' , ' "
The artillery followed up the storm
troops closely and, hurled shells down
Upon the enemy forces, which, taken
by 'surprise and fiercely attacked, must
be th a more or less crippled cbndlklonV
ft la believed ralnforcemeata are on the
way , to help them. What the future
holds for the enemy cannot be fore
cast, but the outlook Is not a promising
one under present conditions.. ;'J't. .
Moreutl and the country, front .ad
joining Vlllers-Aux-Erables have been
taken by the French, while the British
bare captured the Dodo aad Hamel
Woods and Marcelcave after bard fight
ing and pushed a considerable distance
beyond. .........
. TWO AVIATORS KILLED. 1 1
Maohlnea Collided .3,000 Feet Over
Fort Worth Field. " '
Fort Worth, Text. Second Lteuti.
Harry 8. Heir and Leon W. Adelsperg
or,, both of Springfield, Ohio, were
killed at Taliaferro Field last week,
when the machines ther were piloting
collided at an altitude ot about 1,000
(eet and Jell to the ground. Both offi
cers were commissioned on August t.
WILL FINANCE BIO PLANT.
22,000000 Works at Birmingham, Ala,
Approved by Board.
Washington. Penator Bank hoed of
Alabama announced that the war In-
tfaatrlee board had agreed to finance
a 121000,000 steel plant at Blrmlng
bam In connectlou with the works ol
the Woodward Iron Company.
. Work oil the plant will begin as soon
M the necessary arrangements ran be
oade. It will employ ( several thou
and men and win turn out steel prod
eta of many kind.'
RBEAK UP ENEMY ATTACKS
German Efforts to Prevent America
Advance Fall to' Stop Soldlere
of General Pershing.
With the American Army on the
Vesle. The River Tesle was crossed
east and wost ot Flsmes Aug. 7 by ad
ditional American Infantrymen. West
of Flsmes the Americans broke up
counter-attacks by German Infantry
and hold their ground, despite enemy
efforts.
In support ot the Americans who
had crossed the river a detachment of
infantry crossed the Vesle under a
Franco-American barrage Just before
noon. Two other detachments reached
the north bank in the afternoon.
'The Germans counter-attacked the
Americans west of Flsmes, but were
scattered by the American artillery
fire. The enemy la endeavoring to
prevent the American advance, hut
the Americans have pushed on under a
heavy fire and in bitter fighting. In
which men from overseas used their
bayonets effectively. A few Germans
were taken prisoners, while the oth
ers retired.
COURIER-JOURNAL SOLD.
Louisville, Ky., Paper Now Controlled
By Wealthy Attorney.
Louisville, Ky. The Louisville Cour
ier-Journal, nationally and Interna
tionally famous, and the Louisville
Times were taken over by Judge Rob
ert Worth Bingham, Louisville attor
ney. The formal announcement of
the property's transfer waa signed by
the majority of stockholders. Henry
VYattersoa, noted editor and Joint
founder with Walter N. Haldeman, re
tires from active editorial endeavor,
becoming "editor emeritus" ot the
Courier-Journal. Colonel Watterson,
the statement says, has consented to
confer with those in charge of the pa
per's editorial policy whenever his ad
vice is desired. The consideration Is
i?'"6 be6 ,argel7 ",epM 01
11,000,000. r
BRIDGE BUILDERS ATTACKED
American llunnart Wipe Out Qetjnane
i,Vlcloua Attack, , r,., ,. ..
With . the American Army on (he
Alsne-Marn'e " Front. American - tha-
chme gunhera,'prt)tecttng a location 6a
the Vesle west ;of, Flsmes, wiped, out
ah entire battalion ot German. Infantry
men and machine gumlers. The Ger
mans, at this time, wereE-getting lot
position to attack a group of Ameriot
bridge builders who wexe approaching
the location. " "" '"!
Sdme bridge materials had -teen
moved near the south ,baak , ot the
Vesle aad the Germans, apparently, dis
covering, this tact, bad sen a battal
ion to a hill' position to prevent the
Americans " from carrying . out thstr
plan.; A; detachment of crack Ameri
can machine gunners, however, , pre
viously had taken an elevated position
commanding the location, opened fire.
: FEW WQPj&i ft j. ;H
oifo die fclWn'tofiViiiTfi
(--- injuries 'ReWlvk
fuccumb to
.' Washington Of the American sol
diers; wpuQdedjljiJthe iteqpeAJjn? of
fensive, probably'less than one In '20
will die from their wouqds, more than
four -fifths will lie returned- to service
aad only 14 per cent will be discharged
for disability, according to statements
of1 the' chief of staff, based iipon the of
flslaay attested experience' of the '
Use during -the tour, year of, war. w i .
i
GENERAL PAU AT' WASHINGTON"!
lev, With. Prencti Wat Mleslqn eiT the
Uau a !. I la
L , Washington. France s war mission
to 'Australia; headed by' Albert Metro;
member :of j the chamber! bt- oepurJee
and, former, cabinet officer, aad with
the' famous General Pau as chief ot
the" military' section," reached Wash
Ipgton. tn spend a few. day before pro
ceedloi on the wsjr,.tq Sidney, Austra
lia."' Arrangements were made for the
visitors' to call on President "Wilson
and U meet member of the diplomatic
corps.
Mo NICHOLA8' LAST WOROaVJ
' '- -,i"t .r.) i- ; 'ittiUf - -ia rrw.
Entreated That . Lives of Wife and
" Children Be Spared. ' 1 '
Amsterdam What seenis 'to ' bare
beea .the last words f .Nicholas 1 Ro
manotf, the former Bussiaa emnerorr
Spare my wife and Innocent, ' no'
happy children. May my blood V
eerve Russia from ruin.". ; t
These words were called out hy the
former emperor' just' before ha waa
kbot by the filing squad. : '
Crying for a Crar.
Amsterdam. Michael : RodilaBko,
former president ot the Rasalan duma,
has published an appeal In the Vecher
nee Vremya of Petrograd In favor ot
the restoration of the Imperial regime
"Only a ciar," he writes, "can cre
ate a strong army and establish, a
government.''
SocleW Glria Drawn.
Ashland, Ky. Carlyle Myers and
Marie Kimball, society girls, were
drowned while swimming In the Ohio
river. They were caught In a whirl
pool. Beveral others had narrow es
capee. Roumsnlsn Crop a Failure.
Amsterdam. Roumanla's wheat
crop Is a failure and the condition ol
matte In that country le only medium,
according to "Berlin advices to the Col
gate Caxette. Supplies from lioun.a
Bla, therefore, caa hardly be counted
on, It is said.
Breaking the Way Through For Democracy
i 1 ' TT
GREATESTARMY OF ALL
THE NEW AGE LIMIT IS EXPECT
ED TO PROVIDE SEVEN
MILLION MEN.
LARGEST RESERVE IN WORLD
Class of 18 to 20 Will Furnish Two
Million, Class of 31 to 46 Will
Furnish An Equal Num
ber of Men.
Washington. An army of 7.000,000
fighting men will be one-rWnlf"of the
extension of the draft ages between-19
anA 45,.,ln: the-opinion of .war depart
ment officials. t, This. Is the minimum
tbJjfoajboO wmUof the typewd
WfeMbm Kf thiuTniw All tha Kittle
avsj ewtww. as tw wr ..
front tn France. . r; , 1 .
Military' men believe the claw' 'oi
IS to I0"wlU yteld" .OOMOO TOuhg
men. From the laa-ot 21 to 31 the
country has already taken 3,000,000
youths o:thbektiesldls)rlt!(uaterlal
hi history, almost all of whom are now
fin' France. Th'dait ot M to tt U eet
down for another t.OvO.000 imen.
I -finder the present plans, .which, pro
vide thai the boys of from 18 to 20
shall be trained hre",i: e" I'nlted
$ UTM Mil 1 1 va 1X4 largest -.teserve
.army the world has ever, known.., .
II Is estimated that registrants' 18
to 20 and 31 to 35, Alabama wlll fur
nlsh 1B1,; Arkansas, 218.655; Ken-tuckyaop.MSj,-
LoulsUoa,, 25UC0;
MlasourL, 47fi.930M1aleatppl, '222,914;
Tennessee, 302,811. "" ' '
FOR LIMITED SERVICE.
f TwsnfVme' taFc.lled 'Cbert"Vo
t. , Furnish 6,000 Registrants..
i WWn,on- Twenty'nlfie' sutef
and ; the District of r Columbia ' were
called upon by Provost Marshal Cea
eral'.Crowder to supply s)00 white
refUtrants qualified for limited mili
tary training. ' They entrained Aug.
S 'for Byracuse, N. T recruiting camp.
The Quotas by steles Include; Flerjda,
60; Georgia,-. 60; Louisiana, 60;. Mis
sissippi 40;' North ' Carolina,' 100;
gohth Carolina, 40;' Tennessee, ;100,-
s t-v.-v) 1 I n'M
!p, U-BOAT: SINKS SCHOONERS.
Are Sent 6owh'iot Oft Neva lcea
, j,j.v v 1 1 Coast y.J rim-
' nallfii, Mi 8.-tTfcree Aroerkaa tUbH
lag-scboonersi were sunk, by Germaa-
submarines on aeai isiana, lormouio
Conftty.'ori the Nova 'ScoUa coast The
crews landed on the Nova Scotia coast
The commander of one submarine told
aq American skipper that he had sunk
other' schooners hailing from Boston
and Gloucester. '; Ha did aot give tha
names of the vesicle or mention what
became of the crews.
Lu&tt
Wllftir RIFLE PRODUCTION.
8,000)00. lispected and Acoeptsd op
1 WashlngtQn. Two million rifles,. In
cluding 280.000 Russian pieces, have
been produced, Inspected and accepted
up. to July 87, the. ordnance bureau
announced., .: , . .., , ,. .., .,,
Machine gun production fluctuates.
bot the total to July 87 ran 66,006. In-'
eluding 1428 heavy Browning and 14
895 Ugbt Brownings. More the 400,
000 pistols and revolvers have' been
passed.' ' .-:;'
GERMAN STORES EXPLODE,
Defective Quality of Cxploelvee
'..' , Glvea ea the Cause. 1 ;
le
Amsterdam A number of Oerraen
powder stores have recently blown up,
owing to the defective quality of the
exploelvee, according to the 1 Echo
Beige. In one explosion at Mons CO
Oermsns were killed, and 100 were
killed when a munition train blew an
ROBERTSON LEADS.
Oklahoma
Race For
Conoeded.
Governor Is
Oklahoma Clty.-l'uofflclal though
complete returns from about one-halt
of the 2,600 precincts In Oklahoma
give J. B. A. Robertson a lead ot ap
proximately 12,000 votes over W. 14.
Murray for (he democratic nomination
for governor.1 Murray still claims he
will win by a plurality of 7.000. while
W. 1 Alexander and W. A. Durant
eoncedo the nomination of Robertson
U-BOAT CREWS REVOLT
REPORTED THAT PROPAGANDIST
INCITE SUBMARINE SAILORS
READY TO CRUISE.
LEADERS SENTENCED TO DIE
Revolt by German Sailors In Protest
Against Continuation of Subma
rlne WarfareFifty U-Boata
, Have Disappeared.
j London. Rumors of a revolt by Ger
man sailors at Wllhemahaven, In pro
test against a continuation of the sub
marine warfare, are in circulation. 'ac
cording (o a dispatch from Amsterdam,
, It la reported that propagandist
tmoag the men Incited sallera about to
leave on Submarine cruises to attack
their officers and surrender their eblp
or seek an opportunity to sink them
and get . themselves Interned lq J)u
tral harbors. More than 60 submarine
ere said .to have disappeared.
, .Twenty-three of the ringleader , of
the revolt are reported to have bee&
arrested and sentenced to death. Many
others have been arrested at Kiel and
elsewhere, It is added. '''"J
The correspondent who sends the re
ports admits that the stories are ca
flicUng aad facta difficult to ascertain.
The men behind the movers eel the
accounts state, are revolutionary eoU
ors, who for some lime past have. been
conducting propaganda With the ob
ject of stopping the submarine .war
fare because of Increased dangers.
1 'The recent resignation of Admiral
von Holtzendorff aa chief ot the naval
Staff Is declared to have been connect
ed with the scaodaL Emperor Wil
liam, It Is added, abandoned tn lev
lendod visit to the fleet at Wllheimo
baven because ot the ferment there. -
-ALL HEAT RECORDS BROKEN."
J. '
Northeastern Part of Country Hae
t Been the Hardest Hit - V
Washington. High temperature rec
ords that have marked the limits of
heat waves during all the period of of
flclal observation In the northeastern:
quarter .of the United Stale, were
broken Aug. 6. Washington and Hal
tlmore, by weather bureau thermome
ter, experienced a temperature of 104
degrees, fc point not even approached
ty the mercury since 1881, and not
reached then. In Detroit Mich , liar
risburg, 'Fa., and Toledo, Ohio, with
temperatares ot 104, new record were
established, as did Scrantjn, Fa., and
Cleveland, Ohio, which a xh officially
registered 100. 1 t
TO PROTECT INDUCTRICt,
Enlistments Suspended Ty Order of
Bsksr and Danlc ,. ,,...
Washington. Voluntary enlistment
la the army and navy were completely
aspended to prevent disruption of, In
dustry pending disposition of the bill
proposing to extend draft ages to In
clude all men between 18 and 46 year.
Orders were Issued by Secretaries Ba
ker and Daniels directing that bo vol
untary enlistments be accepted' after
August 8 until further orders. The or
der also exclude civilians from 'ap
pointment to officer' training camp
until further notice. " '
BIG STORM LOSS REPORTED, '
Oeretner . Field Aviation Camp la
.1 1. Badly Damaged. .. ,- 1
Houston, Texaa. That Oeretner
Field, a training camp tor aviator,
was badly damaged and that property
lots In and around Lake Charles, La
would amount to a million dollar, waa
the Information cent here by a conduc
tor of the Southern Taclflc who made
hi way to Vinton from 1-ake Charlee
aad reported from that place.
' The storm area, he said, extondnd
a far east as Jennings, and as far
west as Vinton. High wind and rata
worked the damage.
Urge Control ef Mea,i Packing.
Washington. Government acquisi
tion and control ot all the principal
stock yards, cold storage plunts and
warehouse and both refrigerator and
cattle car ha been recommended to
the president by the fnderal trade- com
mission lo destroy a monopoly which
It declares parking compsnles exercise
not only over the nient Industry, ot the
country, but necessary food supplies.
WHAT WOMEN GAtl
DOTOVlliTIIEWAR
Conserve Food and Buy Liberty
Bonds Two Ways They
;: . Can Help. . . .
v;o;.:enofai'erica,WaKeu?!
pour All Your Savings Into Uncle
tarn's Lap Keep en Saving and
Pouring Until the World
le Free.
By INEZ HAYNES IRWIN.
What can the women ot America
do to help win this wnrl Two things
are certain; on that they can do a
great deal and another that, unless
the war lasts ten years longer, they
can never do so much ss the Frvncb,
English and Itallnn women have duo,
they can never suffer so much as the
French, English and Italian women
have suffered.
To me, returning to America after
two years In ths war countries, the un
touched gsyety of the American people
cam as a terrific shock. I had left a
World as black and silent as night; a
world In which 1 had seen no dancing,
A world In which I bad beard no spon
taneous laughter or except In the case
of military band no music. At first
th atmoepber of America was almost
unbearable. I wa obsessed with the
dJeelre to get back to th allied coun
trlee, to Buffer with them, rather than
enjoy the comparative comfort of a
Comparatively unaroused America.
The luxury everywhere appalled ma
Rtoee hundred ot motors glldln
through oat streets for Instance!
trivapi meter have long ago disap
peared from allied Europe. The beau
tlfal fabric, the fur and lace, the
gorgeous sport clothe and the daullng
evenlpg dresses which still distinguish
the women of America.
1 i1 Ban en Evening Clothe.
,-fn first time I was Invited to a
dlaAec party oa my return, I wore a
ong-1eved high-necked gray and
black gown and fosjad myself a wrrn
among- birds ot paradise. No woman
Of Xranc .would think of wearing ure
al of clothe. Indeed, both men and
women art prohibited by law from ap
pearing lo evening clothe at th thea
ter. On the few social occasions in
which thy tak part Prcm-h women
are dressed Id black gowns with e lit
tle lace If the sack and sleeves. Eng
lish women aUl: wear evening clothes.
When their two return on their rare
leave' from th front, they cover their
thing heart with much garety a
possible Id order to send them bark to
the filth, and. the vermin end the rat
and the" damp and the cold and tbe
wonnd and the frmtn sight of dt-stb
psychologically Mfrcsbed. But most of
the. evening drss that the: English
women are now wearing date back to
the beginning ef th war. Aral strang
est of all, perhnpev for a country at
war,.thve lustrous street with their
rows of electric light euri their vivid,
flushing, changing, iridescent electric
sign. Th Tarls, yeu plunge Into a
deep twilight when y)u leove your res
taurant and in London run crxuo your
way home through 'i dangerous' ftty-
Van gioom.-' iam in carci? spend
ing In Amerlrsn hotels -anti restau
rants. In, Paris those V'evea close at
half ptut nloe. And food I Food con
dltton : him never-boen so - bad In
France .m la' the other BUM own
Wes, for. Franc has alwss fud hr
aelf and Is, piotoover, the world's best
cook. Ilut in Italy 'and England, meat
I rare luxury to be obtained only'
once in a great ' white ; butter and
eogar are lohg-forgottea dream.
'1" tit Thslr Heme Destroyed.
And then Id the esse of France and
to some degree of Italy, the allied
women hv seen vsst stretches of
carefully enred for ancient forent and
enormone sections of oftly-beotlful
farming country turned Into metai-rld-den
dump; they have seos dusens of
email cltlea and hundreds of llttlo vtl
lages transfurmod.to ash huaps; they
hare bo much old sacred buauty
In the form of churches, cathedrals
ana niKtvnc monument reduced , to
hills of nibble that the whole world
must seem ' a desert to them. ' They
have rvea hid to endure the extra
affront of n exhibition In Ik-rlln of
the art treasures looted from northern
Franc. ' : .
Tbe allied women have Bumrd the
wounded, the tubercular, the under
nourished ; they bave taught 1 Dew
trad to the crippled, and blind and
(hose who arc invalided tor Ufc. They
have taken car of thousands and
thousands of refugees from Bel glum,
northern France and Siberia. They
have had to provide for the bringing
op of thousands of orphan children.
This hss not come upon them gradual
ly, but all tbe time and In Increasing
proportion. , . ,
Hut, after ill. these things are a
nothing to the denth of the flower of
their msl youth. England and Franc
and Italy have tost so much In tuso
power that no member of our genera.
tlon looks for bnpplnes egnln during
his own lifetime I They hope only
for one thing to Insure the freedom
of the next goncrntlon.
Son All Gone.
"My husband I a I'arlslnn," said
beautiful American weman married
to a Frenchman. , ,"11 has always
uvea in I'sris. no has runny friends
here, llu I forty-five your old. Ill
friends rcnge Bt age rrrnn rony tsj
lxty. Not on ha a on left" I
"Thank rou for your klua lenerj
wrot an English girl t a woman whft
had Just sent a letter condoling wlu
her on the death of the last of three
brother. "Ws find ths country a up
tt dreary now and we are returning
to town the last of th month. We
hall be at home Sunday evening, Be)
ore to come to u often. W wan
to see all our friends and hear woat
they have been doing In the last three)
months. Mother and father look fr
ward with pecUl pleasure to meeting
you all (gain. IHease bring auy sow
dler friends; w will tr to muae 11
gay for them."
"What news do you get from rrej
crick," a friend of mine asketl of th
mother of Frederick, a beautiful nil(M
dle-sged English woman who weJ
maklna a great success or a aanco
clven for som co0vsleccnt Tommlei
Oh. vou hnveni heard, have you," in
mother of Frederick answered. "II
wa killed two months ago." And she;
turned to answer with her ready sym?
pathetic suille the Inquiries of a gronQ
of Tommies gathered about ner.
Fight Bams as Men.
Cut Hint I not all In a otnnner
i
sixaklng, the women of burope ar
fighting the war Just as the men 0:
They hove not except In the case 0,
tho famous lluttullun of IHatn, Ulc
In battle; and yet a half to three,
quarter of s million women have been
11 have beed
of war ec4
e been kllM
on both tbej
killed ss the direct result
tlvltles. More women have
ed In this war than men on
Northern and Southern sides In OUB
Civil war. That nearly three-quarterej
of a million Includes the women ma.
sacred by the Turks In Armenia, b
th Austrian In Serbia, by tho Oetj
maus In Delglum snd northern France f
It Include army nurse Qd women
munltloa maker; It Include civilian
women killed bv shells In th WSC
aone or near It women killed by ZepJ
pvlln and alrplon raid and by uh
martnea
Wiat can th women of America
do to equal til this service tod all
this suffering!
For three year, th French and
English, and for two year, th !ial
Ions, have stood between us snd the
death of our democracy. What cad
we do to make up for that long, best
Uitlng neutral Inaction of ourst Tb4
men of our nation bare responded gli
lantly. We bv a real army In Fran
now. As Lloyd George said In pailla'
ment to a listening empire, Th Amei
lesns a re In. He ere lo and 0
course we are tn to stay, lo for
century If need be, until the safety o
the world democracy Is assured. Tb4
men of America are dolug thetr part
doing It with suffering and death!
What can th women dot
What Women Can Do. ,
It I th geographical misfortune ot
us women of America that we cannot
possibly give the personal cervlc thai
the women of Europe bve given!
They are cesr snd w tr far. Tbeyj
so to speak, r tn th front trenchef
and we have not entered the war ion.
Only a very fvw of us. In proportlos)
to our numtiers, can work In th boot
pltals r ratitoen there. Only a f
1 mere, viiiy lew
n to our number r4
iork (ir r. , a Aj-J
nor In proportion
do Itiil Oms w
work here. There ore, however, twa
things we can do all tbe time n
with all the strength that Is In u
tine la to conserve food. Th othej
Is to buy IJberty bonds. W ran bel
ran help
nda Tel
It I 004
the government by buying bom
ogulii we hsve an advantage;
peculiar misfortune that most ot ut
can help the government only by belp
log ourselves. For ths purchase oi
Lllitrty bonds st the generous rate oj
Interest which the government irnt4
I not aelf denlal but In line with eelfj
Interest legitimate of course, but rUl
seir Interest.
Women of America, wske npl Pom
all your tavjngs Into Uncle Bum' laa
Then save more, and pour tbem Inti
bis tap. Keep on saving snd pourtnM
pottrlug abd saving, until the worle
la free. . Vou have given generously
of th sloews of war In those mag
nificent boy yon have sent to France
(Jive t generously In th money wblcb
will keep them well nd hppy ther
EXIT THE GERMAN DACHSHUND
Msrlne Potitr Cause Otrman Dog to
' N OHvn From Street of
r : ; ClnlnaU. J
Ctnrlnnatl. Exit rhederrntn dache
Inind from the sod cry of Cincinnati,
dogdum. , M 11,: '
. A United Stat marine enrpe pnetetf
waa responslM for th Gemitu doa
fti'a social demise here. TlM'poetelj
depict an American bulldog chaatni
a German dachaliund with the word!
"Tsufel hand (devil dogs),' OcrtneJj
nickname for U. I. marine." 8lnco
th appetrenc of the poster tbe local
dachshund, of which ther are t grea j
puoibor, hue led miserable existence,
as small boys hare "sicked bulldog;
terrier, hound and every other ce
nine breed on the poor "Fritxle," nn
til at last tbey have been virtually
driven off the street of Cincinnati. '
Navy Bn Ltudd.
Th navy bean, beside being plenti
ful In thnt brunch ot th war servlci
which bears Ite name, le also welli
stocked tn the army, it follow the
flag to the front and Chicago food ad
ministrator say It should be aacd lib
erally at home to eav other food fog
the oldIur boy.
Quests Provide Own Sugtr.
When friends go "a-vlsltln'" ot AK
ton, III., they bring their own sugar
along for sweetening the refrehrneot
served. A two-pound sugar rulton td
each fnmlly coniol It. Sugnr hai
been uuumully aenrce for some times

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