Newspaper Page Text
Page 8 JUDGE SAYS CRUSADERS DID "f _\ WORK “WITH STRING TIED TOIT” iNew Citizens Are Told by judge Moss g% That They Are Doing a Real Work % lin Making Every Nation Free. g 4 5o PEREEL NSNS S PR AERES E“flut a sort of unwarranted halo @ad been hung around the crusaders old, who, perhaps, had “a string at " sached to their crusading,” and that’ 1 e who fought under the American ‘today would be really fighting to Enake every nation free, was the state- A ogt in the speech of Judge Robert : of Annapolis to the newly made g. in camp, which brought forth : Jréttest enthusiasm. -+ Judge Moss_ told the nearly 1,100 ers, who Wwere naturalized with - cost to themselves,- that they were - ting under the greatest flag that gver was flown over a free people. . ‘“Never forget that you will be wel- F-";g'puod’hen you come back from the = t,” he continued, “and that you ©an say to those who ask you where 4 were born that you came back to P country on board a ship after ~Sighting for world freedom on the i ns of KEurope. - You can rest as ?nrod that this will be enough.” - Judge Moss followed Maj. Gen. Car % wio informed the soldiers that it Wwas a great pleasure to him to find ~ ghem so eager to bear arms for the pountry of their adoption. He said ~ ghe) might well be proud to take _ ghel places at the front, as the sol . @ilers who had fought. the battles of & nis country were largely foreign ~_ Casualty Lists Bear Testimony. B . e ' “The casualfy lists,” he said, “bear B B o RT A RA A A o R e ¥U S TST~ SVT S SSNT, 2l e g M T TSR TOBtASU RAB D T T OS U P DAL SRS BT T, BUCKING STEEDS, “"WILD" INDIAN | % & - 5P i e i \ eg N RO :-:~:':-§</->::-':¥:2:1:-:-:§5-‘.;¢'=-2~2- e P e et $....:.;~.;.-,¢ N ; B fi{,”’#*mhv%*”’**‘f’“ S 3’“&3“,% : P R 3;_::3:5-5:;i13r?:E:‘:f?3?:E:’g;3:3:5:5:5:;:;:5:;:;:;;;;::;;r:;:je;::,’=€:E?&:E&:?Wfig:;z~::;3;;:,-::;5:~;;:{.;:§::<;:z e A '-;E¢:‘-;:=-‘-':9.’:;<',""5::3:5:?2;;&:5:;:f:;.ja;c:e':;?fi:éé:%fi:i . b e g I o e R ¥ - R , ,_,..,.g.~..(.,;.,.;.'.;4.;.-~.;.;.',;.;.:.;.;.;.;.1.~.w,a-.~.-:-..:-;.;,;¢,.---'-.;.;.;.;.@ s A X BKB .}:}:'-:k-;ag'f.:::;:;:;:-,-;:,-:~:;:-~¥-.::¢:;;--:~:-:-:-:-:-::::::::-:-f:r::::;:::::'-:5;@:;5‘:4:-:5-. O R M o eo B R e, R ,r,’;-‘,z,g'g’#%"fl’f“ ~”’f',f‘:,'puw“‘,;i@n",_Q"'fi‘r,/& R N R _. eB S B 808 R. B é e -'~:'-:{-:a-z-‘\f%:gfg;;fi:;;5};::25;35:;’33;:;:;&;.:;:;::;;:;:-:5:7;1:-':1:‘-:3:?:137:" "-'Z:f:f.i'ky.'-i" SR :/:I:l:ls:l:i:"f:f:iti.f:f:i.f:3:l.'=:i:';?':::fit,f.i:i.\"fz‘zi'?:f.'?' i “:33“' 7 ~'-%?<s-'!5;1;!;-2:",1:2:5:1:5:;!51:5:::3.‘:2.‘2117:3:1:1‘.‘.‘;3:~ e < B e RP Al S = se o o e fi:ii:?%:i??i:ss:;'-‘::E:::s:=§;$1<';2:if;?:?'::::::a::7::::::L'E:E:E:E:S:E:E:Ef:.*'c::?:=:£:i$:i§:i:§1:¢:1:2:=:1§=€2:-:-:fzf-'?i'.v‘-‘:i??If=:£:5t'::5:§:5:?:k’:’:ffi:?'i:f.‘~:=:f~-’15¢5'é=$i'riti=??=£:‘:i§ £ b :fi’éfi"fil’@gffi’-{‘%3:3‘:’55155335::-"1555:2;1:7’1 CRRERE B ‘,.-.m-f""::37slss:3?%7?!sls23ls:sls:ff?YEJ’t’s'EtE:E:;‘.E:i:'i?:-"cf:-’::if?."t' e Y e e N '-:-:5:!;:::;:; % ":4;;;;;:::;:;:o,:;:-c;:-'.;:7:1:-:'v:-:1:1:2:'<5:=:=:§=§"-5-,:?.-',. eb O e2l A 3 3‘-& R s .”“'§.,7’z€b°¢ R R ,’@' e ; IR e :;:;f;‘.sbfiz.;:;:;>)~:;>;;;~:-.;:;:g:;:5:5;;'::;;;;:3;:;:;":;:::;:::,> s A :2’-:::::;;:,;;:;:;::-;:‘;;:-:;:;:::;:,:;.;:;:5:;:5:::;?:.g;::f;.;:;:;:;:,f.::;(fi'.:d-:f.h T s ‘;-',.,-;-::;‘;:::;f:t:’.;t-Z;‘a.:f,';n:fi57{'3:2:%111;2:2;2;2;7-3:1::;.;‘;'.;;;:;:;'; o SN "‘f@?&"‘s“:“:”'g“"k‘\'szifi;‘ sg\oj’ P S ,:;:;:;::.‘,_;:,:_-::';:;:;.;;;;-.;;;:;:;t::;:-:-;.c?:-,-::;::!;:::_;;:~:;:::-‘-:?‘-'€2§5,' * °3;;;2:;'4‘5:!:2:i:=:1:‘ io S B s s 2 0 6 .-.f:E:Efifl:é:fi:{#:%%fi:-;:::fils';é:;rirj:;’:2'3:s:s:s:s-1:::2.2:5;5:2:1:5:1:~ ; s g&\ R \-*:f" ;St‘%fig/,ag e 2 :;:;.%:335:5%:5?&:‘-::%fi-lffi:l:::i.‘.'-’&k";"“i';:5:;:‘;:'<-'f;’f3:5:5:5:-':Z:l:1:!;51::;1:3:15531215;3:. S S BA e . v R A S %\g@\“ R R g >,:g.;:;:,\‘-‘:;.&.;.;',_\-.;.;.;.;?.;-:5;3::;;5;‘;:%;.;:&; 3 .&;:2-.;:_" % ‘,;,:,,% R 4 s R R e e R e B C BT TR :&& Sl e ‘Vfl:-;xé.’i’@%”g Giaw o e > RR R P sSR R S S S 3 B ¢ R R % R R S X :"'M:f'f:::ifi:i:&:::%:~:::'°':b'i\'§'f-’:¥s’?s:=--’n.a:.fi:?'l. Lol B&’ B AR SR i R S i 'V;@ B "'T-S‘S-‘i%-f":f fi5’:’5\@352535154’:5’!5‘.5:555.- ~:i’:‘s:?3£s':""\.'sßfils‘-§:'3”'s Xff B S PRI o D 35:"355.?;5:-‘:;:1:1:!:Eg':{i;';if‘-:l;}sj:ffi:};?fiifi:%;{:-@'\?::?fi:" B S 3 _~.,;~~§. . P o e R e S e i &9{% bAP 3 R ,f"u "'53-’:2515151:5.’1236{*:3‘,-.-"..5" gt ¢o O X AR ¥ e e R e R B e e R b N R e % e A e ) 3 % B e L R ~l’¢J.’<?:l’(3':~ B S R e R )& % 3 i e eR A R s 2 " e o s A i e P ;.~.;.-.;,-~;\ eI e i A L e T e eS s e P g SO 3 P b o ‘.zi%‘ WL PR . g B b B R o O goR PR BN B s A e i s ; R SR 3 e T o Wt SRR R Sk 5 P £ o AR AR § bR o “". S e s o e % (V”g /R i O SR % S e Doras g AR & FaA¥E : o gt e : S Kty 5 b £ i 4 i ‘ L ol e R R % - - g \ : OSBORNE OF “BUFFALO BILL” . it ° (Continued from First Page.) ,~————-_———_——_——— ' ence with “Buffalo Bill” and picked En.ndkorchlers from the crow‘d as L chnrr went Plunflng on in the i , eld. In this event he com with Boston, O’Donnel, Sihto, ,"r:ur, Blackwell, -Steiffel and ' Sergt. Tommy Thompson—he of the red .iundkerchiet and flowing mus tache—made music out of whip . eoracking, and the chorus was made up/ of Sergt. Peterson and. Private Schisler, also of the Remount, and Sergt. Black of the 63d. “Peterson, Brooks, Pabst ‘and.Ballnog of the Remount drove around wit thelr twenty-mule teams like a Balti _more fireman would turn a corner ia his high-powered motor engine. . Then Gyp-the-Blood, Osborne and - Romig did some blood-curdling things 3:: made one wonder if they would : get a chance to get the kaiser, . they were then.running such risks. ~ Realistic Stagecoach Hold-Up. Just at this point Maj. Meade pulled - his “chef d'oau:vre" in the form of a w:oaoh hold-up, with the clowns : 2 Doc Patton on the inside of the coach ‘and every horseman in the - show trying to frightem the poor . travelers and the audience into fits of * delirlum. Somebody got the money bag and made ‘off with it while the rest of the cavalcade rode away in hot pursuit. Nobody was shot. The Roman riding, with two horses being ridden by each entrant, was run satisfactorily under difficult track conditions by Carl Romig and Private . Butterdahl of the Remount and Roy Osborne and Corp. “Reds” Inman of the 63d. It "was a fine exhibition of nerve and good horsemanship. ; Privates Bursted and Roy Osborme of the 63d competed against Private , Balst and Sergt. Wittmer of the Re . mofint in the interesting stake race in - which the contestants rode direct for a certain ‘point ‘and. then doifi an A “*about face,” refurned to the point of Sit g 4 VIl GRPIC 2 ’fig Rs d sAR eH S R it ’é’ ~3;:,3.12,, @ - - 08 W p: testimony to the fact that foreign born men are now dying in France under the Stars and Stripes, and that their commanders are getting from “them every bit of loyalty and devo tion which is theirs to give.” The general pointed out that the only real American race was Indian and that the fpeople who made up the great body of the nation were drawn from every country of Europe. The: men who took the oath of al legiance to America that they might serve in the Army, which, as Judge Moss said, had the proud privilege of helping to make free the people of every nation throughout the world, hailed from many lands. One was a Persian, another a Hindu, and still an other, a native of Paris, had an Aus tralian mother and a grandfather who was a Belgian. One of the thlngs which. dxveloped in this court, which was the third pre sided over by Judge Moss (the first having been conducted by Judge Rose of Baltimore), was the disincli nation of Russians and Italians to be come citizens. Many Italians were naturalized, but there were many who preferred not to take out their final papers. It is said that this feeling has been growing in recent weeks. About 3,700 soldiers have been nat uralized since last spring. Lieut. Campbell Meeker was in charge of the military side of the preparations, while E. C. Wood of Washington and County Clerk Woodward of Annapolis assisted in the filling out of the papers and the administering of the oath which was taken “en masse.” e S ———— A, T T A3 N N AR S T VT P%4 S AB, 1 :g:lnst Osborne and Bursted of the Then the ‘buckers” strode forth. It was not hard to see ‘that the riders who tried to tame these horses would have about as unich trouble as a mother in keeplnl er strong-minded son out of the molasses barrel—those 5%30;!: were there to buck, and they 2 1 Bla.ckwoll& Gyp-the-Blood, R{)mlg and Butterdahl of the Remount tack led the job of sitting in the saddle while “Hash Khnife,” “Weasel,” *“88" and “Biting Tom"” endeavored to un horse them. Oshorne, on ‘Cyclone,” Gibson, on' “Firefly,”. and Dreggers, on “Unquenchable,” proved that the 83d boys knew the game, too. ; But Wilkins Willlams thought there was still not enough excitement. His “days on the Umatilla reservation back in Oregon came vividly before his eyes. He had seen horses that could leap down 20-foot embankments and land on rocky ledges without hurting a soul, and he pictured himself back in the wilds again. - “Let me ride without saddle or bridle,” he pleaded with Maj. Meade, And the major, ever ready for more, wrote down on the program this add ed attraction. Away rode the Indian before the major had finished speak ing and the steel of his spurs went deep into the flanks of his mount. Down the fleld went horse and rid-- er. The crowd did not quite under stand. Could it be “muble that a° mistake had been e? Had the bridle been slipped and the rider left helpless gn the horse’s back? But no, it was really intended that way. The Indian was smiling with every buck and turn and the ox;&y person who smiled more was Maj. Meade, who told the Indian that he “had never seen such riding in all his life.” : “Tommy’’ Tompson said he was will ing to keep Oan chewing horses’ ears as long as l;‘x‘: necessary in' the process of bridling the bucking mounts, but Maj. Meads sald it was “time to feed” and the frolic ended with ree-for-all race on the taken by Lieut.. Morrison, the divisio: RNPERRRUAPY SR GNPy ,‘l,..,;}#i- B domins o - ey 10 g—gm}r {g R ~al;"~! ST TRENCH AND CAMP: Extensive Work Being Done - ' By Organizations Overseas (Continued from First Page.) are no stores except possibly a wine shop. - Tll’lo only place where the men can buy tobacco, candy, chewing gum, safety razors and other necessities is the Y. M. C. A. Between July, 1917, and August, 1918, there was shipped overseas 1,959,156 cans of fruit, 2,557,481 packages of tobacco, 848,- 785,802 cigarettes, 32,358,700 cigars, 10,227,738 pounds of sugar and 561,520 tubes of tooth paste. In an average month the Y. M. C. A. gives away 100,000,000 sheets of paper, and every day 2,600,000 letters are written from Y. M. C. A. huts on Red Triangle sta tionery. Wh:t the Y. M. C. A. is to the fight ing men in camp and trench the Y. W. C. A. is to the Army nurses, the women of the telephone wires in the Signal Corps, the hundreds of Army stenog raphers and the women in the vari ous branches of civilian work in France. : In Paris the Y. W. C. A. has taken over the Hotel Petrograd, in the Rue Caumartin, and has made it into a women’s hotel. Here, for a moderate charge, the woman workers overseas may live in an atmosphere of home. In Tours another woman’s hotel is in operation under the management of the Y. W. C. A. Sixteen huts for American nurses, who otherwise would have no clubrooms, and fifteen for women workers in munitions facto<" ries stand to the credit of the organi zation. !"Our business is to back up the women who are backing up the men,’; is the slogan of the ¥. W. C. A., and they are doing it in France as well as in the United States. The Great Work of the K. of\c The Knlgl‘\P of Columbus is the agency through which the National Catholic’ War Council does / welfare work for the men of the American Army and Navy, both in France and Italy. The K. of C. is an organlrgtion 430,000 strong, and its war worß be gan during the Spanish-American war, when returning veterans at Montauk Point were given aid and comfort. When the American Army was mo bilized on the Mexican border the K. of C. extended its work, erecting a row of service huts in New Mexico, Arizona and Texas, As soon as the United States entered the world war the K. of C. volunteered its services, chapla_lnl and secretaries were ap pointed and a general appeal for funds was issued. The great sum of $11,241,529 was quickly raised, and by September 1, 1918, 300 secretartes had been sant to France, 450 more were in training and 200 were in reserve, It is ex pected that 1,000 workers will be in Europe by the first of the year. On every transport there is a K. of C. secretary, At points of debarka tion in France and Italy the organi zation is represented. One hundred sécretaries have been assigned to Italy, where huts are rapidly being built. The order maintains three buildings in London, a headquarters in Paris and forty-five permanent buildings throughout France. A fleet of motor trucks are in operation, keeping pace with the rapidly ad vancing allied farmies. These carry to the spldiefs cigarettesg tobacco chocolate, writing ~materi , Soap, towels and other comforts. There is no duplication of ffort in any of these organizations. e Jew ish Welfare Board, which is in the war to help all soldiers, is especially concerned with the morale of the more than 100,000 Jewish men ih the Army and Navy. Its overseas activi ties began ®|lmost as soon as the first American soldiers landed in France, “and at the present time thére are eight Jewish chaplains in the Army M SECRETARY BAKER INDORSES DRIVE. 3‘, S —————— >r. John R. Mott, Director General, October 18, 1918. United War Work Campaign, New } York city: " , ) ' : Dear Mr. Mott, P On my return from Eurépe I am \‘ more than pleased to learn of the successful progress which ' ~ you have made in projecting the plan of the United War Work. Secretasy Baker Campaign. I have receiveéed most © Jriermeed ¢ gratifying reports of the splen i did spirit of 4o operatidi on the part of the Young Men"' Christianidsso ciation, National Catholil|War .Council (Knights of Columbus), Jewyiish Welfana ‘Board, and other agencies. el . The proposal to exteafiithe campg gn to all of the military training camps, Jarge and small, meets with my hearty approval. In fact, it would be a serious mistake not to afford the officers and enlisted men this opportunity to jJoin with their fellow citi zens in this great patriotic endeavérion behalf of.their comrades in arms. ' - I am confident you will meet with the hearty co-operation of all the Commanding Officers in furthering your plan. ° : FieN e " ¢4 : {513 é; PEEiE S ;v,n‘ ‘ucbr‘lyi i f e e NEBCPON DM R . ’izi‘?'@ié m\“}* u\}%é‘! | k‘; | "') {” !t‘?:l ' R R ik asiEl Lt SiBE LN o K ORI TC R ey WO arfd Navy, and twenty-five more are soon td be appointed. Abocut 100 sec retaries are in France and England. Jewish Work Is Effective. The Jewish Welfare Board has a place of its own in camyp life. It does not seek to segregate the Jewish soldiers. Rather it aims to help the Jewish boys to adjust themselves to understand and be understood by their Gentile comrades in arms. The distinctive function of the Jewish Welfare Board is making the Jewish soldier into a good fighting man, and keeping him, at the same time; a good Jew. Safeguarding the religious life of men of the Jewish faith cannot very well be accomplished except by Jews, and the work of the welfare board has been strongly indorsed by Gen. Pershing, Dr. John R. Mott of the Y. M. C. A. and by religious bodies, Cath olic and Protestant. The library war service of the American Library Association is something really. new under the sun. Soldiers have often taken books to war, but this war is the first one in hidtory where books have been taken to the soldiers. Beginning with the troop trains that took the_men to camp, and the transports-that t6ok them overseas, the American Library Association keeps the men of the American Army and. Navy constantly supplied with reading matter. ' Libraries for the Soldiers. In Paris there has been established a central lending library, and at Gievres, in central France, .another book reservoir exists. At one of the principal seaports a large building under the quartermaster’s department receives the fifty tons of books which every month are shipped over the At-" lantiec. From the two central libra ries and from the receiving ware house, books, magazines and other reading matter are distributed to every point occupied by the men of the Army and Navy. Every Y. M. C. A., Knights of Co lumbus and=Salvation Army hut con tains book collections; every permanent camp has its library, and-hooks are shipped! as wangegt to isolated units of men on special y. Recently the as sociation has arranged to furnish all Army schools with text books, and it has also engaged to send any book or books wahted by individual officers and enlisted men. By order of Gen. Per shing these books are sent to and from the men through the American postal service post free. Two hundred and fifty war vessels have been supplied with book collec tions, and‘h.every Ameriean naval sta tion in Europe has its library. Every military hospital has library serviee. Up to October 12, 1918, 1,250,062 volumes had been shipped to France. The Salvation Army does not under take the extensive service of the Y. M. C. A, for it is operating in only three or four divisions, but it fills a unique place and comes nearer being an old fashioned home than any other .organi zation with the armies in France. In general the Salvation Army huts are near the fighting line. ?;. Salvationists Popular With! Men. Usually they are in charge of 'a man and his wife, with two or re as sistants. The women mend the 'soldiers’ clothes, fry doughnuts, make.pies and coffee, while the men take iof the canteen and make themselve§ other wise useful. The Salvation y has, working in France and Italy: 831 men and women. It operates 501 hutments, hostels, naval and military homes, read ing and rest rooms. Forty chaplains from the Salvation Army have so far been appdinted, and no less than forty-four ambulances for the service of the allies have been supplied by the organization. BAN RA A AR I Y T DUON AN KRBO ~ COLUMN RIGHT! = . 4 -% ’ . _,k .' BY ROBERT D. GQODWIN . Corporal 47th Company, 154th Depot Brigade. * g We all have our weak polnts—-fl?é“ the Army coffee. P German peace terms are not BWt ) of the “all-day-sucker” durability. ‘ ATTENTION, SHERLOCK! | Lost or strayed: One crowa pri and the “crown prince's army.” LAas heard of in July on the Marme. .. Is the kaiser heeding Greeley's “Go west, young man?"’ etc. KA Are you seeking your fortunfi‘ifii style seems to be, seek the other fei low’s. iz Every soldier in uniform i$ a réa son why yvou should strive jan cially, and in every way, to make y” and allied institutions stable. Remember, only one week. For what they did in the .“yesterdays,” &re doing “today,” and will continue throughout all the ‘‘tomorrows,” give your limit. “Mary Garden” is the name of Sergt. George E. Riggs’ pipe. He named it that because it draws well. I've nick | named it “Samson.” % “Your time will expire next Satur- .‘ day,” says a stamp on my town p;&r. Baltimore undertakers, take notice. Regardless from what walk in life, you don’t have to teach 'em to sleep. At last we have our revenge. The | “Somewhere in France” company of actors were quarantined in Omaha last week. They were “forced to “wait” table in local restaurants. Re member when you kept the audiénce - -in waiting? fi * wpirst, take nine eggs,” begins & ’ recipe.” Suppose we're caught? % “The huts satisfy that soul hunger that only human companionship and 4 true solace can,” read a letter from & the front lines, “and witir all the & traditions of the American mother,” ~it continued. g 18 1t is rumored that Bergt. Wobds will soon publish a volume ~verse. I wish you would, Woods. U wel- & come. 55 1 The tales they tell by cable are rery nicely “tolled.” : fi i FURLOUGH .DREAMS. = & Little bank roll, ere we part .. . % Let me hug thee to my heart; . ‘All these years I've clung to yous 3 Tve been faithful; you've been trdu o Little bank roll, in a day 0 A ; You andi I will go away o o T o e g with A T ‘ll ¢co ack, but you ook . QP —PAUL a'r&a .. Looks ‘like hash o' Turkey. :‘** Take a piece of paper, i s A little one-cent stamp; ’%5 Stamp ;1. address to mother, . .- i Wraq fiound this Trench and Camp.* ; _— e\ 1 Now, Shackley, honest, don’t: ¥ou . think | fhat picture would have 3a tendencyl to decrease, instead of in crease; pprrespondence?. A letter just receiv; reads thus: “I am gial [to ! see thag!T. and C. has added a comic picture fgection.” eel il e Ll gt o Do ygp know that George M. Co ~ han’s dle name is “Washington?" | A car¢leps typesetter in the lays gone 1 bN'a, George a twist, inverted the | ot ' a three-column Writé=up ¥ which at that time was too 1 ” to disown, so he stuck to the “M* but & it all leaked out at the Lambs’ Club. & . A cartoon by a French *fk the kaiser looking upon the fields of Franceé, over which masses of infantsy ¢ . and artilery deploy under.the Stass and Stripes. PR “What ships brought all these S¢i diers?’ he demands of his comp nign. -“The Lusitania, your majesty!™ ks ¥ the reply. Nt No, Chauncey, you can't rfl _the magazine of a rifle. . %g" 4 oot i S Jess Willard isn't a prize fghteses he’s a time-killer. What do you W | Jess, an inmate ef the ol m " home? el i ; ——— -~ "-‘,':?'::‘ e ~ Famous come-backs—canceled clie Now, if it had been the 13th, Insfile™ of the 17th, we’'d be better &% place the blame. S The Americans are tesehl ~ | many the “shell game,” and they find the little “pea-ce.” = THES At an officers’ lecture,in Idi Field ‘the other day some. one BS singing “Silver Bars Among the G —_— ST R Recent revivals: “Turkey ini§ Straw.” Fo .r.u';‘;;’:!‘:{ £i . & —— il ST Famous aids: George. ;i i§§ & TI N Things we have to take for grantedis An Atlantic Port. ‘? R gga: %hereiis pork in Arthy beans, ; at beer isn’t as ltrou! ‘as it w . “orhat Ner o e e That Nero could play a m&&* ¥ NEWS EDITORS. s,f ‘, You ma ite, ramble an e 4 As m{xc:rue you wm.’,'ww& 4 But the paste pot and sciésors T o Remain with you nflk‘u Ry gL When- Caruso receives $1.5 song we are forced to rem: i“g” W think his favorite note is “De* = 1 n corner, . ;i iidbT . Puteing e ple swasd el HHE © Now little Jack's:dl HibE He sits with a ms LTRIHNE In some gilded 1‘ f,: 4 To the soldier every piece of ehibien has a wish bone. Eesi - 5310 l e re you ping foil the kiiye i b tinfoil? . :fii P R Ra 3 But for pumpkin t'f’ ’*(fi‘ would have escape *s -# gfi%@ S)Tg 7 S o