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Show - lies' . . , . In sews Petits Les sb clasadied ad ow of Surther worry, It's always .., : ' E vs )08x 1 '' ..-- --.J illa , ' - ,. .. 4 I 1.4, , f , I- :1.' - tr L,..... ....,: . ! ' m... I 4A ..L...FOIO . , ! . G ( , - ' - .....,N t, ' , 4 7 I .. 4,, . Persistent. Insistent and rontantesal advertising In the' News will keep I you on, the right aide of the ledger: ... So , SALT LAKE CITY UTAH 1914 PAGES EIGHT . ,1.1 , .. , ' -- to.. 0, 32 lb. ,, , ; ,p , 4 - 3 t., - Ilow.the Paper Is Made Under Guard;Barean Where the Print., ing Is DoneHalf a Million Bonds Made Every Day and -- Ex:Pertthe. Big Difie WadyWoman Counters on EarthStandardizing the Process and Saving the WasteThe Pressmen- and Their Helpers.. New Way of Watering SecuritiesFourteen-Year-Ol- d Boys Who Handle Millions of Dollars. , st , - - I - I . , , ,' 1' z k A ' . t ' . at a bond you will see that there I daLed in site that four could be made.laccordance with the by Frank G. Ciarpen- - fully .. government re rr are lines of fine red and. blue sti-- I -,-17c s and in the thlrd, and also in the ' Ictpregbe. In the first place. the ot "' ter.) . ,Z...........11111111:11-01-001.1610.00000.1.0.11100'' ' ecattered bete and there uee. I exit loan. the ,number of bonds cut ltheeu are counted when dottlItle.-la threads they are is, ASHDIGTON. D. 0 it. and that theme threads go througn i from each sheet is six. It is the sued. They are moistened and - , counted Ttr bond! the a chief on of and oi the w story liberty the bond and not the size,ngain when they go to the filth who .. legend signature pans , ; , the comes ' The thread fret its and deternilres bond that and engraving. .. there print the back s. each vaiue, le Ithe story of your having has hen a great saving of moriey in his own count. After printer s ,,, , ... ,. Japan. It is made there by eilk worms: iii ! tip. hack"! are mine. It is the etory of the which are fed on mulberry leaves. awl . ,; 0, i; rt p4 tile holids smaller trail ever "Printed the she,ets mast be dried over- making .', 1 bonds which baVe been which 8011:1 the cocoons 'from which before. , twenty milion inight in the humidor or steam drying It, . .......... , ) the United1 raw silk is made.' This silk in twisted , ',ertld to,that many people of litohedno tcboeu 10,4,rit, tthoer : nptreeednowutortko , ,' tPTreirrnItfearr:of ' ;.1, 1." liEnI3 I' .3 t"' "It a saving and of i into a very thin 'thread, in which IS4,,17 i :).,firt;,-.1- ,),,,,:- . : ti.. 1 ,, vs:. .S.es within the past year, form it comes to the government mill. i ii the bonds. Istthis drying'. ; !. f,..1 bonds. the I which 'pr,nt.ne more e millions to it le there dyed red or blue with colors k 'I the tnty-fiv' 11;reomsisa. i'lwhninchtraYaare lia s bta nd soln,liaragr'1,,-t-'';reef. - 'V- iirrice. tik-'1 i - ; - - - it ,.- - 4177,1 -,- . .weehalia:abacribeduririg the next ley , specialty made for the fpurpeee, and- , A' Ized a of of. theta a is i cut the work.iped around with steam pipes that the into part-''''." a bonds these onty of about ,.. guarit lengths ' .J weeks. Each '"'t '' 4 , ,:l!!',. , 4i,..,40,1pc -- e-Hoit is worth more ter of an inch. These silk lengths are ft,,... C'tlt down the - thrAti 0 tett.' kt-I grap of paper, butSouth t nollies;irotwbutaedod and amouthnet bhoeatndstitimeletiaolulYt ',';- , t--, African die-- fed' into the linen pulp an ft is spread l-, weight in V -- 1 ,,, of and I, Ito iisThis eligrall",ig dry ? regt.irod qt , , It that-ion was i the rolls. and that in such a way Te...: for bI ,... ....litivt !enough , maids. ii, printing , ''IL . 4.?,. again. number of .0 go through As the sheets come and that the I that they run straight and form a part :"."'1C .,:::":--, I'd '. '1 from eat made Iin Germany. the face '. ', 1, - Is- - metthat- et 4141' 3. , ,,,.4)41,,. In irtliback the Is lames fortnnr the of to the itfIt warnprwaia paper. hare impoitsible printers they to be caninted and weetiture of each bond had to have threes sepia- gs ' 4 ?:, Ati,, and then-g- o to the bintier;sl-herThe value ot this bond le tate this by any. other method than Ck '''1:,41, r'i, tt 0,4A. ta; tn-,. 'kit 1' rate impressmns and the face five. each is cut into its six individual t , the milisn ,4,t4p. heed upon the wealth, brains anti that wed 1 Now Om barks go through the press bonds. Thie cutting 41 done in All of the processes f paper mak-,A '"'4. trawl. of the most prosperous section rl ; 4 of atIO,' 0,,,V, A ,,..to4,,.4.4)..,.,tee,,,..,ttill'extist4,siasestmrorkel-e4,, ,w erOd.S green earth arid upon the !ng are; perfornied tirder government ...,.,----,,,,., tetreiltr'tlyiAlsas N r , ...........:... tlens being i !town by the difference dollars worth df -'it mate 'heal. tramenstiser lUvetteeettlitsJeininatel-latStrif.....? . 12'; bonds ' ''' cut at being ' In the color of the ink. The back of each tarn of the. wheel.' .7...,' , to., sag- ' ' 1,''''gtt''''tdodC., e tIth government guards. Men armed ,sever been questioned. It I. the t .....1 .sloremo,. the l0 bond is brown. the $100 is red, I. After the bonds,are cut they-ar' ' de- ' salutes upon the bond that make up with rifles stand at the doors. ard I : bis . , 't and the bonds of denorninaMitered , see over Uncle to the office sof the sec. higher that nothing , cti. !ts value. and also the fact that the Samegents .. )I 4.! Of other cpiors. .10, are of face The tiortS jos, thatIs .4k. of such of is lost made are ;retary hit in ' the basement Every fi F, Rupee either. Ink end engraving the bond is made to carry the legend ter the building, being measured and counted. If a scrap is t, 05 rannot be counterfeited. C'T: tountedofwhichshows--exactli-what--i- t . 'fivers li it la - .. ''. torn from a. sheet or a roil it, must be I before .. .., the di- seçrelary . "ea, bears of the number the series. I andivector of the bureau ef engraving gets FAMP day and no.one is per.....,.... 1 .. TAKE first the paper and see bow found the ; tio: fl,,, A the namos of the secretary and reg- - ' his receipt. At this writing -i from the mills until . the bureau its adventures begin in mitted bitto isdepart I li I liner of the g , legitima-it- s which ,....,:,,,, treasury back for and 11 secoutted in ,.,., every turning out 504,000 individual bonds r alf the earth.- - its place. This standardization every tize Its value. one of them has to day. Every ,indely separated parts saves not.only mbney. but time. and it go through all of the ---- -;I ''''' The T11014 q It originates in the flax hay, I has enabled the bureau to turn out described. The bonde processesi comes from the' i the run in value ,,ftmda of Europe, and it cement to this .3 paper 11 4 enormous of it the number securities tAFTEI1 ,11 SlO bail to linen afo:o.' in it each. raga. $100,000 pure Elba teethry 'from it goes through a drying K 111 I -... needed. 1'7 3 I ......,... -. &ready eerved its first purposes in the then - 1L 1:6 The frreedt to prinetet the bonds ,er RE ome,tat'.,ho takes .thnste. et, haottke.d,i,fe. tohimitythe. and finishing proems,- end it Ir,,,7:e1 7 eut Info the shots used for printing . 4sterie'and dresses Of onii'kinelor '', the bonds after they a re printect i2 the; is now obtained by the use ,., At A , otter, and it is as refuse that it is 'the bonds. .1,, aed Each sheet is large enough : ,,,ii.:,..::,, of the colorimeter. a machine which the register of th e treasury, who-is A .' 7.: '1''' ' to ocean sent across and the 'I V.,, i'y earpesi loor for six bonds. Those sheets are packed I measures the exact hue otrid inteneiry mote than half Cherokee Indian. Tres In the Berkehire hills of Massa- JOCVS444,4,11Via44,4,4414. "':".13e,,e,4V.Nro4: of an Y eolor and arerealises it in fig- - name , i boxes firmly fastened and l'if, titt'In"wow, ..4,:4mitorszvoicamoonevanorponnommmonic, .k, Houston p ' seem dissent IA hete the paper Is Made. It bound 'pine and be urea. b or example. it is no longer around with wire. Each box rIt-- I'l is manufactured in mills which do No n I 10.000 contains and its sheets Just owners othredowscrithmai tth(1,"eloiloarm'reetrterain to have The L.N., t.7o7 cher bu.inees. strooildm,itehr:rinaCbh is 600 olerc"qurtiab.kweiest;;Iltbirt.attirl"TRS'. pounds. When packed it nye a large bond and the making of weight is sent to the bu4,, i rrit eiseacomalptdateada opafItretapabritsee,red.oe.10aspaxtset. psner for any other use than that reau ofby guarded 'expreas . and at and was engraving printing IS 0,,.., A et the rritled States is ronsidered a , acting as United States die- - pressed in the codge of the.eolorimeter trict attorney ' Washington, and there stored away in for Colorado when sip- tr'...e F.I.1.11 to counterfeiting. ... In the tame manner the R85(1101336. PRINTING TITE rioNos or THE POIIITFI TIBER vaults until used' the to his ' pointed mill reach the the they rags I parition. It is Iir1 ; . figtires 1185G40B11 reprement a very singular that ,preaera The paper,is counted before it leaves an Indian's. vignette, are cst into bits by women skilled at sold. anti no bond piper can allotment e for the second loan agthe mills of Massachusetts, and it is pulpand should make the bn. legitimate re-L. e trade. The women use scythelike be from the sent make forth bureau as '' ' in gregated almost four billions, and to lei but and counted again at the bu- - fuse kn'.vee and the rags are chopped fine. inspected dollar( worthoehonde stewuntil ithas been shredded and te. they required the printing of inure 'common Si - reau of engraving and printing when ilasued lubrvrigolt.osea4173,4et..4,,,,,,ertelrlamp.witir the bottinrd United ' by rzr-,thenStates. Rut Zor. Is hins: im st. next to a pasta The trimming Is' than 17.000,000 bonds The third 'comes maavninttgthe true nesesthe)eJet ma name la it of It Is taken out of the boxes. It comes '''..athleed 6:Peened by the use of chloride done by 4...Impressed air, which forces amounted to more than four billions and has to sealed packages of 100,000 sheet fum .cattho Ilre. and then mixed ivith the purest...In x a knife through the paper, cuttmg Jt..and the .subscritters.had so.increased .!sory, pailkage ja looked over......end ..: The machines are that more than 24.000-.00bonds had This is done by wetting the sheets peculiar blue gkiss screen that 'eon- exactly to shape. hill s. tevery bad sheet talien out and sent operated eneKen sell far back in the to be issued. Altogether the by women. in such a way that they retain Juin serts the light.into a pure white ex- - atwi:hteoa:doseirtaaertds. s. Thrathenegtfritugttetellnntagadgooene:ofrobymthopir4;onttfo-the mills. back to amount ' the to Only i d to heat s mid have the. lb:4, .a.',i ,re TIM aetly like da,light. gate value of the new government se- - the right amount of moteture. greuse d for the day te isomed each water on earth. It.wasi be T was Is c11sPatir with James; I. curitlea that have been actually sold inediiim cotton in is cloths tiltig,'-thrnot sheets I Wilmeth, the director of the bu. since the war' began in In the neigh. water. A we( cloth is placeddipped 8 to the printing Itself, that is done r.e18,,,,'11,10:14;140thilts mpaoretth.of atitil; wmotrit..0e8F-aeof,r the purpose, and It is guar tbeY go. nut by women some of whom fd from eontamiAtion. the water be- borhorkl of 12 000 millions of dollars every four or five eheets and the paper! much the Inane as the printing dollars' worth of bonds aa as handle can 100.000 I sheets followed from many that the reau, Paper r.turr!pd In underground pipes to the in a day. The through the bond; actually, printed have with the Wet cotton in it is laid up in of bank notes. The bonds are run their hands every day. past - ; So far i30t- a counting Is not dene as the vault through the various pro: and r,..I. been more in 31.000.000 than number. ees. to e which floor count p reach the bond has been lose. a from bill at a time; but ' money. "through eleesmall moved AN It flows the macerated presses t by is believed that the coming issue the ceases It through which in the resulted bright a of head. When i i the After pile your height by running fingers through the been pet os, It'l:'.e razs the water churns the each press being tinder this they aye the seals have ed it Lai at a time The new Liberty bonds which will be 'wild will have more than 35.000,000 differ. of wet aheets bus - ,. ,s.-.. eamhed b y other omeletteto a pulp whichl sheets taking five o r ten are reduced, '!-,(m of an Individual Weiler, who and the bonds Wit- - flit subscribers, and this means the wrapped around, or swathed Mr. charge the to walk are twornen's-handwatethremth doting corningdrive. then to be In '4s iii,? whippea-creaor that ready 30 of between somewhere and s arid printing the ihus two women to say, in damp ebeeee cloth, aheets. as It were. I asked one meth has been an important part of 40 him. The plate ent tie subscribers all over the United ; t freknr lus, before freezing. It seems million Individual bonds. In ad... I le then submitted to a pressure is first inked by a help States. Thi s is done largely how many beets she had eounted the bureau of eograving and printing! ,t roller, from which the ..ein .ncligh to eat, and you feel like girl through dition TieW bonds needed which drives the water in the elothslit moves be will the we were t since to bonds, t the time of twirl process-gehareto the up issuing machtnerY day my visit.; the by so al a spoonfulwar with Spain. He has had to do for the conversion of one series to the evenly through ail the sheets. Theiarmed printer. who rubs off the cur- - i ir tandardized that hundreds of being was 93.000. . millions Trie pulp contatus . absolutely Her reply Sani gives out only new wetting takes four or five days and face with his hands. can be sent out In a day. The whole I went through the bureau of I with every branch of the businew others, As tearing just and the convention of one loan at the end the r',rhing hit the linen and this purest is mellow all thelenough Ink for the and printing I saw scores and as director of the bureau of en- - bonds, slon. After work ii, one of remarkable efficiency. f;r1ng watr. It is' now ready to be engraving for another necessitates; much new way through. paper in which the noticin g and ' distribution It le now loaded on this the plate slides onImpres of women doing such counting. to the feeder, The!graving and printine, he has .today Printing. en.H.ed on the rolls, from, which it now They are et working on hand cars and Duelled to the priuterteiwoznan,---- who-- ets i n the paper;--andresponsible of the IA Starelarillzed, muh piaper and bonds have to be counted, One of the most ales forth as white paper . of seeen d the ftrxt and In the first 17noteSattriS however. the wet tatter the printing. goes to &nether; lace the making of cheap automobiles. these wmnen dal Posons iimaloyithe""weretnn egaiir and again.-an- ! The prospect is sheets have toplaee, ' ' and counted be in and day, Other men deal in millions. Jam es L. loane to the third. count but else ' argein r day nothing : 'iiith-lifit-24,440460 TIIERE i to. however an important out all th e year through. They bevel Wilmeth deals in billions, andth must receipt for all hellt will be peen that every bond has to ;all along the line, and there is searety for this I procetis that has to be added, in to see that the paper and alene. purpose a lost a41 i be handled to motion he back ilevor receives. from deliver for has , such as have are the and time the ',.; quantities On again printing papee again by the The first Liberty: many bonds as the eheets repreeentlemployees in the prookut of making.1 COlnell to Washington until it h i went, Irrierto make the paper impossibli to perfect The greatest care must be fore been known. new bow FN5 this let,ns bright In the first Liberty loan only twoland ht the end of every 'tingle opera- - leut its bonds to the militate of sub- 00interfeit. This le introducing the observed that not a bit of the paperlloan amounted to more then- 22.000,- 1--1 h owi Yttle Kilk threads' wtfich run here and is tort' The white linen paper.s.epperod with bonds were ?Crap' from cutting and 009.000. and for it were printed more i' We the aecotall'oan the bonds were so Hie that it is abaolutely correct and int if, FRANK G. CARPENTER. . L'I 1 I -- 4' Written for The Saturday News by Frank G. Carpenter. p - , 191 g; i 1 . , , 1 . ... , 3 I a ' . . . . - 'Adventures From the Flax Land.i of Europe and Silk Worms of Japan to Hands of Buyer. Its ' t4 . 1 7 9, Ft I 4 , .m.......' i, I SATURDAIr FI,EPTE3IBER s E . or I' , . : .:. ,e t ta , FOUR SECION ' . I. t ,...... . - ... - z ., i ., .. .' - . . . - , - . ' ' 1 ! i . i (1 - . , rl.t.,,r t -,- , - ? . 4 r . .rli.,.-i,::- ' ! I.,A,i.! i ,1;:f1411-- ;- 1,0,,,i:41 - . - , 1 , , s t alone-indicate- . el ,.r. 5sm TIF,, ' ..47 - Al L. . -'-- .. -- I - . ari--- i - 1 d lilock-a.4.41,- . e f , - . - I : r 0 ,, i, ; ' Jj : 7.? ' 4 -- I . - I 100 e t c I i i:, 4 ..s-- -- -- p ;)1 il ,h , I -' 4i r fl 11 t, triasa-lbe-bun- -- ', I , IL t 4- 4-4 l t43 , ; iths . ,,,,,,,, - ,,r...,,w, . -3., cawerna:pl"tals: wt.eltri i ' I I . ' V is I , 11 e 11 ' 5 ag- A . been-finish- i I 4 bi trit, - , ps i and-takin- -- '' g 0-.- l i -- I ' -- t i j ; &I-Ir- ;.t11.'tNI'LkuPo-11,-41,- 1 4 . THE PLEDGE : , t1 '. LECET. By ' 1'''- ',4 ii! i'- ' 1 4, ., 1 ''' i. . 1 ., - . . that's the,.way out here, you krts Anyway we Just sat in the bottnin:ot 10."Ile rolled the trench and waited. over," he said, 'and was dead rn the instant; suddenly, like i'tleorge and Walter were Aide by Thal- - and he made a demonsside as usual. and whenever there was trative gesture with his left hand. Ilia a landslide near them. or the bureting would look anxof a shell. fpe glowed in the daftness, lighting iouslybigat the George youngster to see that he Pli his weary eyes and Ma unshaved was all right. He was a plucky chap. Don't go chit. when he look a puff. We waited sure enough. young Walter. Tor bitalo imagine George had to keep him continue. After a minute and to olp ewe: 41! -- the lig,IFeralirtanglag-t- e slac..k. that,Notiiing-wM liedivent on he &wend, 'wen a , -- eiCas lona-tkind of b.ombardment. and after some"tim Thap yeo feel there's no gots bit quieter. We stood-t- o rePlacing. And things in that battered trench , and prepared he'd bers with us from the start. We to give them a reception worthy of lam hlm so well. We were so ttsed to them. We, were pretty hungry. you Ilerllri'.', ills, clumsy ;walk. his broad know.- - and mighty tired, hut we - knet stick whatever-14Prin"; t.,,rtiollow, ong hadet ,,thougtit peined..Wiett for that . lt;- i- I) F-RANC- 4 -t J. B. MORTON. (Special Correspondence.) Sept a ,1.1 3 ''''' .1 - , 4 I -- t,,i - 1 ix. -- 2! .tot tr. ".! iolly-well-w- Zr- enth7v, a word. "' ' i - ttlit-orie-4, il .4.;,, - - 1 ,..,, ; T.. 1 t.1 .40 SUMO . --- Ireh like that - tr?ey ,:n!r 3, fought-totamtre- about us. Well they came crowds of "ent, and we let them. have, It straight front the shoulder. They wavered a bit. as if they didn't lik0, the look of thing. Then they braced, ' unexpected. and came on. Talk "Whti been up iin the linea, pretty themselves up . we fairly about fire, rapid tur.e. and rod there'd been no end of lewd into them;; and then they squirted, got into were making soma sort as if a, kind of confusion.- ir.'a...ix every few Gerttheboors, hail ot them were for coming on, ant 'aya. Whenever des- the rent for going back. litnyhow they: looked thing' ignue lied nay something quits an or i which is fatal. They were, thilarY thing you know, but In thrt hesitated. .., pretty near our trench at the time. !tit;I: ?f his it sounded inspiring. And and our officer saw our chance. 'Out there was the LOW be youngster, Walt. we Scrambled. over the Bp. and went, hAcl to watch APthat boy! tor them hammer and tongs. We were tortauf gorne girl at a pretty good lot with the bayon.e; 'borne to ;lied prcmised after Walter as, much ke as' were pretty annoyed. too. We'd ereila, and, I can tell you, he atuck and we la ilia .the last Tew days. It promise like a man. If that stood a lot- for to get mit of that trench, was glorious out got of his sight for a for a hit. was off like a !hot to gee' litat be sax .15re were all over 'eta from 'the up to; and Walter looked all to him start. and lots of them shoved up their like a kind. of father: to hi, hints, and looked to him .hands. The rest fought. ona gamely But they: fought logine ' T,,Itir an'l thert for art approving titbits. enough. .sod isnother, Zi..al4.a4, "me' '''''''''... 114', we land prime:Were looms irilen anything wag d,,t...' on chap got aeliteett back to the trench, and there was a marched them g'I't of look ourselves. in Veorge's eyes as it he pleased. Is Punch with v..IPLIefi alert tó intercept a2TY bullet or They huddled together in a corner, . and J leant alien and 'el, against that 'threatened young out of later. He absolutely . to look began to rip the atter bis forgot own safety and seemed to be the bottom of my tutti,e. I d.got a teeinecions that a, nasty-lookigash on my danger existed for rather Ien,,,clne except 'Waiter. etneared most of the wrisl left ..Well. but the right., eat I One night. pretty bright it iodine; everywhere than made a rough bit of itreelal remember, there wag an extra place.' and When Ed tone. I turned in Otte Immhardment, and we looked a bandage. another In a peculiar sort of and Waked out into No Mane Land. ',Nal', as was do ehape by my side. holding his when therre proper- George '? up ligalnat We had a fait inkling bead. Ile looked sort of artneneiL-anit githat iraa going to happen when the his cheek yam slashed to ribbons. Be prirk 4 'thickened. We weren't wrong !was looking over towards a. group in It webt on 'for an hour or two, No Mans Land. At first it seemed ralltirg fiercer "I Pld dug-ou- and fiercer; the wretch- - se if someone was bringing, in mono wer4 knocked to prisoners. then we saw that the hu,zo le the trench Walter. was fighting like ;ogle earth: 'you boards were covered e youngster,. couldn't go' a yard --giving ground ste'p by atop. ItIPLX the trench 'without striking a Thera.. were two hefty Gerboys going of stuff, where His thruets dithit blown in. Yon the parapet had at him like fury. got used to the seem to have much behind them, awl sole so rmich go that it Wag allittt we... goeeed he was wounded'. ' '""- e:'.1titrart it Wean ' Isrlesotal-Ali- at ----- felt he should kart Lld a kind of triumphal death. ther . that'stoarinficently Imposing. But the way out hers. Al- alitthe bOne ny'lethx,tg 4,:., tt ' l list-fli- ed 1 1' ' , ' e ' g7 , ,it ., ,le.i. ' ID ,, field-drawi- I 1 ts te . -- -- in I' '- ------ - an' Feet:II-We- re-is- i - - P4-'- 0 i"- t mane7-ttas"bee- - II 1 -- - - hand. but George was before me. Like: a flash, be was off towards thrage three GARIBALDI HOME figures. Ile staggered just us he get to them. Ile must have been an weak as a rat by then. I saw one of the big fellows dig at him. and over he went. Ite was up again.. though, and Fan hold of young Walter just as ths The next thing boy was. collapsing. ITALY IN villlTilviE I knew was that the two Gerboys had their hands up. They didn't like the idea Of equal numbers. 1 eunnese, much less three to two; not that you could count George and Walter any The part being taken by Italy and Weil. I brought the two of especially by the dexcendants of Gins-thelonger. I back-saw eppe Garibaldi, Italy's' liberator, In came Jo, and as George staggering along with Walter. helping to make the world safe for e had his arm round him to support him. They were helped into the mocracy, la strikingly told' In a Red trench.... Walter had got a hit on the Cross worker's story of- her visit to the of a Tine home built at Riefr eddon in the 1110111.beadwith the butt-en- d Mirtattellati ttaina stoat ftosneby licorice looked,. chaps took Walter off and ,looked821-4balói,00- 0, ilsarri3aa-tca- of Ibe 1:141"1 W"Man et blin; and- theft George just toppled', 1111 and rolled over. dead on the instant, thi:v17:r.r'ket7ictehniat of 47rAzrIlacultys suddenly." Red Cross have reached. the etory Ile puffed at his p4pe, which heilOhows. for the little hospital founded is now being kent gone out. lby Madame Garibaldi Cross. The Red Cross 'Kind of chap theree no. repin- e- UP by the Red 3f s'ldiss-Roguest-4weranwas-th's d thet the Gartbaldi,,who la latisTpiTNE of - m de-H- 1- r.,..41 hatatlyz-i,pallet- a' - I I sa Gs WIiittelldsitYstrcloa TIrticlt,t4le of Ttio met the pas- froddo, a tiny Carrl-ill- r sentrers bound for the village-propethe Red cross worker's stout little horse with an sesistaist'.at thep side started bravely off to make La- ascent' to the town above. ane of the first buildinge to be eon principal town was the Garibaldi hnosreaching the , -- . .Coct rishing Short 7 sters-goestr-"-rite St. John 'N. F., Sept. brador- fishery. one of the branclie of the Ne irfatilidiand to be short this year. The fish are shipped direct from the coast to :European countries.'' nutinly port ral.. Spain? Itapr and Greece. and very high prices areobtained nowadays. virtually dou- ble the figures ruling before the war 20.-.-T- i the-stee- ' ill to'tiaotm.wthwes Hit fourth st.--Thrst- made IsoPpittanzrft thentIotrg: century and Asap. or children's home. where forty children are taken care of by kindly nuns. Here Miss Garibaldi described and ttoolyite jhtidortegnthe flag of America was food anrmen tow:1'1Zr ally. Italyign the great war for the freedom of Vona. in return the children sang their The Labrador 'fisheries :of ...igewn- tittle ratrimie c'llire with eh abillidtwi foundland has not in late years at. qtrnidttervonti that stpitte well for tpe paforth:irTtntroats 817111:duarnedeitttitze7rn1.-al- l tattled the same proportions merly when some 20.000 fisher folk. voisea caressed the men. wèmen and children. migratcd 'Italia.' "Then came the Garibaldi home on a there every summer for the fushing mason. and the onto!". in some yearti beight at one side of the village, cont. reached- 2,211.000quintaleyA--Wooe71 session at preseng would represent anuoneatrances.of 31:ef:Itidaltu"tibo.allwilb tit; half these figures, whereas the out- 1 two tOW PrS and their winKa, and th, look just now la that for the 10 or 12 other half of the quadrangie to an on. thousand people .engrtged, not more finished state. "Now all- la quiet at the Gartbaldi than 10.000 quintals will be obtained. homestead. On the terrace and gardyn -. . overlooking the bills' and the valley not st mound is to be heard . The belew, American Servjce amibn lay in a dream ae !. ......... . under nome magic spell. But the silence I. m oat potentlyof service flag for spokeend Tokio, Sept 20.-- -A nearer division 02 the fields of would bay. shoWn Awmrleana who have tort japan to grain in end old men and boys hard at the United States military forces ;;Tioken, taking the peace of the moo I. tWbs given to the American tom- - fighting In the trenches. - It would here by Roland S.Nforria. the rhetaedewaehyredhonlitielhydeilitg. ewnPwtilftetilithy a'nh: American Ambassador. The flag will women knitting as they walked. TM' in th4 sue be kept at the etnbantry in Tokio and landscape anteantrAnftildlryoanstutill tri: with it will be a war record tot, each man. repreeented by a star. stout men. doing their share -icith and Abetst 20 Americium- - have -- left loyal hearts. tohome GartbalM aro the offer their services to the Inside Japan y g many a States military authorities; cc- - Shirts from weapons and ban- to Major kt...! F. Baldwin . mill field. Rothe are the Rieetottl father stoolred by 'era tall' attache to the American' Um- - Garlba141 on Wit ..Grecian campaigns haexy: who ix leott!ering the. dots thew) 1,x0e,Weonntathered tOrliZt, moat ot who has "won- worry, to ALM - -de d . - ,.. - nag. - wt . srnilee-drowell- y -- ed far-awa- battle-cordin- rtrenge. SOutb Elul America, Mexico. Along the walls of the im mense ball, running the length of the house, are hung' trophies' from different land. Then there is a Mexican raddie presented, to Peppin- - by Madero who acknowledged in thin way his debtl to the grandson of Garibaldi. "Minn Garibaldi, who among other things Is a painter. had partly completed a portrait group of tho family across one whole side wall of herroom when the 'present war began. The five norm and three, cbaughters (herself included). are standing about ,thetr parents seatd in the foreground. The family will not resume their TH.F HEROIC FOOL BY LRAM K.. I N. COLVELE. , (Special Correspondence) The British battery was not re- Sept. 10.A consider-- I quired to fire just then. and as soon as all the venue-me- i get away FRANCE. we made some years intopossible a the deeper or out of the England by A fire In one line of fire, but. first the wounded 'of the biggest of ' her public had to be removed. The officer irt was arrilyng the first to get thools.-srtme- - I sittings boarding hones was set question there. and be found several of the men at of history's greaten blazing. and two were suffocated horribly iniured and bleeding proboys war. PAPPITIO, the oldest son. who has inherited his father's and his grand,. in their sleep. The rest were awaken- fueely. It was unwiee to move thown father's skill at arms and the leading ed to gel out in time. but one boy, till they had been roughly bandaged. ,trf ITIPIIL took side's with the Allies. in so he net to work on one of the woret. CrorylranY with a voting's? brother. 'Nu, having but 4ust --escape3 from the the biasing Istrildlog, was af on suddenly - cutting. knife. In due eoree been neverelv. to rostsL back into it. Cries slf iroutided, SVT'. as their- Unskilled eom- Will al eta ti othlerit. "'MIS- Italia, 't he ettletf, back!" were unavailing. Up the smoky ! rades could manage, put' on stretchers nurstng toit military hospital on the stairs he dashed. and the onlookers, and taken to the road. where &mho- ftellan front. the second. Rosa. feared his that rashness lances would earn bad already arrived to take restent enraged In bonnital Work at Rome whtte the youngest. .Tosemhine, him a fiery death. But presently he charge of therm But in the interval. to the Amer-- reappeared, none the worse for his those working on the worinded were I, em neeeen't her serviees esca pude. rnes, explaseel to inceemant, danger from a -Rene Why bad he tune? Did he suppose tholuland gP1141ere sad to thebarratat-r,,,-,, naritieldtthan ,vairius.,,,ttion,L, four, ,vanrig There was anyone Jett in the build- ing assault ef,thesetexritic nurstingrourt of Italian Ilea ,rrtorn No. he mild, no one wsui there so within a few yards of them- - Another nurees and has seen nervIce sett iie ing? She ham also Ivan far as he knew. but he remembered limber waa hit and some berm of ear- fictise fa (Ir.... flared up to the darkening' to South Amertea but '11Pirtr to the that he had left half a crown on his chest of drawers. and he saw no mu- sky. Staten. r70,4 ''''Ttowever." nab Miss elnrihei(lt in tficrent reason for abandoning itt All thhe little enough to the feel tel if moakIng of America. To what is his action to be ascribed? soldier. Itsoundi is tndeed almost a part of had many friends In your rountry. for To avarice? It is inconceivable that his. but it neVer becomes not )on it ago I reeeived postcards from a routine, boy of considerable means--t-he onlyi wholly pleasant even to .othe--sowing women of the American son as It of a wealttry lath-1 hardened. and yet when there Is most Frignelle-geelet- v, chanced anyNewlershould-ValutVowsome a crown above thing (such as the tendingor haft from amsfrore Yrrk, otato-w- o life. to ,distract the thought and outweigh To ignorance of his danger? 'Hardproommessh, yr, In there ronsiderattanz personal ly, for the room he had come from hardly a British soldier who will shirk and to 'which ha returned vras only a from It. o door off one which was al- The work was quiekly dofte and Han,'est Big Pea Crop Irealir bnrning and the whole corri there were no further serious ;dor srmoking. He was tristeen years of ties.: The officer took shelter with his Snokene. Wash.. Sept. S.Farmers' lige. too. and 'no fool in other things . fellows in a well protected out of the danger zone. Prestmtly, of Spokane county will harveet a !son though rather a spendthrift,,, It is eaaiest to suppose that he was. while the Place wss still quivering crop Taipei at two million dollars, one of thotse who by nature, are quhe with the centinusd explosions he reit County Agriculturalist 1 Ft.. Shinn..untouched by any thought of fear. Of in bis pocket a.lid went .quickly out. completed, a survey of;tife risk they run these people are 'Viliere are you going!' snouted the but the pea crop In title county, declares.;ttileetually well aware. but the answer was Inaudible. and enough 'shattered peas will bethought has no emotiOnal value foe major, 'wes away several rninntesi lett in the ;fields; ."' to an4 anydeaire whatsverAwilL, Utak .feed111,0001togytthem, such a cold piece of knowl- major oft his return:, -- yqu had better Mr. Shinn is I am reminded of this incident be stop Where you are till palgn among the farmers to induce: them to pasture bogs In their pea:a story I have just beard of an arta- off" left rny knife up there. Wear fields after the crop has beenhar-lier- y officer at the front. Late one af- - where I was handeeing Casey," was-thvented, and to save the pea straw after. ternoon his battery had concluded a "It's getting dark but !titan been threilied. He has aireatly'ehoot and .the detachments were on had reply. look a and, couldn't see It. sent 500 hogs to Iferms, he said, foe, their way froth he guns; to their0 Thex're good lot. those very This purpose. Troth tests he has made. eili,Ittrre when a hostile battery nud- - finches, athey on pant-pintheir he has diecovered that 100 to 700,denly opened fire and plumped a: shells into thekeep rame old and pound' of shelled peas to the Ler salvo right into their midst. It was al the knife !Wight have been place. burled by ere left 'on the irround after the crop t heavy howitzo,r I thought I'd ask the now. However. had been taken: off. .ing to our inchand It hit off the: men if any of them had picked it of, a . 1 I W t to I I Irange with great lecuracy. Tour rend: end the third dos-5log. shattering shells descended with found a fellole in D stub. had It. 'Concrete Shipyards. rush into the position. One hit a It s a good knife. My sister , It It gavi, limber a little in rear of Its Cue. and m." 1. London. sept. 20.Ttentorctd non (MIS fall right in the middle of one of The rnafor, I understand. refralmod the detachments- - and two in were from ubordlnateorate shipyards In the United hie It tat reproving killed outright and sixwounded. The Kint other cor an oMcer to two shells did no damage, but estremely dom aro making gooi,peogreas but there'. tto construction of the shock and roar of tone 'projectiles Mit timee when fools serve a good Nit- The program now 'in band of each caliber bursting almost eimulbarges.intrepidity bt - the unocti- represents Name 200,004 bons of ship- - taneously within a small compass' is pose, The Moreover the sclmmly courageous M & wonderful ping. and 20 million dollars are to be hideous and horrible. of ur whose nerve& re, to tonic those with-littlvariation of spent on the 'work. The designs enemy, firing 1:40ta,:daaletaL114:134WILlibriagrr guar.. t adopted .will.affeekaAmying,ol,10340.2.tigenatiesited-4.1ta--bleerAtbeste-itTerttwo minutes for the test boar. tons of stel.:.-- , - t. dug-out- , , .; -- A ak r - , - - , -I- . -- let- f - Usrd-tJiwov- Mans-schn-s- : i or-tw- dog-eut, - ' I. ; ' in-t- ,;, 'rotr-beeft7-"-- 'I ''' ' e ore-ide- ad . r tit, 4 battery--approsima- t-: . . a I, |