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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1918)
Notice of Final Settlement Notice is lieruhy glvnn that the un- lIlTHIHIH'll t'XIM'lllrfx (f tllU lllHt Will 1111(1 toatiiineiit of Henry Fcldinnnii derointod Iiiih tiled her (IiiiiI account hh mii'h exec ill r t X mill thill the CmititV Court of the Si ii lo of Oregon for lli I 'mini y of W'nBliiii,;loii, iiiiticr (liitn of Au(,'. .'H, !MH, Iiiih hi ! Moiuliiy. September I'.o, lit IN, Hi tin' liimr of ti ll ii. in. of wiiil iluy. mill lint county court room in IIiIIhIhiio, (hccott, iih I he time mill t for hctiriiii? objeel ion to I Ih mud lliuil account, if liny there lie, liml for Hie Dual netl lenient thereof. .Inliioimi Feldiiiniin, Kxoculrix of Hie l.tml Will mid 'leu lument of Henry I't lilinnnii, Deceit l Dated thill AllK. i-'i, HUM. soiuni kN I'Atn ic To Portland McMiiint lie train . ..7:22 . in Slu riilait I rain 10:10 a. in. M I'M iiiih ill- I r mi . I t.'lll . in. I ,lli llr ( 'iirviillis ... fl :();t p, in MrMiiiiu ille Iniin . li: IO i, in I nn si ( irn e train !l ;f0 i. in I'ruin 1'ortUnd I 1 1 j -i t I rain N : 1 .1 n. m . I i'M i 1 1 1 1 ille train . ... 10:. Ml i. iii. Sin ri, I in I rain 1 :2 I . in V '.'I . 7 :'J0 i ! :00 i. I'.': 15 a M r.l in ii ille I rain . I nn -.1 ( irnve I r.iiii c.M imit ille I rain StfAtn Train Si ln-duli To I'lirll uiil I ;:i() I liilll 1 nrllllnl ! ;.";l i. in Motor Car Si-rvioe Tn I!iiIiiii I I : 1 ,1 a. in. 'I'k Tiinlirr 1:10 p. in I'tulii 'I'im t n-r ! :f0 a. In I ' 1 1 mi i Itiixtmi I :.'I0 p. in AUCTION SALE 1 1 t inu n ull d inv f inn I ill nl public sale at my pi uv '.' 1 liulei S. Y, of I lill iluii'it, ainl I. mile Mint It uf Julie's r i s . t n ti , nl tell .'!. III., (Ml S ATI HDAY, ST. IT. lis Hl.uk M' I'lii't;. I. "00, S years; s..r re I in ;i re , ! years, 1 ."00 ; muni Ii' liliny, 12 years, I. '100; drown Hi dlini:, 12 years, 1200; 17 inlllt rnvvs, S of (In in eiiiniiii; f n sli ill (leluder, fl in N'oveiuder; two IV in, plows, tun ft IimiIIi i ii 1 1 i v 1 1 1 1 is ili.c plow, siilkey plow, two section burrows, spriny lnulli lur row, I I in. disc, iron roller, d i r.'ii l, llicrini; binder, I inllou a v in. mine spreaili r, rudder lire 2 m ill li.iek, nlil hack, dimu'V, lie Wfiitmi wilh I ali f.irn I i deil, '.' 1 . in, Milllinen wa'.;ini, iron I nil. w.ilnn wild hayrack, 1(1 i' I lousier grain drill, milk coo?, r fl I. ii. Ill riitlit alor, putalu pi nil i potato dinner, fan mill, work d r in ss, dnuuy liarness, let! 10 " ' milk i nns, hack lift i nr.'.s, Sin. 1 1 lump puller, w ild 100 f I . e id'i li ilr.iiilic r un w ild 100 feet pin Myers pump, !nekee pump vol iinmerims oilier artiele-.. T''t : 20 ,ill,l miller, msli; oer !?'.'", Ii lit It t d'llik.idle linte, fit S : I rent. Two per nut olT for ." over $20, II. Kneiilvi', .m ii. ' ' ('. Kill'.illi, anelioiieer ; Joint d i ralli, Jr., elerk. Miili is l 'IX ti. l'Tll i:.ii:vr. Notice is hereby Riven that tlio tin dci'Hi.;ned, Milminislralor of tin cs tatu of Josef Mritner, deceased. Ims tiled in tln I'otinly Court of Hie State of Oretrnn for the County of Wnili iiUflmi, IliM lllial neeoiiiil as rik-Ii nil niiiiistrnlor, nnil Unit on tlio I tth day of AtiKiiNt, I'.MS, Raid Court, by order duly HlKlie.l mill llled, linn Set Mull day, September HO, 1HS, nt 10 A. M. nt thn County Court Koom in llilU lioro, Oregon, as Idc timo nnd place for lti'iiriniT obieetioim to until nmo neeotint nnd the limil settlement of tlio unid extnte. Chits. .1. Sebnndel, Ailininlslrnlor (if tlio Kstnte of .In ef Meitner. Dtyrawil. Dnled nt Portland, Ore, thin lMh day of Antrum, 1 : I H. Tin Ari", 1 1. BO prr year. I'or Sftli' : Iteijislereil llolslein licifers iiml dull calves, clieap, if taken In fore t or fi weeks odd (ierlianl (loelze, ft miles sunt It of Cornelius, Hill line fifiU. Address Cornelius. It. 2. M0 He nn, an (!. I. uek anil Henry Mi .'ieliani, of above Moiiul.'iinil.id were i 1 1 ,ur . ill V callers Monidiv tnorn SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF fllK STATU OF ORKC.ON FOR WASHINGTON COUNTY dcitrviit Brown, I'liiinlitr, v Janii-flll Iti'nwn. Dcfeniliiiit: To .lanicH ll.Ilrown.tdp nbovo named di'fendaiit : In the Name of the Stnleof Orrirnn: Yon are hoicbv tiolilicd nnd r riitired to iilipeitr in tlio ndovc onlilled court nnd nnwwer tlio coniplnint filei niriiinat vou in lh" above entitled chuhc on or beforo the 2fith day of October, I'.tlH. Raid date beinir nfter tbo cximii lion of nix wcekH from the ditto of tbo firat publiciition of thin Numinous upon yon, tbo (bite of tbo (lrst. publication thereof licintr t boll!! It da v ol Scptetti der. l'.IIH. mid the date of the IiikI pud licntion tboreiif bciiiti; the 21th day of October, HUH; and in the event, vou fail to iippeitriiiid answer said complaint for want, tdercof the uliiinl ill' will apply to t he Court for the relief prayed for in her complaint, to-wit: tor a decree dm Rolvuig the niarruie;e nnd miirrittpc con trad now and heretofore oxihIiiiR he t ween rinintilV and Uefendiint upon the KroundH of desertion, nd (but such other relief de awarded unto her ns tbo Coin t inny deem I'quiladlu in the prem iHes. This summons is served upon you dy publication thereof dy order of the lion, (ieo, K. Hnpley, JuU?e of the ndove entitled court, mnde, rendered nnd dated on the 11th day of Septem de, WIS. Hare, McAlenr & I'eters, Attorneys for Plaint ill', Residence nnd I'O address, llillsboro, Oregon. First publication, Septentder 12, 1!M8. Lust publication, October 21, 11)18. MURDER OF NATION BY RUTHLESS HUNS How the Poles Were Slain and Starved and Frozen During the German Drive. F. C. Walcott Tells of the Gconet of Horror Ha WltncHtd Along tho RoiiJ From Wriw to Pinik . Million Periont Homeleii. fj Thli I hv teen. I could not bcilevo It unlets I had teen It ! through and through. For tev- 1 eral weoka I lived with It; I ', went all about It and back of It; inldo and out of It wot shown to me until finally I came to rcallie that the Incredible was true. It la monttroua. It Is un thinkable, but It exists. It la the Prussian system. F. C. Walcott Tlio following la a atutemeiit by V. O. Walcott, who aerwd ns nn nsHlHt- niit to Mr. Hoover during tbu time America wna doing all that wit in1" ullilo to feed tbo RtnrvliiK mllllotiM of Ilelk'luin nn J 1'oIiiikI und nurlli.ni Fnince. In tbl work ho wan brought In direct contnet with Oernutn military olllcliils, nnd wtw tlio conditions which tba Ocriiinn Invasion bad created mixing the civilian population: I went to Poland to loiirn tlio fact concerning tbo remnant of a people tluit hud been decimated by war. The country bnd been twice devnitnteri. First tliu RtiHsInn army nwept tbnmch It nnd then tbo Ournuinii. Along Die roiidiltlc from Wnntitw to Plunk, tb prcReiit firing lino, 230 miles, nenrly linlf a million people bad died of hun ger and cold. Tbo way wus strewn with their bonee picked clean by tlio rrowa. With their usunl tbrirt, tbo erntana were collecting tbu larger tunics to bo milled Into ferllllier, but linger nnd too bones lay on tbo ground w ith tlio mud-covored nnd rnln-soitked clothing. Wicker basket were acnttered n'oug tbo way the basket In which tbo baby awing from the rnfter In every pen nt homo. Every mile there were ecoreii of them, each ono telling a nth, 1 started to count, but after a little I had to glvo it tip, there were no many. That Is tbo desolation one wiw along the great road from Warsaw to IMnk, mile after mile, more tbnn two hun dred miles. They told mo a million people were mndo homeless In i-'lx weeks of tho German drive In August nnd September, 1010. They told mo four hundred thousand died on the way. Tlio rest, scarcely half lillv. got tliroiudi with the llusslan army. Many of these have been Rent to 81 ln rla; It la these peoplo whom the Pitderewstil committee la trying to ro Ileve. In tbo refugee camps, fiOO.OOO enr- Ttvort of the flight were gathered by tho Clermnnt, members of broken fam ilies. They were lodged lu Jerry-built bnrracks, scarcely water-proof, un llghtcd, tiuwarined In the dead of win ter. Their clothes, where tho buttons woro Inst, were sowed on. Tbero were no conveniences, they hnd not even been able to wash for weeks. Filth mid Infection from vermin were Hpreiullng. They wero famished, their dully ration a cup of soup nnd a piece of bread its big ns my fist. In Warsaw, which had not been de- utroyed, a city of one million Inhnh Ititiits, one of tho most prosperous cit ies of ICuropo before tho war, tue streets wero lined with people In the pnngs of starvation. Famished and rnlii-snnked, they squatted there, with their elbows on their knees or lean ing against the buildings, too feeble to lift n band for a bit of money or a morsel of bread If one offered It, per ishing of hunger nnd cold. Charity did what It could. Tho rich gave nil that they hnd, the poor shnred their Inst crust. Hundreds of thousands wore perishing. Day nnd night tho pictures Is beforo my eyes a people starving, a nntlon dying. The above Rtntement by Mr. Wal cott Ir a terrlblo arraignment of tlio nun, but no more terrlblo tbnn ho deserves. Whnt hns happened In Poland, In Belgium, in northern lYnnce and every other couhtry that tins been blighted by tlio Hun's pres ence would happen In America Rhould the allies, by any chance, fall to win this war. It would mean the enslave ment of American ' men, the starving nnd death of American women ami chil dren. Either tho Hun or humanity must perish. KILLED BY GERMAN HELMET American 8oldier Hunting Sou venir Picked Up Charged Headpiece. Rbainokln, Tn. Writing from a dug out In No Mini's Lund, France, Leo Comer, n corporal In tho Twenty-third Hulled States Infantry, forwarded to his sister here, Miss Cecelia Comer, a bunch of st runge (lowers ho had gntlv ered while on patrol duty. Ooiner had promised a younger brother a flerniun :iteel helmet as n war relic, but in writing Informed the brother that bo was doomed to tils appointment until the Americans roueh lteiiln. He had seen o fellow soldier pick up a steel helmet nnd then full dead. Tho helmet hnd been electrically charged by the Germans. Pacific States I'ire Inmrmre Cntnprny of Portland, Oregon. The only big Oregon Old Line Company. Losses Promptly l'nhl John Vnndenval Agent Hillsboro, Otcgon Try the Argus, $1,00 per year. POLES DRIVEN TO 1 GERMANY TO WORK Hun Commander's Brutal Order Issued to Conquered and Helpless People. , Every Able Bodied Man Forced to Leave Hla Starving Family and Labor Under Shocking Condi tions for tha Opprewor. H4 H- Thla I have seen. I could not I believe It unless I bad seen It through and through. For sev- eral weeks I lived with it; I f went all about it and back of It; Inside and out of It was shown to me until finally I came to realize that the Incredi- t ble was true. It Is monstrous, it is unthinkable, but it exists. It Is the Prussian system. F. C. Walcott V. C. Walcott, n member of the t'nlted Slates food iiilmlnlNtriilloii, and during the time America was feeding the civilian populations of Belgium, Kerbla nnd northern France an nsslst nut of Mr. Hoover in these Itiviiilnl countries, bus pictured In n graphic way (ho conilliloiis bo found ninniuc the. people It wus bis duly to help. After describing the terrible email lions In Poland In 1!U), the million that were dying of starvation, tlio luitiilrcds of thousands of defenseless people that bud been ruthlessly cut down by the sword of the (jermnn con queror, he nays; In that situation, the (icrmnn com mander IhsiiimI a proelaiiiiillou, Kvety able-bodied Pole was bidden to tier-' many to work. If tiny refused, let no1 oilier Pole give hint to eat, not .so mm b as it mouthful, under penalty of Ocruian military Law. This is the choice the Oerninn gov ernment gives to the conquered Pole, to the husband and father of a starv ing family: Leave your family or dio or survive as the case may be. Ienvo your country which Is destroyed, to- work In tieruniiiy for Its further de struction. If you ore ohxtluute, 'e( shall seii that you surely starve. flaying with his folk, he Is doomed) and they are not saved ; the father niidt liu.-lmii'l cnu do nothing for tbeiti, l;ij only adds to their risk and Kufferln Leaving them, ho will he cut off froiis his family, they may never hear from: bltn again nor he from them. Ocw many will set him to work that a Or man workman may bo released to flgbq against bis own land nnd coplc. Hot hliall be lodged 111 barracks, behind! barbed wire entanglements, under' tinned guard. He ahull sleep on tin bare ground with u single thin WaiH ket. He shall be scantily fed nnd hi. 4 earnings shall be taken from him b pay for bis food. That Is the choice which tho (Jcr- mini government oilers lo a pioui, sensitive, high-strung people. leattv or shivery. When a Pole gave me that proclamiH Hon, I was boiling. Hut I bad to r.x Hindu myself. I was practically th only foreign civilian in the country and I wanted to get food to the peopl That was what I wits there for nnd I must tint for any cause jisipanur.e um iimlcrliiMng. I asked Governor Gen eral von Ileseler, "Cnil this bo true? "Iteully, 1 cannot say." he replied. I have signed so many proclanmtlon nsk General Von Krles." So I asked General von Krles. "Clou, nil, Ibis Is a civilised people. Can this be truel" "Yes," b- said, "It Is true" with an, i Ir of adding, Why not? I dared not trust myself to speak I tinned to go. "Unit, he said. Aim he ('villained to me how Uennun.v, oilliinl Germany, regards tho Btnto of ihject peoples. It Is hard for us to Imagine such a condition In America ns Mr. Wnlcott has described as existing lu Hun-rld-den Poland, and yet that Is just what would ovist should our boys, nnd the boys of our allies, now lighting in Franco full to defeat the soldiers ol this murder empire. This fair couo try of ours would bo mado Into a Ger man province; our people would be the slaves of the Junkers of Germany, subject to the beastly whims of the olUeers of the Geruuin army. In no war In which America hus ever en gaged have tbu stakes been so great ns lu this present conlllct. Should wo, by any chalice, lose; should tho Hun, by tiny chance, win ; our liberties, out happiness, everything Auierlcnus lioia dear, would be lost WILL "USE NOTHING GERMAN"' Club Organized for the Purpose of Boycotting Products of Hun Manufacture. Chlcngo. High art and low art, music and literature nnd dolls that talk and walk are to be taboo forever and forever to members of a new club here, when they beur the "Madu In (Jertimiiy" stamp or llnvor. "Use Nothing Geriuau" Is tho name of tbo club. And the women who have formed it swear that they meuu what they say, nnd that nfter the war they Intend Unit tho kaiser does not re cuperate, from the ills ho has brought upon himself through their aid. The club expects to spread ita mesi sage countrywide, nnd thus to Induce women throughout tho United States to back them up in Ignoring every-i thing Oernutn. I Vinegar Apples Wanted We are now receiving apples at our Cornelius plant. Knight Packing Co. Phone Cornelius 762 CRUELTY AND LUST yEAPOilSOF HUNS Conquered Peoples Shamefully Treated for Advantage of the German State. Proattan Offlcera Callously Tell How Starvation and Abuse Are Made te Serve Their Purpose Cap tive Women Made Slaves. This I have seen. I could not believe it unless I had seen it through and through. For sev eral weeks I lived with It; I went all about It and back of It; inside and out of It was shown to me until Anally I came to realize that the Incredi ble waa true. It la monstrous, It la unthinkable, but It exists. It la the Prussian system F. C. Walcott No more graphic description of the ravages of the German soldiery upon the civilian population of Invaded eonntrlua tig been given than Is con tained In tho brief and simple state ment of F. C. Walcott, now connected with the United States food adminis tration, who was assistant to Mr. Hoover while America wus feeding llelglum, I'olnnd and northern France. In one of tlie.se Htatements Mr. Wal cott says: Even now I find It hard to describe in comprehensible terms the mind of official (Jeruiuny, which dominates and Shapes all (jcrtnan thought and net Inn. Xet It Is as hard, as clear-cut, as real as any material thing. I saw it lo Folund. I suw the niune thing In IH glum, I heard of It in Serbia and Itou iimtila. For weeks it was always bo fore me, always the same. Officers talked froely, frankly, directly. All the stnfT officers have the same view. Let me try to tell it, as General von Krles told me, in Poland, In the midst of a dying nation. Germany is des tined to rule the world, or at least a great part of it The German people are so much human material for build ing tho German state, other people do not count All Is for the glory and might of the German state. The lives of human beings are to be conserved only If It makes for the sta' ;'s ad vancement, their lives are to be sacri ficed ii It Is to thn state's advantage. The stnte is nil, the peoplo aro noth ing. Conquered people signify little In the German account Life, liberty, happiness, human sentiment, family ties, gruce and geiierous Impulse, these have no place beside the one concern, the greatness of the German state. Starvation must exclto no pity; sym pathy must nut be allowed. If It ham pors the main design of promoting Germany's ends. "Starvation Is here," said General on Krles. "Candidly, we would like to sen It relieved ; we fear our soldiers may be unfavorably affected by tlio things that they see. liut since it is here, starvation must serve our pur pose. So we set It to work for Ger- piany. By starvation we can accotn- fllsh In two or three yenrs lu Last oltmd more thatl we have tn West Poland, which Is East Prussia, In the last hundred years. With that la trlew, we propose to turn this force to eur advantage. "This country Is meant for Ger many," continued the keeper of starv ing Poland. "It is a rich alluvial country which Germany has needed for some generations. We propose to remove the able-bodied working Poles from this country. It leaves It open for the Inflow of German working peo ple as fust as we can spare them. They will occupy It and work It' Then with a cunning smile, "Can't you see how It works out? By nnd by we shall give back freedom to Poland, When that happens Poland will appear automatically as a German province In Belgium, General von Hissing told me exactly the same thing. "If tho relief of Belgium breaks down we Bun force tho industrial population In to Germany through starvation and colonize other Belgians in Mesopo tamia where we have planned large Irrigation works; Gerninns will then verrun Belgium. Then when the war Is over and freedom Is given back to Belgium, it will be a German Belgium that Is restored. Itelgium will he jGcrman province and we have Ant- eerp -which Is what we are atter. I Thut Is not all. rvomovlug the men; Ehnt tho laud may bo vncaut for Ger aau occupation, that Germun stock Inay replace Belgians, Poles, Serbians, uVrmenlans, uud now Koumnnluns, Ger- Biuny does more. Women left captive Era enslaved. Germany makes all iuanner of lust Its Instrumentality, ' The other day n friend of mine .told me of a man Just returned from north ern France. "I cannot tell you the de Sails," he said, "man to man, I don't kunt to repeat what I heard." Some of the things he did tell shocking mutilation and moral murder. He told lof women, by tho score, In occupied territory of northern France, prlsouei in underground dungeons, tethered for 'the use of their bodies by officers and imen, If this Is not a piece of the Trusslan ' . IX I . 11... l.x..l..nl ,..,.1lf tt jl tO- ystcm, It Is the loRlcnl product of dis regard of the rights of others. j ( Germany hns limited tho amount ithat prisoners may spend to $15 a week tot officers nnd J12.50 for privates. Best Fire Insurance JOHN VANDERWAL Agent London & Lanca shire Five Insurance Co, Fur sale: On tin old Hurley pltiev, 2 miles fast of Ilillslioro, on liasclitu rond, team liiules, .". rows, 2 lu'ifcrs, and Jersey luill. Phone 13R0. 27-2S) BOYS TAKE HOLD IN GOOD OLD AMERICAN WAY, SOLDIER SAYS Hardships Ignored, Wounded Man Tells Mother Don't Let Them Hinder Your War Work By Mr. Haiel Pedlar Faulkner From a hospital somewhere la France a wounded American has writ tan to his parents: We are going through hardship. but the boys are taking hold in the good old American way." What a mfsai(e for those of us who have remained at home! What a challenge to the vast army of men and women who are In tie lio.-ie guard, carrying on In the thouwad and one ways that tho exiK'ticles at war bare brought ti;s)n us. "We are goicjf through hardships." We can believe that, when we re call the dauntlui charges wLlrh our boy have been making over thr::, and the dally lengthening casually lists which are resulting from their fearless devotion to the task that to set before them. We know they are going thnni.-di hardships, when we slop to think of the hundreds upon hundreds who are wounded, and who for the time be ing at least need care and attentloa. FIENDISH ENEMY ADDS TERRORS Of course thy are going through hardships, those boys from yo ir home and mine. Hardships are a pftrt of war. They are the inevitable result of a state of war. And when war Is waged by an enemy so skilled in all the fiendish deviltries In which the Germans have lndute'd, they are the Inescapable portion of every soldier participating. But hardships are not the part of the war these eoldlcrB of ours ar thinking most about. They are but the incidents la the day's work. The boys are taking bold In the good old American way." Could there be a better statement of their manner of fnclnff what come to them? Could t!;ere be a more def inite course of action prescribed fur those of us at home during these days which teat the mettle of our aouls? The time for onr messai-p to the boys has come azaln. The Fourth liberty Ltfan Is to be our re?ins to this wounded soldier's challenge. MAKE YOUR ANSWER NOW Are we Kotaig to take hold In the good old American way?" We have not had to go through hardships. oars have been an eaMer part Wo have known little of sacrl floe or deprivation. Compared with the offering of our boys, we hav done nothing as yet And now, here la the challengn rnmnded to us. The good oM American way Is all that is asked of us. What la that way? You must frame the answer, moth ers and Bisters of the west. Your Is an important part in the reply which the nation will make to the bojs overseas. There is not one of us who would not spare her son ff he could yes. even spare some other mother's ron the pain and hardship he mnt hear. We are not lsked to do that. We could not. though we would. But e can make his part easier to bear, we can go with htm throutA the hardships, by lending completely of our money. There is no loiiger need to espials what a Liberty Loan is. There is no more necessity for pointing out reasons for paitklpatlon in It. This is the day when but to hear its call la to insure Its heartiest support. September 2Sth is the date set for our concertea reply mrougn in Fourth Liberty Loan. Let us take hold In "the good old American way." What (s the very most you can do to make that advance a smashing suo toes like the boy over there ars siaJrtnc? OREGON ELECTRIC TRAINS To Portland- 0:32 7:12 8:2S minutes a. in- a. m. a.m. 9:58 (Sunday Only) a.m. 10:18 (Except Sunday) ti.ni. p. in. 1:18 4:17 6:47 7:48 9:43 ....p. ...p. P- ..p. From Portland 55 minutes 7:54 n.ni 9 ;20 .'Lin 11:31 . m. 2:1" p.m 5:0!i P- (5:12 i - - - 1. 7:1.1 p. 8:47 p. 12:0(1 P Notice of Final Settlemenl IN T1IK COUNTY COPRT OK THE STATK OF ORKGON FOR WASH INGTON COl'NTY. In the matter of the estate of Adolf llouzaik. deceased. Notice is hereby Riven that the un dersigned Administrator of the estate of Adolf llouzaik, deceased, litis tiled in the above entitled court and catie his tinal account and report as such Administrator, and the Miid court has fixed and appointed Monday the 14th day of October, PUS, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. of said day. and the Court room of the above entitled court in llill-.Uero Orciron. as tho time and place for hcarinf objections to saidi final account and for the tinal settle ment of said estate. Fluted this 12th day of September,! l-HS. , I llenjamin llouzaik, I Administrator of said estate. j Hate, McAlcar & Peters, Attorneys i for Administrator. cio' flies ':1 M VI Here Is an American commander 'CM general In hU re-.iew of a Yankee eontlng-nt billeted in a town where tb trench line in tb Vogues has Invaded territory undor the German fla ' When the v. .r b'-.-,tn. Foirth Liberty Umn bonds will help remove the Boche from Alsao and i.or.alne as well as from ravlshel Belgium. BRITISH WOUNDED PASS THROUGH FRENCH LINE t --r-j- S."ji .r: - i 1 'V JJ-i?' f H During the tiereest of the fighting in a battle lu Franco ISriti.-di woi.uded on the way to hospitals were carried past the lines of the French. As ho passes the trenches Oiled with mae'doe gtinners In action thN wounded Tommy, Interested, has raised his head to watch his French cousins help hold the Htm. Away at the rear In the woods eavnlry horse-' cnti beeen corniled while their riders wit It the enmmntid to advance. ' CAPTURED HUN TANK REPAIRED BY FRENCH : -v nr-,M:ff- --V'. - .. ' V'.' . - -. - 1 , "ep" ' - - i- 1 i i -t- t; - '1 ' ' ' - - h' i ' - . . - 5s Uu f f V ". i " w : - J V, v. At- 1 - -.- 1 I .i-u i -. , - - y ' '" "- . . 4 K- ' rr ... bk . ?v t -.(" 4 - '"'; " e . ' - ....-W" . "a. I s,(S&. s-r. - . - " ' ' --w . .......'-'-.. . .'-4l3 l ... , e The tank si en in this. French ol cial pliotournpli was enpfiired by the Blench in the recent heavy llirhtlnir on the western front. The tank was de molished by the heavy French snmtir and It to.il; these crnffy Frenchmen! twelve days of work under enemy llr' to put It in order again. The photo graph shows the French crew which n paired the tank and which Is operating; it with Hi'ent results against the enei.iy. ' ' HEAVY WORK ON I i S .. . v ' ' ,.'-.i ' J w" ' t K . i b .y- .v.'.:. t i1. m-v:.: . t ... , - - i '. "v . V3v:i:.- ' .v; ;-'.' v'".- nvy. ..w.. . si : .W"'. ' ' :5K' X' - w ' '-- -' - -: tS-V : '.: :.-' ' , . "::.,. . . ' V . ' I --:rX-" W,,V. ' . - .1 - g. ' vi""'Vt'' '. . "' ,v..t N. ! rl ... n '4 These powerful American nrtiller. men, with hm;e crowbars, tire working fast to Ret their heavy gun Into position to hurl Its shells at the retreating Huns. It is u dillieult Job. for the earth Is pitted with shell craters. r ' - " 3V " i "'. 1 4 . v I'lere is it ib ta. lime flKliliuj; on Hie west fi'i.i nnd ivlivn.. Tluy ;..e it of I lie I, n.M ; I' . ..... i henrtud, ouU ready to jump Into the c;i c.4 ;:.;i s:;i v-f K-Xi ' ' pi-- 1 1 ' f s ' t i In Abiice accompanying a FreneB v. Hue V B- V - 4V ,-:.: ' . ........ V. a THE FIGHTING LINE ' .'V if If i ' i ' .i- thai did so. It brilliant the V ,.t,..ive St.)..!.!! Info a 1! tin dHasfnr i:, joUiiK and light" finht