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Influenza Encyclopedia

ï~~ V ~gas1 aeon1toast has do e 17e' P'; Of lusilnees. gaut joe re were not all ~e at l eadtters by an- mans o16 ut amn tbe aards for 4mmpfe. r t ' O')w y arm ~Bill G( i4n, leaO, of;teB lx"Wa rd. cahrap. op t Ao W rd over first Wftt a quota tilt' ast, of llecestyi' r.Iy t creased "or the quota in the third losan. alone leaders and their w*kers did three. days more work than was tho In tour weeks In 'the third c~ntign. And Sigmond Sanger. chairmji n to Wiathi.Ile led General Qhafrstnn Ill ~ng t~ and Frank Coates a eerrycte fz'+tt the sa ndpointof tl1tl a1l S * ~ wa ths~ a0rthe ',. n aditonh o tt i e foun d~e somehow to cheek th a work of *e special sales committee' Insofar, least, as it affected his ward. Dr. George Love, superintendent the Toledo State Hospital, also ado good with a vengeance. When )u Boulay was called away to war, r. Love was made chairman of the filrteenth Ward organization. He Ld his workers keyed up to a pitch at put the ward over In four days -spite a greatly Increased quota. VE'LL GET 'EM DAVE." Then there was Pat Hagerty of e' Fourteenth. In addition to his ork in that ward, Pat found time help other wards by securing rec. -do from the various railroads of tbcriptions taken, but not turned to the wards that had the credit me them. And he helped in a hun 'ed other ways. Then there was Dave McAleese, tiarrnan of the F~st Ward, and no of the most po ~lar workers in ts organization. They call Dave W'e'll get 'em." Because that's what Dave, despite heavy quota for the First,. ard. ways has said in the various meet. cge, and more than that, Dave is vetting 'em.";TH DISTRICT TOTAL, $153,075,050 l CLEVELAND, Oct. 4.--Cleve. tnd's total pledges to the Fourth.ibetty loan today were estimated tmore than $26,000,000. The esti iated total in the Fourth Federal reserve. District was $168,076,060. "MW ike to be more popular' than Mr. Yank the letter from home is aata Claue with that boy in doubly important. Make that letter France or training camp? a home-folks home newspaper Here's how! with contributions and pictures from Send him a made-to-crder news- all the soldier's friends and family. paper, profusely illustrated, with START IT NOW. the lured-picked news of his home., ei o.B sr ohv h fatuiy an frinds!letter newspaper ready to mail by UNO"* SAM BUSY. Deo, 5. Mark It "Not To Be Opened Unc.~Sam is so 'busy shipping Till Christmas!" food abd,ssnmunltiqjt, and reinforce- (Jet a No. 10' envelope of heavy ments'tI his fighte ghat nonessex- Manila Paper. (let 10 or 12 pheets tiel -fil.Christma gifts will be of thin "onion skin" typewriter pa. at opst ded out,o' official or- per, size 8 1-2 by' 11 inches, der eiit4ed b 'shie Poatoffiq~e Enlist the -cameras of the faznilr, p 7ep et it e sni1l and friends and take pictures of es # thge;diio ~yeverything.^ad,every Foresanditis ou b s hcp ick nan -wmod,mt..t.es 71oeshee tteoa~~ _ ' as o a ot ctdr'a:best.tArI~ds and one to each b memb er of the family. Make each responsible for filling his page wIth jolly mnessageS, snap-' shot pictures, and clippings from newspaper or school or club magazine which would cheer or Interest the soldier. Be sure to have camera pictures resasonably small and printed on the thinnest paper obtainabe-to keep down weight. Pen and ink sketches liven up the pages. Don't forget pictures of the family dcg cat, or other pets. SEND LOT OF PICTURES. Get a written and signed message from every p=boolmnaf or ebtun of or three Weks ttt pla and saanble the newspaper pages.' lgaysa party and entertsJli by making sobh new s letter books for several soldiers. Try to see that every boy from your town gets such a letter Christ' mats Day. Ask families who have no soldiers to make books for sol' diet's who have no families. B(, sure to mal it by Dec. 5 if In-' tended for F'rance. Mal one week earlier than usual if intended for an American train' ins ('amp. * 101 The mou Aspirin fLae *ta sotv. @1ia I he ail i I I I - m -. m -, r m -- -, -LIMI.m 4 - 0 - II HIQH GROU-ND Con lued.frota Page 1. and Lens, reaching the railway east of the latter place. 'At the close 'of the fighting yes. terday we held 'the high ground a mile west of Sequehart and have suocesefully beaten. off the enemy's counter attack ' o. Gou y and Le' Cateiet." the statement said. "A second cuter attack against Seqiehart was also repulsed. "During the night there was local fighting to our advantage southwest of Beaurevoir and on the southern outskirts of Cambria. "We advanced our posts slightly northeast of Elnoy (six miles northwest of Cambral) and repulsed a hostile attack on one post south of Biache-St. Vaast (midway between Arras and Douai). "North of the Scarpe. we made progress between Opy and Mertca f, "Further north our advance troops reached- the 'veiiwag east of Lens. They have attained the general line of Venin-Le-VIil, Wingles, Berclau, Vourne*EnnWeppes and ftouplinles." NO.bEATHs CAUSED BY INFLUENZA The Spanish influenza is slow In getting a hold in Toledo, health statistics for September show. Diagnosis shows that the di-sea-se weakens resistance, making patients easy victims for both pneumonia and meningitis. But reports show that there were no (deaths in Toledo in thet entire month of September from these diseases. Tihere were. only 20 cases of inafuenza reported, as against 23 ror last September, a year ago. There- were, only tbie cases of pneumonia reported, as against six for the same month a year ago, and not a '-a.s4e! of meningitis reported. let alone a' death., The death rate for tihe year ending Sept. 30 was 16.37 per thousand, arn improvement over the same period for last year, when it was 17.45 per thousand. t I i I IF YOU HADA NECK Lao " M TW LLOw METHROAT III.75 r 1 (1LTO N I LINE WmOOS Blm mIII T ML e ud 3sseS,1 - __J. iv A Simple Way To Remove Dandruff i.....d I There is one sture Way that hae cover- fotted to remove dandruff at Inoe, "and that Is to dissolve it. thee o deslro*' it entirely. To do this, uwt get about four ounces of plain, tommn i iquid Arvon' from any wne.;,store (this Is all YOU will to r )app'l y t t tnigh twhen reltnis use *wne'a't to moisten tha iapand ru b it in gently wit~h the'.ie otips. 'y: oxen a most if not all, of fo s 4andrut* Will be gone, and at + our more applicationa wilt *sno.te ' disolve and enitrety as. o~l+e> r. a.ignand trace 'i t tai lgad lilt sutngY U s ur uiesThis shoptae lots of p ride its the llllulber of men in and arounid this to~ whom we are able to " suit" just a little better than they have e'veri' eenL "suited" elsewhere. Honest-to-goodness ti e tailor ing does ' it.' You Men-Above Draft Age Stay Young In Appearance Dressing young is half the baittle in staying young. Our styl ishly made-to-ceder clothes give to every mall that well-groomned, young1 appearance without the least danger of looking over dressed., " - Bef~rethe War fabrics combined with our strictlyHad Tailoring -~-We want to share with our, customer-s this season. the ~ra values we can offer bexcause of our fortunate a'angeaiin hwt 'o. hosswh-scue-for us smeunusuall - - wer mll:ef re he' rt re trc e oI, i 1 i t 4 I They're the women demazl of the hghest that are not i Bolivias, Pow; Broadcloths, T and some of s Belted, flar and rippled s1, fur-4s, sk natural 01)081 taupe nutria; with which tA4 I~ninp are Skinner satin sizes. w -1 ti 10/27/2006 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS NEWSPAPER R M 0

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