of bullion are calling to others to come and get it out 

 for them. May they succeed better than we did. 



The stone is Northern Minnesota with its countless 

 lakes and rocky hills, its cedar swamps and piney 

 woods, its cool nights and bracing air. Long have its 

 features been a stumbling block to agriculture and 

 orthodox settlement. But underneath that stone lies 

 one of the greatest summer resorts in the United States. 

 The gold of health and pleasure. 



Have a peep under the stone yourself and remember 

 that the Forestry Association has the very best map 

 in existence showing the roads and canoe routes to that 

 very pot of gold. Have you one of them? 



FROM THE JAWS OF THE HUN 



THE following letter from a member of the 10th U. 

 S. Engineers (forest) will be of interest as a first 

 hand account of the torpedoing of the U. S: transport 

 Tuscania. Nearly all of us had friends on the ill-fated 

 ship: 



" Having experienced the most weird and gruesome 

 night of all my life, it is a relief to inform my friends 

 of my safety. 



"We were aboard the S. S. Tuscania on the night of 

 February 5th, when, at 5:50 P. M., ship's time, she was 

 torpedoed at approximately the same point where 

 Lord Kitchener met his fate. 



"The torpedo struck just forward of the engine 

 room, and few of the stokers had even half a chance. 

 I happened to be in a stateroom on 'C' deck, a little 



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