THURSDAY. JANUARY 21. 1913. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEK LY JOURNAL. PAGE 7. ''QmW? MM! T IF! Copyright, 1914, by CHAPTER VI. A Horseshoe For Luck. iMOKE was for tbe moment speechless. "You did It a-pur-pose'r" Shorty demanded. "1 did it to give tlie old timers a chance." She laughed mockingly. The men grinned at each other and finally joined her. "I'd lay yon across my knee an give you a wallopin If women folk wasu't so scarce in this country," Shorty assured her. "Your father didn't sprain a tendon, but waited till we were out of sight and then weal onV" Smoke asked. She nodded. "And you were the decoy?" Again she nodded, and this time Smoke's laughter rang out clear and true. It was the spontaneous laughter of a frankly beaten man. "Why don't yon get angry with me," she queried ruefnlly, "or or wallop me?" "Well, we ra!ght as well he startiu back." Shorty urged. "My feet's get tin cold standin' here." Smoke shook his head. "That would mean four hours lost. We must be eight miles up this creek now. and from the look ahead Norway is making a long swing south. We'J follow it then cross over the divide somehow and tap Squaw creek somewhere above Discovery." Lie looked at Joy. "Won't you come along with us? I told your father we'd look after you." "I" She hesitated. "I think I shall If you don't mind." She was looking straight at tim. and her face was no longer defiant and mocking. "Really. Mr. Smoke, you make me almost sor ry for what I have done. But some body had to save the old timers." For two hours more they kept to the frozen creek bed of Norway, then turn ed into a narrow and rugged tributary that flowed from the south. At mid day they began the ascent of the di vide itself. Behind them, looking down and back, they could see the lung line of stampeders breaking up. As for themselves, the going was hard. They wallowed through snow to their waists and were compelled t stop every few yards to breathe. Shorty was the tirst to call a halt. "We been hittiu the trail for over twelve hours," he said. "Smoke. I'm I'lumb willin to say I'm good an' tired. Au" so are you. An I'm free to shout that I can sure hang on to this here Iasear like a starvin' Indian to a bunk of bear meat. Cut this poor girl here can't keep her legs no time if she don't get somethin" in her stomach Here's where we build a fire. What d'ye say?" So quickly, so deftly and methodical ly did they po about making a tern porarv camp that Joy admitted to her self that old timers could not do it better. Spruce boughs, with a spread blanket on top. gave a foundation for rest and cooking operations. But they "Why don't you get angry with mc," eh queried ruefully, "or or wallop ma?" Kept nv.ij from the heat of the file m.til nows and cheeks had been rul I ! cruelly. hi tin.' steep slope of the divide there w:! nit i-i so snow a fine and hard laid crystalline as granulated sugar w:is poured into the gold pan by the b'i-hi-1 until enough had been incited lr the i nfTee. Smoke fried bacon and th.-iwed biscuits. Shorty kept the fnel n!!irt'l :rml rended the fire, and Jot t-t the siin;ii- table composed of two l' ites tw cups, twn spoon, a tin ot f LONDON. th Wheeler Syndicate. down he had stepped always In bis previous tracks. As a result, in the midst of soft snow and veiled under later snowfalls was a line of Irregular hummocks. If one's foot missed a hummock he plunged down through unpacked snow and usually to a fall. Also, the moose hunter had been au exceptionally long legged individual. Joy. who was eager now tha: the two men should stake and fearing that they were slackening their pace on account of her evident weariness, insisted on taking her turn iu the lead. The speed and manner in which she negotiated the precarious footing called out Shorty's unqualified approval. "Look at her!" be cried. "'She's the real goods an the red meat. Look, at them moccasins swing along! No- high heels there! She uses the legs God gave her. She's the right squaw foi any bear hunter." looking back as they came to the bank of Squaw creek they could set the stampede, strung out irregularly, struggling aloug the descent of the di vide. They slipped down the ba.uk to the creek bed. No recent feet bad disturb ed the snow that lay upon. Its ice. and they knew they were above the Di co very claim and the last stakes of tbt Sea Lion stampeders. "Look out for springs!" Joy warned as Smoke led the way down the creek. "At 70 below you'll lose your feet 11 you break through." These springs, common to most Klon dike streams, never cease at tbe lowest temperatures. A man stepping on dry snow might break through half an inch of ice skin and find himself up to the knees in water. In five minutes, un less able to remove the wet gear, the loss of one's feet was the penalty. They watched for a blazed tree on either bank, which, would show the center stake of the last claim located. Joy, impulsively eager, was the first to find it. She. darted ahead of Smoke, crying: "Somebody's been there! See the snow! Look for tbe blaze! There it is! See that spruce!" Sha sank sud denly to her waist In the snow. "Now I've done it," she said woefully. Then she cried: "Don't come near me! I'll wade out." Step by step, each time breaking through the thin skiu of. Ice concealed under the dry snow, she forced her way to solid footing. Smoke did not wait, but sprang to the bank, where dry and seasoned twigs and sticks, lodged among the brush by sprins freshets, waited the match. By the time she reached bis- side tbe first (lames and flickers of an assured fire were rising. "Sit down!" he commanded. She obediently sat down In the snow. He slipped his pack from his back and spread a blanket for her feet. IYom above came the voices of the stampeders who followed them. "Let Shorty stake!" she urged. "Go on. Shorty." Smoke said as he attacked her moccasins, already stiff with Ice. "Pace ofl a thousand feet and place the two center stakes. We can fix the corner stakes afterward." With his knife Smoke cut away the lacings and leather of the moccasins So stiff were they with Ice that they snapped and. crackled under the hack ing and sawing. The si wash socks and heavy woolen stockings were sheaths of ice. It was as if her feet and calves were incased in corrugated iron. "How are your feet?" he asked as he worked. "Pretty numb. I enn't move or feel my toes. But It will be all richt. The fire is burning beautifully. Watch out you don't freeze your bands. They must be numb now from the way you're fumbling." He slipped his mittens onNind for nearly a minute smashed the open bands savagely against his sides. When be felt the blood prickle he pulled off the mittens and ripped and tore and sawed and hacked at the frozen gar ments. The white skin- of one foot ap peared, then that of the other, to be exposed to the bite of 70 below zero. Then came the rubbing with snow, carried on with an Intensity of cruel fierceness, till she squirmed and shrank and moved her toes and joyously com plained of the hurt He half dragged her and she half lifted herself nearer to the fire. He placed her. feet on the blanket close to the flesh saving flames. "You'll have totake care of them for awhile." he said. She could now safely remove her rnittens. and work and. manipulate her mixed salt and pepper and a tin. of sugar. When it came to eating she and Smoke shared one set between them. They ate out of tbe same plate and drank from, tbe same cup. It was nearly 2 In. the afternoon when they cleared the Crest of the divide and began dropping; down a feeder or) aqua creek. Earlier in the winter some, moose- hunter made a trail up tbe canyon that la. in coins op and own feetT"with the wisdom of th ini tiated being watchful that the heat of the fire was absorbed slowly. While she did this he attacked his hands. The snow did not melt or moisten. Its light crystals were like so much sanL Slowly the stings and pangs of circu lation came back into the chilled flesh Then he tended the fire, unstrapped the light pack from her back and got out a complete change of footgear. Shorty returned along the creek bed and climbed the bank to them. "I sure staked a full thousan' feet." he pro claimed. "No. J7 an' No. 28. though I'd only got the upper stake of '2.1 when I met the tirst geezer of the bunch behind, lie just straight declar ed I wasn't soin' to stake US An 1 told him" "Yes. yes." Joy cried. "What did you tell him?" "Well, 1 told him straight that if he didn't back up plumb f00 feet I'd sure punch his froze nose into ice cream an' chocolate eclairs. He backed up. an I've got in the center stakes of two full an' honest .r00 foot creek claims lie staked next, an' I guess by now tbe bunch has Squaw creek located to headwater an' down the other side Ourn is safe. It's too dark to see now, but we can put out the corner stakes in the mornin"." When they awoke they found a change had taken place during the night. So warm was it that Shorty and Smoke estimated tbe temperature at no more than 'JO below. On top of their blankets lay six inches of frost crystals. "Good morning, flow are your feet?" was Smoke's greeting across the ashes of the tire to where Joy Gastell was sitting up in her sleeping furs. Shorty built the fire and quarried ice from the creek while Smoke cooked breakfast. Daylight came ua as they finished the meal. "You go an" fix them corner stakes. Smoke." Shorty said. "There's gravel under where 1 chopped ice for the cof fee, an' I'ra goin' to melt snow au' wash a pau of that same gravel for luck." Smoke departed, ax in hand, to blaze the stakes. Starting from the down stream center stake ot No. 27. ne beaded at right angles across the nar row valley toward its rim. lie pro ceeded methodically, almost automat ically, for his mind was alive with rec ollections of tbe night before. He felt somehow that he had won to enipery ever the delicate line and firm muscles of. those feet and angles he had rub bed with snow, and this empery seem ed to extend to the rest and all of this woman of his kind. In dim and fiery ways a feeling of possession mastered him. It seemed that all that was nec essary was for him to walk up to this Joy Gastell. take her hand in his and say "Come." It was in this mood that he discov ered something that made him forget empery over the white feet of woman. At the valley rim he blazed no corner stake. He did not reach the valley rim. but instead he found himself con fronted by another stream. He lined up with his eye a blasted willow tree and a big and recognizable spruce, lie returned to the stream where were the center stakes. lie followed the lied of the creek around a wide horse shoe bend through the flat and touui that the two creeks were the same creek. Next he flouudercd twice through the snow from valley rim to valley rim, running the first line from the lower stake of No. 27. the second from the upper stake cf No. 2S. and he found that the upper stake of the latter , was lower than the lower stake of the former. In the gray twilight and half darkness Shorty had locat ed their two claims on the horse shoe. Smoke plodded hack to the little camp. Shorty, at the end of washing a pan of gravel, exploded at sight ot him. "We got it!" Shorty cried, holding out the pan. "Look at It: A nasty metis of gold. Two nundred right there if it's a cent She runs ncti from the top of the wash gravel." Smoke cast an incurious glance at the coarse gold, poured himself a cup of coffee at the the and sat down. Shorty was disgruntled by his part ner's lack of delight in the discov ery. "Why don't you kick in an' get ex cited?" be demanded. "We got our pile right here." Smoke took a swallow of coffee be fore replying. "Shorty, why are our two claims here like the Panama ca nal?" "What's the answer?" "Well, the eastern entrance of the Panama canal is west of the western entrance, that's all." "Go on." Shorty said. "I ain't seen the Joke yet" "In short Shorty, you staked our two claims on a big horseshoe, bend. The upper stake of 2S is ten feet be low the lower stake of 27." "You mean we ain't got nothln'. Smoke?" "Worse than that; we've got ten feet less than nothing." Shorty departed down the bank on tbe run. Five minutes later he return ed. In response to Joy's look tie nodded. . "We might as well break camp and start back for Dawson." Smoke said, beginning to fold the blankets, "I am sorry. Smoke." Joy said. "It's all my fault Dud's staked for me down near Discovery, 1 know. I'll give you my claim." He shook his head. -Shorty!" she pleaded. Shorty shook his bead and legan to laugh. It was a colossal laugh Chuckles and muffled explosions yield ed to hearty roars. "It ain't hysterics." he explained. "I sure get powerful amused at times, an' this is one of tham." His sraze chanced to. fall on the uoM pau. lie walked over and- gravely kicked it. scattering the gold over tht landscape "It ain't ourn." he said. j "It (elongs to the geezer I backed up !."): feet last night. An what gets me is -4f)0 of them feet was to the good his good. Come on. Smoke. I.t's start the hike to Dawson, though. If you're har.kerin" to kill me 1 won't lift a finger to prevent " (To lie Continued.) Pamis and Oils. Gering & Co. Phone 36. FOR MEN AND WOMEN. Backache? Feel tired? Not so spry as you used to be? Getting old? Ilany persons mistake kidney trouble for advancing age. Kidneys out of order make you feel old before your time. Foley Kidney Pills tone up and invigorate the kidneys, banish back ache, rid your blood cf acids and poi sons. Sold by all druggists. Corn Stalk Disease Cure. I have a guaranteed remedy for the curing of the corn stalk disease onion,? horses, that will be sold on a positive guarantee. If the same curcr, your horses you pay for the medicine; if it fails, no pay. H. M. Wilcox, Plattsmouth. Wall Paper. Gering & Co. Phone 36. Any skin itching is a temper tester. The more you scratch the worse it itches. Doan's Ointment is for piles, eczema any skin itching. 50c at all drug stores. Overhaul Your Cars Now. The auto business i3 rather quiet now, but this is the time to have your cars overhauled, while I have men hired for the busy season, and wish to keep them employed during the dull months. Your cars will be overhaul ed now at about one-half the price for the labor. See me. Sam G. Smith. Garage. For dyspepsia, our national ailment, use Burdock Elood Bitters. Recom mended for strengthening digestion, purifying the blood. At all drug stores. $1.C0 a bottle. I OR SALE Fine 3-year-old full blooded short-horn bull. Perfectly gentle. Iuquire of G. II. Tarns at the county farm. Farms for Sals! The Horn Farm, one mile west of Oreapolis; good improvements, 258 r.cres mostly bottom land, good hay hind, good pasture, good farm land. Ask for our price. 40 acres well improved, close to market. v 100 acres, good improvements. Price cheap. And many others on our list for sale. Firm Loans at low rates. No delays. T. II. POLLOCK, Tel. No. 1 Plattsmouth BIMSMTHING - gHS5 AND j SESHOEilG! I am now prepared to look after all general blacksmithing and horseshoeing. Shop 4 1-2 miles west of Murray. JOHN DURHAM. The Union Auctioneer Union, Nebraska All sale matters entrusted toiny care will receive prompt and care ful attention. Farm and Stock Sales, a Specialty! Rates Reasonable! iSTAddresa or phone me at Union for open dates. CASTOR I A Fox Infants and Children The Kind YqaHavs, Always Bought1 Slg-aatve-ot PROGRESSIVES ASK NEW LAWS Bill For Constitutional Conven tion First on List. PLAN EDUCATIONAL CAMPAIGN. Senator Quinby Has Bill to Abolish Capital Punishment Proposed Stock Yards Regulation Bills Yardage and Grain Charges Alleged Excessive. Lincoln Advance legislation tha kind that men termed "progressives" are wont to law stress on is coming up in many forms at the present ses sion of the legislature. There is lit tle hope of the hackers that it will get through. Their enly concern is that it shall come before the people in an educational campaign. Then if the de mand shall appear urgent at some late date, think the leaders, the people will see that the legislation is passed. The first hill of this nature is tha act calling for a consRtutional con vention. The measure is an old visitor in legislative halls. It has appeared at the last three sessions and is al ready on the rolls of the present ses sion. Its fate is unknown, of course, at this early date, but there are many of the solons who are freely predicting that it will not survive the ordeal. The friends of the measure say that the convention is sorely needed, that the present constitution is antiquated and broken down and should be shelved. They do- not stop to figure, the enemies of the bill say, that the state has prospered quite nicely in the past forty years under this same con stitution and that many, many men have been made well-to-do and even rich while tilling the soil and follow ing other pursuits. The present constitution is a staid old document, somewhat unfitted to the needs of the hour, they say, but the present method of amendment is rather easy. In fact 35 per cent of the voters of any election, providing a majority are for the question, can amend the document as they see fit. The majority of the solons believe that this is sufficient for the time and they are lor.the to let a convention make the pace that the people have always in the past been given the right to make. The fact that the convention might evolve from thirty to a hundred prop ositions upon which the people of the state would later be called to act is the one phase of the affair that does not appeal to the greater share of the lawmakers. They argue that it is bet ter from the standpoint of the people to act upon three or four amendments at each biennial election and to get a thorough understanding of them than to act upon ten times that many and know little or nothing about any con siderable number of them. Investigation of the affairs of the stock yards at South Omaha and of the live stock exchange of the same city will undoubtedly cause a flutter when the time conies for the matter to be acted upon. It is raising a fight that was started in the late campaign and before it has engulfed both houses will likely cause much bitterness. The first plan of making an out and out investigation was given up be cause the members did not want to incur the expense and then have to mould legislation afterwards to fit their findings. Under the plan now pursued, they can shape their legisla tion to meet the apparent require ments of the hour and then can make such amendments as they think, after regular committee investigation, ap pear to ba unfair to the interests con cerned. The charge is made that the live stock exchange is operating a combi nation in unlawful restraint of the commission business and that the prices for selling are fixed there and those who do not conform thereto are ousted from privileges of the market. Against the. stock yards the charge is made that the yardage and grain charges are excessive and that the concern is making a greater return upon its investment than it should be allowed to under present regulation cf public utilities. The latter charge the railway commission recently had before it in argument. It is awaiting the time, in fact, when it can settle that important matter and when it will hand down its ruling on the case. The present law gives tlte railway commission the right to regulate the service and prices of the stock yards, and- while there have been only one of two minor complaints in the matter there- has never been until the late case a chanc for the officials to make a ruling in the matter. The recommendation of the gov ernor that all public utility corpora tions. including the municipal plants of all kinds over the state, be placed under the state railway commission's jurisdiction, is not meeting apyoval at the hands of the legislators. The step would be entirely out of sympathy with the fundamentals of the Demo traiic party, and would hardly fit in with, the ideas of any particular di vision of that party. For instance, it Is a step which the World-Herald has been fighting against for several years past and which C. W. Bryan, as a member of the Lincoln Municipal Ownernshlp league, has said would be more than unfair to the people of the capital city, to Omaha and to people or an towns "wrrrre mere aic Tarrens kinds of public utilities. With these two leaders of the two lines ot thought in the Democratic party op posing the move, it is believe that it would have littie chance to weather the session. Several Democratic lead ers of the house stated that they did not believe a bill covering such changes would be introduced at the "resent session. Neither the World erald nor the leaders of ihe other division of the Democratic party has taken occasion to rap the governor se verely on his recommendation, but they have denoted in an inoffensive way that the governor was not think ing of all the principles concerned when he made the suggestion. Quinby of Dcuglas has started a had rolling that wilL undoubtedly gather much moss before it has reached the foot of the legislative hill. He pro poses to see that a new method is evolved for taxing the franchise value of corporations. He proposes the subtraction of the tangible properf value fronf the value of the outstand ing stock and says that the difference shall be denominated the franchise value for taxation purposes. He asks in the collection of data on the subject that all companies make known tho number and extent of the various fran chise grants and says that this will enable the people to get control l affairs, wlyeh the corporations or some of them long ago usurped. The same Douglas county senator has a bill proposing to do away with capital punishment. He does net be lieve that this form of penalty should be visited upon any criminal, no mat ter how great his crime. He think.; that life imprisonment is sufficient. The last legislative session cut. out the hanging method of doing away with convicts and supplanted this witn electrocution. Senator Quinby pro poses to go all the way. His in'ercst in humanity, he says, would he shriv eled up and puny indeed, if he wer to make no effort to remove the means whereby killing of one's fellow beings is legalized. Plans for building a hospital at the Omaha medical school tho medical division of the state university arc fast rounding into shape. The bill providing for the appropriation is al ready on its way through the hopper. Et. HoiTmr-ister of Chase county is the member who fathered the bill. On.'? strong point in connection with the establishment of this propose ! adjunct to the school is the attempt to pro vide a moderate priced hospital for people ot" tho stito one ju.n between the high priced institutions and those that are known as charity hospital. Such an institution could be made to pay its own running expenses almost and in the belief of many people of tho state,is sadly needed. Charges could be regulated by the board of regents of the state university. These officials have complete control of the medical school and, of course, would he in a position to dictate the details of it 3 management. Thus the power of levy ing these charges would never get away from the people. It would al ways be within the hands of the offi cials named by ire pcork? themselves. The hospital v-'- cly be a ho!:"? or contention between the governor and the legislature, as the former has told Dr. Hoffmeister that he would veto tl;e bill when it came to him. The legis lator stated that he would make an effort, to get enough votes to show that the pecple really wanted the n"v adjunct to the medical school. In th:.: event it might be possible that thi governor would relent and would be found working for the institution. Hc believes in infrequent use of the veto power, particularly where the wish ol tho people is obviously contain;-:! in a bill brought to him for signature. v The bill by Anderson of Phelps cut ting down the daily time for operation of thirst emporiums will likely give the legislator something to ficht over in lively shape. The measure provides that all saloons in tho state hli close their doors at 0 o'clock. instea-J of S o'clock, in the cver.inz. Th" measure is the product of Anderson's own efforts, ho says, and no members of the anti-s;;!oon league or any ether temperance organizations are back o! it. He simply wants to see what a Democratic legislature! will do with the measure and what the Rejr.iljlicnn who are there will do with it whe;! they have an opportunity to vote on it Other than that, the author thinks, the bill will not he worth much. All of which should make the aver age taxpayer wonder why the legisla ture meets and what should be the attitude of the members with regard to the introduction of legislation. The house is determined that the senate shall not spend more than $10, 000 for the salaries of its employees snd the members cf the upper hous3 are determined in the same proportion that, they cannot get along on that amount. Which means that there wili likely be a nice little difference of opinion manifested from time to time during the session as to what shall constitute efficiency within tho mean ing of that word. The senators say that they want to get along without any friction, but that it will take more men and women to do the work than the house members first figured. , Three newspaper publishers in the legislature propose to see to it that all legal notices shall be paid for prompt ly instead of the publisher being com pelled to wait several months lor his money. When a legal publication ha: been made the owner of the newspa per musn swear to an afSdavit contain i ing this clause: "Publication fee has been paid tc the publisher of newspaper iu which luch publication was made." STATE FAIR OGARD , GUTS SALARIES Slashes In Pay o! Mambsrs Re sult o( Annual Meeting. ROBERTS HEADS THE CODY. Fremont Man Elected President and W. R. MeHor Re-elects:" Secretary. Many Meetings c." Organized Agri culture Arc Held at Lincoln. Lincoln, .Ian. Zi. Hconi-my ruN-d at a meeting of the state Lo.ird of a;ni culture wl: n tin; salary of li e bw:i:d tecret.iry was cut from $.',,'i j to and the stipends of ineruheis of ti e executive hoard governing the Mate lair and all supcrinte::d:':i!s c: d p.r nx nts of the fair wen- phi' ed on a basis of $4 per day of actual Kervi , toact'ier with hotel bills aiid traveling expenses. - Tho change was effect d n a re port of the special committee to it vise the rub s governing the board, the recommendation being that the .-ecic tary's salary be cut ?"jt'0 a year and that of each member of the hojrd "! managers Iron) $1hi to $2."' and the tier.surcr from $35 to $.'"0. Action as finally taken was nn a notion by Secretary Mellcr that t"ic p r diem scale be fixed. The change applies to all connected witli the board of agriculture diawin-ovrr-$3 a day, except the serretao. whose s;iry will be at the reducer; figure of $2..)i;0. In view of the small balance o.' 000 in the treasury, because of tinf: vorcblc years for the fair, it was de cided to discontinue the pJibii ity bu reau as now conducted. Ofhcers elected for the culling yenr are: President, Joseph Huh Ms of Frcmcnt: first vice resident. .1. A. Ollis of Ord; sec-end vice president. R. M. Wolcott of Central City: Tens tirir, Georse P. Dickinan of Seward: secretary. W. R. Melior of Lincoln. Tho meetings of organ':el aricul ture are well under way, with se.-sfons being held at the state farm, several thousand farmers l.eing in Lincoln Sessions today were devoted to cattl breeders. Rural schools will have an inning tomorrow. House Proceedings. Needless exp .-nse in priming bills In the house : which are duplicates 1 those in the senate was a proposition which Representative Rithniond ol Douglas fought against and which h finally got through. Public warehouse r solutions rtarte-.J. a debate which for a time kept tliinsr. interesting. Tihbets of Adams s. i,t up a resolution asking for the appoint ment of a committee of three, v.hbli should be compos, d of one la .v r, c n farmer and another, who should draM a bill along lines suggested by the Farmers' union. .Mr. Ostcrman dcrlarc d that ot'ic organizations of farmers 'Tid declared against such a hill and Mr. Dan joined with Ostermnn in declaring that a wanhciso bill was not needed. Tibbets then withdrew his r 'solution. The houso lit-tied to ru address . Ccncres'iuaii Hcivis of Falls City and then adjourned m.til moniin?. Eeal Has Bill to Pension Mothers. A mothers' p?::?i')i hill. iM.-nded tc take liie place nf b lis already intro diicc l. so it is said, w.i.; intro lured l B- al ef Ciisle r in tl.o senate. The bib affects the old law in that it mikes it easier for tbe pension to be secured umlcr tho old law the chiid practic-allv being placed under the custody ol the co'Tt. The peal bill provides thai a mo: her cr puaidi in may make appli cation to the county judge, who rna issue an order that the mother sha'i be paid not more than Sl'i per inont? for each child. A special levy is pro Tided. Sterilization Bill Is Lost. Rrisner's sterilization bill met feat in the house mouieal commit fc- The judiciary committee r porte ,-i o:;t two bills, one incrcasino: the p v rity for aiding tho escape of a prisons and the other requiring that a coun. v attorney should be at least tventy-fir years c.f age, live in the county twr years and have practiced law at leas' one year. The judiciary eomrnittee of the rep Rte divided. 4 to -1. on the dales bill known as S. F. 13. NAMES WORE COLONELS Governor Morehead Now Has Stah That Numbers Ninety-two Men. Lincoln, Jan. 21. Tbi announce nicnt of three additional colonel:-, ai members of the governor s staff c:t given out. They are Hal Christy : Scrihner, II. F. Kohl of S ribner "nm; Paul Wupper Of Beemer. The tirst liV.t rnnounced included the names o: eighty-nine. The State Association of County Su perintendents of Education, mectin. in Superintendent Thomas" office ai the state house, went on record rw favoring a thango in the date of th annual district school meetings froti. June to some time in March. 'Greenwood Has Oldest Odd Fellow. Greenwood, Neb., Jan. 21. H. V Swanhack of Greenwood will hc- !" years eld March 0. lie was born r Germany and claims to be the oleics Odd Fellow in the world. He erv against the Danes In tho war of l&4i