The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, June 28, 1921, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    NORTH PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE.
con ITEMS
(News of All Kinds Gathered From
Various Points Throughout
Nebraska,
Nebraska automobile dealers nrt
being kept busy nt present in nn effort
to equip the cars of customers with
lenses thnt comply with the new state
paw, which provides that only lenses
receiving official recognition can be
fused In the state. Stock cars on
hand musb bo equipped nlso, as a pro
jvjslon states that n car must not be
(offered for sale unless properly
equipped. State officials declare that
ttho Nebraska law Is to be rigidly en
forced and that the One tvilt range
(from $10 to $50 for first offenses.
jTho state lens law has been published
jln booklet Torm and may "bo obtained
(from Sthto 'Engineer Georgo E. John-
pon nt Lincoln, by those wlio wish It
Lewis 15. Smith ot Ixmg Pine Vas
jelected grand master of the grand
lodge, A. F. and A. M. mt the annual
tco.nmunlcntlon at Omnha. He was
formerly deputy grand master. A
committee appointed to conduct nn In
vestigation Into lite future cstabllsh
Iment of a NcbrnsTca "Mnsonlc hospital,
'will Tcport tit the 1021 session of the
'grand lodge.
Mr. and 'Mrs. Clyile Dixon, former
Tresldents of the Adams, Gage county,
wlfh two of their six children were
mmong ttie victims of the Colorado
flood. The tardily removed to n ranch
fifteen miles east rit Pueblo some yenrs
ago, tlie farm 'being directly In the
path of the flood.
A committee of three ministers pre
sented the city council of Superior two
petitions enCh with over three hundred
names, mostly'lndles, asking flint 'Sun
Idny movlesibe closed and ball playing
'.Sunday by -prohibited. The dry clerk
Urns called n special election for Truly
112 to vdto upon the two propositions.
"Reports from Lincoln are fhrtt the
executive committee of the Nonpnrt
ilsjin lengue'hns revised the nrficles of
association to provide for precinct
locals of the lengue, and lifts -authorized
the calling of a contention to
organize the 'Nonpartisan, women of
the state.
The state depositors gunrantee 'fund
w'ill be replenished to the -amount of
of $35,000 within n short ttme as the
result of the final clean tip of 'the af
fairs Of the Superior, First State
, Thrrtk. This was the first bank to "go
under" and make a draft omthe-gunr-Innty
fund.
To have n carload of sto!k weigh
imore In Kansas City than It did when
'first welgheU In Chester was 'rne ex
perience of O. E. Miller on a recent
ishlpmcnt df fat steers that 'brought
'$8.35. "His carload weighed 105
pounds more at Kansas City 'than at
Chester.
It Is estimated thnt 10,300 -pounds
'of Purls green and other poisons will
Jbo used on the 8,300 acres planted In
potatoes In the vicinity of Kearney.
'The growers nrc considering pooling
'their crop and contracting for 'its sale.
Sixeentsn dozen on eggs, or n total
(of !?885, was saved farmers of TTnmll
Hon county during April and May 'by
co-operative grading and marketing
lof eggs, according to the State 'College
(of Agriculture.
Many farmers In the southeastern
ipart of the state have begun to cut
jtheir wheat and oats. Farmers -arc
offering about ?3 a day for "help, but
jdo not expect to 'hire much extra help
Itlils year.
.Tnmes T5. "King, who killed1 It. L.
Taylor, ii guard nt the Nebraska state
penitentiary, Iny 1.1, was sentenced
to die in, the electric clinlr November
H. by District Judge W. E. Stewart rtt
fl.lncoln.
Nebraska's new -cnpltol building to
(he erected at Lincoln Is to hare a
dome at the top of Its tower, as first
(designed, members of the capltol eom
mlsslon finy.
P. C. Balrd sold his -30-acre tract of
Hand adjoining Superior on the south
Ho H. C. Mendell for a consideration of
!$500 an acre.
Proceeds from the 4th of July celo
ibratlons at Arnpahoe are to be turned
lover to the local post of the American
'Legion.
Farmers in the Falrbury district e
Itlmate that wheat will yield but ten
(bushels an acre.
The work of paving streets of Clarks
!wlll be finished In about three weeks.
Fire of unknown orgln destroyed the
jopera house building nt Wtnslde.
An order by the Brown county dis
trict court was served on the depart
ment of trade and commerce, to pay
'.$232,000 to depositors in tho Jlrown
County bank at Long Pine, which
closed Its doors some time ngo.
As a result of the tuberculosis in
spection work carried on among Uvo
stock by the stnto and federal bureaus
of animal Industry, there are now
ninety accredited herds in Nebraskn.
Asts have been mnde of 18,004 nn
jmnls since the first of the year, only
4 per cent of which were found to re
act to the tubercular test.
A committee of the Nebraska dis
trict of tho Evangelical Synod of
Worth America has authorized im
trnedlate construction of a $100,000 de
tnomlnntlonnl hospital at Lincoln.
Thirty-one churches In tho state are
isupportlng the hospital.
Nebraska, with a total population or
1,200,372, lias 1,270,210 whites, 13,242
tnegroes, 288 Tndlnns, 180 Chinese, 804
(Japanese and 80 Filipinos, Hindus and
Koreans, the census bureau nnnonnccd.
(Foreign-born whites constituted 11.5
jper cent of the total population, com
jpared with 14.8 per cent in 1010.
The crwJt of tho Colorado ilood in
tho Platte claimed two victims nt
Grnnd Island, when Mrs. II. C. Gilles
pie, aged nbout 82, wife of a Union
Pacific freight conductor, and her
little son, aged 0, were drowned. Tho
accident occured . nenr tho Ilnmlltoo
Hall county stnto bridge, when tho
mother went to the rescue of her son,
who hnd wnndcrcd over his bend whllo
wading.
Following a recent meeting of pota
to growers of llnffnlo county, with a
number of buyers, It wns stnted thnt
the price which tho growers tnny ex
pect to receive will be one dollnr per
bushel. The estlmnte of yield In Buf
falo county Is placed tit nbout ono
hundred and fifty bushels to the ncrc,
whllo some will undoubtedly go to
two hundred.
It Is estimated thnt the stnte of Ne
braska will "linve to pny 5125,000 to
$150,000 during the next year and a
naif to pny tho "board bills ot pris
oners In 'county an, who cannot bo
received at the penttonilnry at Lincoln
because of ttie 'overcrowded ccndUlon
at the prison.
A well-'known poultry raiser near
Wymcrre Iras discovered that the
refuse ofl from the crank case of n
motor or tractor engine makes nn ef
fective -spray for mites und vermin In
and around poultry yards and houses.
On account of the new state low.
'Which goes Into effect July 28, requ'lr-
ifog thnt women have fishing and hunt
ing licenses ns well ns men, the rush
for permits nt tho stnte game wnrflen's
office Kt "Lincoln is unprecedented.
The giving of citizenship papers to
t
newly -made Americans of -Superior
Will 'bo a part of tho 4th of July cele
bration. It Is part of the plan adopted
by tho Superior Order Of Shifters in
their Americanization work.
"With a largo attendance -mid With
department and regimental 'dfilcere
present, the comer-stone of the nrm
ory built nt Hastings by people (it 'tho
City, to house Its national guard unit,
was laid with appropriate ceremony.
Mrs. Ira Lyman of Wrikdfleld,
mother of eighteen children, died nfter
giving birth to triplets. ATI the 'child
ren including the three "babies are Hv
Ing. Six of tho other 'children -are
under 5 yenrs of age.
The Hesslnn fly and loose smut Tiro
seriously injuring wheat crops, east of
Blalr. County Agent 'Olson estimates
the pest will cost Wnshlngton county
farmers not less thnn $15,000 this yenr.
Buildings nnd fnrm -equipment were
completely destroyed and menibcrs df
the fnmlly Injured "by a small cyclone
which swept over the liome Of Vllllam
Buchholz, near West Point.
Extension of the lighting plnnt at
Strutton and the erctlcn 'Of a four
ton ice plant recently nufhoflzed by
voting bonds of $12,000, Will 'be rto
ished nnd in operation "by August 1.
Only nine votes were cast -against a
$5,000 bond proposition to give' the
City of Nellgh nddltkmnl wells for tho
water plant. The proposition 'carried
by 101 majority.
The total acttmt valuation ftff 'Box
Butte county renl estate and personal
property is $15,003,874, according to
an estimate submitted 'by 'County As
sessor Pilklngton.
County Agent Davis of Adams
county Is making a list of rill farmers
in the county who have Knnred Wheat
on their farms nnd who "Wish to havo
the wheat inspected.
The American Legion of 'North
Platte Is planning a series of enter
tainments with a view of starting n
fund to build nn auditorium and -post
'headquarters.
'Wheat conditions in Nebraska drop
ped from 02 to 75 per cent of a nor
mal crop between May 1 and June 1,
according to n federal crop report.
In a hotly contested election at Sut
ton in which almost twice the normal
vote was cast, Sunday base ball -car-Tied
by a majority of 70.
A bond issue of $5,000 was anthorlrcd
Ty the voters of Ellis for the purpose
of remodeling and enlarging the flchool
building.
Work Is progressing rapidly on Mc
Cook's new $300,000 hotel. Last week
pouring of ement for the sixth story
was started.
Plans are being formulated for the
erection of a $200,000 home In Omaha
by the Omaha chapter of Disabled
American Veterans of the World War.
A 125 foot steel 'bridge Is to be built
on the Bentrlce-Ffllrbury road, n half
mile e:t of Fnlrbury.
Falrbuy'a slxty-ftve piece kid band
la believed to be one of tho best of ltd
kind in Nebraska.
Four thousand additional feet of tho
Valentine Sparks state-aid road Is to
be hard surfaced. Tho road is 20
miles lonir. extending from Valentino
to the Cherry-Keya Paha county line.
Over 15 miles nro covered with hard
clay surfacing.
Members of the west central district
of the Nebraska Press association,
comprising editors of Lincoln, Dawson,
Kleth, Deuel, Garden, Perkins, Ar
thur nnd McPherson counties, havo
asked the stnto bonrd of control to
locate the proposed reformatory at
Ognllaln.
In order to Incrense growth of tho
second crop, Jefferson county farmers
ere cutting ihe first yield of alfalfa,
although it Is too light In many local
ities to bo gathered with a rake.
The state department of game nnd
fish has plnnted 40,000 bnss In Cnrter
lake at Omnhn, 16,000 trout In the new
state fish nursery nt Royal, 30,000
buss In the Stono Lnke nursery nt
Gretnn, 8.000 In tho Beaver river at
Albion, 8,000 In the Greek nnd Shots
ski lakes at Geneva nnd 0,000 in tho
Lymnn-Rltchle sandpit at Central
City.
CONTAINERS FOR
FARMJRODUCTS
Public Sometimes Defrauded Be
cause of Many Types and
Sizes Now in Use.
STANDARD WILL REDUCE COST
Relatively Few Styles and Sizes Would
Satisfy All Demands of Trade
Hamper Is Especially Pop
ular In the East
(Prepured by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
To eliminate fraud In the marketing
of fruits ntnd vegetables by the sub
stitution 'of short mensure pneknges
nt fulbmensure prices Is one .of the
principal objects of spcclnllsts of the
United -States Department of Agricul
ture (now mnkhig n study of -the hun
dreds -of different types X)f contain
ers In uso. For exatnple, baskets
which contain seven-eighths or a
bushel are Trcquently used as bushel
baskets, It being difficult to detect the
short mensure. In Fnrmers' Bulletin
TWO, from the bureau of markets,
ijust ipublished by tho department, "the
specialists discuss the need for -stand-nrd
containers for fruits and vege
'tables and describe how the public Is
sometimes defrauded because of the
'tanny types nnd sizes oT 'containers
now in use.
Multitude of Sizes Increased TJnst.
The serious lack ,of uniformity of
containers increases the 'ot of mar
keting, sny the specialists, becnuse of
the grenter expense of manufacturing
n 'lnrge number of .unnecessary styles
nnd sizes nnd by breakage In transit,
which Is sometimes 'directly nttrlbut
able to the difficulty of loading odd-
sized containers. There nre in com
'mon use at present mbout '40 sizes of
cabbage crates, 20 styles of celery
crates, 30 lettuce rrntes or : boxes, 50
styles nnd sizes ol hampers, 15 styles
nnd sizes of roTrndstnve baskets nnd
mnrketing bnskets "varying in size from
1 to 24 qunrts, -wherens relatively
few standard sizes would satisfy all
demands of the trade. In mnny enses
the G-qunrt maTkot basket, the 14
quart peach basket, "the "-bushel bean
hnmper, nnd the frpeck lettdce hnmp-
er nre confused with peck, half
bushel and 1-lrashel bnskets.
No Standard "Hamper.
The federal standard bnrrel lnw nnd
tho United States (container act, which
establish standard containers, have
done away with :u Inrgemumber of un
necessary sizes -of 'barrels, berry boxes
lind grape baslccts, and have Uwnk
ened n widespread -demand for the np-
plicntlon of the snme principle to
other contnlncrs, -Btxya 'the bulletin. At
present there Is no 'standard hamper,
which is one of the imost widely used
types of containers, especially popu
lar In the eastern und central states.
Almost 30.000,000 of these bnskets are.
Baskets Which Contain Seven-Eighths
of a Bushel Are Frequently Used,
used annually. The sizes of hampers
which are recommended by the bureau
of mnrkets of the Department of Ag
riculture ns being sufficient in num
ber to satisfy all legitimate require
ments of the trade are as follows:
8-quart, or 1 peck; 10-quart, or one
half bushel; 82-quart, or 1 bushel;
48-quart, or 1 bushels. It Is sug
gested that the latter be made in two
styles tb meet the preference in va
rlons parts of the country.
The round-stave bnsket, for which
there te no standard, is popular In nil
regions except the southern nnd Mid
dle Atlantic stntefj, nnd on the Pnclflc
coast. About 20,000,000 such baskets
nre manufactured annually. The sizes
which are recommended as standards
by the bureau of markets are the
same as those recommended for the
hamper, except for the elimination of
the 8-quart size. Tho Bplint, or
veneer, baskets, for which there are
nlso no standards, are well known to
the public ns market bnskets. The
sizes which ere proposed by tho bu
rcnu of mnrkets are five in number
I, 8, 12, 10 and 24 quart.
WORK DONE BY SPECULATORS
Shippers Overlook Fact That Middle,
men Are Doing Things Producers
Fall to Do.
Mnny persons opposing the opera
tions of speculative shippers overlook
the fact thnt this type of middle
men" Is doing however Inefficiently
nnd eitrnYngnntly the things that
producers have failed to do for them
selves. Carefully orgnnlzed, efficiently
mnnnged, loyally supported, co-operative
orgnnlzntlonij enn perform the
services rendered by these men in a
more satisfactory manner, and In so
doing shorten the distance between tho
farm and tho consumer,
! SIDE LINES INSURE
AGAINST BAD CROPS
Many Stories of Achievements
Reported From South.
Case Cited of Arkansas Woman, With
Co-operation of Husband, Sold $1,
00 Worth of Milk, Butter
and Eggs In Year. '
(Prepared by the United States Depart
ment oi Agriculture.;
Numerous little stories of big
achievement nre encountered In go
ing through the reports to the United
Stntes Department of Agriculture
front home demonstration agents In
the South. In estimating the money
vnlue of the returns reported in the
various activities of tho clubs It la
necessary, of course, to remember thnt
account seldom is taken of tho lnnd
vnlue, Interest on Investment, bonnl
and lodging, und such things, although
credit for labor nt the current rate
of pay Is spt down In most cases.
However, the vnlue of the achieve-.
ments rests upon something more Im
portant thnn money the fine comrau
Farm Woman Feeding Her Flock.
nlty effect, the leadership doveloped.
the general all-round rise In agricul
tural morale. It Is Impossible not to
be deeply Impressed by the work re
ports of some of these southern worn
en and girls, results accomplished,
very often, under conditions of un
usual dllllculty and discouragement.
An example of what may be 'nccora
pUshcd under the stimulus of the
home demonstration work and with
encouragement and, co-operation in
the home Is afforded by the case of
Mrs. Jim Dorrls of Bear, Ark., who
enjoys the hearty co-operation of her
husbnw In the work she is doing
With from three to Ix cows this con
pie sold, from January 1 to December,
last year, $458.85 worth of milk and
$495.75 of butter, and from 09 hens
$249.80 worth of eggs. Tills $1,200
from side lines, coming in through the
years, is important ou any farm, nnd
in mnny enses is a form of lnsuranco
against crop failures.
WINDBREAKS SAVE MOISTURE
Farming and Living Conditions More
Favorable In Regions Where Trees
Are Planted.
When the prairie regions of the Mid
dle West were first developed the lnck
of trees wns severely felt The clenr
sweep of the winds across the plains
was n grertt hindrance to agriculture,
for the soil was dried out quickly by
evaporation, grain was lodged, and or
chards injured by the force of the
wind. Windbreaks were the only rem
edy nnd thousands of miles of them
were planted along roads and farm di
vision lines. The effect of this plant
ing, although felt only gradually, was
very distinct; farming and living con
ditions became more favorable through
out the whole region.
CUT LETTUCE FOR SHIPMENT
Far Less Decay Developed In Transit
When Two or Three Lower
Leaves Are Removed.
Cnrefully. cut lettuce, with the two
or. three lower leaves nnd ull diseased
lenves removed, develops far less de
cny In transit thnn the commercially
cut lettuce in experimental shipments
from Florida to northern manketa,
says the United States Department of
Agriculture.
POTATOES IN ROTATION PLAN
Specialists Advise Interval of Two or
More Years Between Crops for
Best Results,
Specialists state that it is best to
grow field potatoes in a regular rota
tion, keeping on Interval of two or
more years between the potato crops
becnuse of the liability of disease car
rying over from one crop to tho other.
QUALITY AND HONESTY COUNT
Farmer Can't Make No. 1 Hog Out ef
of No. 2 Animal by Selling It
Through Cooperative Market.
You can't make ti No. 1 hog out of a
No. 2 merely by selling it through co
operative mnrketing. Quality and nil
round honesty will contlnuo to be tha
most compelling vlrute of all right
thinking men and women.
DAIBLY
FACTS
RULES FOR FEEDING CALVES
Desired Nutrwts Furnished by Giv
ing Youfia AMmal Variety Avoid
Sudden Changes.
(Prepared by the Unltod States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
Feeding Is an Important factor In
developing u good breeding nnlmnl,
or n favorite In the show ring. There
arc mnny paints to be remembered.
These points may be called rules of
feeding, nmong which speclnllsts of
the United Stntes Department of Ag
riculture give the following:
1. Provide n variety of feeds nt nil
times, If possible. It Is easier to sup
ply the proper amounts of the duslred
nutrients which the calf needs If
several different feeds are used. Tim
ration will also be more palatable.
2. Do not make sudden chnnges in
the feeds used or in the amounts giv
en, if it becomes necessary to change
feeds from, say, clover to alfalfa liny,
Grain In Medium Amount, Fresh Wa
ter and Pasture Are Necessary for
Success With Calves.
feed part clover and pnrt nlfnlfn for
u few days. Gradually reduce the
amount of clover nnd at the same time
Incrense the nlfnlfn.
3. Do not overfeed the cnlf. Feed as
much grain us It will clean up In 30
minutes nnd wish It hnd just n little
more. Feed left In the trough to he
brenthed over Is worse thnn. wnstcd.
If any remulns It should be removed
and less given the next time. Digestive
disorders occur from feeding too much
rather than too little.
4. Do not underfeed the cnlf. It
should mnke n continuous gain. If
It does not grow each day the feed
given It Is nbout the snme n wnstcd.
It never pnys to starve a calf. In
fact, the cnlf does not begin to pay
for feed until It Is given more than
enough to mnke some gnin,
f. Do not nnnoy or disturb the cnlf
unneccssnrlly. It requires more feed
to keep It growing while standing or
moving about than while lying down
at rest.
0. Do not feed moldy, musty, or
spoiled feeds. To do so muy cnuse
serious digestive disorders. All hnys
should be bright, well enred, nnd free
from mustlncss, dirt, nnd conrse weeds
The grain nlso should lie free from
dirt, mold, und mustlness. If ground
feeds get wet they nre likely to mold
This Is pspecinlly true of cottonseed
meal nnd ground corn.
7. Do not waste time In feeding the
cnlf, or in preparing feed, since wnsted
time needlessly Increnses the cost or
gains. Grain should be fed whole ex
ccpt when touching the calf to ent und
possibly nlso near the end of the fit
ting or finishing period. Whole grain
us n rule is more palatable than ground
feeds. Ear corn may he shelled,
broken, or chopped up In the feed box
rather than ground. Husks on snapped
com need not bo removed for this pur
pose. It rarely pnys to shred stover
or to cut or chaff liny for the cnlf.
It need not he fed threo times n. dny
when twice n duy ylll do ns well, nl
though the former may bo practiced
when fitting the animal for show or
snle. Do not go to tho expense of buy
ing prepared "stock feeds" or "reme
dies." lIomcmIxcd feeds nrc chenper
nnd equally, If not more, satisfactory.
A healthy calf does not need condi
tion powders.
ENCOURAGE FENCE JUMPERS
Dilapidated Fencing Is Source of Con.
stant Trouble for Owner of
Dairy Herd.
Half broken down fences help to
teach the cows to lie fence Junipers.
Heifers that nre constantly Jumping
the fences In easy places are dlfllcult
to break In later life and nothing Is
more wasteful of time nnd patience
than constantly chasing your cuttlo
out of your neighbor's crops or your
own. flood fonclng Ih necessary equip
ment for the dairyman nnd poor fenc
ing Is n constant risk.
GIVING YOUNG CALVES MILK
Care Should Be Taken That Tempera,
ture Is Uniform When Poor In
Quality, Give Less.
Care should he taken to seo that
qny milk fed to the young cnlves Is
of uniform temperature of ubout 00
degrees Fahrenheit. Many feeders at
tempt to overcome poor quality In the
feed by Increasing the qunntlty. This
Is radically wrong. When on account
of age, souring, dirt, etc., the quality
of the milk Is poor, the qunntlty
should be reduced rather thon Increased.
WILD FAMILY
IN NEW YORK
Parents and Four Children Dis
covered by Official of a
' Village Board.
FLED FROM RAMAPOS
Woman Dumb and Youngsters Never
Had Seen Comb, Pencil or Paper-
Came From Place Inhabited
by Halfbreeds.
Nynck, N. 1. Judge Charles W.
Haughcy, a member of tho town board
of Ornngetown, brought to tho ntien
tlon of the bonrd the condition of n
family named Thompson, consisting of
father, mother and four children, ref
ugees from the interior of the Ilamapo
mountains, who took possession of a
tumble-down aback on the edgo of the
Penrl river near here recently.
Judgo Hnughcy said tlmt the couple
nnd the two elder children, n boy of ten
nnd n girl of seven, nppenrcd to be suf
fering from n skin disease due to lack
of water. Their hair wan matted nnd
they presented n wild nppenrnnce.
Came From Ramapos,
In his report Judgo Hnughcy said
thnt he found the man sitting on tho
doorstep of tho shnck. After much per
sistent inquiry the man finally said
thnt ho nnd his fnmlly came from tho
Interior of the llnmnpo mountains,
northwest of SufTcrn. Tho interior is
n desolate place, Inhabited by a few
hnlfhreed Indians, moonshiners and
"Jackson whites."
Thompson's only gnrmonts were.n
blue flunnol shirt, n pair of old trousers
held up by a twisted rope nnd n pair of
old shoes. Judge Haughcy was unnblo
to find out the man's first name ufter
half an hour. He learned that none of
tho children had over been to school
uor hnd they over seen pencil or pnper.
The two youngeBt children wcren bov
of five nnd u girl of four. They were
almost nnked.
After considerable conxlng Judgo
Hnughey induced Thompson to cnli his
wife, who hnd rcmnlncd Inside the hut
during most of the Interview.
Woman Has No Name.
"Woraun, come here," cried tho man.
A frail, huddled form emerged, clad
In n bluck wrapper, worn through nt
the elbows' nnd knees. Tho woman'n
Took Possession of a Tumme-uown
Shack. '
hnlr was matted. Thompson swore nt
hor, nnd nfter she had given several
lnughs he snld she wns dumb. He told
Judge Hnughey thnt his wife nnl chil
dren had never had a comb so far ns
he could remember.
After Judgo Hnughey mnde his re
port It wns decided that it would bo
best to remove the family to nn Insti
tution. In the memory of the oldest Inhabi
tants of this section this Is the first
time that any of the inhabitants of the
Inner recesses of the Ilamapo mqun
tains have ever Issued forth to civili
zation. From time to time lawbreakers
have sought the wild mountain trulls
when pursued by the police, but once
they entered, the mountains they have
seldom been heard of. The residents
of thlB section never go Into the In
terior, knowing the character of the
gypsy-like Inhabitants.
TWO WIVES AT 70 TOO MANY
New York Judge Tells Aged Blgamst
He Had Better "Forget
Women."
New York. Roscoe Reich, seventy,
of Wnodhnvcn, formerly of Kaston.
Pa., where ho held the position of
county nudltor, pleaded guilty to big
amy in the Kings county court.
Ilclch admitted thnt he hud a wife
when on August 7, 1010, he married
AugUBtu Ilelmund. Itelch leaned
heavily on u cane. Judgo Martin, In
Buspenuing sentence on tne ngeu pris
oner, mii Id:
"You nre surely old enough to real
ize thnt any man has nil lie can do to
take care of one wife. While you
might bo admired for your courage,
you certainly cannot bo commended
for your common sense. My advice
to you Is to forget your women." .