The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 13, 1923, Image 2

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    THE FRONTIER
D. H. CRONIN, PUBLISHER,
* % CL TEMPLETON,
Editor and Business Manager.
ffKEILL, ..._NEBRA8Kj
Anti-Saloon League Officer
Requests Suspension of
Omaha Judges
tdncoln, Neb., Sept, v (Special)
Governor Brayan la given an opor
tunlty to Invoke the favorite law of
the governor by F. A. High, super
intendent of the anti-saloon league.
Mr. High has requested Governor
Bryan to suspend William Wapplch
and Frank Dlneen, municipal Judges
of Omaha. The superintendent
charges that the two Judges of Oma
ha have for a long time Ignored the
law prohibiting the sale of liquors,
gambling and houses of ill lams
Governor Bryan said Monday af
ternoon that the complaint of the
anti-saloon league head had not
reached him and all that Ihe knew
about the matter was what he had
read In the newspapers. The High
application is the first to be made
tinder an amendment to the Sackett
law which the 1923 legislature adopt
ed after Bryan had made a hard
fight for action. Under this law the
governor has the power to suspend
an officer and start prosecution
for his removal for neglect to en
force a law which Is his duty to en
force. Pending the Investigation
of the charges the governr may name
a temporay officer to fill the va
cancy left by tihe suspension of the
duly sleeted officer. Under thteorig-.
Inal Sackett law tlhe governor had
no power to suspend an officer pend
lng prosecution.
NEAR TRAGEDY
IN OMAHA HOME
Husband Tries To End Fam
ily Trouble By Shooting
Wife and Self
Omaha, Sept. .—Marital trouble*
were given as the cause of the shoot
ing here Monday of Mrs Eugene Dil
lon, by her husband, Eugene Dillon,
who afterwards inflicted a severe
would In the side of his face. Mrs.
Dillon was shot three thnos, the bul
lets taking effect In tlin abdomen and
hip. Both will recover, hospital at
tendants say.
According to the story told police
by the woman's relatives and friends,
Mrs. Dillon was "forced to marry
Dillon."
.# ,
\ . -tl***.. '
TYPHOID FEVER
MUCH FEARED
Flood Waters Become Stag
nant And Residents of
A Neligh Are Alarmed
S*. < __
Neligh. Neb., Sept. (Special)—
An epidemic of typhoid fever Is
feared here, because of the stagnent
water that extends for nearly a half
mile at the foot of main street and
west of Riverside park.
Fish taken from the water are said
to be infected. Adjacent property
^owners can notice a strong stench
from the water.
The county engineer has estimated
the cost of changing the river’s chan*
*el at 110,000.
Bab* Killed When
A><toa Com* Together.
Omaha, Neb., Sept, f Nlneteen
months-old Alice . Gwendolyn,
daughter of Mr. and Mra Earl A.
Lillie, Omaha, was killed and Mrs.
Lillie was severely cut about the
face and head, six miles north of Wa
boo when their automobile was do
molisbad In a collision with a car
driven by J. A. Green, 60, Council
Bluffs, Green was taken in custody
by Saunders county officials but
was not formally placed under ar
rest. According to Sheriff L. D.
Mengel, an emtled liquor bottle was
taken from Green's car, which was
also badly wrecked
•A l[ ■ .." "
Hsepltal Located There.
Wahoo, Neb., Sept. I -Saunders
county and the city ot Wahoo are
making a bid for the location here of
one of the two tubercular hospital*
for world war veterans, to be loca
ted In the 9th United States veter
ans’ district. Ths bid Is being made
through a folio. Issued here today by
H. O. Weber, chairman ot the Cham
ber ot commerce committee in charge
of this promotion. The folic has been
forwarded to E. T. Hines, head of
the government veterans’ bureau and
to other men, Influential in the loca
tion of the two hospitals, Mr. Weber
announced today.
Lose Trace of Negro
.. Who KiHorf Another.
Alliance, Neb., $ept. 1 (Special)—
No trace has ev*r been loan 1 of Lln
sle Robins, colored youth, who shot
and killed Frod Ellis hei«, some weeks
ago. "W Trail •'as piokr*\ up lead
ing ’w Bltitest Jwit., bf v lev there.
There Is a rsrat^rd't $171 hit Me cap
ture, $100 ofterod by the county ar.d
$76 offerbO IP lolorcd citizens of Al
Napoleon Wat "Crap” Shooter
From The New York Herald.
The Berlin judge who refused to
hold some prisoners accused of
shooting craps because he could not
understand that It. was a game of
chance should have consulted the
German Hoyle. Under the title
"Hasardsplele" he would have dis
covered the principles of the game,
for craps, although It seems to have
been regarded In France and Ger
many as an American invention
when General Pershing’s young
gentlemen Indulged In this rolling of
two dice, is the simple child of the
ancient English game of hazard.
All that Americans did In trans
forming hazard into craps was to
remove its complications and apply
common sense to Its mathematics.
The Englishman of Georgian days
called his “main** or point before he
let the dice fly from his hand for the
first play. It could be any number
from 5 to 8. Why he should choose
any number other than 7 Is hard to
understand. In craps 7 and 11 are
arbitrarily the points for which the
player yearns as he casts the first
time. Seven can be thrown In six
different ways; 6 or 8 In five ways;
5 or 8 In four ways; 4 or 10 in three
ways. Fixing 7 as one of the points
for the first cast gives the player the
advantage of the odds and of not be
lnir obliged to guess.
"Craps” In hazard la 2 or 3; "craps”
in craps is 2, 3 or 12. If the hazard
player’s main after the first throw is
6 or 9 he throws out with 11 or 12.
If it is 8 or 8 he throws out with 11,
The game is equally complicated in
the matter of the casts that will win
for him. Your modern crap shooter
would find pung chow as easy to
learn as hazard, yet tl^ principles of
both these noble dice games are iden
tical. And If the German Judge Will
take a whirl at craps he will be sat
isfied that it is a gambling game.
The.worst thing about craps is the
mediocrity of its name. Hazard is a
stately phrase. We read that Charles
James Fox lost £ 32,000 in three
nights play at hazard, neglecting his
Parliamentary duties; that five of
the nobility parted with £100,000 to
the proprietor of Crockford’s club. It
sounds romantic. We know that
Napoleon, bound for St, Helena in
the Northumberland,* spent his eve
I nings "casting at hazard” for small
stakes. It would be a shock to have
the historian say that Bonaparte was
a crap shooter, but it would be true.
The hero of "To Have and to Hold”
must have been a crap player. "If
I throw ambsace,” mumbled Ralph
Percy to himself, ‘1 will go to James
town tomorrow and take a wife,” or
words to that effect. He threw his
two aces, a combination known now
adays as "craps.” The chances were
IB to 1 that he would not make that
gast. He admitted that he was the
finest swordsman in Virginia; maybe
fee was the best dice tosser.
you Inform me whether the deplorable
Condition of this person is due to perma.
nent dementia or spasmodic and inter
mittent insanity?”
Omaha World Herald.
Why are people intolerant? Be
cause they have not learned to be tol
erant. It requires forbearance, kind
ness, pity, good humor, broad un
derstanding and a sense of kinship
Vith every living thing, for one to
be truly tolerant. The virtue of tol
erance must be acquired. It is not
a rtatural Jpstinct ._
James' Harvey Robinson tells us
that “most of our so-called reason
ing consists in finding arguments for
going on believing as we already
most important one In all (human af
fairs, he says, “and properly tp
do.’’* The little word “my” is the
reckon with It Is the beginning of
wisdom. It has the same force,
whether it is MY dinner, MY dog,
and MY house, or MY faith, MY
country, and MY God. We not only
resent the Imputation that our watch
is wrong or our car shabhy, but that
our conception of the canals of Mars,
of the pronunciation of ‘Epietitus,’ 1
of the medicinal value of saliclne or
the date of Sargon I are subject to
Mryls.ion,”
How properly to reckon with the
“I” and "my” is not abolishing them.
We may never escape from consider
ing the self as of some Importance.
The danger lies in thinking that the
self is it, everything right and holy
to treat our opinions with respect,
whether they agree with us or not.
We do not like folks who kick our
dog, break into our house,, seek to
destroy our faith, attack our coun
try or blaspheme our God.
Tolerance is just a matter of treat
ing the other fellow as we would
like the other fellow to treat us.
Morning 8ong
Awake, my soul, ’tls day!
Awake, awake, 'tls light I
Purled Is the tent of night.
The shadows flown away.
Be strong, ray soul, be strong;
True strength must He witihln.
I Oh. days are the battles which all
must fight,
And none but the brave can win.
Then be thou as the oak,
My heart, be stout and brave;
’Tie but the coward slave
Who fears the hostile stroke.
Let tempests o'er tihee sweep
And coward bosoms quake.
But be thou as the oak that bown
Tet cannot, will not break.
Then be It as It will.
And come what will or may;
What If they lose a day
The brave are victors still.
Tls then that manhood counts,
A coward may despair;
The brave alone can face defeat.
The strong alone can bear.
Arise to meet the day;
Purled la Its tented night;
Then start the day aright;
For strength and courage pray;
The strength that's born of prayer
Is as the strength of ten.
And those who pray can meet the
day
As Christians and as men.
Fred Kramer in the Kansas City
Star.
Another Boston Bsby.
From the Boston Herald.
**i)o this Is tbs baby, eh?’’ said the
bachelor. “Bless his little tootste
wootsleal Watch me tickle-urn ribs."
The genial one proceeded to play rag
time on the unoffending infant’s ribs,
foolishly imagining ths child was en
°^hetup-to-date child stood it for some
time, and then cried out; "Mother, will
An Oversight.
From Wayside Tales
“My doctor put me on a rigid diet, but
he said I could eat all the spinach I
Wanted"
"Wetir’
“The. dan ted fool evidently didn't know
that I like spinach.’’
NORMAL SCHOOL
HEAD ATTACKED
Farmers’ Union Members
Make Written Complaint
To Governor Bryan
Lincoln, Neb. Sept. * (Special)—
The Peru normal row was again re
vived when the attack of Col. T. J.
Majors, president and member of the
state normal board took a new turn
Wednesday when five members of the
Farmers’ Union legislative commit
tee called upon Governor Bryan and
filed charges and information with the
governor.
The first complaint was made by
a delegation composed mainly of
democratic members of the state leg
islature from the Southwestern
counties. Written Information was
filed. The union delegation mention
ed that it represented 25,000 members
of that organization. The governor
received the committee behind closed
doors.
Governor Bryan refused to state the
nature of the complaint, except to add
that the information included a report
of an investigation made last winter
by J. O. Shroyer of Humboldt, a mem
ber of the union and of the committee
and fames Auten of Albian. a mem
ber of the last state legislature. The
governqr said that the constitution
gives him authority to remove his
iewn appointees on the normal board
for malfeasance, Incompetence or ne
glect of duty. PYiends of Colonel
Majors deplore the fight being made
on him and Indicate that it is of *
purely political nature.
OMAHA DRF
SLEUTH HELD
“Bootleg Queen” Abo Sur
renders to Face Charges
of Liquor Sales
Omaha, Sept. * —Earl Haning,
federal prohibition agen, and Mrs.
Louise Vinciquera, "bootleg queen,"
who several months ago made public
acknowledgement tiiat she had ac
cumulated a fortune of *45,000
through illicit Uquor dealings, sur
rendered to U, S. Commissioner E.
C. Boehler Wednesday following is
suance of warrants for their arrest
on specific chargo of selling one
pint of whiskey und one pint of
wine, which was alleged to have been
purchased lest Saturday by evidence
men wording under federal prohi
bition officers.
Louise Vinciquera created a mild
sensation last April with the state
ment that she had accumulated
enough money to live in ease the Re
mainder of her days. At that time
a Jury trying her failed to agree,
but convicted her husband of the
sale and possession of liquor and he
is now serving time in the Douglas
county Jail
Both Mrs. Vinciquera and Haning
were released on *2,000 ball, having
waived preliminary hearing, subject
ing themselves to grand Jury action.
When questioned as to Hanlng’s
status, U. 8. "Dry” Commissioner
Rohrer said he had no authority to
suspend Haning and that if sus
pension is made it will properly have
to come from Internal Revenue Com
missioner Blair at Washington.
COLLEGE HEAD TELLS OF
OBSERVATIONS IN EUROPE
Yankton, S. D., Sept, '» (Special)—
There are not many signs of des
titution in Europe, but there are
slgqs of the most rigid economy
practiced on every hand, according
to G. H. Durand, vice-president of
Yankton college, who has Just re
turned from conducting a party
through Europe this summer.* Only
enough cars to run to trains to care
for passengers who have made ad
vance reservations, and hotels and
restaurants have only enough ready
to serve people whom they konw will
come to eat.
All the people there are under a
terrible burden of taxation. Profes
sor Durand said, and they are fac
ing problems of reconstruction far
beyond any in this country. The
battlefields are mostly healed over.
Rhelms is still a ruined city. Of
14,000 homes only five were left
standing, and it is slowly being re
built. The cathedral is being re
built, but Its fine decorations are
gone forever.
HEATINQ OP OATS IN BIN
CAUSE OP BAD FARM FIRE
Yankton, S. D., Sapt. (Special)
—Fire believed to have originated In
troyed the
the heating of oats In the bin de
stroyed the large barn on the Her
man Vollmer farm, on the Jim river
north of Yankton, causing a loss es
timated at $10,000. It was one of
the largest barns in the county.
About 3,500 bushels of oats were de
stroyed, as well as some farm ma
chinery, a calf and a sheep, Rnd
about 100 chickens. Arthur Erick
son severely burned his hands in
getting other sheep out of the build
ing, and the animals suffered bad
ly scorched wool.
Has Big Profit
His Wheat Chop
Gurley, Neb., Sept, v (Special)—
Two thousand two hundred bushels
of Turkey Red wheat were thresh
ed from a field of 42 acres, an acer
afe of 51 (4 bushels an acre. Brown
has already sold It to Cheyenne
county farmers for seed wheat a$
$1.25 a bushel.
t!
Innovation In Government.
Marvin B. Rosenberry in the North
American Review.
There has come Into existence In
the United States during recent
yearn, by accident or design, an extra
constitutional method, by which the
federal government has sought to In
fluence and control state govern
ments. Stated in plain terms, the fed
eral government says to the states:
Here Is an appropriation which is a
vallable to you upon certain-condi
tions. As a rule these conditions are
that a like amount shall be appro
priated by the state government for
the purpose Indicated In the bill mak
ing the federal appropriation. There
Is a further stipulation that certain
conditions relating to intrastate af
fairs are to be complied with as a
condition of receiving federal aid.
This scheme, by which the federal
government in effect excercises legis
lative power In relation to education,
publlo health, and other kindred sub
jects strictly within the police powei
of the states. Is an Innovation upon
America’s constitutional system.
Last week Producer Joseph M,
Schenck signed Claire West, noted
costume designer, to supervise all
gowns and costumes worn by Norma
and Constance Talmadge in future
productions. Miss West was former
ly with Cecil B. De Mille and It was
then that she startled tihe fashion
world with many clever and original
styles.
“But can you Imagine a blue-eyed
flapper trying to practice her wiles
through smoked^glasses?”
Scientists recommend a dally half
dozen to aid blondes. They are:
Roll your eyes.
Look up from your work frequently.
Ciive your eyes plenty of fresh
air.
Look at green grass, flowers and
the blue sky.
Bit up straight.
Bathe the eyes In cold water when
tired.
The Aztec calendar consisted of a
year of eighteen months.
Artificial Silk In Japan.
From U. S. Commerce Reports.
The manufacturers of artificial
silk have made very little progress In
Japan, being confined to the product
ion of coarse yarns of Inferior qual
ity. Imports of artificial silk in 1922
amounted to 226,840 pounds—an In
crease of 62.7 per cent over 1921.
Unofficial estimates place the Jan
anese imports from January 1, to
April 24, 1923, to 178,725 pounds, or
about 79 per cent of the total artlfl- t
dal silk Imports In 1922. The use of
artificial silk in Japan was formerly
limited to the manufacture of neck
ties and shawls, but It is now lieTng
used for hosiery and mixed silk tex«
tiles. ,
His Misinformation
From the Boston Globe
They were dining at a fashionable
restaurant, the Customers' Man and
tihe Gossip.
“See that man over there?" said
the latter.
"Yes.”
“Well, he is James R. Smith from
"Indeed!”
Peoria, 111.’
“Yes, he’s just made $200,000 in
the market.”
“Well, dear boy,’ said the Cus
tomers’ Man, “you’re wrong four
ways.”
"Indeed?”
"Yes—his name la Howard R.
Jones.”
"Yes?”
“And the amount was not $200,
000.”
“No?”
"It was $20,000.”
"Yes?”
"And he lost It.”
DEFINITION OF AMERICA
Rabbi Abba 8ilver.
In the heat and the strife of
the war I was asked once to
give my definition of America,
and I said to the men: “To
me America ki infinitely more
than an aggregate of 110,000,
000 men; to me America is all
that the submerged races of
the world wish to be and can
not; to me America is the
concrete realisation of what
the ages have hoped for and
labored for.” That was my
definition I gave to them.
It is a definition. It is a
creed. It is a challenge. God
built a continent of glory and
filled it with treasures untold.
He carpeted it witn soft
rolling prairies and pillared
it with thundering mountains.
He studded It with soft flow
ing fountains and traced it
with long winding streams.
He graced it with deep shad
owed forests and filled them
with song.
, Then he called unto a thous
, «2id peoples and summoned
► the bravest among them. They
k came from the ends of the
y earth, each bearing a gift and
► a hope. The glow of adven
y ture was in their eyes and
y the glory of hope within their
y souls. And out of the labor
y of men and the bounty of
y earth, out of the prayers of
y men and the hopes of the
y world. God fashioned a na
y tlon in love, blessed it with a
h purpose sublime and called
y it “America!"
►
. . a a A aAAaAAA1AAAA.X
From the New York 8un and Globe:
First Stenographer—What was so re
markable about that married guy who
took you out to dinner last night?”
Second Ditto—He didn’t once tell me.
his wife misunderstood him.
The board of directors of the Uni
versity of King’s college, Windsor. No
va Scotia, has voted In favor of feder
ation with Dalhousle University, Hali
fax. _
Woman Bookmaker Fined.
London.—Daisy King, a woman
bookmaker, still piles her business in
the streets, although she was Just
fined $60 and warned she might have
to “do a stretch at hard labor.”
Many Chinese use their hollow Idols
as saving banka. _
There are nearly 20,000 know me
dicinal remedies.
ASK GOVERNOR
TOUSEPOWER
Anti-Saloon League Officer
Requests Suspension of
Omaha Judges
Lincoln, Neb., Sept. * (Special)—
Governor Brayan is given an opor
tunlty to invoke the favorite law of
the governor by F. A. High, super
intendent of the anti-saloon league.
Mr. High has requested Governor
Bryan to suspend William Wappich
and Frank Dineen, municipal judges
of Omaha. The superintendent
charges tihat the two judges of Oma
ha have for a long time ignored the
law prohibiting the sale of liquors,
gambling and houies of ill fame.
b
Governor Bryan said Monday af
ternoon that the complaint of the
anti-saloon league head had not
reached him and all that he knew
about the matter was what he had
read in the newspapers. The High
application is the first to be made
under an amendment to the Sackett
law which the 1923 legislature adopt
ed after Bryan had made a hard
fight for action. Under this law the
governor has the power to suspend
an officer and start prosecution
for his removal for neglect to en
force a law which is his duty to en
force. Pending the investigation
of the charges the governr may name
a temporay officer to fill the va
cancy left by tihe suspension of the
duly elected officer. Under thteorig
inal Sackett law the governor had
no power to suspend an officer pend
ing prosecution.
NEAR TRAGEDY
IN OMAHA HOME
Husband Tries To End Fam
ily Trouble By Shooting
Wife and Self
Omaha, Sept. -Marital troubles
Were given as the cause of the shoot
ing here Monday of Mrs Eugene Dil
lon, by her husband, Eugene Dillon,
who afterwards inflicted a severe
wound in the side of his face. Mrs.
Dillon was shot three times, the bul
lets taking effect in the abdomen and
hip. Both will recover, hospital at
tendants say.
According to the story told police
by the woman's relatives and friends,
Mrs. Dillon was “forced to marry
Dillon."
TYPHOID FEVER
MUCH FEARED
Flood Waters Become Stag
nant And Residents of
Neligh Are Alarmed
Neligh, Neb.. Sept (Special)—
An epidemic of typhoid fever ia
feared here, because of the stagnent
water that extends for nearly a half
mile at the foot of main street and
west of Riverside park.
Fish taken from the water are said
to be Infected. Adjacent property
owners can notice a strong stench
from the water.
The county engineer has estimated
the cost of changing the river's chan*
nei at $10,000.
Babe Killed When ...
Autos Come Together.
Omaha, Neb., Sept — Nineteen
months-old Alice Gwendolyn,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl A.
Lillie, Omaha, was killed and Mrs.
Lillie was severely cut about the
face and head, six miles north of Wa
hoo when their automobile was de
molished in “a collision with a car
driven by J. A. Green, 50, Council
Bluffs. Green was taken In custody
by Saunders county officials but
was not formally placed under ar
rest. According to Sheriff L. D.
Mengel, an emtled liquor bottle was
taken from Green’s car, which was
also badly wrecked
Hospital Located There.
Wahoo, Neb., Sept. -Saunders I
County and the city ot Wahoo are
making a bid for the location here of
one of the two tubercular hospitals
for world war veterans, to be loca
ted in the 9th United States veter
ans’ district. The bid is being made
through a folio, issued here today by
E. O. Weber, chairman of the Cham
ber of commerce committee in charge
of this promotion. The folio has been
forwarded to E. T. Hines, head of
the government veterans’ bureau and
to other men, influential in the loca
tion Of the two hospitals, Mr. Weber
announced today.
Lose Trace of Negro
Who Killod Another.
Alliance, Neb., Sept. 'Special)—
No trace has ever been fount of Un
ite Robins, colored youth, who shot
and killed Fred Ellis heie, some weeks
ago. The trail was picked up lead
»ing to Billings, Mont., but lost there.
There is a reward of $175 for his cap
ture, $100 offered by the county aral
$75 offered by colored citiiens of Al
liance. ^
TWO ARE HELD "
ON MANN ACT
Must Answer To Federal
Court In Nebraska For
Transporting Girls
Aliance, Neb., Sept. *—Raymond
Blair, 21 years old, coal miner of Bar
tinvllle, 11L and Edward Jenkins, 23,
years old, laborer of St. Joseph, Mo.*
who were held for trial in federal
court here last Thursday following
their being charged with violation of
the Mann act will be taken to Omaha
for trial before the next sitting of
that court, it is announced here.
The two men were arrested here las1
week, undier suspicion of having stol
en a motorcar, in which they were
riding with two girls, said to be from
St. Joseph, Mo.
Sheriff Chas. W. Fletcher, of Hol
ton, Kas-, who had been sent here
to obtain the two men on the stolen
car charges, staged a legal battle for
possession of the prisoners with
James C. Emery, Omaha, represent
ing United States District Attorney
KinBler. Federal Court Commission
er Krank M. Broome of Antioch,
Neb., who was called to this city to
sit in the case ruled that the repres
entative of the federal government
had precedence over the Kansas
sheriff and Blair and Jenkins were
held under bond of $1,000 each for
the federal court. The two girlsr
were held under bonds of $2,600.,
Attendance At Fair
Highest In 20 Years
Exhibits, Fireworks ancj
Races Draw Big Crowds
to Hartington, Neb.
Hartington, Neb., Sept. —The*
Cedar County fair In session here
drew a record attendance of 6,000
people Wednesday, breaking th<*
best gate records of the past 20
years. ,
The cattle exhibits have attracted
farmers from all sections of the
county, and are said to be the best,
exhibits that have been shown at
the Cedar County fair in many
years. There are more than 176
head of fancy cattle on exhibition
here.
Attractions at the fair have beer*
Increased both in number and in
quality this year. Five racing events
are held daily on the track and a
hugo bombardment of fireworks i®
set off at each night performance,,
CONVICT GARBED IN
FEMININE GARMENTS
TRIES A “WALKOUT’'
Lincoln, Neb., Sept. —Otto Cole
convict at the state penitentiary
here attempted to escape Wednes
day afternoon dressed in women's
By the aid of his disguise, Col®
clothes.
succeeded lin getting to the outer
gate. Here he was recognized by
a guard and escorted to the war
den's office.
When questioned concerning hl»
act, Cole calmly admitted that h®
had tried to escape and said h®
did not regret his act.
He yas convicted at Omaha some*
time ago for the murder there of
the proprietor of a second hand!
store.
The disguise used in attempting
the escape was mads from up
holstering obtained from the shop®
In the prisbn.
Lincoln Preacher Goes
To Wisconsin Chargo
Iincoln, Neb., Sept. ~ -Rev. W. W.
Bolt, for nearly seven years pastor of
Plymouth Congregational Church of
Lincoln, today announced his resig
nation to accept a call extended by
the First Congregational church of
Eau Claire, Wis.
Nonpartisan-League To
Renew State'"Activity,
Lincoln, Neb, Sept. * (Special)—
Efforts will be made to put the non
partisan league organization on the*
state map at a called mass meeting
In a short time. O. » Evans, first
state manager of the league, and the
man credited having increased its;
membership from nothing to 40,000,.
has been solicited to take the helmi
again. He is considering the matter.
He is willing to accept under certair*
conditions. One is that the member
ship fee be cut from $6.50 to $4 for
the two years, or reduce to $2 a head!
for one year. The 1-ague Is now de
bating whether to support the present:
unofficial paper or make a new deal
If Evans becomes the state manager
he will cut out the wages of solicitors
by organizing farmer units in each
township or precinct or county. Her
will ask the new units to do the so
i licitlng. Evans insists that the league
is not practically dead, as has been-.
I claimed, but is simply in a dormant:
state, ready to be set on fire when*
called to action.
Saves Brothers And
8isters From Flootf
Bridgeport, Neb. Sept. (Special >
•-Friends are commending the hero
ism of the oldest daughter of Johi»
Belden, who saved their lives during
a heavy rain storm. Left alone with
the smaller brothers and sisters, she
found the flood waters of Pumpkin
Creek entering the house, to a depth
of two feet. The glil waded out tc.
the barn, hitched up a team, put
the children in and drove to a neigh
bors in a heavy ball storm.