SICK 3 YEARS WITHOUT RELIEF Finally Found Health byTak ing Lydia EL Pinkh&m’s Vegetable Compound Columbia, S. C.—"Your medicine hau done me ao much eood that I feel like I owe my life to it Fot three yean I was sick and was treated by physicians, but they didn’t seem to help me any. Then I took Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Com pound and got strong enough to do my housework, where before I was hardly able to be up. I have also taken the Vege table Compound during the Change of Life and it haa left me in good health. I recommend it as the best medicine for women in the Change of Life and you can use these facts as a testimonial. — Mrs. S. A. Holley, R. F. D. No. 4, Columbia, South Carolina. Why suffer for years with backache, nervousness, painful times and other ail irents common to women from early life to middle age, when Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound will bring relief? Take it when annoying symp toms first appear and avoid years of suffering. 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Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. m wW Knuckles Petroleum Jelly cforc working in lb* cold or wet and you'll avoid chapped hande and cracked knncklea. For cola, borne, butnpe, brciaca and aorce or akin trouble#, apply "Vaaelioe** JcNy liberally. Alwaya ante, eoothiag and healing. ea awry package./fir yeeu-grefartfea. Cbcaebrough Mfg. Company BP State Street New York j Vaseline MS. U I FAT OFF. J PETROLEUM JELLY I BRYAN HITS AT SUPREME COURT Nebraska Governor Assails Decision As to Deposit Guaranty Fund Lincoln, Neb , Jan. \ (I. N. S.l— Governor Charles W. 3ryan, Friday, assailed.the state supreme court de cision holding deposits drawing in terest at higher than the legal rate are protected by the state guaranty fund. “It appears to me that the court decision overrides the statute,'' the governor' said, “as the law declare* that deposits drawing more than.'6 per cent.! interest are not within the provisions of the guarantee fund.” . "If fi banker and his bank are held to be two separate institutions and one can add to the legal rate of in terest it seems to result In nullifica tion of the statute and will permit the. guaranty fund to be raided at will.. SHIPPERSAYS RULE BAD ONE Complains About Hogs Be ing Side-Tracked “To Rest” Lincoln, Neb., Jan. * (Special)— I). M. Hildebrand, stock hog shipper of Seward, has lodged complaint with the state railway commission against the practice of railroad com panies in sidetracking shipments in order lo abide by the eight-hour rest and wait rule. He says that the ob ject of that order was to give the hogs lime to eat and rest, but that it actually results in a lot of un necessary delay. He says that as the hogs cannot he fed in a public stockyurd, this is done in the car, md there is no need to wait. He also complains because the rate on hogs from Whitney to Seward has Iteen jacked' up on him from 36 cents to 50 1-2 cents without his knowing anything about it. He doubts the correctness of the charge. DEPARTMENTS QUARREL OVER NEW OFFICE Lincoln, Neb., Jun. ' (Special)— Governor Bryan announces that the dispute between the state depart ment of public education and the board of control over which shall oc cupy the nice new commodious suite j of rooms in the northwestern part of the main floor of the new capltol will be decided without any interference from or intervention by the state teachers’ association. That body appointed a committee the other day to. see tl.'.e governc*1 and urge that the department of edu cation be given the rooms. The gov ernor says that there arc rooms for all, and that the matter can be ad justs without any intervention. The educational department says it is a constitutional, office and its heart elective, while ;vthe hoard of control is appointive^ although created by the constitution; hence the state su perintendent should have first choice. NEBRASKA BANKERS SEE DANGER AHEAD . Omaha, Neb., Jan.' ' (Special)— State bankers are frankly alarmed over thp possibilities for had bank ing op<*hed up by the recent decree of the supreme court that a deposit in a state bank is not taken out from under the protection of the guaranty fund by a depositor making a side contract by which the banker personally guarantees or pays him excess interest. They say that if the legislature does not stop up the hole in the law that the court indicates is there the financial stability of the fund will be menaced during the next period of inflation. ASKS FOR $15,000 FOR WIFE’S AFFECTIONS Sioux Fulls, S. D., Jan —Charg ing Melvin Hoff, a prominent farmer of Corson, with alienating the affec tions of Mrs. Margnusen, Mervln Margnuson, of Sioux Falls, has in stituted an action in the circuit court here by which he seeks to recover damages of (15,000 from Hoff. The husband charges they were frequently together, making appointments by letters and by tel ephone, and that the wife now re fuses to live with him and neglects their children. “Stampeders” Are Ordered Held Up Ketchlcan, Alaska.—“Stampeders," traveling by automobiles, dog teams and afoot to the Casslar placer dis trict strike, British Columbia, have been stopped on the international boundary line northeast of Wrangell, Alaska, by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and refused permis sion to travel to the scene of opera tion by way of Stikinc, Telegraph Creek and the Dease Lake trail until MParch, according to the word re ceived here. The order to head off the wdnter rush was issued to prevent hardship and privation without proper provi sions at Cassnir. QUITS FAIR BOARD. INTO AMUSEMENT GAME Lincoln, Neb_, Jan. T. N. S.1 — E. H. Danielson, se»»»“tary of the Nebruska state fair, has Informed the board of managers of that exposition that he will not seek re-election to the office he has held for the last eight years, according to an an nouncement here. He resigns as head of the state fair to become vice pres ident of the Midwest Amusement company, general offices of which were established at Sioux City and later moved to Lincoln. DAKOTA COUNTY FARM INVOLVED Supreme Court Asked to Restore Property to Purchaser Lincoln, Neb., Jan. : (Special)—A. L. Whit* dispossessed of a Dakota county lirm that he paid for and has operated for sixteen years, has ap plied to the supreme court for a re hearing. His attorneys say that if the court allows Its decision to stand, great damage and loss will follow to other persons equally as Innocent In the purchase of land. White bought the land of i>artles Who had bought It from others who had purchased It from the buyer at a sale under an execution. Tfie Judgment debt or, was Bernard Mahon, an old-time resident of the county, who died in 1903. After his youngest heir came of age she began suit to get back the farm, claiming that there was a legal defect In the title White has. The suit in which the Judgment was rendered and upon which the land was sold was begun against Mahon, while he lived, and was revived against his administrator after his death. The supreme court says that being real estate the reviver should have been against his heirs. It ordered White to give back the land, the heirs to pay him what the land sold under execution and for his Improve ments. This still leaves him loser to the amount of the difference between the forced sale price and what he had paid and all increment in its value. His attorneys produce a number of arguments and citations to show the court it erred In its decision. BEAUTY EXPERT CAN'T WORK IN THAT TOWN Grand Island, Neb., Jan. i (Spe cial)—Mrs. Lulu Hutton Cinch is barred for the next five years, by a supreme court decree, from minister ing as a beauty specialist to the wo men of Grand Island, unless she does so as an employe of Mrs. Sarah A. Dow. A year or two ago, in consid eration of being sent to Chicago for a post graduate course in hair curling uml cosmetic application, Mrs. Gotch signed a contract to stay a year with Mrs. Dow and never work for anyone else in Grand Island. Later she went to* Cheyenne and when she returned to Grand Island entered the employ of a rival shop. Then Mrs. Dow descended on her with an Injunction. The court says there was a time when a person who signed such a contract signed away their liberty, but that Is not ;rue In these days of rapid transpu- ation. Such con tracts will be e forced when they are reasonable. Til's Is a reasonable contract. Mrs. Gotch wasn’t forced into signing it, she has no ties in the city and Is free to work else where. Neither will the city suffer because It has other beauty parlors and other expert workers. Anyway when a person signs such a contract knowingly anil takes money for it, the courts will see that they ubide by their promises. NEWSPAPER MEN GIVEN PRAISE Columbia University Profes sor Gives Advice to Ne braska Teachers Omaha, Neb., Jan. (Special)—Dr. Kollo G. Reynolds, or Columbia uni versity, addressing of the Nebraska Teachers’ association here paid a high tribute to newspaper men, de claring that they are men of high Ideals, who want to present the news of the day in a truthful interesting way. He said It was the duty of school officials to give “all the news” they have to the press. He said no superintendent or lesser official has a right to set himself up as a censor of what the public shall know about the school system through the press. “Don’t underestimate the newspaper man” he warned. "His Ideals are just as high as yours. Don't hold the entire profession to blame just because you had some personal ex perience with some one newspaper man." NEBRASKA CITY MAN HEADS BAR ASSOCIATION Omaha, N'eb., Jan., . — Paul Jessen oi Nebraska City was elected presi dent of the Nebraska State Bar asso ciation at the business session at the Fontenelle, Webb Rice of Norfolk, James C. Quigley of Valentine, and B. F. But ler of Cambridge were elected vice presidents. Allan Raymond of Omaha was re elected secretary, and Virgil J. Hag gart of Omaha was elected to the executive committee for a term of three years. The report of the committee on Judiciary, Indorsing a congressional bill to increase salaries of federal Judges, was unanimously adopted by th< association. The association also Indorsed the action of the American citizenship Committee in sponsoring a prize es ■ay contest In the VZ teachers’ col leges in the state. ,,,> TRIAL OF DAMAGE SUIT ATTRACTED ATTENTION Randolph, Neb., Jan. vSpeelal) — Probably the most Interesting and widely discussed case which was on the docket of the district court ses sion recently held at Hartington and in which Judge Mark Ryan, the newly elected judge, presided, was the damage suit brought by William Finnegan against Risenius, of Ran dolph. for (30,000 for injuries re ceived in an autoniobiic accident a year ago and which resulted in a verdict of the jury awarding the plaintiff $£00 damages'. WILLPUTOP LOUD PROTEST Bloomfield and Other North east Nebraska Towns Would Keep Trains Bloomfield, Neb., Dec *. (Special) —E. H. Mason, H. R. Van Auken, E. F. WHter, J. C. Robinson and C. T. Heckt have been appointed to repre sent the local Commercial club at the meeting to be held at Wayne, Monday, December 29, at which time i the state railway commission will hear protests against the cancella tion by the M. & O. of trains 50 and 61 on the Bloomfield branch and 40 and 41 on The Crofton branch. L. D. Case, ■ state representative from this district, will represent the farming community. Word comes from Hartington, Crofton, Laurel, Randolph, Wausa and other towns on the two branches that they will have representatives at the meeting. The heaiing will open at 11:15 a. m. and will be held in the Wayne county court house. RATES ON SUGAR ARE UNDER FIRE Lincoln, Neb., Dec. . (Special)-— U. G. Powell, rate expert for the state railway commission, is prepar ing an exhibit to be presented short ly to the Interstate Commerce Com mission backing up a complaint about sugar rates into this territory. For years, he sgys, the overlords of the sugar business based prices in Nebraska on the basis of rail rates from California, whence comes the Hawaiian sugars. Now It is basing them on the rates from New Or leans, which handles Cuban ship ments. Central Nebraska jobbing points are affected by the change. These formerly had the same rate from the west ns Omaha and Lincoln. Now the jobbers in the latter cities can undersell them at points west of their locations. CONDEMNED NEGRO TO ESCAPE GALLOWS Omaha, Neb., Dec. . (Special) — Sol Wesley, convicted murderer from here, is to escape the gallows. Three experts from the state Insane hospi tals have pronounced him definitely a lunatic. He was to have been exe cuted some months ago, but the court stayed his execution until the ex perts could pass on his mental capa city. He has h^en in the hospital for the insane of Lincoln for the last four months under observation. He and Leroy Mauldron, both of them colored, killed W. M. DeerS6H while holding up an Omaha grocery store. Mauldron was also sentenced to the chair, but the supreme court, be cause It was shown Wesley did the shooting, commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. » SUGAR BEET GROWERS HAVE STRONG DEMANDS North Platte, Neb., Dec (Spe cial)—Trouble is threatened in the sugar beet districts over the making of a new contract by growers with the 'Great Western, which operates the only factories in the North Platte valley, four in number. The growers have an association and have ad vised their directors to stand pat on five amendments they demand to the 1924 contract. If the company will not give in, the growers pledge themselves to devote 50 per cent, of their land next year to other crops and the remainder the next year. The five points insisted on are: Increase of guaranty for beets, from $5.50 to $6.50 a ton: that growers share in gross profits and not net profits, ns additional payments: that the company agrees to act, as col lector for association dues; that the growers bo paid on the basis of in dividual tests for sugar contents of beets instead of on district basis, and that the company either eliminate the proviso that it shall not be liable where losses occur through fire, ac cident or labor trouble or else there be ndded a guaranty of the company that growers shall not lose by reason of crop hazards like grasshoppers or hail storms. PASSES BAD CHECKS BUT ELUDES CAPTURE Bloomfield. Neb., Dec. ; \ (Special) —Bloomfield merchants are on the lookout for a young fellow who has been passing forged checks here at various intervals during the last two months. He writes the checks for small amounts, usually under $10.00, and signs the name of some prominent farmer. Among those whose name he has forged are Henry Hefner and Claus Hagge,-both well known farmers. The checks are marked “for labor" and the signature in each instance has been cleverly imitated. Strange to say, none of those who have been victimised seem to be able to give a good description parently about 19 or 20 years old and of medium build. PIERRE NEV.'SPAPER BEING IMPROVED Pierre, 8. D„ Dee. —Expansion of the Pierre Capital-Journal this week to a seven-column, eight-page dally publication, made possible by extensive additions In equipment, completes one more step In the news paper history of the capital city of 8outh Dakota. Lincoln, Neb., Dec. ..—In order to meet I he convenience of the pro testing towns, the state railway com mission has set for hearing at Wayne next Monday the application of the Omaha railroad for permission to cancel two trains dally on the Crof ton branch, which taps the main line at Wakefield, and two on the Bloom - Held branch, which connects at Wayne. The commission has received notice that every one of the towns affected will be represented, and that the commercial clubs will send delegates to protest against curtailed service. < Some New Books Revieived BY ELEANOR HUBBARD GARST Arnold Waterlow—By May Sinclair May Sinclair, wrote The Three Sisters and though I’ve forgotten the Plot completely, the thrill of reading a beautiful thing beautifully done is with me atlll. Her latest book, ARNOLD WATERLOW, perhaps does not have the quality which will haunt in long after years but it is a truly distinguished piece of work. She combines an absorbing situation, with sure psychological analysis of all the characters, and a study of a man's etarch for God. We know from Mr. Waddingron of Wyck that biting satire flows from her pen- Arnold, however, she gives as the portrait of a good man. Sincere, Icyal and keenly intelligent. Life batters him but as he says, "Through ft all there was something in him that endured—... that stood apart and alone, beyond and above this mys tery. It was proud and undefeated; It would go on.” Possibly it is the “new morality” to which James Harvey Robinson so often but so vaguely refers which is developed in this book. The “Ir regular” relation of Effle and Arnold Is made good by the very beauty of their love. Rosalind, as his lawful wife, is hateful, though the attempt is made to make her understandable Tn giving Arnold's mother to u.° Miss Sinclair allows herself a little of the Irony in which she is past master and consequently Mrs. Waterlow’s portrait bites in a bit more deeply than any of the others. Though it is a dangerous thing ever to recommend books to anybody, at ill I will say publicly to the kind soul who tucked Arnold Waterlow in my Christmas stocking, ‘‘From the bottom of my heart, I thank you.” Postscript:—The opening chapters describe Arnold as a little boy. They give that hazy period with as great a veracity as an adult pen can hope to achieve. I believe I’ll take it back that the book is not one of the ones that will haunt in after years. The flavor of the early chapters will linger long and long. A Strenuous Guide What a fascinating old gentleman he must be! And how enraged he surely would be at such a comment! George Moore darting hither and yon In his mental excursions, set forth in CONVERSATIONS IN EBURY STREET, (Boni Liveright) is an ex perience I wouldn't miss. Neverthe less because of the very range of his Interest, the casual way he jumps from education to art, art to the abhorred Thomas Hardy, Hardy to Paris in 1870 and back to Moore Hall in Ireland, makes hard reading. And the chance that if you become indolent and Just skim you will miss some keen, witty obseration precludes any very restful mulling over the pages. His manner of writing Violates all maxim of correct English composi tion. Ope paragraph never clings to one subject; quotation marks are ap parently taboo; the overweening con ceit of the author sticks out all over each page—he makes no attempt to ingratiate himself with the reader. And yet, it’s a book to enjoy as the far ranging thought of a man to whom art is the supreme thing. He cares as vitally for Landor and Bal zac as we earthbound mortals cherish our first born child. He has little respect for the things most of us Jake for granted as great.—Words- . worth, Hardy, most of George Eliot, one of the Bronte sisters, all forms of modern education-—ho hurls into the outer darkness. His opinion of Joseph Conrad he mutes thus,—“And now 1 beg that you will not press me to speak more explicitly of Mr. Con rad’s writings. I should feel that I was lacking In courtesy to a guest.” Some books I feel comparatively safe In saying “I know you will like these.” Others, I know you will de test. This unique book, I can judge only for myself—I found it stimulat ing. A Sincere Portraiture Even the humblest of us can ape Edith Wharton and attempt analysis of what constitutes a good book. I believe my prime requisite would be sincerity. A book written primarily for effect or for “popular consump tion” with no attempt at an honest portrayal of life, Is not worth the faper it’s written on. Because EN TRANCED, by Grace Flandrau, iHarcourt Brace and Co.) has not an ounce of sentimental haze, but is a fearless and clear-eyed piece of work, I enjoyed it. I missed reading Miss Flandrau’s first book, “Being Re spectable.” However, I venture the guess that in a few years time her name as author will not be new, but , rather familiar to all on the search i for good books. There Is In this book, a feeling of nervous tension, a strain at fine points of analysis, that makes It tiring to read, a defect Which more writing will surely over come. The plot Is laid In St. Paul. It Is the story of a man of charm and force with u weak spot at the core. At the end when ne has apparently been stripped of every shred of self re spect—“Already the horlzen of his dream was widening, already he be gan to see In some remote future a world on its knees *o what he was to become," and again he is commencing to build a house of cards. The description of the conversation In Evanston at the h«me of his grand mother an “eternal requiem and path ology” is worth being put in a mono logue by Beatrice Herford. Rita. Dick’s sister I would like to hear of further. She rings true as u real Christmas Tie. From the Louisville Courier-Journal. Wife gave him a surprise, A tie made for his sake. ’Twhh very like the ties That n‘.other used to make. _ _ ' Quick Repairs. F-om Answers (London.) The Inspector—1 find your scales ab solutely correct, Mr. Short—16 ouncee to the pound. The Grocer—I suspected they were. Vni point; to fix ’em when 1 act time. perWon. However, since she to Dick ■ • with the weak spot left out, aitd that weak spot constitutes the story, per haps she is doomed to live only In cidentally in these pages. (Just a normally intelligent, regular kind of a parson is seldom dramatic enough to constitute good copy.) One final word must bo said for Undo Twing. He’s real, he’s dramatic. How about him for your next book, Miss Fian drat:? Elf, Angel, Philosopher By C. K. P. How many words show her? They can only outline, suggest. This Martha Dickinson Blanchl has done in her LIFE AND LETTERS OB' EMILY DICKINSON. Surely ws have here the most entrancing per sonality in American literature. Bom in Amherst in 1830, Emily Dickinson never left her home ex cept for her short stay at the South Hadley Female seminary, a visit to Washington and Philadelphia and a few trips to Boston. As she grew older, she gradually withdrew from the world. This desire for solitude, Mrs. Bianchl attributes to an impos sible love. From the time of her father’s death, she never left the house ‘‘except to flit about the porch at dusk in her white dress." In spite of this way of life she was np misanthrope, but the tonderest of friends, gay, daring, unique. “Half angel, half demon,” her friend, Sam uel Bowles, called her. Her joy in the flowers, iho birds, the change of seasons, is exquisite. “Spring,’’ she says, “is a happiness so beautiful, so unexpected, that I don’t know what to do wi.th my heart.” And again, “To live is so startling, it leaves but little room for other occupations.” As with Keats, her “angel nerves’’ were ill adapted for any higher vibrations than the old house afforded with itt safe routine. Emily’s creedless religion is her own. Even in this most broad minded day, she startles one with her jocular familiarity with Biblical characters. “As the Bible boyishly says,” she remarks. And further, “Paul took the marine walk at great risk.” And what a darling she was with children! To a small nephew she writes, “Grandma characteristically hopes Neddy will be a good boy. Obtuse ambition of Grandma’s!” With a box of candy smuggled through the hedge. "Omit to return box. Omit to know you received box. Brooks of Sheffield.” What a blessing it is that Emily Dickinson’s family did not carry out her wishes in regard to her own work.' She left word that not only her friends’ letters but her manu script poems, neatly packed in her old mahogany bureau were to be burned. The letters were destroyed, but the poems were rescued, and are now appearing in a single volume gathered together by Mrs. Bianchi and published by Little Brown and company. Little Reviews by Our Readers I---1 Can you sum up a book in one hundred words? Try it on the book you are just through reading and send in your review to the LITTLE REVIEW department. The Book and Gift Shop of Sioux City will give a prize, (the winner’s choice) of any two dollar book in their shop to the one writing the cleverest review. This, we are delighted to announce, will be a weekly feature of our Saturday Book Column so if your review dosen’t get in time for one week watch for it the next. Did you know that we had the state champion of ‘‘Little Review” artists right with us here in Sioux City? Byron Sifford of Sioux City has just won the yearly prize offered by the Des Moines Reg ister for the best review submitted in the whole year to their weekly "Tab loid Review Department.” His win ing review iu as follows: "The New Spoon River’’ by Edgar Lee Masters. With my first Spoon River I reached success. And ever after, As I tried to fan the flame That In me which they called genius O found but sodden dullness, And then I turned again to my first triumph But Spoon River had changed And grown beyond the compass of my pen And I waa done-’’ Though we all may not write with the skillful art of the veteran re viewer. Mr. Sifford, 1 am quoting him Just to show you how it can be done. Now come one, come all, and send in your own. Don't forget that there is a weekly prize of an entrancing new book to the winner. Employment in Great Britain showed a further slight decline during Octo ber. Among the 11,508,000 workers in sured against unemployment under the Unemployment Insurance Acts in Great Britain and northern Ireland, according to a statement by the Ministry of La bor, the percentage unemployed on October 27, 1924, was 11.1 compared with 10.8 on September 22. 1924, and 11.7 in October, 1923. The total number of per sons registered at employment ex changes in Great Britain and northern Ireland as unemployed on October 27, 1924, was approximately 1,247.000, of whom 943,000 were men, 235 000 were women, and the remainder boys and girls. The Clever Idiot. From "The Triumph of Gallio, by W. L. George.” "Bhe was such an infernal fool, the sort of fool who can find her way In the time-table, understand the in come tax, know the date of the bat tle of Waterloo, in other words a thoroughly well-informed woman whom people call clever, and who's nothing but a drivelling idiot." Man’s Frivolities. From the Fort Scott Trlhune. One to five years, dolls. Six to fifteen, marbles. Sixteen to twenty, tennis. Twenty-one to thirty, baseball. Thirty-one to forty, bowling. Forty-one to the cemetery, golf.