Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1915)
PATROLTHE BORDER t ALL OF MEXICAN FRONTIER UNDER GUARD. 10 r WHEAT ORDERS CANCELLED England Cancels Contracts for '2,000,- 000' Bushels of Grain Teamsters' Strike Bsglns WJth v." fc t . R,ot , WeMern Nwirputer Union Kewa Benrtce. UrownBvlllo, Tox. United Statfa cavnlry und infantrymen, TcxoJ trur' era und civilians acting ns peace of ficers, numbering in all abolit 1,600 persons, are patrolling the interna tional border between Laredo and Urownsvllle, Tex., aB u precaution against rcpctttlonof UioTnldn by Mox--dean bandlU which havo created a reign of terror' In T6xns border coun ties during the past-week, v . Ouly ono baud of raiders 1b known etlll to bo intact. It is bcllovcd to numbor in tbo neighborhood of thirty, and posses oro.HearcUlngho uatry fifty, miles north 'tin UroVnnYllln'inSan effort to locato and arrest or disband the marauder.; t'H'jJ'BTVu l lg Strike; VVfrte St. Louis. A running light between 600 strikers and svmimthlr.orH mi onif aido and threo non-unlqi(3UirJj scoro of policemen on tho other. 'which terminated hi a riot' In front of ithe St. Louis Transfer company's .utables, was tho initial act of violence In tao strike of 1,500 transfer drivers and chauffeurs which, began hero Frl ,day. Tho light 'began' at a'postofflce yBUb-Btatlon, whore twonty pickets were waning ror three drivers who had jbeon hauling mali 'during ' tho 'day. There was only ono policeman at tho fetation, but ho held off tbo strikers wllo tholastUoaavtWiaHowiUK)kemg.10hOcitiKIt'xkBbhVl6VUlKPsocalIod taken from ihn wnrnnn. iWWi ? I CANCELS ORDERS FOR WHEAT... England Sudlwtfrtarffcsnt G raWwcfeleTavflro Chicago. Aftor tbo closer totritttsv board of trade Thursday representa tives of tho allies cancelling grain con tracts aggregating 2,000,000 bushels of v,haMo-4oiUabr-lilpmout..-JXha. causo or tuo. cancellation. Remains a J u cure i3 rj- niacoy, president or ;no ATraour Grain company, who in said to have cancelled 6 largo numbor of wheat contracts, declared! . "I am' unable to understand what Bas happened . abroad. . it , ciust, havo been, aomethlng Important r.r" the. would jiot havo .caprollo'l purchases that now show profits and glvo them away. Possibly it is that the Darda nelles are to be opened." Hastings' Joint Political Picnic. Hastings, Nb,tA Joint' aolltioal pic blc, an innovation, at which an many peoplo aro expected as at tho demo cratic barbrctio last fall, woh launched wl'h tho Indorsement of the repub lican and democratic county chairmen, and threo locnl candidates for utato nd congressional ofllcoa. A non-par-tlsaa committee will choose speakers, including various political candidates. Tho big chautauqua pavllllon is to be utilized. Curtallng Saloon Hours. Cairo. Early closing or drinking re ports is the rule in Egypt, and follows tho prohibition of the salo of absinthe. In Cairo, Alexandria, tho Canal, Suez and elsewhere within a radius of five tnlles of any military camp, the sale of alcoliollo liquors of nny sort is stopped at 10 o'clock at ulght nnd is not allowed to begin until Uie follow ing morning. Ten o'clock closing Is also compulsory In those districts for all cafes, restaurants aud theaters. Death Overtakes Centenarian. Sioux City, In. Stansbury Wright, 115 years old, Is dead In a local hos pital hero. Tho centenarian becanio 111 while on n train en route from his hoino In Sherley, Ark., to Itapld City, S. D where ho was going to visit his sons. 208,000 Prisoners Work. London. Ofllelal reports forwarded from Tetrograd by Hcuter's news, agency show that recently upwards of 208,000 prisoners weiq being employed liy various Russian ministries on rail roads, in agriculture and In other ways. I To Keep Check on Aliens. u London. Tho British foreign office lhuB notified the American embassy In 'London that American residents in tho United Kingdom as well as nil aliens will be subject to registration undor the British notional registration act. New arrivals henceforth will bo al lowed twenty-eight days In which to report themselves. This does not mean that Atuerlcaus can bo pressed into tbo national sorvice in any capacity, but bespeaks a government deulro to o check all persous In the United King coin. They Have to Hurry. Dunkirk, France. Tho bombard ment of Dunkirk by tho giant Gorman tun operating from" Flanders 'tfcriiAto' the carrying on of tho business of, Uio city only four nnd'a'blj m'lnuJpsJujv t overy ilvo. Thoro Is only ono gun being used in this bombardment, and ,tho shells como regularly every five' mtont0JC21inqiBoplO71ttatLi!li24 advantage of the ratorvals between explosions to transact business, allow tag themselves about half a minute to sake for their cellars. V "T f f WUV rCtb-hd i M$R M A LinLETflAGEDY i ,- ,- . i.al (.Copyright) SUPPUES'flElNft CHECKED UP RATING 'FQR''fANNB)?ATVJN TO PjWSSTOSW Slf fl3p ffrrfnDf B ,n'ormal,on of American Manufacturers l' Kiiie'd'ln Hoidtip' orrtar. vest Hands.' ' ' ;i .M- iWeqUrn ,Nfwpapex. Unl9n Newsservice. San Antonio, Tex. Major General Frederick FunBtan. In rrmimnnil nf 7 1 -- - United 'States troops oh' 'tho'1 border, has sent a report1 tdWashlngton, In livil fhnt Biutrnt nrffimlvflpa nru plan of.Saii DJego. wljlch calls for tho uValhw-ovtiry' Xihwean male over tho a-f sixteen in tho states boderlna tbtt-Jilo Uranihi.,nuil In Maw.. Mux , Cdril4S Arlz&Wfaud California. ThlBwoW b foTlowe'fr bythHfolzuro 0tUhO'ltatwsikiid tho ostabllshment or a-ropublld fiuraMexlcamu nfgrqcu, Japaneso and Chinese. Tho portion of Moxlco whlok he supporters of tho U-UJHo-pltt-WukI vt8U.ra , to. Max. ico would bo, aboiU. 144,000 aquaref miwisidd. m-oiHfeobi.ltip,.8ti 3 eludes 165.183 inhabitants. Of this number "inofotthah'i)!) fper certt Tare Mexicans', lnbstly'of tho poorer. oUtRbcu: " " Rifled In' Hold-up. ' ' ' tHoldrcge, M Neb. Vincent '" IfflriMe-' mayor of New York 'city wan",kllled,t and" Fred . Collum of Kansas City! and E. It ."Lee Of Lincoln were wound ed in a box ear. hold-up on Burlington freight No. 70 between this city and Funk Wednesday night. , Tho me;i,woro haryest hands who hadben working around McCook'aiid other towns In tho' wester part" of the state Nino men Vo"ro in tho car when tho twQ hold-up men entered nt Holdrege. When a short distance out of town they demanded their savings of tho workmen. Wlnkleraoyer offered eomo resistance and wan shot four times with an automatic pistol. Col lum and Leo wore bit by stray Rbots, but neither is seriously wounded. CHECKING UP ITS SUPPLIES. Uncle Sam Wants to Know Where and What He Can Buy in, Case of Emergency. t Washington. American manufac turers of war supplies hae been asked by tho war dop.utmont for Information concornlng their facilities, with par ticular roferenqu to what service tho United States can expect from them in enso of an emergency. With virtually every private plant in tho country taxed to Its utmost capacity filling enormous orders from tho European belligerent armies, olll clals want to know whether expan sion of facilities has kept source of supply to supplement tho output of IttJ arsenals and armories. Even In ordinary times the govern ment factories produce only a part of the urms and ammunition for tho army, flioasures to strengthen the national defense during tho coining session of congress are expected to re sult in vnstly Inct eased demands for supplies usldo from any emergency that may arise. Etna Again on Rampage. Naples. Vesuvius, Mount Etna nnd Strotnboll, threo of tho world's great est volcanoes, havo suddenly become active and nro belching forth great clouds of steam nnd smoke. Streams of lava nro pouring down the eastern slopo ot Mount Etna from two now craters, threatening the destruction of Sicilian villages. The wholo popula tion of Naples and of Messina nnd other Sicilian cities Is in a state of terror. Severe earthquake shocks hnvo been felt at Tarantc and Brlu- dlsl in southern Italy. Kurds Massacre Armenians. Tlflls, Trans-Caucasia, The Ainerl qan bishop has received infcrmntlor that 00,000 Armenian f efugeos Jiavo nV rived at Igdier, tho principal outlet of the vlllnyot of Van. It Is expected that fully 100.000 will bo driven from Van nlono nnd another oxodua, of'clirls-' tlans from Persia Is feared. "Kurd's ar6-rporUd-ta..liaT0nia33acred.eu. Ihousand Armenians In the vflluyet or Bltlls, throwing tho bodies of tho vic tims into tho Tigris and Euphrates fivers. bLVi ,., ff kji a, T 1 wty fcrf Tpffpt aafliar T " Sljyfct fLfH t ' "" Tfca H ' ksBVBBBBBBBK. ' V f t MJff1 m BBBSBbBT RED 0.LOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF. IN EVERYDAY rlE eft sm mmrt .J , ) M -Li.vrLl i feU HUGE BATTLESHIPS -READY tFOR Getting England's Former Trade from Germany, Austria, France and Belgium Indictments In Eastland Case. Wsitern Newspaper Union Naw Service. Washington. Aftor a brief period of uncertainty and wire conferences betwocu navy ofllcials and President Wilson regarding the sending of war ships to Vera Cruz, Secretary Daniels hns announced that threo battleships of tho fourth division of tho Atlantic fleet hntf been ordorcd to "southern waters for any duty that may bo re quired." Tho threo ships nro the Lou islana und New Hampshire, which salldd from Newport, It. I., Wcdnchday nlght, and tho Connecticut, now in Haitien waters. Whether thoy will be directed by wlrcloss to procead to Vera Cruz or will bo, kept In readiness for action somewhere ,1a. the South At lantic or In tho Gulf ot Mexico, will. .depend upon developments of tho next few days. Indictments In Eastland Case. , Chicago. In the' criminal court here, rtq a result of tho investigation Into tho sinking of the .Eastland, indict ments charging manslaughter mid Criminal negligence were returned Against Georgo T. Arnold, president of tho 'company? William II. Hull, vice president nnd general manager; W. O. Stoelo, secretary-treasurer; Ray W. Davis, assistant secretary-treasurer; ffarry Pedcrsen, captnln ot tho East land; Joseph M. Erlckson, engineer. Bonds were il.xed nt $20,000 each for tho company officials aud $10,000 tor Pedersen aud Erlckson. Tho two last named aro charged with criminal carelessness and tho officials with manslaughter. Shippers Win In Rate Inquiry. Washington. Sweeping freight rnto Increases sought by carriers of west ern territory on the ground of general ly.poor financial condition ,of , tho llncs and decreased earnings havo been re fused by the interstate commerce corn mission, and advanced rates approved representing a comparatively small portion of tho amount sought. The commission voted flvo lo two, Commis sioners Daniels and Uarlari holdfog that additional Increases had been jus tilled by the carriers. An Incomplete summary of the commission's nctlon shows thnt rates estimated to produce $r.,97 1,800 wero rejected, while ap proved increases will add $1,632,8S" to tho carrlorV revenue. AMERICA DOING VERY WELL. Has Grabbed England's Business Lost to Austria, Germany, France and Belgium. London. Attention Is called by tht Post to tho fact thaC the report of tho board of trade for tho half year end ing June 30 shows that the decrease in the value of imports to Great Brit ain from Germany, Austria. France and Belgium is almost exactly coun terbalanced by tho Incroaso In lm potts from tho United States. Lincoln to Furnish Munitions. Lincoln, Nob. Soventy-flvc centl meter shells are likely to bo made und sent ouL-of this city to the nlllos with In a short timo. A plea to tho Lin coln Commercial club from big east ern holders of munitions contracts hns not been made in vain, for onj Lincoln firm has written that It will help out It satisfactory arrnngeniouts can be made. Pending the comple tion of tho alfalr the name 1 being withhold by tho commercial ub au thorltles. J' Big Shipment of Gold jpn Way. New York. Tho first.- direct ship meut ot gold in large", quantity from England to this cohrtry; bliico tho war lidgan (s op Jits, way by train t6 New Y6rk-:frnm-Hallf(v.I N. Si The value of tho shipment 1 as not boon revealed, b,ijt It Is sauUto run -well up Into tho millions. It.'s rifmored thnt the amount Is' $AjO,OtnfiOOO but this estl- jmato waa.aa ,lto. bo.exccsslye. ltjvaa stated llTaT immiaTTOrTanon-oT-gow would bo j'jposlted in tho subtrcasury here to thi account ot financial agouti of tho British government mmmmmmmmm i m ii tauiT.iiil,!. I K...I ,i Hi, r ted states makes reply' jo .aUstWhungary. DAIRY 'PRODUCTS RATES UP Nebraska Is Affected by Co'mtnerct J Commission Decision Plenty '4. J k rof Jvinterlal for"'Voun I teer Army. v,r "- - - r i- V . Western .Newspapor OnloiNews rVlce. f .,-WaBhlngtort.- The suite department' has mado -public 'the .robly ot. tho tirtltcdj States eject'infc vloWa set' forth by tho Austro-llungarlan, rovont note declaring that transportation of war munitions from the United Statos ,U Austria's unemjes was emductcd oil such a scnlo as to tie "not In conso nneo with tho definition "of 'neutral- , i f 111 Though friendly in tone the note flatly denies - the Austro-Hungarian contentions nnd notes that that Country and, Gffnjany ftjrnlihpd, m,unj tlons of war to Great Britain during tho Dbcr.vaf, .when. England's cne-mlot-cWidotninoht Much supplies It Insisted that the American gov ernment is pursuing a strictly noutrnl. courso and adhering to n principle upon which It would depend for mil nltlons In tho markets of tho world in caso It should bo "attacked by for clgn powers, Attention Is directed to tho fact that AiiBtrlft-Hungnry' and Gorman y beforo'tho war produced a great sur plus of war munitions nnd sold them throughout the world. "espeelAlly to belligerents," and that "never during that period did either of th'em suggest or apply tho principle now advocated by tho Imperial and royal govern ment." Preparedness for War. Plnttaburg, N. Y. Tho United States has plenty of material for a volunteer army of one nnd a quarter million menr nnd nil thnt is now needed are plans for utilizing It, Mujor General Wood declared hero In a. statement .as to tho preparedness of, the nation' for wnr. The chief need, he said, was of ficers, and ho advocated training stu dents In their junior and Benlor years along tho same lines as are now bo Ing used nt tho military enmp of in struction hero. DAIRY PRODUCTS RATE IS UP. Commerce Commission Approves Ne braska Affected. Washington. Tho Interstate com merce commission upheld tho nctlon of various western railroads In cancel ling rules providing for tho readjust ment of aggregate chnrges of ship ments of dairy products concentrated in transit In western territory, which means an advance estimated from four teen to thirty-five per cent over the present charges on traffic from Ne braska. Kansas, Oklahoma and Mis souri. Tho commission disapproved the railroad's cancellation of rules as to storage of these products In transit, Want "Thrift Day" Designated. Snn Frnnelsco, Cal. Designation ot tho Sunday preceding Labor day each year as "Thrift day" was asked of President Wilson and governors of Btatos In resolutions pnsscd at tho sec ond day's session of tho first interna tional congress for thrift nt tho Panama-Pacific exposition. Labor organi zations, It wa said, havo promised tc suppoit this movement. Italy Short on Grain. Rorse. Tho lntest ofllelal reports regarding the harvest show that Italy needs 12.000.000 quintals more of grain for her consumption until next year. A quintal Is approximately 220 pounds. Most of this grain, It Is undorstood, will bo purchased In Amerlcn. Three Weeks Without Food. Stanton. Neb. Threo weeks ago n large steer belonging to Louis Smith liorgor wnB lost in his pasture and was found In a deep gulloy where It had been over since without feed and only tho water Unit ran down tho gulloy when It rained. It was taken out and it Is thought It will live. Washington New uprisings by the Dobo nnd JCamor factions havo broken out nt Capo Ilnltlen nnd have forced Itenr Admiral Cnpertort to establish military rule In tho city. Obligation of Every Mexican. Laredo, Tox. A Carranza newspa per ot this city prints a fiery editorial which Ib regarded among the suscept lblo element of Mexicans hero bb "a call t,o arms." Translations of tho edi torial havo beep forwardad to Wash .lngton and to Major General Funston. The editorial snvf In part: "If you aro Mexicans, rend article 71 of tho constitutes, which says: 'It is the obligation of every Mexican to defend the Independence, tho honor and tho rights nnd interests of the fatherland." St. Louis Strike Settled. St. Louis, Mo. Tho strike of tho 1. BOO teamsters and elmuffours which started Friday night has been Bottled. Tho strikers wero granted nn In crease of 50 cents weekly, a reduction of ono liour in tho day's work and bet ter working conditions. Tho average Increases, according to the team own ers, will aggregato $60,000 a year, whereas the original demands of tho men called for Increases totalling $160,000. Tho settlement was brought about by Father Timothy Dempsey, a Catholic priest. N .rtiv-., EXPLAINS IIS STAND i n V r H5r FROM ALL OVEBKNEBRASKA --.. ""& ilk J- ? ... . . : '. Tlie PadJock. hotel .at Bcatrlco will bo reopened. , ' - The' new $75,000 -Carnegie library at College View Is ncarln completion. " York county pioneers will hold their annual Bfcnic nt York August 2&. rA,Jtlte,'flyhg contest will be one of the attractions at the! Seward county fair. ' i Cheney has voted $5,000 for tho con atructlon ot a new school building at that place. Jacob Mack, a. farmer living near "Falls City, was trampled by a cow and painfully. Injured.. ' , .A '8jelng Lincoln" pamphlet is the latest boosting "proposition ot, the Lin coln. Commercial eluh. i V-n' r' Tho ,Wahoo Qnjitnjuqiia: pivo'n en." tlrely b,y homo talent, ,waB,.R'BuccesY ij-om eyery standpoint. , 'Pays ajy is discusslpg tho question of tho establishing of a skirt and gar . ment factory at that "placed Frank JonaB of Lincoln was Instant ly killed whon a Northwestern train struck him at a street crossing. s Glen Wells, nt gradtiate'of Fnirbnry high Bchool, has been elected super intendent of the Strang school. ''Kor Ramsey, 23-yearBold,who was hit by a train on?t,he Missouri Pacific 'uttyfcrdoh, dled.from 'his injuries. Possibilities of finding oil In pnyinc quaititles In Cass county will be ex perliented upon by local capitalists. Baslness men at Scotts Bluff se cufjsd $12,000 of the $15,000 aece33arj. toVeetahtlsh :i rwnmnrv nf ihJlCthJn' Iarly fifty jitney driversat-CJmnlle' have combined to fight an -abjection- ".u UIV.IUUUV.D pnBBuu uy ine cilj council. The now' $15,000 Presbyterian church at Falrbury was'dedlciitc'd Sunday. It Is a han'dsome brick! and "modern In every respect. c 4 Harry Walters,, living .near Ilislng City, had 280 aorea of wheat thnt yielded , ,7,000 ushels, or an average', yield of 25 bushels to the acre. , , Hundreds of acres' of, nalled-out wheat of Adnms county ndve dovelop ed into splendid hay 'aiid pasture fields as itho Tesult of heaVy rains. It is possible that state fair visitors' Willi havo a chance to hear Billy Sun- a an and I effprUf oeion footrtq-aecuroi a-dat6 drtrtrfgthe fcfck.' J hlkkjfor llss Alberta Mutz, daughter nt Al- Mutz, of Auburn, is dead4 from 3d poisoning, brought on by pieklhg atfi,'rt9!W'Hfdtelth a b3 ,ln A sevcTTS'nftHflform passed through 'tha, Central Dart of Sherman rmmtv. north and west of I,oup City, "and (Utfj a-vi? ho state auditor's ofllce hns rec- ed $25,000 cirfAhalldl'wl li - tf.il '. Z.M ' by Benson," a.juiliirD' otApmhhn, h has not yfC city. M' M ,toie small son Stfrwlugh Wirlers, a farmer living near Pllger, wtte burned to'tliatfHIk a aaV)lderel8teN piaysMrJw - , .y isi'3e Secretary Whltten of tho SLlncoln Commercial club, has established braska state fair visitor. AllHhS aVaH- J) able rooms in th citV'ni'Jt 1fafnV -f . Governor Morehead ,and Auditor Smith, with Pthe1hrAfltobf6blfes?. loat their way In trying to reach Reward fc-iy the big barbecue Tuesday, arul came near mUslngj out.on the "oats.1 DeLloyd Thompson, the tumble bug of ht air, has written Secrotary Vf. n. Mellor that ho will keep his con tract with the Nebraska state1 fair management and will perform his aer ial tricks, rain or shine. ' ' Tho cffortB of .TohnsMcCulIough ol Lincoln, to save the life of his wife by yielding up almost a half a gallon ot his own blod, for her enfeebled body proved unavailing, as she d,led of blood poisoning In a local hospital, F. W. Chase and Mrs. Frank Chaso of Pawneo City and Mrs. James War den of Lincoln were seriously injured when an nutomobtlo in which they wero riding crashed through tho rail ing of a bridge near Swcdeburg. Hastings jitneys are now a paying proposition after threo months' trial, according to Jumen Shcehy, who bays the business hns doubled during tho past sixty days. A Stradlvarlin violin valued at $1,000, stolen from tho homo of Mrs. Pearl Stockn.-n at Omaha, was found in a pawn shop, the manager of which had advanced $5 on tho instrument. x Billy McFarland, an Otoo county farmer, has mado a remarkable record fattening a hog with alfalfa feed. In sixty days he developed a gain of ono hundred pounds in the animal's weight. v There are 05,221 farmers In tho state who work their own land against ;S5, 747 who are tenants. Special service will bo glvon by ail tho railroads ontering Lincoln during tho stato fair week, September C to 11. The schedule will differ little from last year with extra tralu sorv ico on the biggest days of tho fair week. Louis DIsbrow, Barney Oldfleld nnd John Ilalmey, In addition to half a dozen lesser racing lights, havo been secured tor tho state fair nuto races to bo stagsd during tbo week of the gigantic Nebraska state exhibition. Charles Nelson of Omaha was se verely burned when some ono threw oil of mustard over his head and shoul ders as he was entering a store at that place. Gage county farmers caught fish In the roadways and tho pools alongside lnftor tide water from the Bluo had ireceded .usltjg rakqs am). pitchforks t drag thqm out . , J.J ' ' Mrs,.DanirlSulUvaBof Unco'tUtus skilled "nnd Mrs. M H.'Ounn oLDerfr Iton was seriously Injured v when1 fin aWic?iT-;ra turned turtle three miles east if Den ton Thwedar evening, nbn absstifced bvf L.J .. iS.' c:l!?P, tifiht nifen :j ct?W3ft'" LAWS REGARDING ' " J -&) ; ! WILD FOWL f J .0 . - 1 i WARNIrJQ THAT" ITS REGULATIONS ' ARE TO BE STRICTLY il ' ENFORCED NEWS OF THE STATE HOUSE Items 'of. General Interest Gathered rPom Reliable 'Sources at - v ',jT!v anw, Mum.; i 'tJW Wfitcrn Newspaper Union News Service WiiirthQ approach of theopen Rea son for shooting wild fowl, the United i States, ..Department of Agrlculturo in warning sportsmen that tho Fedoral regulations as amended October 1, 1914, will be strictly enforced. Some misunderstanding hns arisen from the fact that the various Btato laws ,do,M not always conform to tho federal regulations. This is regarded asiUh- fortunatebut la.sucb. cases the. Dcparj- x ment must insist upon the observance" of the Federnl regulations. y" jrj i nu ueparimeni win consider any 'toconMundatlons tsubr uiiin unr , Mimnnimirni m L.r. .,..', j. t s- nuns, uiu win iioio no UiMnfWaWfctholDeparJjifcttVw corrfj formahi.rgulaUoiiit-to,thia.wlshes of mm o'xn epees stmaster to i SrtJley,efl the News. The $ a democratic paper ana nas been under the successful management give wild fowl tho necessary protec tion, o ,-er 7Htdera1'reMilaions divide the United Stofef ipta two Mines. Zone No. 1, the breeding ozne, includes tho states ot I Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, ..Nebraska, Idwa? llllndfslndllmhPOftib Pennsyl vania, and New Jersey, apid nil states north' of them.t,r2dne No. itlm winter lng'Jzono. Includes all states-, south of those named1 ' ' ' 1 The regulations prqBcrlbeseasons as follows: , "Watiiffowl Scpt.l 1. Pec. f 16. nxcep tlc.n1: MufiiJclmsettK, Itliodo Island. New York. Connecticut, ivnimyrv.inla. Oregon. WKlilnrton. Iduho. Oct. 1. Jan. 1G. New Jerp y. .Nov. 1, Feb. '1. 1lnnnota. North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Sept. f. Vc. ). IUIIb. Coof.4. Galllnulea Sopt. li Dc. 1. Exceptions: MjH-ucluixett.s, New Hnrop slilrt. lllioJe Ichiml, Aue. ir, Ilc. 1. Con npctlput; Mlrhlcan, New York, liottit Ialnnd, Snt. 10. Hoc 1. Mlnn'ota, North Iitikotn, fioutli Dakota. Wisconsin. Sept. 7. Dc 1. OrcKon, Wnslilnuton, Oct. 1, Jnn in. Voodcock Octk 1. Drr. 1. HxcfpUons: romii-etlcut. Msssachiihettti, New Jerssy, Oct. 10. Dor. 1. Ithodft Inland. Nov. J, Dec 1 Pennsylvania, I.oni; Islanfl, Oct. Jo. uec, i. , Shoro Hlrd Ulnck nrasted and Gol den Plover, Jorksritpe. Yellowles:. ft. 1. Vcc IS KxcrpttmiH Maine. M?usa rliuoctts. New tlanipshlro, Hliorte fsl.uid, Lonr IflAtul. Auk. 15, Dpc 1, New Yorlt (except I.ons Ishtml), Bept IB, Doc. 1. Minnesota, North Dakota, Eolith D,diotji. Wiscori'jln. Pfpt. 7, Dpc. 1. OreKon.pVash Incton. Oct 1. Pec 16. InscftlvotouM lilnls protected Indellnlte ly flaiid-tallfil plurons, rrann, swane, curlew, smaller shoie bird., and wood tlnrkH protected until Peptembtir 1, 1S1J. IUIIh In Vermont find woodcock In I1M nols also protected tin til 1918. Shootltip prohlliltod betweimi sunset nnd tmnrlsa; or nt any time on soctlonH of upper Mlsslsilppl nnd MUouri rivers after January 1, 1915. Governor Morehead has appointed fifty-five Nebraska citizens as dele gates to tho international irrigation congress to bo hold nt Stockton', Calif., September 13 and 14. I , ; i i The department k of experimental agronomy of tho university bollevon it would bo a good practice for those farmers who have last year's" seed corn to keep it for seed as an emer gency In case their seed should not ripen satisfactorily this fall. Corn planted at the university farm on May 10 this year did not tassel before Au gust C, whereas corn planted nt tho Emo date last year was In full tas sel by July 16. With corn three weoks late now, it is likely to ripen fully threo weoks later, even with very fa vorablo weather conditions. Reduced Ratos for Cement Southeastern Nebraska territory bounded on the west and north by a line running through Deatrlce, Lincoln, Fremont nnd Wain will bo opened ui ns market field for the new cement in dustry nt Superior on more favorablp termJhan heretforo,,jinrdor the torms , of an drdhr maflVby,thq sUtef railway 0omtntBslQnrcduclng "the rates which haypf Veeaju effect for the past yerfr or moro. ). ine oraer applies a blanket m Superior to all points In the territory referred to. where biomaats travel nltted in goodi 0.I"V T"" puoiic nenringBi thereon,,.nqr will It nmend the regula- tsMmw A 7VBeTeB9eHbZHP&. ! I...t M L1 H J Juh beee4 iddmRccI dS barataseupn(.'nt)Pr Mr. C$wnh fovinany yearly ilh "Wi'fhho maloWtv atAWtsm-a r ..SlV iJ? Britln I.JA.IkVt k 41 I.J '' Kim uun uM'b lmv.Ukavium visbs7 ..n'" T 4 v.