The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, July 20, 1916, Image 6
w r RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF E tM ll Ot y WILL 60f BORDER OflQANIZINQ TROOPS OF CAVALRY FOR SERVICE IN THE SOUTH. Items of General Interest Gathered From Reliable Sources Around the State House. yvltrn Newsnnper Union News Service. That ntteniptn arc now bring mnde to orKunlze n troop of Nebraska cav airy for bordor service Ih the nsser tlon of n membor of Adjutnnt General Jlall'fl staff, who was left behind when ths 'government refused to muHtcr In members of thu adjutant general's do partmsnt. General Hull, he says, Is determined to go to tho bordor. Twen ty Lincoln men have already promised to Join In caso the troop Is organised. Ninety uro needed. Staff officers left behind will check up tho accounts at each company's homo station, aftor which It Ib said that thoy will resign and got to tho Nebraska troops on the border In some manner. General Hall preaum ably will be made captain of tho troop, If organised, as ho was doprlved of his office as captain of company H of the Fifth roulment by tho ordcrB of the war department. Endeavors will bo mnde, according to tho staff mem ber, to recruit for the cavalry when tho officers visit the various towns to close up company affairs. Mo said that little trouble In getting tho men was expected. Temporary structures at the fair grounds erected for tho convenience of the guardsmen during their lato encampment are being dismantled, and soon ovory vestige of their pres ence will have disappeared, with the exception of the grass-worn company Btreets. Sheep havo already been turned back Into the grounds. Biggest Camp on the Border. Tho Fourth Nebraska under Colo sol George Eberly and Lieutenant Colonel William Baehr, detrained at Lluno Grande, Tex., In a terrlflo rainstorm and Immediately set about pitching camp. Maay delays were encountered along the last ono hundred miles of tho journoy. Mercedes had boen se lected for tho concentration camp, but a suitable tract large enough to encamp all tho soldiers expected could not be obtained and tho camp was moved three miles west. It Is expected that this will be ono of tho biggest concentration camps along the border. Find Mlsbranded Patent Medicine. State Food Commissioner C. E. Her man reports that his Inspectors found 1,402 packages of patent medicines In stores between June IB and July 1 that were mlsbrandod because they bora on the label the word "cure" and other false claims. The packages were ordered off sale, which means an In voice is taken and tho druggist ordered not to sell tho packages unless he supplies new labels or returns the foods to the factory or destroys them. This Is done to prevent loss to the dealor who Is supposed to have unin tentionally violated tho law. Tho number of automobiles regis tered In Nebraska Jumped from 59,060 In ono year to 84.400. The latter num ber was registered one day last week, nt tho offlco of Secretary of State Pool. He has run out of number plates but has placed orders for a total of 95,000 with manufacturers. During a period of eighteen months, ending July 7, tho ofllco fees received by sec retary of stato amounted to $219, 892.27, not including a fee of 35 cents for each automobile registration. The expenso of his offlco during that period was $15,591.50. Lieutenant George Hughley of Om aha has been in charge of the hospital work at Camp Llano Grande until the arrival of the field hospital with the Fifth regiment. Whllo It lias rained almost continually since the Nebraska boys reached camp, the men are suffer ing no discomfort. Almost 2,000,000 rounds of ammuni tion have arrived at Mercedes, Tex., for tho two Nebraska regiments. Tho Nebraska Patriotic league hns started funds for purchasing regimen tul standards for tho Fourth nnd tho Fifth Nebrnska regiments, now south for border duty. Organization of the proposed Sixth regiment of troops for Nobraskn has not been abandoned according to John G. Mahcr, but Is still going on. Mr. Maher states that an olectlon has Just been held, resulting In tho choice of these officers: Colonel, John O. Mahcr, Lincoln; Uoutenant colonel, Mr. Steele, Omaha; majors, Allen G. Fisher of Chadron, L. 11. Warnor of Goneva nnd probably L. W. Colby of Beatrice. Tho war department has not ns yet authorized the formation of this regi ment. Tho special muster blank which would permit Captain George A. Beecher of Hustings to go with tho Fifth regiment ns chaplain arrived "O. K." nnd ho was mustered In In time to get with tho regimental stnff in tho first section. It was found that under tho new federalized act, a chaplain Is unasslgued, when ho Is first mustered In with the roglmental stuff, and that it is nccessury for him to sign a special muster blank and tako a separate oath before ho can be considered attached to any one regiment. 'FIFTH REGIMENT DETRAINS. First Detachment on Hand to Welcome Newcomers. Tho Fifth regiment, under Colonel Herbert Paul, arrived nt Camp Llnno Grande, near Mercedes, Tex., Friday morning and Immediately began to detrain. The entire Fourth rcKlment, Including Colonel Ebcrly and stuff and the regimental band, whs on hand to welcome tho nowcomerB. Almost bIx days were required In bringing the Fifth from Lincoln to camp. Many delayH wero encountered along the wuy At Muskogee the regi ment was tied up nearly twenty-four hours. A freight train Just ahead of tho troop train went Into the ditch, derailing throe cms and un engine. At Illshnp, Tex., the troops wero again delayed by washouts. Along a distance of seven milcB tho tracks wero under two nnd three feet of wutcr. At DonlHon, Tex., the troops wero transferred fnto tourist sleep ing cars. Twenty-seven of these cars wero nwaltlng tho Nebraskans when they reached that town. By night there were more than 2,000 Nebraskans encamped. All mall Tor the two regiments should bo addressed to Mercedes, Tex. Remarkably Free from Casualties. Although Nebraska regiments havo encountered two wrecks but ono man has been seriously injured. This is considered remarkable when tho fact Is taken into consideration that over 2,000 men were transported nearly 2,000 miles to tho concentration enmp. One of the Inspiring sights on tho trip was an elghty-Blx-year-old man, a veteran of tho first Moxlcan war, plant ing two large Hugs on the euglno of the first Nobraskn section. Lieut. John Madgelt or Hastings, lost eight pounds en route from Lin coln to the border. He expects to classify In tho lightweight class before long. When ho wont to Camp More head ho weighed 230 pounds. Morn ing runs about the race track and dieting got him down to 220 pounds, Uncle flam's avoirdupois limit. Now ho balances the scales at 214. Captain Monto Lum, company A, Lincoln, is tho Beau Brummel of tho Fifth regiment. It is said he pressos his uniform twice a day. AH members of company G, Fifth regiment, have decided to Ignore tho company barber. All have shaved their heads and are allowing their beards and mustaches to grow unrestrained. Fifth Nebraska Held Up by Wreck. Tho Fifth Nebraska regiment was held for some time at Muskogee, Okla., becauso of a freight wreck near Hoff man, Okla., which blocked the rail road. Tho third section was held on Its arrival, and tho first and second brought back for route diversion. The Fifth regiment followed the trail of the Fourth through Oklahoma, and It was common gossip on the train that It will be encamped near the Fourth when it reaches Its desti nation at Mercedes, Tex. Railroad officials are said to believe this was a plot to wreck tho Fifth regi ment and hospital corps. To Enable Soldiers to Vote. Representative. Sloan has introduced a bill nt Washington giving the right to national guard volunteers who may bo on the Mexican border on election day to voto for presidential electors, senators and congressmen, such elec tions to be conducted by officers of tho troops choson by the men, and tho votes to be counted In accordance with an olectlon certificate to be sent to tho canvassing board of tho respcctlvo states. State Flro Commissioner W. S. Rid gell reports that Inspectors of his department made 4,135 Inspections in June In ntnety-slx different towns and Issued 652 clean-up and condemna tion orders. Two buildings wero con demned and removed at Ewing. Tho ftro losses In Juno as reported to the stato warden amounted to $53,428, The department Is endeavoring to mako an Inspection of tho whole state with the object in view of making the state as free as possible from flro hazards. Harry Pease Has Feet Crushed. Harry Pease of company L, Gothen burg, had his feet badly crushed nt Slnton, Texas. Ho disobeyed orders and with soverul others climbed to tho top of the coach. A lurch of the train threw him between the curs. He will bo crippled for llfo. In tho Injunction caso, long pend ing, whereby William Kearney sought to prevent Commandant Walsh from ejecting him und his wife from tho Soldier's Home at Grand Island on tho ground that they wero not dependent, having propurty nnd Mr. Kearney conducting nn unto- mobtlo line between tho city und tho home, the court has decided the In junction ngnlnst the commandant will hold until such timo ns the stato board of control adopts n ruling un dor which tho commandant would havo authority to act. Pay Nebraskans Deserved Tribute. A deserved tribute was paid to tho Nebraska troops by the citizens of Denlson, Tex , who declared thoy were tho most orderly, tho most obedlont, nnd tho most manly soldiers who havo passed through that town. Guards men from eight or nlno stutes have passed through Denlson In the past ten days en route to the border. A committee of business men nvt the boys nt the station and distributed cigars, stamped postal cardB and nowspapers among them. -Z.UM3,Mi.t. - --- EBRASKA STATE NEWS DATES FOR COMINQ EVENTS. July 2G Nebraska Democratic con- ventlon at Hastings. July 25. Nebraska Ilepubllcan Con vention at Lincoln. July 28-29 Northeast Nobraskn Edi torial Association Meeting nt Nor folk. July 30-August C Summer Assembly of tho Church of Brethren at Beat rice. Arg. 7 to 11 Tractor Week In Fre mont. Aug. 7 to 10 State Press Association's Ndrth I'latto Valley excursion. August 7 to 12 Merchants' Market Week in Omaha. Aug 9 to 12. Frontier Days Celebra tion at Silver Creek. August 10. Second annual barbecuo at Seward, Aug. 17-27 Seventh Dny Advcntlsts' Conferenco at Hustings. Aug. 17 to 20. Blenniul Nebrnska Suongerbund foatlval at Giund Is land. Aug. 21-25 Mo. Valley PhotogrnphcrB Asaoclutlon Convention nt Lincoln. Sept. 4 to 7. Nebruska Stato Fulr nt Lincoln. Sept. 13. Annual Convention State Federation of Labor ut Fremont. Nebraska's corn crop this year will amount to 180,000,000 bushels, accord ing to the July 1 forecast mnde by the bureau of crop estimates, United Stntes department of agriculture. Last year tho final estimate of the corn crop in Nebraska was 213,000, 000 bushels. The winter wheat crop In Nebraska on tho snme date wu? within 1,000,000 bushels of tho final estimate for lust year. The compnrn tlvo ilgures were: 1916, 65,700,000; 1915, GG.618,000. Tho outs crop on July 1 was forecasted nt 69,900,000 bushels compared to 70,400,000 bush els In 1915, nnd tho potato crop at 0,300,000 barrels or about 22,350,000 bushels compared to 11,550,000 bush' els last year. The production of ap ples this year in Nebrnska was es timated July 1, at 791,000 barrels, or about 2,350,000 bushels compared to 1,267.000 bnrrels In 1915. Of special Interest to employes operating under tho workmen's com pensation law In Nebraska Is a cube Just decided by District Judge Con grave in Lincoln in favor of the Ne braska Manunfucturers Casualty asso ciation, which had Insured tho defend ant. A demand had been made by an injured employe for $11,477 de spite tho fact that the wage percent age nnd nllowanco for medical ntten tlon had boen paid as required by law, the plaintiff Insisting thnt he wns entitled to compensation for per manent disability. Tho Judge held that tho caso was prematurely brought and declared In open court thnt there was no excuse for lltlgn tlon In such Instances where the com pensation law protects the rights ol all without court procedure. Tho progressive stato committee af ter a short cxecutlvo session nt Lin coln passed a resolution npprovlnp nnd endorsing tho nctlon of the nn tlonnl committee taken nt Chicago Juno 26, whereby It endorsed the cnndldncy of Charles E. Hughes fot president, nnd recommend to nil pro gressives thnt they give him their support in the coming campaign. The comtultteo also endorsed Judge Sut ton of Omaha fee governor, J. L. Ken nedy of Omaha for U. S. senator, Ad dison Wnito for secretnry of state, G, W. Marsh for auditor and W. II. Rey nold for stnte treasurer. The township levies ror Cuming county for tho yenr 1916 show a re markable Increase In tho amount naked for road purposes. Tho- levy this yenr for tho entire county, out side of the municipalities, is 132 mills, ns against 92 mills for Inst year. In tho years preceding, from tho yenr 1899 to 1912 nnd 1913 the levy for road purposes wns from 30 to 40 mills for the entire county. Kenrney people nro somewhat nlnrmed over tho death of Ilesde Lemon, nge 5, of Infantile paralysis tho malady which is taking hundreds of New York babies. This Is the first death from this cause In Kearney, nnd no other cases are known to exist. A frontier day's celebration will be hold In Silver Creek August 9, 10, 11 nnd 12. Eleven people were Injured, none seriously, which Is considered remark able when a big truck loaded with members of the Recreation club, re turning from a picnic ran off the wooden bridge over tho Plntto Intc the river near Kearney, The biggest whent harvest In thf history of Adnms county, with yield estimated nt forty bushels per aero, has stnrted Urgent demands for help, coupled with high prices, has robbed tho Hastings paving contractors ol half of their employes, Tom Meyers, solicitor for a Fre mont pnpor, who makes his terrltorj In a roadster, captured n coyote nftoi ho hud chased It for about a mile, at ho wns coming homo from a trip in Saunders county. George Trexler, Union Pacific engl neer, was Instantly killed and hit wlfo and threo children seriously In Jureil when nn nutomobllo driven bj Trexler, fell off a brldgo near Ognlnlln vTek tnty on Juno 1st hnd 1,38 automobiles nccordfng to figures com piled by County Assessor J. W. Bar nett. x-wuwwtjtwtH'WivlKr 33Wff&Vg.t-lfrrt' -' ' -yavMgii Nntynl:,t) years old, p'oi cor frontiersman, Indian fighter, but st 11 voting, This In the ncord of Jr.cob C. March of Lincoln, probably the old est voter In the state. When ques tioned as to politics, he said that he Ih a "democrat, b'gosh, und nlwnys will be." He Is nlso a woman suffrage booster. At the time of the civil war he wns too old for service, but sent two of his Bons. The Commercial Club of Kearney hns sent forth Its annual appeal to Nebrnska congressmen to use what Influence they may have with the fed eral government to secure a release of the Hood waters of the Pathfinder dam. The Kenrney cannl Is ptnctlcal ly tlrlcvl up and the cry for wnter is being heard on all sides. A campaign has been launched by Lincoln Commercial club to securo one of the twelve regional bunks pro vided for In the rural credits bill which JiiHt passed congress. W. J Bryan Is taking nn nctlve part In the campaign to land the bank for Lin coln. North Plutto hns responded gener ously to the call of the guardsmen of Company E. A check for $225 has been sent to Captain P. R. Halllgan to be used ns n mess fund by the boys. Fifty-one persons contributed to the fund, the contributions ranging from $1 to $25. In the first heat of n 2:10 pace dur ing the races at Fremont last week pacer Bud Williams, owned by a Washington man, dropped dead with in 100 feet of the wire. Tho driver wns thrown several feet but" was un injured. ' Tho Pentecostal church of the Nnzarene, moio familiarly known us the Nnzarene church Is being organ ized In Beatrice. The organizers s'ay two hundred people have signified their intentions to Join the new church. Tho Burlington rnllroad company Is surveying around Scottsbluff with n view of escertninlng the cost of building branches to transport sugar beets from n lnrge area to the big factories nt thnt place. The present membership of the Hastings Y. M. C. A. is 443, Including 77 sustaining members. A member ship campaign Is to bo launched early this fall when It Is hoped to Increase the enrollment to 1.000. A red letter dny was held nt tho Methodist church In Burchard recent ly for the pastor, Rev. A. C. Spencer. In nil he baptized twenty-nine persons and had forty-six accessions to the church. The campaign of fish spearing in the wnter holes of the Platte, hns ex tended so thnt ment markets In Grand Island estimate the decrease In the sales of meat is over $100 a day. During the first day of the J. W. Fleming closing out sale of twenty four improved stock farms nt Wis ner five farms were sold, comprising 1,438 ncres, nt nn average of $142.82 per acre. Small grnln harvest in Red Willow county is well under wny, the yield being large nnd the quality fine. It will be one of the largest harvests in the history of the county. Seventy head of cattle weie drown ed at the Coffee Cattle Co. ranch near Harrison when they broke down n fence nnd crowded Into an overflowed reservoir. The new $10,000 St. Chnrles Cath olic church nt North Bcid was dedi cated last week. Bishop Tlhen of Lincoln delivered the dedicatory ser mon. William Woodhurst, warden nt the stnto penitentiary under Governor Garver nnd a pioneer Ncbrnsknn, died died at his homo In North Platte. On July 28th the voters of New man Grove will pass on n proposition to Issue $2,000 bonds for the purpose of procuring n town park. Tho Gage county bonrd of super visors turned down n petition signed by 150 residents of Filey for permis sion to play Sunday baseball. Material to bo used in the con struction of the new bridge over tho Plntto at Kenrney Is arriving daily. The Nebraska Saenegrbund festival will bo held at Grand Island August 17, 18. 19 nnd 20. President Woodrow Wilson will be Invited to speak In Omaha during tho semi-centennial crlobrntlon this fall. Work will commence soon on the new federal building at Alliance. Tiro nt North Bend did $3,000 dnm nge In the Empress theater. John Schmltzof Edgar, a bovhood friend of Henry Ford, tho Detroit nu tomobllo manufacturer, mailed n check to Mr. Ford Just recently for $1 15, nsklng him to ship n now Ford to him. Ford called the bluff and shipped the cnr. A brick yard belonging to Fred BrlnUmnn at Arlington wns totally de stroyed by fire. The llo Is supposed to have started from tho kiln where Mr. Brinkman hnd Just begun to "hum" 150,000 brick. Tho loss Is plnced at $2,500. Dr. A. P. Fltzslmmons, formerly of Tecumseh, hut who for tho lust few years hns been holding n position In Manila, has been appointed treasurer of tho Island by the governor general, with a salary of $12,000 per year. The Lincoln hlghwny through Keith county Is undergoing some extensivo Improvcemnts. It Is being graded nnd drngged n good many places and nn excellent roadway entirely ncross tho county Is promised to tho tourists. Clover blent has killed n largo num ber of cattle In southeastern Nebraska lately. wwnrwr ijBtwjvisZSSSlSSSSSSil E EORDER SITUATION PRONOUNCED LESS ACUTE SAYS SUBMARINE A MENACE French Writer Declares Deutschland Is Intended to Intimidate. Floods Cause Immense Damage to Crops. Western Newspaper Union News Henrloa. Washington. Tho war department hns sent orders to nil department com manders to delay transportation to the border of nntlonal guardsmen now mobilizing until they aro thoroughly quipped nnd organized. Tho order will revoko a ruling Issued when the Mexican situation was acute, waiving certain requirements. Tho order af fects about 25,000 men still held In camps. The latest Information of tho department Is thnt about 100,000 guardsmen now arc at the border. With the 50,000 regulnrs thcro and the 5,000 ndltlonal men called from tho reserve, olllclals estimate that there Is Hulllclcnt forces to copo with any present emergency. Floods Cause Immense Damage. Atlanta, Ga. Serious floods In North Carolina, South Carolina nnd Vlrglnln, caused flvo known deaths, rendered hundreds homeless, damaged property nnd crops to the extent of $10,000,000, according to first estimates, nnd de moralized railway, telegraph and tele phono communication. Following the hurricane that struck tho south At lantic coast last week, unprcccdcntod rains have fallen, driving rivers and smaller streams from their banks and imperiling many lives. DEUTSCHLAND A MENACE. Intended to Intimidate, French Writer Declares. Farls. Gabriel Hanotaux, former minister of foreign affairs and presi dent of tho Franco-American commis sion for the development of economic literacy and art, In a political leader in the Figaro declares that the ap pearance of tho German commercial submarine Deutschland In American waters is a part of German diplomacy. It will bo followed, ho asserts, by a reopening of the question of German resumption of tho submarine cam paign against merchnnt ships, and he alludes to it as a diplomacy to Intimi date neutral powers annd sow discord between neutrnlB and members of tho entente. "It la as if Germany said to the nations beyond tho sens, "Tho sea no longer Is an obstacle; there we aro, nnd bewaro our coming.' It 1b n part of the German system to try intimida tion rather than persuasion." Jury Frees Orpet. Waukegan, 111. William Orpet. tho university student charged with mur dering Marlon Lambert, a high school girl and his former sweetheart, was found not guilty by a Jury In Judgo Donnolly's court after five hours' de liberation. Tho Jury retired at 2:50 o'clock. At 0 o'clock Its members wero taken to dlnnor nt n boarding houso where they spent half nn hour. One hour later enme tho flash that a ver dict hnd been reached. Probably fifty persons were waiting for It. Foreign Trade Exceeds All Records. Wnshington. The country's foreign trndo during tho fiscal year ending with last month, readied a total of $6,525,000,000, exceeding by many mil lions all previous records, according to preliminary figures announced by the commerce department. Exports wero valued at $4,325,000,000 and Im ports at $2,180,000,000. Tho figures are based on complete retuniH for tho first eleven months of the year and es timates for Juno. Hughes' Notification July 31. Now York. Charles Evans Hughes will be notified that ho Is the repub lican cundldato for president on July 31, at 8 p. m. in Carnegie hall, Now York City. Selection of this date for tho prcfunctory notification ceremony wns announced by Senator Wnrren G. Hurdlng, chnlrmnn of the notification committee, following a conferenco with Hughes and Chairman Wilcox. Prosido, Tex. Ono detachment of tho United States border patrol fired on a second detnehment near here, nilstuklng it for a body of bandits. Ono soldier, Private Mllhoun of tho Sixth cavalry, was wounded. Mllhoun, with several other troopors, was re turning to camp with several horses they had rounded up. Ncurlng a small thicket In whclh they detected a movement they called out and fired Beveral shots. A patrol hidden In tho brush, mUtaklng them for enemies, fired upon thci.i, Mllhoun being shot through tho Jaw. Railroad Opened for Shipment El Paso, Tex. The Mexico North westorn railroad has again been open ed for tho shipment of supplies to American troops In Moxlco. This nc tlon follows tho lifting of tho em bargo on food and othor oxportntlons to Mexicans. Shipments nro bolng mnde by El Paso concerns, by wny Juarez, to Casus Grnndes merchants, who In turn dispose of their supplies to tho quartermaster at tho flold base. Army officers welcome tho In direct uso ot tho Mexican railroad for transportation of supplies. D R GUARDS HELD I OWE MY HEALTH To Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound Washington Park, 111. "I am th mother of four children and hnvo suf fered with female trouble, backache, nervous spells and the blues. My chil dren's loud talking: and romping would make mc so nervous I could just tear everything to piece nnd I would ache all over nnd feel so sick that I would not want anyone to talk to mo at times. Lydin E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound und Liver Pills re Etored mo to health nnd I want to thank you for the good they huve done me. I have had quito n Lit of troublo and worry but it docs not affect my youth ful looks. My friends sny ' Why do you. look so young and well ? ' I owe it all to the Lydia E. Pinkhnm remedies." Mrs. Rokt. SToriEL, Mooro Avenue, Washington Purk, Illinois. We wish every woman who suffers1 from female troubles, nervousness, bnckacho or the bluea could see tho let ters written by women made well by Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, If you have any symptom about which you would like to know write to tho Lydia E. Pinkhnm Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for helpful advice given free of charge. Reduces Bursal Enlargements, Thickened, Swollen Tissues, Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore ness from Bruises or Strains;. itops Spavin Lameness, allayi pain. Does not blister, remove the hair or lay up the liorte. $2.00 a bottle- at druggists or delivered. Book 1 M free. AUSOHDINE, JR., for mankind- antiseptic liniment for bruises, cuts, wounds, strains, painful, swollen veins or elands. It heals and soothes. ll.OO a bottle at drug gists or postpaid. VVill tell you more if you write. Made in the U. S. A. by W.F.YOuNQ.P.O.F.,ltSTBltSt,Sprlnoflt'.Mlsi. Actovitles of Women. Over 0,000 women uinrched In the Hoston pr.epn redness purnde. Queen Wllheliiiliiu of Holland is the only woman who Is u reigning sov ereign. There nro between 3,000,000 nnd 4, 000,000 woman voters In the Unlteil Suites. To wed n man she never saw, Vlolti Kleckner recently left Snnhury, Ph., on u 7,000-mlle trip to Seward, Alaska, where she will become the wlfo of James M. Foley, a mining engineer. It cost the suffniglHts of the coun try over $(10,000 to get u suffrage plunk In the Itepuhllcnn und Progres sive party platforms. Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger many visits the hospltuls every week to console the wounded soldiers of her country.' IF YOU OR ANT FRIEND Buffer 'with lthenmutlHm tr Neurltln, acute or chronic, write for my FREE BOOK on Rheuma tism Its Cnuse noil Cure. Moot wonderful book eer written, It's absolutely KUEK. Jesse A. Cube, Xcit. O. V., Uruuklon, Muwb. Adv. Anatomy From Experience. The former big league Imsehull mnn nger, who hud been ennned becnusc the team finished lust us usual, was taking it civil service examination in order to secure n political Job. He was umazed nt the list of fool ques tions on the examination paper. Ho didn't know the dlstiince from tho earth to the moon, so hu passed that one up. And he could not describe n syzygy, so he culled thnt test n loser. Hut the third question interested him. It said: "Name the targes t bono In the nu llum frume." And with n grin of confidence tho former inunnger wrote this answer: "The head." Cinclnnutl Enquirer. The vacuum cleuner ought to work well on many heads we have seen. Stop That Ache ! Don't worry ubout n bud bnck. Get rid of It. Prolmbly your kid neys nro out of order, ltesunie sen sible hnblts nnd help the kidneys. Then, kidney biickache will go; nlso the dizzy spells, lumeness, stiff ness, tired feelings, nervousness, rheumntlc pulns and bladder trou bles. Uso Doun'H Kidney Pills. Thousands recommend them. A Kansas Case "Bwrv Picture TtlU a Mrs. J. W. No Innd. t09 Ktckapoo St., Ill a wn t h u , Knn,, says: "I was running down with kidney diBcuso for yenrs und Anally got so bud I could honrcely get about the h o u 8 e. My limbs, feet nnd nn- aiorv kits swelled terri bly. The doctors said It was rheu miitlnm. I was nlsn subject to dizzy spells nnd the kidney were unniitiirnl. I nnally 8 Kidney I'llls and soon the becrotions ued Doan' backache if rt. tno HweuingR dlsap- i-cureu nnd i leu ucuer in every way." Cat Doan'a at Any Stora, BOc a Bra DOAN'S "VKIV FOSTCRMILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. APPENDICITIS If vnn hivitluvn thrnAtonMl nf h&TnflAI.T.HTQNFY INDUIKSTION.UAH ur pultn In tho rlyblCRCE laewrltoturtalunblelluokof Infnrmiilon r nUt U I. ItONSLS, IlkrT, H.I, 911 DSItliUin BT.,CHlCi wTn. U., LINCOLN, NO. 30-1916. ISp WiK, FrM I