RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF ,. BwJF3P"BBfTT?"lBBBMpv ! U1 TytMMMjMf"fMP'iy"?'w .-aawXawaeca 1 Mronil lint! of Mttl HirlUfis otitsltlo tlu-ir i-uiiiiiuts .ury itt Youiikhiuwii. Ohio. H Two iIioiimiiiiI lialluriH board InK the CJulFoppI Vordl at New York to will for Italy, lieciiuxo, hh ninny of them mild, they hud been deprived of tlielr beer and wine. 3 Head of the preat wooden Miitue of IIIndcnburK which was used as u ineurm to raise funds during the war, lying In the Tlcrgnrten, Iterlln. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENT,S .Treaty and Covenant of League Killed for Present by the Ac tion of the Senate. BOTH SIDES DISOWN BLAME Ratification With Modified Reserva. tlons May Come at Next Session Efforts to Avert Coal Shortage Oleaster President Wil on Summons New In dustrial Confer ence. , By EDWARD W. PICKARD. j The treaty with Germany, Including ftho covenant of the League of Nations, Us dend for the present ho far iih the JUnlted States Is concerned. Everyone (knows that, but opinions as to who llled It differ Irreconcilably. , The lethal dose administered to the pact In the sennte was compounded of wtubnnrnncsp, desire for revenge, per gonal pride, partisanship nnd desire jto protect America against the more (or less Imnglnary plots of foreign tui tions. Who contributed these various elements the reader can tell ns well ns ithe writer. The firmness of the president and hls most nrdent supporters lasted Just a little too long. Otherwise n rninnrn imlse might have been reached which (would hnve been measurably satisfac tory to all except n few Irrecnncllables -so few thnt they would have been fcnowed under. Knt when Kenntor plltchcock took to Mr. Wilson In IiIp islck room the news that Senator Lodge jiind his followers had adopted the com imlttec list of reservations, the pres. ident declared ho would pigeonhole the Hrenty If It were rn tilled In that shape, tend asked the Democratic senators to prote solidly ngnlnst the rntlllcatlon. He gave no hint that he would accept any compromise, nnd the Itopuhllrnns,. with the few Democrats who nnd ctood with them nil through tho light, there upon brought the mntter to n final vote lat once. , For four nnd n half hours there were rroll calls nnd parliamentary maneuv ers In the course of which Hitchcock jvnlnly tried to get n vote on n mile' reservation resolution, hut tho Ilepuh lllcnns were too nngry to listen to him JTwIee the senate voted on the Lodge resolution of mtlflentlon with reserva tions nnd twlco It wns defented. the iflrst time by aft to r5 nnd the secom' itlme by 41 to 51. Hetween these rol cnllf n vote was tnken on Underwood' jresolutlon for unqualified rntinentloi Iran m-uu'n, jmj io UJ, On tin iXodge resolution in Republicans voter in tne negative both times. Theo Rea ltors had declared themselves nirnlnsr :he treaty and league unreservedly. me mihl reservation Ilepubllcan--lould have been captured for n com iromlse If Mr. Wilson nnd Snnntm- Hitchcock hnd started on thnt line 'earlier, hnt ti! It was Lodge was able lo now them In line throughout. I While the trenty Is ndmlttcdly dend, jit mny be brought to life nt the regu lar session which begins Monday, Do icembcr 1. If President Wilson re-sub-,rnltB It to tho fiennte and shows n dls position to nccept modified rcservn tlons, It Is not unlikely that It will be jrntlfled In such n wny thnt the other power will ncqulesce. Tho nltenin tire before the sennto will be adoption lof the resolution Introduced hv Son. jttor Lodge Just before adjournment IWednesdny night nnd referred to the committee on foreign relntlnns with out debate. This declares tho stnt of war between the United Stntes nnd Germany to be nt nn end. It requires the concurrence of tho house but. ne cording to general practice, no nctlon fcy the president follows. Senator Pornh, one of the Irreconcll. bles, who wnnts to keep tho United States wholly aloof from tho nffnlrs of the rest of the world, predict? thnt tho treaty, with tho league covenant Includ- j d, and with the Lodge reservations j omewhat modified, will ultimately be , ratified. According to Mr. Hitchcock, many of the reservations are objection- nble chiefly because of tho language In which they nre couched. Advices from London nnd Purls lead to the belief that If such objections were removed the other great powers would not hes itate to accept the American reserva tions. They nil feel thnt without the participation of the United States the League of Nations would be a phan tom thing, nnd In the .words' of Gen eral Smuts: "The mnchlnery of the league Is wanted to snve civilization from dissolving Into fragments, from fulling into decay. It nlone can save tottering Europe." One London correspondent snyp most Englishmen with a knowledge of world nffnlrs would not be mi pi eased to see the league plan fall, because they de sire an Aii'do-Franco-Amcrlcnn alli ance rather than a league In which ev ery little nation would hnve equal pow ers with the great nations. French ofllclnls were disappointed but not surprised by the nctlon of the American sennte. They nre more In terested Just now In the fnte of tho Franco-American defense pact. It Is taken for granted that the nllled pow ers will put the Versnlllei trenty Into effect not Inter than December 1. Be fore this Is done. Germany must sign tho protocol to the treaty. The Oer mnn delegates are objecting to the pro vision requiring them to mnke repara tion for tho wnrshlps sunk In Scnpa Flow nnd wnnt to argue the question. So fnr the government's legnl vic tory over the striking coal miners hns proved but hollow. The union lenders said no court action could compel the men to work, nnd up to the present they have mnde good on thnt proposi tion. In some fields some mines hnve resumed operation, htu the number Is so small that tho situation Is growing decidedly desperate. Many trains hnve been cancelled and Industries nil over the country nre becoming nlnrmed. When he opened tho conference be tween the operators' and the mine un ion lenders In Washington. Secretary of Labor Wilson told them they must get together. Lnter Fuel Administra tor Gnrfleld Inld before the scale com mittees figures thnt demonstrated these two things: That the GO per cent Incrense de nnnded by the miners Is unrenson hie nnd Impossible. Thnt tho operators have n margin leretofore pnld out In execs profit ixes upon which to bnse nn Incrense f wnges to tho miners without neces tltntlng n rise In tho price of conl to tho public. Pr. Garfield then told the conferees thnt the country must nnd should hnve coal, nnd while he uttered no threats, It was the belief In Washington thnt If nn ngr"ment were not renched. tho government would resort to extreme mensures. Wbnt these would be can only bo conjectured, though It mny he It would follow the example of Knnwis nnd North Dakota, where the state has taken over the operation of the mines by proclamation of the governor. Again It can only be guessed how. In such cne laborer would be obtained. Meanwhile Director General nines of the rnllro-td administration Is doing verythlna possible jo conserve the nn on's simply of coal and to distribute equitably, lie hn forbidden nnv nnecewnry use of fuel by railroads .nd Industrial plnnts. Also ho hns rlnced a censorship on nil news con cerning tho conl Rltuntlon because, he aid. of false rumors that hnd been ittrlbuted to ofllclnls of thendmlnlstra 'Ion. Mr nines Is especially endenv trlng to keep ns much traffic and In 'mtry moving as Is possible and Is re Islng freight truffle to reduce unnee ssory mileage. The announced prl rlty In allowances and deliveries Is being continued. So fnr there hns been no embnrgo placed on freight. In Colorado another strike of conl miners wns called on Friday by tho district president beenuso of nllotrn tlons thnt not nil tho striking miners had been given re-employment. TIiomi who were not tnken back, sold tho op eratora, were connected with tho I. W. W. Hundreds of miners In tho New River fields of West Virginia who had returned to work quit again beenuso Iho operators hnd discontinued the "check off" system for the collection of union dues. President Wilson hns token the nd vice of the group representing the pub lic In tho recent futile Industrial roi ference and has called another, the del- egates to which are not divided up In to groups. lie lui" Invited 17 men to be members of this new conference and has usked them to meet In Wash li gton on December 1. The citizens thus honored nre: Secretary Wilson of the Inbor depart ment; former United Stntes Attorney General Thomas W. Gregory; former United Stntes Attorney-General George W. Wlckersham; former Food Admin istrator Herbert 0. Hoover; former Secretary Oscar S. Straus of the com merce depnrtment; Henry M. Robin son of Pnsadenn, Cal., Prof. Frank W. Taussig, former chairman of the tariff commission; former Governor Samuel W. Mcf'nll of Massachusetts; former Governor. Martin II. Glynn of New York; former Governor Henry C. Stunrt of Virginia; Dr. W. O. Thompson of Ohio State university; RIchnrd Hooker of Springfield. Mass., George T. Slade of St. Paul; Julius Itovenwnld of Chicago; Owen D. Young of New York city; II. J. Wnters of Manhattan, Kan.; Stanley King of Bos ton. In his letter of Invltntlon the presi dent says: "It Is not expected thnt you will deal directly with any con dition which exists today, but that you mny be fortunate enough to find such ways ns will avoid the repetition of these deplorable conditions." The bolshevlkl, while still ostensibly trying for peace with the Rnltlc nn tlons nnd ultimately with the entente, nre scoring decided successes ngnlnst the Russlnn nrmles thnt oppose them. Kolchak nnd his Siberian forces have been driven further enst and hnve giv en up Omsk, the sent of their govern ment, nnd several other Important cit ies. The soviet coinmnnders clnlm to have captured 28.000 of Kolchok's men nt Omsk. General Denlklne nlso hns given ground before the bolphevlkl In southwestern Russln. The cnmpulgn or General Yudenltch ngnlnst Petro grad hns collapsed and nfter retreat ing to Esthonln he resigned his com mnnd In the effort to nvold Internment of his troops by the Esthonlnns. Some 20,000 of his men, It Is reported, Joined tho bolshevik nrmy. In Vladivostok there wasa two days', rebellion headed by General Galda. Af ter bloody combats In the streets nnd suburbs Galda was wounded nnd cap tured nnd the revolt wns quelled. r D'AnnunzIo pulled off another spec tacular stunt, which mny or mny not menn anything. Leaving Flume, he proceeded with some wnrshlps to Znrn where amidst the plaudits of the populace he formally added tho Dal matian coast to tho Itnllnn domnln. Spalnto, he promised, should come next. The general elections' In France re sulted In n grent rout of the radicals. They lost many seats In the chamber nnd Olemencenu'B victory wns so pro nounced thnt his elevation to the pres idency of France Is considered not un likely. Real trouble with Mexico looms ns a result of the nrrest of Consular Agent Jenkins nt Puehln on charges connect ed with his abduction nnd ransom. The government warned Mexico that Jenk ins must be relensed nnd thnt any further molestation of him would "se riously nffect the relations between the United Stntes nnd Mexico, for which the government of' Mexico would ns aume sole responsibility." Tho Mexi cans accused Jenkins of collusion with tho bnudlts who kidnaped him. At the request of the government tho Supreme court Is expediting Its hear ing of the cases for and against the war-time prohibition net nnd the en forcement law. Arguments began Thursday and the court promised an early decision. In this connection It wns nfllclnlly stnted thnt the president would mnke no movo to rescind the war-time prohibition net until peace had been formally declared. It la now predicted that tho "wet" period, If there Is any, will bo very short. Secretary of tho Treasury Glnss has entered the sennte ns successor to the Into Senutor Martin of Vlrglnln. Mr. Glass accepted tho nppolntment on the ndvlce of President Wilson. It was snld his place at the head of the treas ury would be filled by John Skelton Williams, whose appointment as con troller of the currency hns not bee confirmed by the senate. CORNHUSKER ITEMS ffcw3 of All Kinds .Gathered From Various Points Throughout Nebraska. OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS Tho Nebraska college of agriculture lock Judging team, eomposed of It. E. Fortnn, Octavia ; I. K. Hepperly, Nor folk; M. V. Kuppliis, West Point; L. C. Noyos, Waterloo; ('. H. Powell, Al liance; W. E. Weldburg, Lincoln; Earl J. Yates, Geneva ; Del.oss P. Moulton, JJItle Springs, nnd headed by Prof. II. J. Grninlleh, left Lincoln lust week for u trip through Iowa, Indiana and Illi nois before going to Chicago to com pete at the Inleitiutlomil livestock ex- posuion the first week In December. Nearly r.OO delegates attended the nr.iiiial convention of Ilia Nebraska Farmers' Co-operative Grain nnd Live Slock Association nt Oiuului. J. S. Ciinady of Mlntleii was elected presi dent or the association, It being bis seventeenth term to thnt olllce. Oilier officers chosen were: E. p. Hubbard, Juiiiiltn, vice-president; .7. W. Short hill, Omaha, re-elected sen clary. Eric Johnson, Hustings, nnd J. It. Morrison of Chnppoll, directors. Ten thousand dollars has been np preprinted by the Sioux City Inter state fnlr board to further boys' and girls' club work In the middle western Ktntos, L. I. Frlsble, leader of the club work In Nebraska, who was named on u committee of state club leaders which will decide how the money Is to be used, announced. Louis O. Holcombe, Hooker county rancher, rode Into .Mullen nnd gave hlms-elf up to Sheriff Dutton for the murder of Perry N. Kirkpntrlck, u neighbor. The tragedy, It is said, grew out of n dispute, over the dead man's cattle getting into Holcombe's corn field. Three hundred nnd ninety novices were Initiated Into the mysteries of the Mystic Shrlnu at the close of u four-day reunion nt Omaha. The elnss wns the Inrgest ever ns.sembled in Oinuliu for ndnilsslon to Tangier tem ple. Drastic nctlon hns been taken nt Omaha to conserve the smnll supply of conl on hand. Until the situation is relieved nil schools, churches, places of amusement and non-essential Indus tries will receive no more fuel. At the State Good Ilonds associa tion meeting nt Grand Island George Wolz of Fremont wns re-elected presi dent; O. G. Smith of Kearney, vice president; nnd Charles II. llopcr of Lincoln, secretary-treasurer. While hunting in the vicinity of Pop ulnr llluff, two boys discovered u envo more than two miles In length nnd be lieved to be the "Lost Cave;" for which, It Is declared, Indians searched In vnln, for CO years. Nebrnskn women may vote for pres ident and vice president of the United States at the next election, but not for nny olllcer named In the state consti tution, uccordlng to an opinion of At torney General Davis. Notice that milk in Lincoln would bo raised 1 cent, to 10 cents per quart, caused Secretary Stulir of the depart ment of agriculture to again take up the matter of Investigation of profiteer ing in Nebrnskn. Fire from nn unknown source de stroyed the Drake block, one of the lurgest business buildings in Beatrice, nnd damaged the Y. M. C. A. building, causing n loss of approximately $90,000. In u wrestling match at Kearney, Joe Steelier of Dodge defented Tom Drnuk in straight falls, the first in forty-three minutes, the hecond in twenty-six minutes. The stute rullwny commission hns issued an order permitting the Fnr mors' Telephone Co. of Ord to pur chase the Ord independent Telephone company. Word has readied the University of Nebraska, at Lincoln, that Chancellor Avery has been made president of the Lund Grant College association. F. C. Crocker, president of the Ne braska state farm bureau, at Lincoln, has received n call from Texas for !100 head of pure bred hogs. A bond proposition to build n new Junior high school building at McCook, will soon be submitted to voters of the city. All owning gatherings nt the Stute Normal school at Kearney hnve been canceled to conserve conl. O. W. Lnngley, Cortland farmer, charged with shooting and killing C. II. Pfelffer. Justice or the peace, nt Cortland last August, pleaded not guilty 'In district court In Beatrice. His case was set for the December term of court. A report submitted to tho stnto fin ance department from Gnge county jows that farm land transfers In the county during the past season totals the enormous sum of ?2,00."),0!8. The report, submitted by the county cleik, covers (he sale of 17,012 ncres and In cludes only honl-ilde sales. Edward Muth, newspaper man, rlnns to begin publication of 'a news paper nt Odell. Odell hns been with out u paper for several months. Stock Issues totaling over $40,000, 000 have been approved by tho state of Nebraska since August 8, 1018, ac cording to the state bureau of securi ties. Nebraska dntrymen, whose milk and cream Is retailed, must hnvo their herds tested for tuberculosis before February 1, 1020, Secretary Leo Stuhr of the state department of agriculture announced. People of Douglas and Washington counties were shocked over the dis covery of tho body of a be'nutlful woman in a ravine nenr Fort Cnl houn. A bullet wound In the bend left no doubt In the minds of ofllclnls thnt the woman had been murdered. Thou sands of people viewed the body nt Omaha but no one could positively Identify the dead girl. It is chronicled ns the most mysterious murder In the annals of Omaha's police records. Tho cold-pack method of entitling Is In no wny responsible for the deaths of several people In Michigan and New York who died from eating ripe olives nnd canned corn, according to the col lege of agriculture extension service nt Lincoln. Several letters have been received by the extension service, call ing its attention to. n newspaper arti cle which left an erroneous Impression. The lurgest coiuYnt bridge In Su lierlor, mid the lariest In the county, except for the rl. bridge, which Inis been under cons ,0n on the out skirts of the city for the past few months, has been eoniplctcir. The bridge Is to be used on a road that will be built to u cement plant, which is to hu constructed there next spring. Following nearly forty-llve venrs in the ministry, mote than twenty-eight of which was spent as rector of All Sulnt's Episcopnl church nt Oinnlin. he Itev. Thomas J. Maekay, oldest no tlye minister In the Nebraska metro... olls hns resigned his pnstorute, owing to falling health. Governor. McKel vie has Issued n proclan.utlon culling on the people of ebruska to buy the 0,000,000 ii,.. f tosh stamps placed on holiday sale for 1 cent each by the Nebraska Tuber culosls association. The proceeds aro to be used In lighting tuberculosis la this state. Warden Fenton of the state peni tentiary at Lincoln announced that ho will not permit nnyone to undertake the transfer of the Interstitial glnndd of Convicts Cole mid Graniiner, con detuned to death next month, to living men. Representatives to the mate constl tutionnl convention consist or -14 Inw .vers, .TJ farmers, four bankers, four teachers, four merchants, three labor ers, two editors, two Ins-trauce men, two preachers, one doctor and one city clerk. Sunday picture shows are being held regulnrly now nt Lodge Pole. Hereto fore the little city has only hud one program each week mid that was on Saturday evening and with nn addi tional attraction during the week. An election will' be held next Satur day nt Sidney for the purpose of vot ing seventy-live thousand dollars worth of bonds to complete the new ward school building nnd to pay fo;- the site on which It Is placed. In an effort to snve coal stores nt Aurora hnve been requested to close nt .r::i0 p. m., picture shows to give but one program each evening, power to be cut off from C p. m. to S n. m., und street lights discontinued. By n decision of the federal court 8,000 ncres of Indian iund In Thurston county, now held by eighty-live orlglunl title holders, must be divided among some COO Indian children of the orlg Iiiul claimants. Lloyd Tltlele, 10 years old, son or Mr. nnd Mrs. Emll Thlclo of West Point, lived for three hours nfter the top of his bend wns blown ofT, when ho nccldentally shot himself with a shotgun. Cornhuskers In Gage county are said to be mnklng nil the wny from ?0 to ?S n day and board. Some far mers nro pnying us high ns 10 cents a bushel, Including board, for the work. The state has offered a $200 reward for tjie apprehension of Glen Benson, chnrged with tlm murder or Nellie Benson in Howurd county last Sep tember. Dr. Frlnk, resident physician of Newman Grove, has established a hos pital In the city, fitted with all modern conveniences, Including nn operating room. Right Rev. C. J. O'Reilly, bishop of the Lincoln diocese, presided nt the dedication or the new $40,000 Cutholic church at Colon. Joseph Havllek or Fnlrbury, has been chosen president of the athletic asso ciation of the school of engineering of Milwaukee. About 45 dental students took the examination before the Stute Dentnl board at the stnte house In Lincoln. Beatrice Post, American Legion, has Instituted u movement to levlve Com puny C, Nebrnskn national guard. The Douglas county post of the Am erlcan Legion hns over 4,000 members, nnd more nre being added dully. Two I. W. W. members, arrested nt Fremont, were sentenced to 00 days each In the county Jail, charged with vagrancy. County Attorney Cook says he will prosecute to tho fullest extent of the Inw nil I. W. W. who nre nr rested In Fremont. The riot nt Omaha, September 28, wns caused by crimes against women nnd undue criticism of public ofllclnls, uccordlng to n report of n special grand Jury which Investigated the dls usto" und returned Indictments ngnlnst more than 100 persons for pnrllclpa tlon In the disorders. Tho mnnnger of n Lincoln thenter wns arrested for placing chnlrs In tho nlslo of the playhouse and wns lined $20 nnd costs. Fred Krug, 80, millionaire Omtihn pioneer, president of the Fred Krug Products company, nnd founder of tho first brewery In Nebraska, died at Omaha a few days ago. A horse belonging to a farmer near St Paul died suddenly, A "post-mortem" to ascertain the cause developed that the horse had swallowed a five pound window weight How the aul mal got It down la beyond sural. COLDS bneJuHl Spread INFLUENZA KILL THE COLD ONCE WITH wivs CASCARV fiftOMlO Standard cold remedy for 20 yttr in taoiet lorm Mie, ture, no opiates breaks up a cold In Z4 noitrs relieves grip m j a ay. Money back it it fails. The genuine box rui m Kta cop wiid Air. nm picture. At AllDrvj Start Hand Sapolio-The Ideal forToilet and Bath rnmil TO EPSiTrvtLViitMovrohTDr.nrTV Nebraska Directory FILMS DEVELOPED FREE Whan Print in (Vrlru Prln taSMzHM, So. n:,SHx4M rental postal card size 0 rx:iua ponlpaid. Beaton Photo Supply Co. 16th & Funio St. 'HiaJut, Neb. S. S. SHEAN OPTWIAN -1123 O Street n Lincoln, Nelx. Omaha Crematory Send for illustrated booklet Address or call on Forest Lawn Cemetery Assn. 720 Brtndcu Theatre Omaha, Neb. BE A NURSE Exceptional opportunity at the present tlmo for young women over nineteen, years o- ago who have had at least one year In high school to take Nurses' Train Ins In general hospital. Our graduates aro In grcut demand. Address Hapt. of Is'nrnen, Lincoln Sanitarium, Lincoln, br. GET HIGHEST PRICES for Your Live Stock Ship to WOOD BROTHERS Omaha, Chicago, So. St Paul, Sioux Citr STOCKERS AND FEEDERS EOUGHT ON ORDER IN OMAHA T5ie Henshaw Hotel EUIlOfKAN I'LAN T. J. O'Urlcn Co., Props. H.J5 wrrnorjT bath IU5 DP WITH UATH 16th end Famam Sta Omcdia- TAX FREE Mortgages and Bonds for Sale In $100. $900 and $1,000 denominations on farml and high class city property lo net 5, 5M and 6 per cent Some can be cashed any day before ctua for a commission of one months Interest. Monthly paper for Investors sent free. LINCOLN TRUST COMPANY 126 North 11th Straet LINCOLN. NEB. Order of our agency. If we have no local representative order direct from us. FREY & PREY, Morlila 1338 O 8TKEET LINCOLN, NEBBA8KA KODAKS Developing, Printing and Enlarging Lincoln Photo Supply Co. (Eastman Kodak Co.) Dept. K, 1217 O St. Lincoln, Neb. THE CAR AHEAD Six-Foiiy-Fivt Standard equipment. Ample power Inrestl gate tills cur before buying. Write or call for catalog and our proposition to dealers. KNUDSEN AUTOMOBILE CO. 107 Farnam Street Omaha Monuments BOOKLET FREE C. E. SPEIDELL & SON, Lincoln WEAR OUT YOUR OLD TIRES (iMltlnthiaUUiJutkMM) IIT C8INO THE CTf TWGRIPc .f Jk- iallBB CASINf WB vnnriu inni iwita AAA mI. . ...l ."" to many tlrea wnlcb you hi mtm now t brow away. V.TXliZ., XttVOr tnacoaiof anew tire, thu lameBnb-Uailnii ran be 8ff.LTLW,bTV! Hlftf.'.' BcV ifi.Sn.tiT blj iUel rlm (inmed Br,l are endlMi ana are made ooDleal to fit ac alnit the inside of Ue outer fij M Ue beadT fteit rim. (" are below rl ro-ert ki?." Mrfore there ii no ebanoe for taa Sob 2S?i2g !"?? "ront a tbe rlm-eat. A anui i .IVJ?. ACACTCaUIKl COMTAKT ! M Itml LUeeJa, Xak. kv 117 n nlll AT B nr rj QUININE nPfnL k 1W U IX K VJ I IT? hTIS -zp M mm PM "Pa SSI2S11 " 'jpi I i i 'i f ' 3k .4HvraW VaV ay ' i m c )