,tu JtED f!T.wn m - "Ssi RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF EX-KINGS EYE DANUBE STATES Federation Is Formed on Paper by Plotters In Switzer land. DETAILS ARE flOT COMPLETE Exiled Rulers, Seeing the Hopelessness of Their Cnucc, Now Center All Their Plotting on One Great Scheme. Heme, Switzerland. From "the piny ground of IJtirope" (if before (be wir, Switzerland bus become "the plotting ground of Km ope" of nfter the wur. And nil of this plotting may now be summurls'ed lu one general end of "the constitution of n Damihlan confedern tlou." To the credit of the Swiss It must lie .nld they resent In the extreme de gree the abuse tluit Ik now being iniide of their ronntry nnd their hospitality by the exiled rulers nnd ntntesmen of erstwhile empires nnd states, but they nre ns helpless In the mutter ns they nre Innocent. Keeps Everybody Busy. While they ennnot keep their little country from being converted Into nn Incubator, however, they mn at least try to keep the plots being brooded iherelu from actually batching, and the SwNs secret service, together with Its gendarmes. Its policemen, Its detectives and Its public ofllelals generally, are putting In quite a few sleepless nlgbta to this end. Now that the gradual readjustment of llurope has left no doubts In the minds of certain exiled ruleis, like ok King Constnntlne of Greece and some of the former niler.s of German states, of the hopelessness of their cause, all of the plotting In Switzerland has come slowly to center on one great scheme, a scheme that Is not only con sidered possible, but that Is considered by many of the great minds and au thorities of Europe as being absolute ly Imperative and Inevitable. This Is the constitution of a Dan ublan federation to replace the old dual monarchy, nnd w hlch. according to Its backers, Is the only thing that can Insure tho life of the half-dozen or more states Into which the old Austrian-Hungarian monarchy has been di vided. ' Vital and Imperative. Whether this Danublan federation has Its center north of the Danube witli what Is left of Hungary and Aits ti in as a basis or whether it has its center south of the Danube with Serbia EGGS DROPPED FROM Pjlittfllllll . f'lititwii. txP l'.... I. !.... .... . "" S.......V.U ... iiininiiKiuii, v. y uuiing canons or unbroken eggs f i urn a bag of mall dropped via parachute from a mall airplane Hying over the capital from College Park, Mil. CROP VALUES TRIPLED - Production for Year 1919 Broke All Records. Worth Almost Three Times as Much as Average for Five-Year Period. Washington. The value of crops produced In the United States this year Is nearly three times greater than the nverngo iitmunl valno during tho flvo years preceding the outbreak of the Eu ropean war, according to the report of the secretary of agriculture. "On the basis of prices that have recently pre vailed," says secretary, "the total value of all crops produced In 1010 Is ?ir, 87:1,000,000, compared with 514,1222,. 000,000 for 1018; $1:1,470,000,000 for 11)17; $0,031,000,000 for 1010; ?,112, 000,000 for 1014 ; and .T!i,820.000,000 for the five-year average, 1010-1014. Thcso values represent gross production and and Itoumanla plujjng he leading role j whether It be nionnrchlcal or re publican In form, together with half a dozen other possibilities or ramifica tions, are generally considered unim portant. All that Is regarded as ltal and Imperative Is that stieh a uu.fcd era t Ion be constituted and that It be organized In full harmony with end support of tho allies. .Hungary and German Austrln. ns they will exist when the peace confer ence finishes Its wink, will be dead states their own people and states men admit that. Poland nnd Czecho slovakia are merely gambling bets. Hut Serbia and Itoumanla are consid ered as the two big future bets of south central Europe. On the oilier baud, there are Just iik many supporters and Just as many plotters In Switzerland who would like to sco Vienna regain some of Its past UNIQUE CEMETERY 1 TEACHES LESSON Exhibit at Montana State Fair Sent People Away Thinking. EPITAPHS DRIVE HOME TRUTH Greater Convenience and a Larger Measure of Comfort In the Farm Home the Big Lesson Conveyed by Miniature Graveyard. Washington. It was a neat little country cemetery, much like most lit tle country cemeteries, yet tltere was something queer about it. There was the arched gateway and the customnry weeping willows by It. The clipped hedge wns like most cemetery ltedges. The tombstones weie about the aver age run of tombstones. Hut, withal, there was something queer c en shocking. Then you discovered what It wns. These were truthful tomb stones. Consoling platitudes "Too pin o tor earth," and that like found no place. Instead, there were such epitaphs as these: "Mother walked to death In her kitchen;" "Sacred to the memory of Jane she scrubbed herself Into eternity," "Grandma washed herself away;" "Susie swept AIRPLANE UNBROKEN I. ...... - Funeral Held for Cat, Pet of New York Woman l.eno, Mass. Funeral rites over n cat here were attended by all the employees on the sum mer estnte of Mrs. Carlos de Ilerodlas of New York, and the feline's "remains" were burled on the estate In a metal casket. Hyacinth, a Persian cat, said to have cost $0,000, was greatly treasured by Mrs. de Ilerodlas, and when It died at her home In New York the owner bad the body borne here in n special au tomobile truck, not net returns to the producer. The value of live stock on farms In 1010 was $8,830,000,000, compared with $8, Coal Car Rams Into Man as He Is Bathing liny City, Mich. Telford E Hill, manager of the Mueller Chicory company's plant, was taking a bath lu bis home ad joining the plant when a freight car crashed through the house and agatusl the wall of the bath room. The wall fell, and u coal car came in view. There had been two cars stand ing on the shoit switch. When the train ciew attempted to place more cars there they evi dently forgot about them, and the cars were sent through the bumper right Into Mr. Hill's bathroom. glory ns the center of the new Kanubl an confederacy; Ihidupcst Is equally well represented, while there are plenty of others who can demonstrate from ii dozen standpoints, why War saw Is Inevitably destined ns the future great center of middle European ll.'e. out of life with too heavy a broom." Tlu people who saw that cemeterj and there were thousands of them may have been shocked for the Instant, but they came uway with tho thought that one might be better for seeing ' sjicIi a cemeterj. Tor, you see, It was ' a miniature ceme'erj, three feet ( square, and It was part of an exhibit at th" Monlnua state fair. Such levity with the most .solemn thing thatinan-. ' Mini knows could not be Justltled , merely on the theory that the things said were true but those who saw It came away with the belief that It was Justified by way of keeping Just those things from being true. And that was tho purpose of the exhibit, placed there by the agricultural extension de partment of the State Agricultural col lego of Montana. It was meant to em phasize the need for homo conveni ences, for lack of which many a farm woman has gone to her grave beforr her time. Drive Truth Home. There were other exhibits designed to drive home the same hard truth. One was a model showing n bleak farmhouse on a bnre hill. At the bot tom of the hill ran n little stream, nnd by the stream were barns nnd cattle. Struggling up the hill toward the house with two heavy palls of water was n bent old woman. And the legend was: "Convenient for tho cattle but not for mother." Then there was a farmhouse with tho water supply as It nliould be, the woman In the yard sprinkling her tlower beds with a hose. And the In scription read: "Convenient for moth erand the cattle, too." Another model showed a kitchen as It should be, and another, n kitchen as It should not be. And there was 'the legend: "A long-distance kitchen sbor ens life." The lesson taught by the exhibit Is one that the state agricultural colleges and the United States department of agriculture are trying to teach by every means at their command great er convenience and n larger measure of comfort In the farm home. CALIFORNIA RICE DOES WELL New Agricultural Industry Produces Crop Worth Millions of Dollars. Washington. In eight -jours the Sacramento valley of California has developed a new agricultural Industrj', rice growing, which this nst season has resulted In a gross production es timated to be worth approximately twenty-one millions of dollars. This sbowlng Is the result of research car ried on by the bureau of plant Indus try of tho department of agriculture. Following experiments by the bureau covering three years, tho tlrst com mercial rice crop as planted In 1012. The value of the 1010 rice crop In Cal ifornia will probably bo several mil lions greater than tlfnt of wheat ami peaches, both of which aro commonly thought of ns relatlvelj largo cropn lu that state. 281.000,000 In 1018; SOJftfl.OOO.OOO in 1017; .? 0,021. 000,000 In U,fl; ijifi.SOO. 000.000 In 1014; ml .r.!ll 000,000 for the live-yen r average, 10104014. "This Increased ilnaiiclnl showing, it Is again necessary to ompli'islze. does not mean that tho nntlon lu butter off to that extent or that Its real wealth has ndvanced in that proportion. Con sidering merely the domestic relations, the true state Is Indicated rather hi terms of real commodities, comparative statements of which nre given In fore going tables. Tho JucronsoU values, however. do reveal that the monetary returns to the farmers have Increased proportionately with those or other groups of producers in the nation, nnd that their purchasing power has kept pace lu the rising scale of prices." Aged Fiddler Plays. Fremont, O. "Itat" Gould, cham pion oldtlmo fiddler of Amerlcn, cele brated his elghtloth birthday miniver nary with n dance In tho Mutual Aid hull In Bellevue. "Itut" furnished the music. Old-fashioned dances vvero revived. AIRPLANE VIEW si -3rffiTlr"aawah,rESa-? -rZZk&Xm-&mi'K an airplane Mew ot isaliioa, the ago a salt water swamp which wns tilled In by the Pulled States government. Nearlv every building In the pho togrnph Is of concrete. The large building in the foiegrotind Is a scboolbouse. In the right' background Is a hiign imi K'iiiui, NEW AMERICAN The U. port, Conn. S. submarine S-10, on'e of BELGIAN POET AND &&,, 4. r , t "V. ti t i. Vk -V. JftHk m V9HMttl(itatWttuKv: Maurice Maeteilinck, the famous Helglan poet and dramatist, and bis joung wife photographed on their aiilval In New York to attend the premiere of his opera "Ulue Illrd." GREAT DRY DOCK h -Ii- i mrasxmTli ..,,. w. . v AMMM As tho prow of the battleship Virginia crossed tho sill of tho now Com monwealth dry dock, nt Iloston, It struck a Moral wieath stretched across from Willi to wall, and us the huge fighting craft moved forward tho chain of flowers MiaprJ, illelully opening tlio world. OF BALBOA ON THE '&SW5Zir&m i;?rr;f SSSSl Paclilc entiance to the I amimii canal. SUBMARINE LAUNCHED the largest in the navy, photographed YOUNG WIFE ARRIVE r .A.ifv SkSAsfa&&ysfoAAtK.SAlJMfri FORMALLY OPENED 'WrtftAv-l iUwrtJWrtA -hv VWV.W'.Wv.W' largest dry dock of Its -kind lu the PANAMA CANAL "ss3 m Thl wits former! j about ten year.- AT BRIDGEPORT just after It was launched at Urhlgo- WAS FOILED BY A VULTURE Lieut. Ktlenne Poulet. French filer, might linvo beaten Capt. Roos J3mlth In the rate to Australia had It not been for n fight with a huge vulture while flying over the mountain peaks of Slam near the town of Moulmaln. The vulture circled for n timo over the nlrcraft, which was making llttlo speed because of weather conditions, then dived straight down, striking and shattering the right propeller. Tho lieutenant senrehed tho mountain tops for over half an hour before finding a suitable place for landing. Ho hud to abandon the race. An Attentive Pupil. Jack, aged five, and Henry, soven, had listened attentively while tho rec tor explained to the church school tho reason for tho. cniupalgit for church expansion. On the w;ny homo .Tnck noticed for the first time the posters advertising the cnmpnlgn. "Who put up those posters?" piped Jack. "God." said Henry, without n mo ment's hesitation. "How do you know God did It?" Jack asked. "Oh, didn't you hear Mr. nrnu-nn.n., all tljH church expansion Is Qod'id worn t tl A Tolerant Attitude. "Your Intellectual friend enjoyed tho, movies?" ' "She seemed to, nnd I nniK glvo her credit for one thing." "What Is thnt?" "Although she knows nnnLi,i..i.i- more iibout Latin and Greek than she1 does about making a pie, she refrained' from calling attention to , ,. 4-i Ical mistakes In tho fnibtltles." Bir- .'3W,TMTi8rt4i;v.5"-.JPiiS,y . .'. ...r..;"& :frv V J V '-! w ia ? s C ( si ." ') - -A" ; - 1 uiiiiKiiuiii ABc-tierum.