iMwkMj RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF 'i i H .1 A l iU 14 m IH V iff c , SCIENCE SEEKS FOR VITAMINES (Elusive Substance Gives Zest and Real Value to the Food We Eat. FLEES THE TABLE OWES clentlstt Concentrate on Separating It From Viands, but Without Sue cets Differ as to What a Vltarnlne Really Is. New Tori:. Food vnluos arc of es pecial I nt crest these days of high prices. One dines at, say, n restaurant In New York city's "Latin Quarter." .fumed for Its atmosphere but uncer 'tain ub to cooking. Tlie food In men tioned casually on the menu lu sev eral languages but the chicken In tastclcHH, the potatoes boring nud tho twlnd disappointing. However, one Is hungry and eats largely. An hour Inter, tho pnngs of hunger again make themselves felt. One llually resorts to the home Icebox and purtukes of somu fumble bread and butter and milk, und that Indefinable lack Is Hutlstled. The reason for this statu of affairs Is not far to seek. Vltnmlncsl At nuch places tho food Is deficient lu ithe.su Intangible and microscopic sub stances, which scientists have proved nru essential to nutrition and which nre to bo found In n largo number of properly prepared foods but nro de troyed by excessive beat, drying or lOtlier methods of preservation often employed for economy or convenience. fThe mystery of the vltarnlne Is, there jfnrc, of vital Interest, as Its namo 1m titles, to the world at large. What Is a Vltarnlne? JuBt what lu n vltarnlne? This ques tion Is still perplexing chemists,, ac cording to a recent urticle by D. Atherton Seidell of the public health service, In the current number of tho Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. These elusive substnnccs have been found necessary not only as dletnry factors but even for tho pro longation of life. Their exact nature, however, still remains a mystery, though much has been discovered con- MUST PAY HIGH FOR PASSPORTS European Countries Tax Arneri- cans Equivalent of $10,. the Rate Here. LESS FOR OTHER TOURISTS President Mitchell of the Red Star Line Suflgeata Action by the United States Chamber of Commerce Peasants Go Back to Land. New York. According to Percy V. O. Mitchell, president of tho Red Star Hue und general muuuger of the Inter national Mercantile Marine company In Belgium, the charge of $10 for an American vise on passports is not only a tax upon Immigrants who have to pay the high rate of exchange, but also upon American business men abroad. "Since tho charge for a vise bus been raised from $2 to $10," mild Mr. Mitchell, "the countries in Europe huve retaliated by making Americans puy the same amount. They Imvo arranged to base their charges for a vise on a sliding scale. For example, I have to pay 175 francs for my vise at the ltel gluu consulate because I urn an Amer ican, while an Englishman has only to pay 10 francs, which Is n big differ ence when a man Is accompunled by member of bis family. All Are Doing It "Since the wur Europe has been split lip into a number of small countries, and each of them Is charging Ameri cana the equlvulent of $10 lu United States currency. A business mnn has to pass from one country to another to get anywhere, and In each caso ho has to pay heavily because the State do- Annual Rabbit Drive in Eastern I saaaaaVm a7..' av Tv wt ataVw am ' sfc?U liaBBaaaaaaaBMv ww wRPa v H. 4&&&p,ix!Jf&siv awov mm -i ; aaWt yv " H iTftwBaaaaaasVVaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaKk .BaaVaalKHMcTVv ftS. satBaaaaBaaaaaaM aaaaaaaaaaaaamsaev ZVsMSMeuAklBaaaaaBV-JtBaaaaaaalva T. S !w ffliaaalMBbaaV suaaaaKiav. 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Many women, some of whom uro shown In tho photograph, handled their shotguns or rifles as expertly ub the men. Major Stimson .mmmmmm- .mmmmmmmWm. nJmmWPvA WLw VB mL - H mmmmmmmmWm Qmmmmmi , mmWmmLmmmmWmmmm. aiaaaaaaaM JmW Au ( MWmMMmwWTtmmmWmmm awRlaaaaaaaaam mmT. .kaaaa P mmmWivmWmm9mmmmBmaSEmWmBmisSLmMmmmm klaW' '''Z3mmmmWmBMlBWmmS&m&imBmBmWmmm 'iaaaw! 'aaaaaaaVffiHnraaMHlHMBKBSSHaaHHIBtBaaaaal L'Maaawaaaavav(& -J-- 39BHuHuBa9BQVaaVwaHBSsvnuaHBaBa9aaal kaawaaaK' t' mw9WmWMMMMmWmWaSSm9MSOmmmmmWm KaWaK-aV"'' -rlM WBWaaaaaaaaalHHaWMawl'alHlWBaaMaMaT liiHijflsS t; L aaBaaaaaaaaLaaaaV BaaaaaaaaaaaBBaaaaaaBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaLaaaaaaa l pJJsHBV flHLaaalBaaaaaaBaaaaBWMBaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaHBaaH rx SLaaaaLaawlLHV .LaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaalJIL&TOLaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaBaaaa i'LaaaaaaaaattbaaaalBaOTP'BaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaHiKTfla K mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmBMmmmmmWmSFB VLaa!aaaaaaVPiPP-IB aaaaaaaaUaaaaaaaaaikaJBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa! ro MaJ. Julln C. Stimson, superintendent of the army nurse corps und denn of the army school of nursing, with her aides at the army nursu corps head quarters In tho munitions building, Washington. corning their effect on the human sys tem and the general benefits conferred by them. For Instnnce, experiments have proved that anltnuls can live In definitely on n diet of milk alone. Hut supply all the constituents of milk separately protcliiB, carbohydrates, fats and snlts, In fuct. all tho known food elements and the animal wastes away and finally dies. Several theories nro held In regard to this problem. Romo scientists In cline to classify vltamlnes as struc tural compounds of living tissues, which function ulong tho snme lines as the other tissues. Others relegate them to the "cntnlysts," thoso strange substances which hnvo been aptly de fined ns "chemical pnisons," as they accomplish tho chemical union of various substances without being themselves affected. Mnny think that they nro derived originally from plants, and one well-known scientist pnrtment In Washington, without any reason that I have been able to learn, has raised the fee to $10. "The citizen of the United States has to pay $10 for his passport In tho first place, and then to puy another $10 to return from abroad, nud the snme amount for tho countries he visits on the continent. Why the United States Chamber of Commerco has not taken up this question, which is so Important to American business men traveling through Europe, I um nt u loss to un derstand. Tourist Travel Hit. "In addition It will also Interfere with tourist travel In the summer, which hud already decreased consider ably through the lncreaso In passen ger fares made necessary by the high cost of operation of the steamships, In creased wages, food, fuel, etc." Mr. Mitchell said the Belgian govern ment was putting the peasants back on tho land in Flanders, and in place of the small cottages with earthen tloors which were demolished by the German guns they were erecting neat, small houses with tiled tloors nud modern sanitary conveniences. From what he had heard recently lu Brussels before sulllng for New York, tho government would not rebuild Nleuport, tho former fashionable seashore resort, as It had been blasted to pieces by shells n.nd bombs, tho avenues approaching it be ing ruined. Olxmude, where the severe fighting took place at the bridgehead on the Yser, was to n great extent demolished also, but tho people had started to re turn there In tho summer of 1010 nud build on the ruins of their former homes. Tho Bclglnn peasant loves his country and does not want to go abroad to live, Mr. Mitchell udded. and Her Aides states that they are always present In natural foodstuffs Instinctively con sumed It." men and animals. At tle present time, three types of vltnudne nro known to exist: Tho water-soluble variety, found In milk, yenst, and other substances; the fat soluble ones, which are present In but ter and egg yolks; nnd n third class, designated as "antiscorbutic," which Is found In n number of fresh vegetables and fruits nnd also In the outside husk of rice. Lack of theso necessary food constituents results in vurlous Ills scurvy, berl-berl, and other dis eases. In fact, the Importance of the anti scorbutic factor was discovered purely accidentally, ns a result of an epidem ic of berl-berl among tho rlce-catlng Eastern nations after modern milling methods obtulncd In theso countries' nnd tho surface layer of tho rlco was removed. When un extract of this husk was eventually supplied, the dis ease was prevented. Lack of both the other types or vltn tnlne result In n gradual wasting awuy. Thlj, In tho case of tho fnU soluble vltarnlne, Is accompanied by1 blindness and often by lung trouble, but' the wasting process Is more grad ual, as tho system subsists for a while on Its reflervo store of fat. INNOCENT, SERVES 15 YEARS Swiss Convicted of Killing Girl to Be Freed Real Culprit Makes , Confession. Ocnovn. After serving more than fifteen years of a life sentence for a murder of which he Iiiib always claimed to bo Innocent, n yjung man named Illrschbrunner Is to bo relensed, the real culprit having confessed. On the day following a masked ball nt Soleure in May, 1000, the body of n young S.vlss girl was found in the waiting room of the railroad station, where she had been strangled to death She had been seen the previous eve ning In the company of n young man dressed as a peasant woman. Tho de scription of her companion tallied with u costume worn by Illrschbrunner, and be wus tried nnd sentenced to life Im prisonment entirely on clrcumstuntlai evidence. Breaks Wooden Arm as He Punches Man's Nose o Murtinshurg, W. Vn. W. B. Welty, un alleged doorkeeper of u suspected gambling Joint, brnko his wooden arm over tho bead of Philip Hack, a Taren turn (I'n.) business man, who Is reported to have tried to enter by force tho room which Welty guards. Tho blow seriously damaged Hack's nose. Mayor Selbert fined Welty $12.00 on n charge of assault und buttery. Washington CORNHUSKER ITEMS News of All Kinds Gathered From Various Points Throughout Nebraska. OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS Howard county claims the largest chicken hutching Industry lu Ne braska. Dubois will have a new amusement park, ullli swimming pool and other attractions. The Annual Kneainpment of the State O. A. It. will be held at Hastings May Z to y.r. A near epidemic of liilliien.u and whooping cough Is sweeping the vi cinity of Callaway. Fremont Jobbers have been restored to equal shipping udvuntnges with Omaha and Lincoln. Ed Van Owen of Enolu prol.ubly will lose his left hnnd v the result of n corn shelter accident. Fire of imk'nown origin practically destroyed the Fremont Feed and Junk Co. building and contents. A Hereford bull, property of II. .1. Smith of David City, sold ut Des Moines Inst week for $1,100. Sixteen of the Lincoln Insane hos pital herd of cows have been found to be Infected with tuberculosis. The annual meeting of the Nebraska Tress Association will be held at Lin coln February 10, 11 and VI. The Union Pacific has reduced the force In Its Omaha shops and track department twenty-five per cent. The State bank Is a new addition to Petersburg business. It Is the third (luanclul lustitutlon for that place. The Commerchil club of Osceola has decided to Inaugurate a weekly bar gain day to stimulate retail trade. Farmers In the vicinity of llohrs hnvo been reporting the loss of much young stock, presumably by coyotes. About $7.r,000 worth of property was destroyed by fire ut Columbus last year, according to the report of the lire chief. Butter manufacturing In Omaha has Increased from a total value of $1, 7U0.OOO In 1010 to $lr.(G2:i,3:;0 for the year 1020. At n special election held nt Vornnpo bonds for the erection of nn $80,000 high school building carried by a vote of 05 to 7. T. V. Norvell has been appointed United Stntes commissioner for the Norfolk district to succeed the late John It. Hays. Tho Fifty Year club, at Geneva, open to those who have lived In Fill more county since 1871, has reached a membership of 114. Tho anniiul report of State Flr6 Wartlen Hartford shows that the loss from fires In Nebraska for W2.Q amounted to $2,070,020. Hubbell is erecting a new communi ty hall, modern nnd up-to-dnte In every respect, with a full basement underneath ttie entire building. Plattsmouth Eagtes nre making ex tensive preparations for the entertain ment of that order during its state convention at that place In June. The Peters Joint Stock Land bank and the Fremont Joint Stock Laud bank lmve been consolidated under the name of the Fremont concern. Totnl cash gifts from Nebraska for American relief of starving children In Europe nre $82,110.0-1, ns announced by G. W. Wattles, state chairman. A recent government report credits Cheyenne county with huvlng pro duced In 1020 more wheat than any other county In the United States. It lias been decided by the Pawnee city council tbnt paving which was to have been started enrly In the spring will be postponed until n Inter date. Following live stock losses, which farmers say will run Into the thou sands, ii county-wide wolf nnd coyote hunt Is being planned for Table Itock. School attendance In Fillmore coun ty lias Improved from 123 violations J of tho compulsory education law in 1010 and 110 In 1020, to 31 for this yenr. The movement of stocker nnd feed er cattlo to the country from South Oinnlm in January was smaller than for the corresponding month of any yenr since 101'i Eighteen wolves hnvo been killed In neighborhood limits near Elwood. The animals have become so numerous that they arc annoying nnd causing much dnmago to stock. Arrangements have been mndo by Fremont merchants to have Professor Ivey of the State University Instruct 100 salespeople of thnt city lu the principles of salesmanship. Nebraska lumber dealers will bold their annual convention In Omnhn February 0-10. Last yeur 8."0 dealers attended the convention. More nre ex pected this year. Albert Fluent of Du Bols claims to have a coal vein 12 Inches thick In Ids pasture. For five winters 1k hauled this Nebraska coal Into market In Humboldt and Pawnee. Governor McKelvie has completed arrangements with Auditor Marsh to furnish clerical help necessary for the auditor to Issue warrants for half the face of claims filed upon tho state hull Insurance fund. What is said to be tho heaviest baby ever born In Franklin county nr rlved ut the home of Mr. nud Mrs. Harm II. Harms near Upland. It was a boy and weighed seventeen pounds. It Is the ninth child in ttie family. Fruit growers of Holt county have begun to express alarm over the pres ent springlike weather. Trees already are showing signs of budding nud sap beginning to fiow. Miss Dorothy Davis, Instructor In inntbeuintlcs nud girl's physical cdticnn (Ion nt tho Columbia high school will teach next yenr In the Islo of Oahu, one of tbe Hawaiian group. Custer county has paid $-1,800 In coyote bounties this si'iibou for 1,000 animals. Murray hns Inaugurated the custom of holding picnic dinners, attended by the whole population, John Iteld, mail carrier out of Blair for fifteen jears, estimates that be lias traveled 100,100 miles. M. Dvorak of Wither recently sold nearly forty head of Poland China bog' at an average of $05 each. The Hock Island rotini!houo forco nt Fiilrbury lias been reduced sixty. Other workmen have been also laid off-. The American Legion nt Coi'.ad lias begun u drive for loo per cent mem bershlp. An athletic carnival neltod neai I. v $200. The Falrbnry Chamber of Com merce Is contemplating reopening tho Waterloo creamery, which was closed six months ago. An uttenipt to revive the Baptist church at Ord, which has been closed for nearly two years, Is being inadu by the Hev. M. Edson. Dean Fouclit, employee nt Die slnto hospital for the Insane at Lincoln, was accidentally electrocuted wbllo clennlng a boiler In the power house. Burglars took 45.000 clgarets, 200 cigars and 210 pounds of tobacco from the lbiyinoud Bros.-Clnrke Grocery house at Lincoln one night Inst week. A bond Issue of $12,500 to tuko up Gerlng'H Hunting Indebtedness nnd put municipal business on n cash bnsls was voted with very tlttlo opposition. Fairmont Is making an elTort to se cure the headquarters of a maclilno gun company. The project Is being pushed principally by ex-service men. The Burlington is constructing tulles of switches mid many new buildings ut Aurora with a view to making that place a division point within a few months. After twenty-six years the legisla ture may this year restore to the school fund of the state nearly $250,000 embezzled from that fund In 1S0I5 by J. S. Bnrtley, then state treasurer. One of ttie largest business deals In the history of western Nebraska was completed nt Goring when the Thorton Hardware and Furniture Co. sold out to the Burge company for $1S0,000. Several wolf hunts In tbe Desliler neighborhood have failed to destroy tbe animals which have caused hun dreds of dollars daniags to young stock and poultry, according to "funn els. Secretary Leo Stubr of the state de partment of agriculture has complied a table, showing that farm tenantry in Nebraska lias increased from 37.2 per cent in 11)11 to 40.3 per cent In 1020. Death claimed 181 members of tho Nebraska G. A. It. In 1020, according to Assistant Adjutant General Harmon Bross report. The organization's present membership is 2,000. Tliero are 157 posts. While helping lath the new Method ist church ut Stromsburg, I5ev. V. H. Van Horn, pastor, suffered a frac tured skull when lie slipped from tho scaffold, striking his bead on the ce ment lloor. Dan Itedmond, n fnrmer residing near Oconto, suffered a double frac ture of the left leg, between the nnklo nrid the knee, when the horse he was riding fell and caught the member be neath tils body. The Itev. (). Kloeckncr, pastor of St John's Evangelical Lutheran church, near Emerald, lias served notice on his congregation that he Intends to resign following action of the members In re storing German services. Half the $7(',0,(KK) state hall Insur ance losses Incurred lu 1020 will bo ipald on February 15, tinder arrange ments worked out by Governor Mc Kelvie nud State Auditor Marsh. Tho remainder will be held until collection of nil slate taxes. , Snakes along the Nlr.brnra river bot tom already have broken their period of hibernation, according to trappers who have been spending ttie winter season on the river. A large bull snake, extremely active, was killed by hunters Inst week. Mayor Thomas of Nebraska City has begun a campaign against owners of pool bnlls nud cigar stores who have been selling clgnrets and tobacco to minors. Names of school boys who nre under uge have been furnished tho owners of these places of business. Of the 1,548 persons seeking em ployment at tho federal state free em ployment agency nt Lincoln during January, but 208 obtained work, ac cording to the monthly report of Miss Frances L. Iloblnson, examiner In charge. Fewer persons were furnished work during January In proportion to the number of applicants than In sev eral years. Five hundred life Insurance men of Nebraska, Iown and South Dakota aro expected lu Omaha February 15 for an mutual congress of agents. Fred L. Fnssott, of Lincoln, has been appointed by national headquar ters as provisional departmental com mander of the Veterans of tbe foreign wars for tbe state of Nebraska. Mr. Fassett served In the First Nebraska regiment In the Spnulsh-Ainerlcan war, In tbe Thirty-second United States volunters during the Philippine insur rection, In the trouble w)tli Mexico be fore the world war, and In ttie World war near Snn Antonio, Texas. The Nebraska agricultural experi ment stntlon nt the college of agricul ture now claims one of the best dairy herds In the country. In the twenty years of its existence It lias developed eight cows that produced nn nvt-rngo of 003 pounds of butter in ouo ye.ir. II. II. Sheldon ef Columbus, who recently hud u fino bunch of cattle ut tho South Omaha stock yards, said there would be un Increased swlao production In bis neighborhood next spring as nearly all of the farmers In that section nro breeding more sows for spring farrowing than they huve for several years. NATION IN DANGER Farm Abandonment Has Created Most Serious Situation. Food Supply Threatened Through th Drift of the Population to the Cities Now Is Great Opportu nity to Take Up Land. The nwnllnn, "How Is tbe country lo be fed If the population continue to drift to the cities?" Is one Mint should create nn agitation that will bring about n teply Hint will mean solution. Tin! census, recently com pleted, reveals a situation truly alarm ing, one that bus never been knowi In the (lulled States before. The ur ban population Is now grenter thnn that or the rural districts by about 4,000,000. Cities nnd towns, each with more than 2.500 Inhabitants, contain 51.318.032 persons, or 51.4 per cent of the total population, white the farm and smaller towns together clnlni only 51.31)0.730 persons, or 48.0 per cent of the totnl. As Is pointed out by an Influential Chicago dully, "the drift to the cltle Is thus proved nnd, reduced to figures, showing n top-heuvy condition of lh Industrial life." Farming Is and must remain ttia basic Industry of tbe world, nnd cer tainly should remain the basic indus try of a nation with u continental arm like ours. It Is small profit to gain the mnrkets of the world with manufactured goods If agriculture bn decayed so badly ns to furnish nn un certain subsistence for our people, nnrt fluctuating crops nre retlected In price changes that upset the economic llf of tbe country. Yet wc nro within mensurable distance of tbnt condition. If the present or recent drift toward the cities continues. Most writers on this topic tnke U for granted that young folks go from farms to cities merely to mnke mort money. Doubtless thnt Is something of a motive nt nil times and wan r very strong one In the period Imme diately after the war, when city Indus trie paid wages totally Impossible for farmers to rival. It Is hoped that this drifting hn reached Its apex. Unless It hns, nnd there still remain" n possibility of ltf contlnunnce, the effect cannot be fore told. The great wave of mnnufactnren for wnr purposes hns ceased, nnd wlth It the number of those empVyed lt factories Is diminishing by thousands dnljy. It Is therefore hoppd thnt ther will ngnln be heard the slogan, "For ward to the Land." If prices to which farm land hns reached are price pro hibitive to mnny, tbe opportunity l still open elsewhere. There are state possessing large nrns of good Innd thnt may still he had at prices within the reach of many, nnd It In doubtless true that In self-preservation It wlir he riecessary totbring these lands un der cultivation. The prices are not high, considering their value. Then, too. there ure the lands of Westprn Canada, thnt hold nut nn Inviting pros pect. Reports from there show thot the prosperity of the farmers there 1f not mythical. Farming there Is con ducted on scientific principles, and" the climate Is such as appeals. The production amply rppnys all the ex penditure thnt mny he made. The soclnl conditions nre of n character that mnke farm life n pleasure, and! tends to .keep the young mnn nntt young woman from pining for nrhnn life with, so mnny drawbacks. If con ditions as above mentioned, showing such a Inrge percentage of population In the cities and towns, continues, they will require food. The opportunity to supply It Is by the means suggested. Go forward to the farm, become In dependent, and become a factor In supplying tho world's needs In cattle, sheep, grain anil such other commo dities ns tbe farm will produce nnd the resident of the city requires. Advertisement. Might Be the Reason. Johnson "De Brown never speaks of Ids family tree." Bronson "I ex pect it's much too shady." Ited Cross Ball Blue Is the finest product of Its kind in the world. Ev ery woman who has sed It knows this statement to be true. I Diverging Views. t, She He is a man of letters and tho stamp of man I like. He Well, your man of letters Is th the stamp I like to lick. Find the Cause ! It isn't right to drag along feeling miserable half sick. Find out -what is making you feel so badly and try to correct it. Perhaps your kidneys arc causing that throbbing backache or those sharp, stabbing pains. You may bave morning lameness, too, hcrfdaches, dizzy spells and Irregular kidney action. Use Doan't Kidney Pilla. They have helped thousands of ailing folks. Ask your neighbor! A Ncbr&aka Cue "ben'rktmTriliiSttnr Mrs. Dude Mci nee, 721 JUh m.. Auburn, Neb., eayu: "I hud a greut deal lot trouble with my Kiuuoys, i wan an run down and had severe patna In my oat-it ana Kianoye. Tliero wns a henw ucuruiK-uown acua in ine email nt my back. too. Tlnnn'n Kidney Pills were recommended to me and two boxco entirely cured me." Ct Dom's at Any Stow, 60c a Boa DOAN'SsV FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. V, fa itmsh a iys UMLV - -TL 3'7s&mMk$i? 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