',. """ RED CLOUD. NEBRASKA. CHIEF i ; i m f s U Audiences of 50,000,000 Soon Engineers Foresee Amplifiers Bearing President's Voice to Entire Nation. IN ITS INFANCY, THEY SAY Current From Arlington Was Multl piled 3,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,. 000,000 Times Rival of "Canned Muolc." Now York. President Harding, who sot a record for long-distance or atory on Armistice day by addressing simultaneously three groat throngs of more than 100,000 persons, gathered at Arlington National cemetery, Han Francisco and New York, may easily llnd himself talking to an audience running high Into tlio millions and Hcnttered through every Htato In the Union, before ho leaves the White House. Indeed, snyn It. W. King, one of tho American Telephone and Telegraph company engineers, whose work on tho loud-speaking device made possi ble the ushering In of a new epoch In space annihilation at the ceremonies over tho bier of America's unknown soldier, It Is well within tho range of possibility that President Harding may sco the day when a President can flit at case In the White House and talk at onco to every city, town and bam lot In the United States that Is tapped by telephone wires. An audience of G0.000.000 perhaps I Or 100,000.000 1 They don't even blink nt llgurcs llko that these telephono company engin eers. For ability to look, unabashed, Into tho faces of n column of ciphers, marching in threes across great open white spaces, is one of the prerequi sites oven to thinking about that tnur vclous contrivance, the electrical nm pllfler, of which tho loud-speaking do vico Is only one In a long list of 'prac tical applications. Sees Nation as Audience. For instance, tho electrical current that carried President Harding's fu neral oration to the crowds at Arling ton, San Francisco and New York was multiplied H.OOO.OOO.OOO.OOO.OOO.OOO, 000,000,000 times before it rolled out, converted Into great sonorous sound wnvos, over the heads of threo audi ences. , It .took 3,000,000,000.000,000 amplifi cations to convey the oration nnd the other ceremonies to San Francisco so jthnt they could have been benrd through an ordinary telephono receiv er. Then they bad to bo amplified a .million million times by the loud speaking device. A mere tcn-inllllon billions 10,000, OOO.OOO.OOO.OOO of amplifications were inecessary to bring tho ceremonies out iclear nnd strong in New York. Ten ithousnnd wcro used to bring the cere jnolncs here, and a million million to jmlsc them to audibility for the Now 'York audience. The other million mil lion amplifications were used to carry the President's voice to the, Arlington rowd. By providing n few more scores of 'thousands of miles of wire, some thou Hands of loud-speaking devices nnd a ifow foolscnp sheets filled with tiny ciphers indicating more amplifications, itho entire country might hear future .public ceremonies, Mr. King said. It would be relatively simple, ho de clared, to set tip equipment in tho cnpl itals of tho 48 states through which 150,000 persons In each city a total of 17,200,000 could hear n ceremony in Washington or elsewhere as distinctly las If 'they were seated within n few yards of tho speaker. A Rival of "Canned" Music. "Cunned" music, too, faces a poten tial rival lu the loud speaker. Tele phono engineers say the Armistice day experiment proved that music could bo reproduced over tho wire circuits at least as purely as it Is reproduced on tho best phonograph records and that it will be a matter of but a fow years when the Inst vestlgo of metallic ring will be eliminated. Mr. King believes it will be but n abort time, ton, until all the prlnclpnl public halls nnd large university audi toriums are equipped nt least with lo cal loud speakers. These, ho pointed out, could easily be switched on long dlstanco circuits carrying public ad dresses and similar events from other cities. While tho loud-spenklng device Is a development of the last two years, the amplifier which made It poslblo has been In widespread use, piling up ciphers unseen on every long-distance telephone line In tho country, since the i t T Lays Two Eggs Daily; One Just Shames Her New York. Wilton Green of Union Ilrlclc, N. J., near llelvl dere, has a Plymouth Hock hen which, lie says, lays two eggs a day, most days. When she produces only a sin gle egg she Is so ashamed of her performance that fahe doesn't cackle, Green suys. Green says she has maintained tho two-a-day speed slneo last spring, with few holidays. Tho eggs, according to Green, arc brown, well formed and of normal size. -....---.. transcontinental circuits wore opened lu 1015. A long-distance call from New. York to San Francisco Involves -lOO,-000,000,000,000 amplifications. The number of amplifications necessary between any two points depends not only upon the distance but upon the nature of the circuit. Hut the principle of t lu; amplifier Is hot limited to telephonic use. It Is a fundamental of radio and wire teleg raphy, of radio telephoning, of all long distance electrical signaling. Jt was the amplifier that picked up during the war the water vibrations mused by enemy submarines and translated them into sounds by which command ers of allied warships were able to lo catu the hidden foe. GET STONE FOR HERO'S TOMS Canadians Pava Memorial Chamber With Marble From Battlo Fields. Ottawa, Can. Stones gathered from every Canadian battle field in France and Ilclgluin will pave the memorial chamber In which Canada's unknown soldier Is to be entombed. Around the walls of the chamber will be a base of btack marble, the gift of Hclglum. Rising from this will be the columns of Jobless Girls Storm New York Lack of Work Fails to Retard Country Lass Seeking City Career. SITUATION REALLY SERIOUS Employment Bureaus Crowded With Women Who Have Been Thrown Out of Employment War Work Brought Unrest. New York. Tho seriousness of the unemployment situation among women has apparently no terrors for tho girl from upstate, tho .Middle West or the South, says Miss Amy Talbot of the Central Brunch Y. W. C. A., accord ing to the New York Sun. New York is tho mcccn towurd which shu turns her steps, confident that once here there will bo jobs without number waiting her acceptance. Miss Talbot, who Is head of tho Booms Registry Service, lins noted little decrense In tho number of applications for rooms received from out-of-town women seeking careers In tho big city. "As fnr as I have been able to dis cover," says Miss Talbot, "girls are not concerned with these reports of unemployment. Jobs mjciii of llttlo Im portance, compared with the fact that tho young adventurer has reached New York. There Is one difference. I find that now the demand Is almost entire ly for tho ?i room, where It used to be that rooms were sought not so much for economy as for convenient locations. Situation Is Serious. "The situation Is rapidly assuming serious proportions. Women, old and young, are now being laid off by firms which have employed them for long periods. Our employment bureaus are crowded with women who have been thrown out of employment, and yet ever' train that comes Into our terminals brings Its quota of new comersall of whom expect to be sup plied with some means of earning their livelihood. Not an hour ago I talked with a girl who had Just come In from upstate. Nothing I said In explanation of the seriousness of this problem that Is confronting so many of our men and women today had any effect upon her. She has always wanted to come to Now York; she had always had a good Job, and she Captains of the Col. Hoaald Campbell and MaJ. F. American teams now competing In COBLENZ TRAFFIC COP f w4 'M r zr.- t wn Among the peaceful pursuits of the American soldiers In the army of occu pation In Germany Is that of direct ing tralllc In Cohlenz. This dough boy looks capable of handling the Job. St. Anne's marble, also from Belgium, lk'tweeu the columns will he walls of Savonnlere stone, from France. In the chamber will be the altar of Great Britain carved from a solid block of marble. did not see why sho should not find another one now. The Idea that good positions nre, not fioatlng around to bo secured at will had evidently not entered her mind. "Wo have dally to send bnck refus als to out-of-town applicants who would like to find rooming qunrtcrs In one of the Young Women's Christlnn association boarding houses. The waiting lists show there will be no vacancies for months. The pitiful part of it Is that wo have so ninny older women who nro desperately In need of a place to stay, let alone tho question of work to do. More and more women well pnst tho thirty-year mark are being forced out by the stress of the times to earn their own bread und butter. They stand little chance of being met even hnlf way the competition Is too strong for them, with these eager intelligent young minds ready to snatch up every good thing thnt comes arong. 'Watch nnyi line in an employment ofilce and sec how ninny of the women on it nre gruy-haired. There are fow hoarding houses and business women's clubs which will admit a woman to resident membership without considering her nge most carefully. In many of these places thirty years marks the ago limit. The reason that la given for this preference Is that since there nre not accommodations for all, It is felt that the younger womnn Is more in need of the protection nfforded by these clubs. War Work Brought Unrest. "Undoubtedly, the wnnderlust which brings the younger women from the security of their homes here to com bat an almost hopeless situation is a phase of the unrest which followed hard upon the heels of the war. So many of our girls who until that time were content to stay quietly at home jumped into nil tho hundred and one activities that .suddenly required the services of women. They found them selves necessary In a way they had never before dreamed of. They swung big Jobs, small jobs, nilddle-stzcd Jobs, Wth an efficiency that amuzVd them. Now they are not content to fold their hands. "The younger generation has ac quired n marked distaste for staying at home, where they may lend a nor mal life. They find they must be up and doing and In their minds New York Is the only plnco for their activ ities. The question is, 'Where arc the Jobs for them?'" Fencing Teams W. lloncycutt, cuptalus of tlio British and Washington. T3H&. NEWS OF STATE TERSELY TOLD Recent Happenings in Nebraska Given in Brief Hems For Busy Readers. An epidemic of brain finer pneum onia Is taking a heavy toll lu ihoScoila bottoms, southeast of I'nlon, All Omaha railroad! have put Into , effect a reduced freight rate on xhlp-' incuts of livestock, gain an ' fnrni pro- j unci- going hi car loan lots. The Verdun Stale hank and the .I'ariners State hank of Verdun have consolidated and will hereafter be known as the Verdon Slate hank. Chester may get lis electric "Juice" from the Ueshlcr plant. A group of business men from that place Inspect ed the Meshler powerhouse wllh a view to recommending a truii'-iulsslon Hue. The ('urllss airplane and Its hangar belonging to Hector .Soar 'r (igullahi. was destroyed by fire. While starting tin ship Inside the hangar it back-llred and Immediately became a mass of llanics. At a special session the Fremont city ,1'ounell ordered the purchase of tho '.plant and business of the Independent F.lcctric Light company, owned by the 'Doherty Interests. The city Is to pay !?'2.-,00(). ' Nine big coyotes, two of them weigh ing more than sixty pounds apiece, weie shot In a round-up staged by Ox ford post No. 1211) of the American Le gion, In which about five hundred men took part. ' Grain, hay, forage and beet pro duction In Nebraska during 1021 was less than In 1020, according to the final crop summary Issued by the state and federal bureau of markets and crop estimates. Ray iower, former cashier of the Valparlaso state bank, was sentenced to serve from one to seven years In the penitentiary following his convic tion In district court on a charge of emhrezzleinent. Haymnnd Koehrow of Alexandria was awarded the -$75 scholarship of fered by the Union Pacific In the stnte agricultural college. Hallroad fare al so Is Included. lie took first place in buys' club work. Negotiations have been completed thereby the First Natlonnl lank of Seward, the oldest hank in the tow:, will be absorbed by the Farmers' State bank. The namo of the First National will he retained. Farmers lu Custer County nre hav ing trouble paying their taxes tills year on account of the low price of com and other farm crops, more taxes are delinquent this year than has ever been know In Custer county. Bill Harris, negro, was taken Into custody by sheriff C. K. Clark of Cen jtral City after confessing to the niur 'der of his wife, iweuy years ago in Texns. The confession was prompted by a visit from his daughter, with whom he quarreled, she threatening to expose him. Misinterpretation of orders Is said to have been responsible for the col .llslon of the northbound Northwestern passenger with a southbound extra freight in the Waboo yards. Both en gine crews Jumped and escaped with bruises. Passengers received a severe shaking, but no one was Injured. The Lincoln crib of the Corn Haters of America, pledged to eat corn In soma form once n day during the year, was organized at Lincoln at a banquet of ,"00 representatives from many Neb raska Chambers of t'oinmerce. and from large cities along the Missouri river. The dinner was made up oxelu .slvely of corn dishes. It Is planned to 'spread the organization through the corn belt at once and make It a nation ',al organization. The object Is to in 'crease the demand for corn and help the farmers. C. J. Brush of Auburn won the grand sweepstakes ribbon" for, the best ten eifrs of white corn at the annual corn show held In connection with organized agriculture, under the auspices of the Nebraska Crop Growers'' association nt Lincoln. Hon Forbes of Dakota City took three sweepstakes prizes, the grand champion ten ears of corn, best ten ears of yellow corn and the grand champion single ear. Will Longeran of Florence., placed first in two va rieties, best ten ears Flint corn and best ten ears of pop corn. There were over 200 exhibits'. Bobbers who broke Into the Wondrn market at Petersburg and stole about !$100 in cash used a large amount of pepper which they put on the lloor in order to foil tracking by bloodhounds. According to the report Just made by the State Department of Agriculture In regard to the sanitary condition of the packing plants in Nebraska the report suites sleeping quarters In the , Nebraska city and Omaha plants are entirely separate from the rooms where killing, cooling and earring nro carried on, the report said. No viola tions of the sanitation laws were found. I William Ferguson, stock raiser of ' Scrlbnor, reported to the Dodge county olllcluls Mint 11 head of nurchrcd sows ' laid been stolen from his ranch, lie values the missing stock at .$1,100. Acting Police Captain Jaines Mc Donald, shot twice In the left leg lu a gun battle with yegginen in Omaha, will be Immediately appointed to the position of captain, Police Commis sioner Henry W, Dunn announced. A fund, subscribed to generausly by sev eral business and professional men for tho Injured olllcer, bus now surpassed the ?G0O murk. Work will start soon at Pawneo City on seventeen blocks of new paving. Tho Nebraska Leiifiiu of Municipal ities will hold its annual meeting in Omaha January 2,'5-2.". Charles K. Black has been Installed as postmaster in Omaha, succeeding Harry Daniel, acting postmaster since the death of Chnrlni Fannin . By wireless, Omaha recently listened to and heiird a speech delivered lu Boston by 11. W. Babson, former sta tistician for the United States. Ho predicted an Improvement In all Hues of business. Hev. Chester Wood of Lansing, Mich., who has accepted the rectorship of the Episcopal church at Central t'lty. for a number of years was pastor of tho Llllle Church Around the Corner In New York "City. While bun! Ing southwest of Barnes ton, George Gulbrod, 18, of Barneslon, was aecldenlally shot In the right arm by Floy .lames of Beatrice. He was taken to a Beatrice hospital. It Is be lieved he will recoer. According to figures compiled by I ho Nebraska stale department of agricul ture In the agrleuliiiral census, a larg er proportion of farms nre operated by owners lu Puwnee county than lu any other county in this section. Twenly-.slx of the neighbors of John Nicholson, who resides near Callaway. gathered at his rurui and busked out his entire corn crop or over u thousand bushels. Mr. Nicholson has been very III with pneumonia for the past month. Fndlcott wants a new $10,000 church und subscription petitions are in cir culation to raise the funds. While this will be under the supervision or tlio Methodist denomination the edifice will be used as a community meeting center. A community house, which will con tain u library, auditorium and women's rest room, Is being planned by tho Klmwood legion post and members are securing pledges. Shower rooms, a kitchen and moving picture outfit also are Included. A court. of domestic relatl.ns before which cases concerning relations be tween man nnd wife and children will be decided, wns established by order of Douglas county district Judges nt their annual meeting. The court is the first of its kind in Omaha. One of every four families In Buffalo county Is the owner of a Jitney, truck or motorcycle, according to County Treasurer Stevenson. During tho past year he Issued over 5,000 cr licenses, with n couple of cycle permits thrown In for good measure. District Judge Munger, in federal court, Issued an order finding eleven Nebraska City plant emplojes now on strike, in contempt of court. A cita tion was placed lu tho hands of Deputy United States Marshal McClung, who left to serve It on the eleven men. Julius Kngikelineler of nenr Mauley attempted to thaw out his acetylene tank and used a hot iron with the re sult that his left arm iwid several hones in the left hand nre broken, left shoulder dislocated and his face bruis ed and burned, besides other bruises. Jobless men and women, totaling 10,72-1, applied for work during 1021. at the federal and state free employ ment olilce at Lincoln, according to the annual report of C. C. Becker, manager. Of these, 0,02t men and Klfl women were given employment. Governor McKclvio will resist all ef forts to have him call off Ids extra session nnd legislature will meet on January 21. "Persons just as well ask tho question, 'Will the sun rlseV as to ask whether there will be an extra ses sion of the legislature," the governor Is quoted as having declared at Hie state house. The governor Is emphatic in his assertion that the extra session will save the people $2,500,000 if it fol lows the program of retrenchment and tax raising cut out for Its considera tion. Nebraska's share of the $7.r,000.000 federal appropriation for the 1022 fiscal year road building campaign will nmount to $1,581,109.50, according to word received by the state department of public works from the agriculture department. The state may use as much of this money as It Is able to mutch. If the state falls to raise a like amount within the blciinium ending-January 1, 102-1, the remainder of her share goes elsewhere. All thu government money passed on to No briisKa under an old appropriation has not been used. The last legislature ap propriated approximately $2,133,000 to match Nebraska's 'share of the federal appropriation. The federal aid move ment for stnto highways was born In 1017 and since that time Nebraska has received .$5,808,701.00. The Lancliester district court judge decided to call a special grand Jury for January 20 to Investigate fraudu lent stock promotion schemes und bus iness failures at Lincoln In 1021. The Deweinber payments to farmers of thu North Platto valley for suuar beets amount to .$850,000 and Hie entire payment this year to nearly .$5,000,000, accordln:; to figures from tho various Nebraska factory districts. This month the ScotthblutV factory uiiido a final payment of .$207,103, the Gerlng factory, .$223,-15S; the Bayard factory, .$213,010, and the Mitchell factory, ? 137, ins. Thu enrollment nt the night voca tional school which will open nt North Platte, numbered about sixty 'the first iiu.v nun ii:jiaiiiiiiuiiii jwii nun injiiir,.. made. Nebraska lnsntio asylums are further from prowar conditions than ever be fore In history. Thu state hoard of control announced thnt a.l threo insti tutions mulntuOicd by thu stnte for the Insane are carrying "peak loads." which means they nro housing more In mates than nt any previous time. The total insane cared for by tho state during December numbered 2.S00. Sure Relief, FOR IHDIGESTIONT 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief I t V I Of'Vl ELL-ANSW 25b and 75$ Packages, Everywhere Comfort Your Skin WithCuticuraSoap and Fragrant TaJcnm Soip 25c, Ointment 25 nd SQc, Talccn 25c. PARKER'S TJTAir? RALSAM KeajcvwinanariKr-stol'lUftlrVaUlni: Beauty to Gray ati'l faded Haul 6JO. una 11 wnv i'iu;, ", 'ntwmf'liriTi.Wltg.rntrli'wUf.N.T HINDERCORNS imT com,. cm. lonc. eie., ttops all rln, cnuri comfort -to ll.o feet. miUra nalUlnir tirv. !V. I'T tnMI orat Drue Clilf. llltcoi Capuilral Worki, IVtcbucre, N. V, Walk-for Health and Strength-Walk You cover tnllca nnd iiillci every day. But you will liovrr know Junt how fnr you gt unlU you own a IMJDOMirrtJU. Karmorn. HoldlcrH, uoy rcouln. hlkorn of nvery descrip tion nro usilnB this wonderful Invention, which ri'Klstem every mile you walk. WAt.K for Jov und plenure. WAt.K. Prlco 5--19 puatpuld. Bend motley order to mtOWX NOVELTY CO. Ml Union St. - bCUKNECTADY, N. Public Acccountant and Auditor Attuiitloii t'urmorii, Elevators anil btoroa Inoomo To Service, Financial. Investiga tions. Your Innulrlcn colli'lltMl. ClIAKI.n.S 1L WAItUKN 140 South 13th bt. - 1JNCOLN, NEB. Ki:i.li:i' I'ltOM 1'II.KS "lleiu-Tiilis" taken Internally Rlvo urnteful rellnf. 1 month' treatment, liontpnld, $1. I.oolt for rurprMtii: reul' Ooweifo Ptinrtmcy Co., Onwegp, N. Y. PATENTS M'ntlon E. Ooleimnn, raieni lawyer, wanoioguui li.O. Adflcuand book Tree. HHSSA Kates reasonable Illahcurcforoncea. ltcstMirloei. i , Two oy Two. It was Sunday morning and thu car was crowded with persons on their way to church. At one stop, an elderly man with n heard got on. A three-yeur-old piped up shrilly, and pointed to hlin excit edly. The father's face Hushed, but lie succeeded in ipiletlng ids young daughter. Two blocks further on an other man, wearing a beard, got on. This time all the passengers nrounit caught the words of the tot. and this Is what she said: "Oh, look, father, there's another man with a tail on his jkf face." If You Heed a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why i it is tint no many products that are ex- A tensivcly advertised, all at once drop out of sight and arc i-oon forgotten! The reason is plain the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. Thb applies more particularly to a medicine. A mcdiciml preparation that ban real curative value almost sells itself, as like nn endless chain system the remedy is reeommended by those who have' bech benefited, to those who aic in need of it. A prominent druggist bays "Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent re sults, an many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale." According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the bueccss of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is duo to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfill al most every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects uri nary troubles nnd neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root ' by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer &. Co., Uinghamton, N. Y and enclose ten cents; nlso mention this paper. Largo and medium size bottles for sale at ail drug stores. Advertisement An authority states that a ton of diamonds Is worth SH.'iO.OOO.OOO. Re member tills nnd don't pay a cent more. When a man goes at things head llrst, he often gets there with both feet. GOOD LOOKS FOLLOW GOOD HEALTH If You're a Young Woman This Advice is For You Aurora, Nebr. "My mother wan nlwnyB a great believer in all of Dr. Piorco's medicines and when I was a girl sho gave mo tho 'Favorito Prescrip tion' when I was in a rundown, nervous . condition and it soon built mo up in health and strength. I am glad to en dorse Dr. Piorco's Favorito Prescription as being u splendid tonio for girls or women who suffer." Mrs. Walter Guard, OOStfenth St. How can delicate, sickly girls liopo to becomo healthy women? A healthy fitnto of tho system comes with Dr. Pierce's Favorito Prescription. It's p. medicine prepared for women's ailments. Get it, now in cither tablets or liquid v from your neighborhood druggist, and f write Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo i N. Y., for free medical advice. TO &OLLJ1ATS HK and MICE Always use tlic genuine STEARNS' ELECTRIC RAT & ROACH PASTE It forces theso pests to run from tho bulldlnir for water and frcali air. ' Ready for Uao Be ttar Than Traps Directions In 15 Unguaiies In orerr box. Bio and II w. "Monoj bacWlf It falls." V, H. Uoverniucnt buys H. I. I I i-Wfi.Wi