IW)jmw . . jr ?v r. RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA. OHIEF if !i b 1 Animals Hoard Winter Stocks tf- Many Different Ways in Which They Provide Against Long Cold Season. MAN USES HABITS OF BEES Earthworm Drag Loaves Into Their Burrow to Provldo Food and Comfort for Winter Why Honey la Stored. Now York. There sir many differ mi ways In wlik'li iiiilmnls uiui't the winter. Many go lnl winter u.iiurters nnd, reducing thi'lr expenditure to u tiiliilimiiii, lie low until I lie spring mils Ihcm again to iit'iltin. others, like tlif wolves, continue to live dangerously, klinply sharpening their wits and In-n-ensing tin keenness of their limit ing Some, like llii' ermine and tlio ptarmigan, ilon n while dress, which In hot It Mire iind comfortable. Others solve the problem by n rbutigo In habitat--notnbly the mlgrn lory birds. There nre several other nUitlons or the problem, and one of llu'Kis Is (o lay nj stores, to hoard, lo .save. Many animal! do this Inside their bodies, Habit Is Acquisitive. A beginning of storing may be looked for perhaps In activities like hose of earthworms, which collect leaves and drag them down Into their furrows, at once making them more comfortable and providing a supply f food for a rainy day. It Is surely Kio acquisitive habit that they hnve. loso earthworms, for more than four tcoro lealleta were tuken from one burrow. With Insects we find nn Inclined piano vt storing that leads up to the tUtiuis Illustrated by hive bees and by aomo of the ants. Among the olltnry bees the mother makes a More for the brood which she never turvlves to see; among humble bees the store Is begun by the mother, but rontlnued by her worker children, and In some kinds at least a part of the society survives the winter; In some tropical bees there are permanent societies and Imperfect combs; In tho hive bees there are permanent societies uml perfect combs. The elaborate storing ot lilvo bees, :arrled to such perfection under men's care, Is, to begin with, connected with surviving the winter I. e., with per manence, and with tlio survival of the mothers ere their offspring grow up. I. e with tho possibility of soclnl tradition. It Is Impossible to think of storing without n vision of Solomon's nnt, "which, having no guide, overseer, or ruler provldeth her meat In tlio sum mer and giithercth her food In the harvest." And, ns among bees, we find nil grndes among nnts from those that do not store at all to those that make n lino nrt of It, According to recent studies of tho common Mediterranean harvesting nnt, tho seeds which are collected are kept ftir a time dry and are eventually put out In the rain to germinate. This has the advantage of bursting tho hard seed coats and In some cases of starting processes of fermentation. At a certain stage, however, tho nnts kill the embryo plant by biting at It, and the seeds are dried again In the sun. The dried seeds of some .vloverllko plants, for Instance, aro then taken back into tho nest and chewed Into dough. This Is dried oneo igaln In the sun In tho form of little biscuits, which aro eventually put Into the cupboard. Culture for Molds. It is likely that different kinds of jeeds receive different treatment and lu Mime cases It .seems that the stored material Is not eaten at all. but Is used as n culture for molds of which Spanish Ambulance in Morocco War 1 JuiiwiF-jfi ;; wWl , TilflHHlBHHf Ih.K Mrr' '1 Y WPfSbT hi fit r-s J samfc&i, mfjfm ESS a l? i " MW&u&mSwaSSx& wmFRM WLJ& wwirtrtifltMwwiiiiwMjiirMiimwii'iiiiiifiyr Two chnlrs adjusted to a pack-saddle on u mule, form this queer ambu lance, used by the Spanish army In Morocco to transport ooldler wounded In the lighting against the Insurgent Moora. thu anis are very fond. It Is nn Interesting fact that tho use of molds reminding us of man's mushroom beds Is practiced by a number of tpilte unrelated animals namely, cer tain ants, termites, beetles and mites. Among backboned animals It Is dif ficult to llnd convincing instances of btoring until we come to' birds and mammals. Apart from tho numerous birds that .store food In their crops, sometimes so cxuhcrnnity that they can not lly, there an; some that may ho said to lay up nutritive savings our side of themselves. lu the burrow of the hamster sexeral store I'liambers are made and grain as well as hay Is accumulated In considerable quantity. The little muiw mouse that thrives all the year round at a high altitude on the Alps makes stores of chopped grass ami gentian roots. There are many other examples of storing, but these ex amples show that tilt. thrifty habit has taken llrm hold In many different comers of the animal kingdom. Round Up Gang of Shoplifters "Dashing Dora" Leader of No torious Band of Fashionable Berlin Robbers. LOOT OVER MILLION DOLLARS Every Step of Police Investigation of Gang Reautts in Fresh Sensa tional Disclosures Eight Are in Custody. Berlin. White slave traffic, tho morphia habit and the practice of blackmail were Joined to theft, fraud and kleptomania In the "Danse Maca bre" or the band of Iterlin shoplifters led by "Dashing Dora." Every step of tho police Investiga tion of the activities of this gang, eight of whom are In custody, re sults In fresh sensational disclosures. Several members of the band plead that they aro addicted to the drug habit and are not responsible for their acts. Mrs. Foerster, one of Dora's "dashing" daughters, is In the hospital, suffering from morphia poison. Her husband was arrested as he was In tho act of concealing stolen property valued at several thousand pounds. Louise Morvillus, her sister, lias been relcnsed from custody In order that she may go to her sick child, but not before she bad confessed to tlio police that for years she has been n white slavo for her husband, Frank Morvillus, who Is director of the Ger man disposal hoard. Further raids have been made by the police on the luxurious homes of "Dashing Dora" tind her accomplices, and the enormous pile of stolen goods at Charlottcnberg police station has received considerable addition. Confiscate Bank Accounts. Thu bank accounts of the gang, which amount to many thousands of pounds, have been conllscated. Morvillus has pleaded that his mother-in-law Is tlio victim, of klep tomania. It has been alleged against Morvil lus that ho heavily bribed the police In order lo avoid arrest. Members of the gang, who were caught with S'JOO.OOO worth of stolen goods in their possession, have ter rorized the largest lterlln luxury stores for many years, and their dep redations nre estimated to exceed $1,- jl. -.: v.jhi READY FOR THE SOUP m . ; & cm) ' ' y "&'& vm " rm The largest turtle wlttiln the mem ory of old timers at the Fulton llsb market, New York, Is this '-'."JO-pound reptile from Costa It lea. Thomas Gil lane, holding him up, is caring for the turtle now. Hut very soon the soup kettle will get him. 000,000 In value. Most of tho prop erty was disposed of in Holland, though a considerable quantity Is be lieved to have found its way to Uritntn, France nnd America. Charlottcnburg police station re sembled n great warehouse. There were piles of china and leather goods, Jewels and other valuable articles, which were taken chiefly from a lux urious six-room apartment occupied by "Dashing Dora." This woman now forty-four, who has been twice divorced, Js married o n youth ,ol twenty. "Dashing Dora's" homo was raided by policemen Just as the seven crimi nals were discussing u New . Year's picsent for "the tlrm," consisting ol two limousines Avltli a liveried chauf feur and footmen to nsstst them In their "profession." Dora and hei woman accomplices, who lived like princesses, mixed In the highest so clety. She Is considered tho mos brazen and cleverest of llght-llngcrei? crooks on record. The list of booty carried off by her gang includes a priceless antique, porcelain set of V18 pieces which was lifted piecemeal from an Untcr den Linden shop in four visits. An easy Job for them was a gold cofTcu set of thirty-two pieces valued at 5.000. Tills was carried off in one visit. Special Belts Used. Dora anil her friends were equipped with specially constructed leather belts fitted witli Innumerable hooks to which they attached valuables as they passed through the shops. The Incident which led to the raid on Dora's home Illustrates the gang's audacity. They fell under tho suspi cion of a salesgirl at one Iterllu lux ury shop, but they bluffed the man ager Into an humble apology. The next day the husbands of the two women visited the shoos. Indli'- nation personllled, and. Hashing l.(MH) mark notes In the face of the manager, they Insisted on a written apology from the salesgirl and thu. manager himself. This was given, but the manager was afterward struck with tlio youth of the husbands as com pared with their wives. He telephoned for the police, and the gang were ur rested. 249 CHILEAN QUAKES IN 1920 Occur 35 Hours Apart on Average,, Re ports Seis'mologlcal Service. Santiago. Two bundled ami forty nine earthquake shocks were recorded In Chile In 1020, according to a report Just published by the national sels mologlcal service. The average Inter val between shocks was !t.ri hours, while in the year previous a shock was reg istered every US hours. The greatest seismic activity In lOUO was the urea embracing the Aconcagua and Mulpo valleys, lu which the prin cipal cities are located. The most pro nounced school; was recorded on July "tl, the center of which was in the Aconenguu valley. Moonshine Makes Rabbits Defy the Whole World Pasco, Wash. Olllcers Imestl gating u fatory sent by a Pasco correspondent concerning the prevalence of rabies uiuoiig rab bits have found that the police in making n raid Just outside the city, dumped several barrels of corn mash out on the sagebrush coxered prairie. The embryo moonshine t once became the diet or hundieds of rabbits, Crazed bunnies ran pell mell into stunning automobiles, frantically gnawed at telephone posts and did some dancing. Many people concluded that the rabbits had rubles. NEWS OF STATE TERSELY TOLD more enmity was tiled with the county Recent Happenings in Nebraska '"";i" 'ing timt tho scrv .rrL7T " J Ices of the enmity agent be continued U1VCB in Brief Items for nml ,1( iial appropriation was Busy Readers. made for that purpose. -1. I. I'hlll'pe, Fremont conl factor. An electric siren lire alarm Is in be1 Mthmllted the lowest bid among 1(5 Installed at Itnmlnlph by tho fire de-j firms, for the construction of the new partmenr, to supersede the belt itlurm. ' Junior hlj,'h .school to be bulll at Fro One hundred Nebraska editors at-1 mom thN summer. The bid win SI.TT, tended the forty-ninth annual meeting w.K oC the Nebraska Press Association i lust held at Lincoln. The supremo court has refused to break tho will of Joseph Hoyden, late Omaha merchant, on petition of Louise Josephine Haydeii, niece, and William llaydeii, brother. .Mrs. Sarah A. Itond, .SO, sister of 'Ella Wheeler Wllcov, died at her home In Ord from Injuries received when she fell on an Ice-con ted sidewalk n week ago. Her hip was broken lu the fall. Menkelnian .schools hae outgrown l ho present srhool building, and Ihe district Is preparing to vole u bond Ip miii to cover the present running ex penses. New quarters. for high school or grade must be provided before school opens next fall. As an appreciation for the quick re sponse made to David City's call for aid when the I. O. o. F. temple burn ed the Ihivld City city council au thorized tho sending of a check for 100 to the Sewnrd fire department. The (j'nrrbou I'olaud China I'lg club hns completed lt organization and Is the first of Its kind to be 'started In llutlcr county this year. Morn tbnn half of the boys have already started, each having a pure bred sow. Lieutenant Clarence Welch, twenty seven years- old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. V. Welch, of l'aplllion, was among the severely Injured of the crew of the giant dirigible Romu which crash ed In flames over Hampton Roads. Soma drunken pigs near Chndron went on a roaring, don't-enre-a-whoop rnmpngo, and unwittingly tipped off tho story of how corn mash had been Iioured Into their feed trough. These pigs and never before fractured Mr. Volstead'a act, nor tho peace and dig nity of tho community. The owner of tlm pigs wns arrested. Every taxpayer In Nebraska who turns In property for taxation will have to give an oath that his return lis correct, If a plan proposed at a group meeting of county assessors hero is carried out. Twenty assessors at n (meeting passed a resolution urging that county assessors require precinct as sessors to administer an oath on ev ery tax return In their district. Following cremation of bis body the ashes of the late .Matthew Oormg. well-known Omaha and I'lnttsmouth attorney, will be taken to his child hood home, Kemptou, ISavarin and scattered over the waters of the Itiver Her, along which he played when a small boy. The disposition of his ash es will be In accord with a wish often expressed by Mr. tiering. Douglas county post, American leg Ion, was awarded Judgment of one cent by default In Judge Rodlck's court ngalnst F. II. Shoemaker, former labor leader on charges of slander. It was charged Shoemaker In a labor speech hiht December stated "the leg Ion was subsidized by the big business and Interfered with picketing among labor unions." Wolhach bellees It has Ihe young est purehicd hog dealer In the state in the person of Virgil, son of Mrs. II. Maddox, proprietor of the C.len View hotel. While but 1L Virgil sold three purebred hoj;s at the lirson Jl Sou snlo for a handsome price, and Im .mediately bid in one of the Larson gilts for .s.VJ. Those he sold wore bis own raising and whle.h lie earned dur ing last summer's vacation. A blaze which started in the garret of the Friend hotel was declared by Fire Chief Hoofer to have nil the ap pearances of lticendlnr origin, The fire was extinguished with chemicals before much damage resulted. When the volunteer flro department answer ed the call they found I'.rlttou in the kitchen of the building, which is a throe-story brick structure, eating pop corn. When loltl that the building was on fire he answered that It could not the possible. Investigation showed that oil-soaked carpets and blankets bad been placed In the garret. Ac cording to firemen the building Is In sured for JJi'O.otlO. An Inspection of the winter wheat icar Oslikosb shows that practically all of it Is going tlti-niigh the winter In splendid condition, Is well roeced and the abundance of moisture assures a speedy growth In the spring. II. (.'. Yunil or llroken Uow hns com - lileted Installing his wireless outfit, Mr. Viind brought tlie set with him trom Coudersport, Pa., but on account of war conditions has not reset the station. Ho lias ery complete equip ment and can iccelve messages from France, Cerman, Spain, Norway and South America. lly u vote of two to one Scottsbluff approved tlio Issuance of bonds of SII00.000 for the construction of a new high school building. The poll show ed OSrt for and 4S3 against tho proposed Issue. ' When Deputy Sheriff T. L. Mlsklmen went on an errand to the basement the county court house ut Alliance, he discovered that a burglar bud stolen Ihe contents of two 100-pound sacks of granulated sugar and had filled tho sucks with ashes and cinders. The Migar hud been confiscated In a raid on u still several months ago.' Frank Sampson, 13, of Western, caught it full grown wolf In u trap nnd succeeded In killing It with short handled ax after a doporiito fight. A petition by riOd lapiiors of Fill- ,.,... ,., When I'lein .'MI'.t, J. Hill, T III t lllll bridge, ewakened In ihe morning ho found his large barn, two head of horses, three cows ami much grain and hay destroyed by fire. The ori gin lias not been determined. The elty council at lttixemm has made a call for bids on street paving. Tlio Ilr.st district to bo paved will eoor about .'10 blocks It is the object or tlio elty to puo the iiiiiln tbomuglifiiies and one block on each side stiver. The thirty-mile gale accompanied by sleet put L'O.tlOO miles f telephone lines with 40,000 phones and .".00 toll lines out of commission In the South l'latto district, with a financial loss f .y-'O.OOO, M. T. Caster, plant superin tendent of the Lincoln Telephone and Telegraph Co., announced. The heav iest loss was In llutlcr county. Nebraska's dog population lor WlM was 10.VJ8.S. according to f.gures giv en out at the .state house at Lincoln, based on assessor's returns. That means that there Is one poodle, collie, nlrdale, terrier, bull dog or some other kind of canine for every twelfth per son In the state. The dog census for last year shows an Increase of li,l!Sri over that of 1!)20. The assessors mado no attempt lo place the dog wealth. Instructors in nny of tlio state nor mal colleges of Nebraska hereafter will he refused leaves f absence to study or attend the universities of Col umbia, Chicago and Northwestern "be cause the testimony of those who have been students and the news Items In the dally press, show that clgarot smoking is common among women In these Institutions," under a resolution adopted by the board of education of state normal schools. Organized fanners of Nebraska are opposed to tho proposed sales tax to create revenue for the soldiers bonus or for any other purpose, II. D. Lute, of Lincoln, secretary of the Nebraska Farm Hurcuu federation, wired mem bers of the Nebraska delegation lu con gress. Mr. Lute said the farmers sug gest, that funds for the bonus should come from either a tax on ocos pro fits or from the income tax. Approximately. ISO Inmates of Ne braska penitentiary will soon be stead ily employed In the new prison shirt and overall factory. Installation of lift large power sewing machines is expected to bo completed soon. Largo quantities of buttons, thread and cloth are already on hand. The factory will probably turn out 112.' dozen shirts a day, according to Warden Fenton. The entire product will go to a Jefferson City, Mo., wholesale concern, which has contracted for tho labor. Persons from all parts of the United States will attend the national debate at Lexington March -J. whoa the ques iion oi wneuier or not speculation is a menace to the marketing or grain will be argued by J. Itulph Picket!, edltoi of Tin- Hoiindup, a Chicago grain paper, and (leorge C. Jewett of Port laud, Ore., ice president of the United States Oraiii (Jrowers. The debate is tlio outcome of a challenge published by PIckel offering to meet any grain growers' official at any place In Neb niska, Iowa, Kansas, .Missouri or Illin ois. Sugar beet growers of Lowell and (ilbbon least perturbed over nient that the year's In tlio vicinity are not in tho the auuouucc con tract price will lie ai omul 5 per simple reason they do ton, (or the not plan to raise many beets, regardless of mice With Irrigation acreage these fann ers for the most part are finding tlio humble potato more profitable, with cabbage a dose second. Consequent ly, this vicinity, which in past years has raised large quantities of beets, will build up, instead, a greatly In creams! potato acreage and also a huge acreage of cabbage. The hit ler product Is becoming more popu lar annually. One farmer located outb of (Ilbbon a setting out 40 acres of cabbage plants lo replace beets. The slate of martial law which has been In existence In Four Mile pre cinct at Nebraska City, in Otqe county, since January US, has ceased by a pro clamation of (lovernor McKolvIo, stat ing "that violence and disorder bad , been suppressed and there was no fur-, t iher need of martial law." l'lro destroyed tho five-room home of I). Shuul near Springfield. Mr. Shaal was alone In tho house ut the time of tho flro nnd almost buffocatcd befoie rescued. Tho firemen weie tin ablo to save the bouse or contents. The loss is estimated at &MXX). When a lire broko out on tho rool of tho public school building at Hub-1 bard, the lire drill in which the child ren had been trained wan ordered and they all marched orderly to safety. i l-'or tho first time, In tho history ol American suffrage, two sisters aro can- of'dldates for" congress this year. One Is Mrs. Irene ('. Iluell, Ashland, city pro secutor, who )ins already filed her petition with Sect rotary at State Ams, berry at Lincoln. Her older sister, Mrs. A. K. flaulr, mayor of St. I'eler, Minn., Is a candidate for congress froir , the district there. nro i niiumw julo Lnunuiii WORK AND ' HOUSEWORK TOO Surprised to Find Her self Feeling So Well Tanntnn Mm. "I used to have paint In my back and legs so badly, with other irouoies uiat wuuicu Bometimeshavc.that my doctor ordered mo to Atav in bed week in every month. It didn't do niomuct ?ood,sootieday after alking with n friend! who took Lydia E. Pinkham's vegeta ble Compound for about the same trou bles 1 had, 1 thought I would try it also. l find that. I run work in the laundry all through the time and do my housework, too. Last month I waa no surprised at myself to be up and around and feeling' so good while before I used to feel com pletely lifeless. I have told Borne of tho girls who work with me and have aucb troubles to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, and I tell them bow it has helped mo. You can use my testi monial for the good of others." Mrs. Blanche Silvia, C9 Grant St, Taunton, Mass. It's the same story one friend tolling another of the value of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vcgetablo Compound. Laxatives Replaced By tlie UseofNitjol Nujol Is a lubricant not a medicine or Uxativo ao cannot pipe. When yon aro constipated, there Is not enough lubri cant produced by your sys tem to keep the food waste soft. Doctors prescribe Nu jol because Its action Is so close to this natural lubri cant. Try It today. Tne Difference. "Mrs. Spender's husband seems bent with pain 1" "No, only with payinM" Wuysidc Tales. If You Need a Medicine You Should Have tho Best Have you ever stopped to Teason why it is that so many products that are ex tensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight nnd arc soon forgotten? Tee reason is plain the article' did not fulfO the promises of the manufacturer. Thi applies more particularly to a medicine, A medicinal preparation that has rral curative value almost sells itself, as like n cndlcet chain 6ystcm the remedy i recommended by those who have been beneiited, to thofsc who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says "Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many year and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent re sults, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a ale." According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is due to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfills al most every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects uri nary troubles and 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; also mention thin paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug ttorej.Advcrtisemcnt A man Is many years old before ho contemptuously refuses to make ex cuses. ASPIRIN INTRODUCED BY "BAYER" IN 190O Look for Name "Bayer" on tho lets, Then You Need Never Worry. Tab- If you want the true, world-fnmoni Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians for over twenty-one years, you must ask for "llnyur Tablets of Aspirin." The mime "Bitjor" is stamped on each tablet and appears on each pack age for your protection ugolnst imita tions. Advertisement. No girl appreciates a lover who 19 unable to hold his own. CURESC0LD5r LA GRIPPE CASCARA. QUININE STAMIAIlt) irmrdy v. 01 I.I ovrr. Ilmunl tc A lot btarlitg Mi, IIUU poMmlt jind tiKMIuic Al All Ih'Wiiiit Cnlt W, II. Hill. COMPANY, I't.TROIT Cuticura Soap The Velvet Touch For the Skin Stp 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcnn 25c. wrmm mt al iiiinai h i . i - ) - i 4