RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF r '!. . i v New Geyser in During tin; past winter u powoiiul new gos i fill, in the Noi lis geyser basin, ollow stunt' .Nntuuiai icnldlng scores of trees to death and tearing it groat gash lu Hit1 mail, lt.ls irregular In Its activity anil luia so far been 'jen lu eruption by liurk rangers only; but the Jesuits of its forces are plainly evident. ELSIE JANIS MEDALED I'.y speclnl Invitation from the Sor jonne, In Purls, Elsie JnnlH sang her famous song "Give Mo the Moon," be fore tho faculty ami students of the venerable institution, and they Rave her tho Medalllo Louis? le Grand, which hns only twice before beer, nwnrdetl to n woman, once to Mine. Hcrnlitirdt nnd onco to Mine. Itejnne. Tho Illustration shows Miss Jnnls In her Paris apartment looking at the medal, which Is pictured below. HOUSEWIFE WALKS FAR One of the features of the lletter Homes In America demonstration week In Chicago was a demonstration of tho distance traveled each day by the nverage housewife. Bessie Cooper put on a pedometer and nt the day's close found she had walked 14 miles. Then sink-, kitchen stove, table, etc., were better nrranged nnd the dlstanco was reduced to eight miles. FOUNDED GIRL SCOUTS D UnUurwood & Underwood. Miss Juliette Low, founder of the iiaerican Girl Scout organization. .a-KT " . C I rt ..r-"- .Uftfc ! 3 M ' "-, flWKV. M rtfr ' atHiSaLir jr B IHKIftr . mFi 1 .0 szjm. v -.&&&: v -"4 rrm. . iiTTii j ps r i hW,wssn' l o- :-t- "'" ' " " ...-" l tx,. fXMrit f -rFY'TWr '.' ..&z&zxi2Zy Yellowstone Park Is President Accepts iVyw Vt rf r V Vf Vjv''ti ra "p fc ti ' MjianuiCi-"Bun xwa n . 5ae4iKiSSS K- -.-rr-. fc 4k w tcct -.&..if.i .iiiiA, President Harding making his address at the dedication of the Zero nim bi one, shown In the foreground, when lie accepted this marker of the hub ol America's highway systojji. The great crowd assembled Included cabinet ofli cers, Shrine olllclnls and thousands of Shrine visitors to tho national capital. Former Sultan's Home in San Remo This Is the beautiful "Villa Nobel" once the summer lmmo of the Inveiitm of dynamite and father of the Nobel prize, where the ex-sultan of Turkey it living during Ids sojourn In San Hemo, Italy. Chicago's Former 1 few - flM Si B L i Uw- l-S2&!V.t: ..,... r . .'.'.. . J z t After many weeks spent in the selection of a Jury. Fred Lundln, r.uu: political boss of Chicago under the Thompson regime, bus been put on trial or charges of conspiracy in connection with alleged corrupt practices of formoi members of the city school board. He is here shown, at left, with his attorney. Charles Krbsteln. Destructive Vl SSki'MJfiLS Zero Milestone & .W V t V MWWWwWWrA'VMw. s- r 5V IW ijfeat A3 ;!,?.'rrfir5ir,sri.'r!!r'iV: VAniMiiMmnfBHHwfAiinBH wr-wtv Boss Is Being Tried NEBRASKA IN BRIEF Timely News Culled From All Parts of tho State, Reduced for tho Busy, STANDING OF DALL TEAMS AT END OF WEEK. WESTERN LEAGUE Won Lost Tct "iMiiia 20 TuNii :V2 "malm 2S Oklahoma city 2." Des Moines 2." St. Joseph 22 Sinus ity Hi) Deliver IS J!) 001 Ml Jl 20 .'.00 .."K .r.oi) .1:11 .120 I! I NEBRASKA STATE LEAGUE Won Lout Pet. Lincoln I'alibury Norfolk P.eatrlce !l lit 15 1!) 21 21 .1 -1 .lilS .1(11 .457 .417 .:!ix) Su- .21 ,.i:i ,.1(5 ,.15 .. 0 1 1 Grand I 'laud Hastings ... Work has begun on the Good maiitan $1!00,(HX) hospital ut Kearney. Negro Haptlsts of Nebraska hold their convention In o.nalia from June 17 to 'S. A eoiKorvntlvo estimate places the Lumbers of pupils that will enroll for the summer term of the Clmdion Stuie normal at 1,M,'U. Mrs. (. H. nicuich of Hastings was elected preldent of the Nebraska Li brary coinml.sslon Fifty boy scouts from Lincoln and I'nlversity Place are .spending several days at their summer camp at Louis ille, near ounilia. More than S(,(MM) chicks have been hatched out by the battery of incu bators on the chli ken farm of It. L. C'ummlngs of Aleandr!a. Guy ltafter, Hi, of Valentine was bulled alive nnd died before help came when the day bank Into which ho was diguing for coyotes caved in. With more thun an Inch of rain in 1U hours, the total rainfall for the week in tli' Scott-Muff country was tlUi Inches, a high record for .Juno. Kearney, lias made ample arrange, nients for taking care of the State Sunday school convention which meets there on the 12th, Utth and 14th. During May .'tl.SIO hogs were brought to the Omaha stockyards by nnto truck an increase of 11.1501) brought in by truck for the same month in 11)22. University of Nebraska commence ment exercises were held and degrees and certificates conferred on over 1,11)0 students who concluded their school work. A new Methodist church building. to cost approximately 20,000 will soon bo erected at Stanton to replace the building that was destroyed by lire tills winter. The State Normal School at Peru has opened for tho summer session, nearly 700 students, tlfty-llve of whom were men. coming on the opening dav to start work. Hessian ily anil chinch bugs have become so thick In the wheal Holds of Pawnee county that some of tho far mers have plowed up their tlelds and planted them to corn. Attorneys of Omaha will have a tloat In the pageant, "Patriotic and Historic America" representing .lohn Marshall, chief Justice of the United States from 1S01 to 18:55. Frank Jellnek sustained a heavy loss when the large barn on his farm near I'erwjn was destroyed by lire resulting from lightning. Four horses in the barn were also burned. Following a request by the leglsla tare that all expenses incurred in huliiilui: the new state house be printed ami mailtd to members of the legisla ture quarterly, the governor has issued a statement of expenses to June 1, which total nearly SI.OOO.OOO. The estimated available cost per hundred pounds fur hows on the mar ket last weik, that of i?l$i(i.o., Is the lowest since November 27, 1011, when it was so. according to the local olllce of the United States Department of Agriculture. Heavy receipts were held partly responsible. The university of Nebraska school of agriculture has nnnoumed that it will offer a new six month's course in practical dressmaking at the beginning of the s, hool year, October s. The aim of the course will be Jo prepare women to take up dnvsmnklm: In tin Ir home communities or to enter dressmaking -hops as assistants, ltoy Souchck was seriously Injured In his father's store at Seward when his head was caught in an elevator, which, usually kept fastened down became loosened and started upward. ('Italics A. Chappell of Mlnden, wns elected grand master of the Grand LoiL-e, A. F, and A. M. of Nebraska nt the session of that lu ly's (iuth an nual cimiiiiinlciitiou at Omaiin. George Anderson, 2S, son of A. W. Anderson of Hildreth, was drowned In the ltepiibllciin river when he fainted while baiting a hook and fell Into tho stienm, which was rapidly rising from heiny rains. Lightning did damage to the amount of over ."J7,ooo wlien It struck the trans mission line of the power company thru Superior and set are to the largo frame fnnn home of Mrs. J. M. Warden, one and oiu'-lmlf miles from that place. .1. !;. Montgomery, thlrty-llvo year. , old, died at the St. Kllzabeth hospital nt Lincoln as tho result of Injuries 'when an emery stone, m, which lie was grinding tools, hurst. Mr. Mont gomery was struck by fragments of the Hying stone, tho most serious in. 'Juries being to his right side nnd Mioulder. The state asylum at Lincoln hns 093 Inmntes, the largest number housed there In the history of the Institution. Hebron will hold n Jive day Fourth of July celebration beginning on tho 2nd. Mrs. Anna Itapp, who celebrated her 102d birthday last May, died in Aurora Friday. Alfalfa In Pawnee county Is ready to cut for the tlrst time this season. and a heavy crop will result owing to i the moist spring which has Jut passed. ! Adam llede, edor of the Hastings: Tribune, left last week for Alaska, where he will gather data for a s Mies of iiewspaper and niiignxlne articles. , A resolution to lmVi .several streets , nnd alleys in the business district at ' an estimated cost of Mo.ooo was passed by the Wymore city council last week. A vein of high grade oal six to ten feet lu thickness has been struck nine miles southense of Tekamah, nt a deptli of i;ii; Wi'l, on the farm of otto Muttsoii. KlTorts are being made to secure for Omaha for the Ak-Sar-Iien fvMivnl Ids fall, tin, electrical display immI during the Shrine convention at Washington. More than .'to.000 grade and parocJi- mi moooi cinitireii of Omaha nre to no guests of Mayor lames iiuhi. man at picnics to be in.iri .t k. i,...i. Mine 10, 21, 2(1 and 2S. Lincoln had Its tlrst death from pos. oned hootch when William Kvans, a cook at a restaurant died nt St. Kllza beth's hosj.ltal ,.,. i.Inw ,,.,, t,10'..(l from the police station. John Paul Jones, ti. j,IMt (.Jv war veteran living in Marquette, died last week, lie wns on,. ,,f the pioneer citi zens of tlie north part of the county and leaves the children. Governor p.ryan has appointed Franz C. Itmlko of Tecums,.), s ,.s private Secretary to succeed .1. n. Uroady, who has been appointed a district Judge in Lancaster county. Agents of Wisconsin sugar compa nies are In the Norih Platte Valley seeking sugi.r beet workers and farm ers olfeilng ?2 an acre or more for this year in labor than is being paid -eiirnsKn. Italn which has been general in north Nebraska for about a week Is continuing making automobile loads Impassable, ami tallrond tracks are be. coming so soft that trains run about an hour late. Joshua Hrustzlc who reside in Fair bury with his daughter, Mrs. Pert Singleton, was 02 year old recently. He has been married three times and Is the father of 20 children, eight them living. Fourteen stitches were required dose a gaping wound in the leg of to of Mellaril liurbaker, seventeen year old Heatricu youth, injured on a' spring hoard, when he took too daring u chance, nt an amusement park. State and government men are at work lu Platte county on a detailed soil survey. The work will be done under the Joint cooperation of the con .Nervation and survey division of the ! University of Nebraska and the United ' States department of soils. Alfalfa tlelds over the state are ' greatly in need of sunshine. Several ! hundred acres that were cut more ' 11 week ago still are lying in the i tlelds. The new crop Is growim? v,..-v , fast ami usH,..s there is good weather within the next few days fanners will sustain a heavy loss. P.oth cattle and hog receipts at the South Omaha market last week made a new June record. Cntn.. r,...i,,,.. totaled close to M.ooo head, while those for hogs reached almost O.i.iHiO. This Is more cattle and bogs than ever arrived in any single week in June in the history of the yards. The dam belonging to the Seward city mill was washed out by the re cent storm. The heavy rain' at Ulys ses raised the liver to Mich an extent that the dam was unable to withstand the water. The male population of Seward had a IMiing festival follow ing the breaking of the dam and ex ceptionally large carp and catllsli wero caught. Iteports from several of the eastern Nebraska counties show that there is considerable damage hing done till spring by the Hessian ily. Marly sown wheat, on winter land, Is especially likely to be injured according to field observations that have been made. Some Holds have been so severely dam aged that they promise but small re turns and are being plowed up. Kurly plowing, keeping down volunteer wheal and later (.cdli'g, are the methods n commei'ded by tin- A-.iiculiurul Col lege to prevent Hessian Ily Injury. Hog cholera has broken out for the second time In the history of Kimball county. The disease is seldom known In that altitudv'. So far only four herds are Infected and the county fari.i bureau Is doing its utmost to head oil' Its ravages. The family cat at the home of Glen Housley, residing near Central City, was not to be deprived of Its family despite that three of Its kittens hail been taken from it and given to neigh bors. After a short period of mourn ing it adopted a pair of baby racoons that had been captured a short time before. One nvin was burned, probably fat ally and another suffered serious burns when a short circuit occurred In the 2,:t00 volt room at the Nebraska Power company's plant at Omiilm. John H. Piper, regional liny Scout executive of Iowa. Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado, formerly stationed In Kansas City, has moved Scout headquarters to Omaha. Mr. Piper Is re-ponslhle for scouting In the above states with a membership of 02,000 men and hoys. The number of Hoy Scouts In tho dis trict, as weil as in tho United State.', Is much lorgcr Uum ever before. posnw Important to See That Goslings Are Kept Dry Goslings should not be removed from ;he nest until the third day after hatch .nir, as It is Important t see that they nre quite dry, and should be kept warm and dry until they are feathered sut. They should not bo fed until thirty six to forty-eight hours old, at the same time be offered a lukewarm drink. Their Hist lew days' feed consists of oatmeal, hard-boiled egg and shorts or bran, thoroughly mixed to a crumbly mass. Lettuce or red clover chopped line and mixed with the food serves us a tonic and is greatly relished by them. Feed every two or three hours Just what they will clean up quickly. After the first few days the egg may bo omitted and the food slightly mois tened, but never be fed snippy, sticky, oor too dry; cornmeal may also bo milled to the mixture. After the tlrst few eeks gradually begin feeding cracked corn and shorts or bran, mixed and moistened as stated above; whole wheat may be added to the above mixture, but a great portion should be grass food. They should not ro allowed to get wet; their water should always bo fresh but not cold, and plenty of sand should always be near, though the Hind should never be mixed with their food. Goslings require dry and warm quar ters at night, at the same time plenty of ventilation, and their quarters kept clean and sanitary; damp quarters will muse them to become lame. Their sleeping, compartment Is best when thickly bedded with straw. After the first week, when the weath er Is warm and dry, they will grow faster when given free range to roam about, for they enjoy feeding on tender green grass. If hens are used for Incubation they should be kept free from lice by fre-tjtR-ntly dusting them with a good In tel t powder. Shade for Young Stock Is of Great Importance The Importance of shade for young stock should be constantly kept in mind, especially for late hatched chicks which have not had an opportunity to get a good start before the scorching weather sots In. These chicks must be pushed nlong without a letup, given every advantage of proper feeding and care. If this Is done. If they are supplied with fresh water or milk to drink nnd the founts are kept sterilized and clean and shade Is provided they will, in truth, grow like weeds. A range in the orchard Is the best place In which to start them out, after which they ran bo transferred to the edge of a Held of growing corn, provid ed colony coops are available, and they should tie. If you wish the most economical results In raising the young llocl;. P.ut shade Is Imperative and should not be neglected. Brooder Pneumonia Is Caused by Common Mold Prooder pneumonia is caused by a common wild present In the Incubator, brooder or In straw; often fhc egg producing organs are affected by It, so that a chick hatched from an Infected egg has the disease. It affects chicks under Tour weeks okl, they become sleepy, with feathers milled and tho head drawn down; breathing Is la bored and the windpipe Is patched with the mold spores. The disease usually Is not cured once it attacks tho chirks, and when a brooder is known to be contaminated It should be fumi gated, the old rfraw removed nnd fresh litter proUded. and the poultry dying from this disease should always be burned. Shed Entirely Open Is Excellent for Turkeys An open shed or u shed with tho south side entirely open, makes an ex cellent shelter for turkeys. The nv erage turkey lays abom three litters a season provided the eggs 'are removed after each litter Is finished. The first litter Is usually about l eggs, tho second 12 and the third 10. WMMMMH)IIIt POULTRY POINTS Good chicks can ood parent stork. come only from Many chicks are handicapped at tho start by poor breeding and hatching. A foot of feeding space for each six hens Is about right when It comes to feci hoppers. The Anconas are good layers nnd nre classed along with the Leghorns In egg production. T'io turkey Is n small eater for his size Many of the larger breeds of chickens eat more than the same num ber of turkeys. Ducks need to be cozy and warm tho first week of their life; they grow quickly and seem to have less resist ance to exposure than n chick. You do not need to change your breed so much ns you need to chango the males of your breeds. Get new ones from other nnd better flocks or the same breed. " A '