EED GLOOD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF HfclOrtfcMWflfcWtitfOOrtfcfcVtVlVrtlVlfcfc NEBRASKA NEWS I IN DENSER FORM 8 Recent Happenings In Nebraska Given In Drlcf Items For Quay Rendero twrp"no ,.tfntP.b,.P,'f.tf . LiTortu are being made to onliifKC Hie state baseball league to olht clubs, lnstcnd of six as It stands at present. A class of COO, tlio largest In ItH his lmry, will bo confirmed by Kountz Mciilorlnl Lutheran church at Omaha, next Faster. Tho llrHt non-resident trapping li cense of the yoar was Is tied by tlio bouid of agriculture to N. It, Newport of Springfield, S. I)., and cost S'-'o. Merle Meyers, 1(1, of Nebraska City, nccldontnlly shot two toon off IiIb right foot whllo out bunting. Tlio gun be was carrying wub accidentally dis ci. arged. Receipts of Iiiirb at South Omaha i during October were Hl.ri,KK, said to be tho heaviest in over forty years and nlinoHt 12,000 moro than those of It year ago. i Public school and placPH of business wero cloBed In Alexandria, during tho cereiiiony of laying the cornerstone for i .1 .. , ......... uiu now i'i'"Hii,viciiaii cuurcii iiuuuing at that place. Tho forty.M'vcnth annual convention of tlio .lohnson County Sunday Hchool association will be hehl at Crab Or chard on Saturday and Sunday, No. voinber 10 and II. Fanners In the vicinity of Klgln are sending out u cry for corn hunk ers. The wage which Is most gener ally offered Is (1 cents per bushel and eer, thing furnished. A big stock- sale, accompanied by a barbecue, put on by a commission firm at Grand Island resulted in the sale or" nearly $100,001) worth of breed li.g mill feeding stock. Ir. Irvvlng .1. Cutler, dean of tho ' run entity College of .Medlclno at Oilman, has gone to London where he will attend tho International Conven tion the latter part of the mouth. Secret service men are looking for a couple of men who have been rais ing one dollnr hills to represent $10, and "shoving" them to country mer chants In Nebraska townn. That Nebraska Is still In good shapo and "hot as bad off as ninny liuve pic tured it, Is the opinion of ninny hank ers of the state who woro In Omaha attending the 2Jth annual conven tion of tho Nebraska Hunkers usso elation. . Ralph G. Hrooks, teacher at Super ior, has been awarded tlrst place with a prlzo of $00 in u uiitloual peace oratorical contest, for his oration on "The Fmotlon of Ponce," with which ho won the state intorcollcElnto con test last spring. hverett Ituekliighum of tho South Oninha stock yards company Is u sure 'notigli football fan and bo never1 plajod a came. In sixteen years he bait missed but three games In which I it Nebraska team has played and but ' one In eleven jenru. .Many fanners in Knox county aro llmling it hard to secure corn pickers at tho price of tl cents per bushel as, established at tho mass meeting of j farmers at Wooiuficld last week.. I Soven and S cents per bushel is the ' demand of tho shuckors. lion i iMi..v ...... 0i.i..... ... .... State hankers association, ut lis ! meeting in Oninha last week, predict- I nun in seen jours, ir the pros- i out ratio continues, every man, wo- I man and child In Nebraska will bo riding in a mortgaged automobile. The Mloomiield Ice company Is the' only one In the state owned and operated by a woman. Mrs. A. Van-1 ness Is the owner and the only help she has In running the business is her daughter, Florence. They make tho Ice deliveries, having dispensed with inalo help. Tho phut of the American Meet Sugar company at ('rand Island is nt present running Hi per cent over Its ! usual elllclency in beets sliced. Late rains are reported to have slightly dotoi Inruted the saccharine content of i tho beets but correspondingly to have Increased the tonnage. The Nebraska department of ngii-1 culture announces that It has released tho counties of Cedar. Knox, ho.ul. Ko.mi Paha and Piene, in nortlieiiBt Nebraska, from ipmrnntlno for anthrax among hog and cattle herds. About I lr.O head of hogs and HO or 10 head of cattle constituted tho loss, it was stated, There is a feeling among Nebraska bnnkers, who attended tho iiuuuul convention nt Omaha, that means should bo taken to place from six to eight high grade dairy cows on every farm in the state to insure it steady income to tho farmer. Humboldt will vote November 0 on tbo question of Sunday baseball. The main argument presented for tho pro rosttion Is that it Is too expensive for the fans to go out of town to see the games, while tho.se who aro against tho proposition say It would be tin at tempt to legalize the violation of a htnte law. C. A. Mlnlck, vice president and cashier of the First National hank, ( mw ford, was elected president of the Nehru ska hankers association at its session in Oiiinhu last week. Mr, Mitilcl; holds tlio .tini position with timed 1. 1 i rawioru imiii; that be assum .lien it op 'lied 21 jears ago. .Tames r. Woodward, assistant post master at Omaha for the past tlfty-two i urn, died at his homo in that city Siiurdiiy after a prolonged illness. Mr. Woodward retired from the postal M-nlco last August because of ill health, and has been confined to his bed continuously blneo that time, TOTAL TAXES FOn ALL PURPOSES Wore Than 22 Per Cent of Which Went To Federal Qovernment. KfTurtH arc bulng tniiilu by dupiirtincnta of tlio luclornl KiivcniiiK.'iit at WiiHhliiK ton to convlnuu tlio people of tliu coun try Hint their tux truulilvs uro nil local but mi (itulynlri of tlio total taxes levied In XeliriiHkii for tlio year Vi'ii hIiohh that moro than 22 per cent went to too federal Kovcrnmcni, and iloiihtltnn u Hlmllar condition prevnllH In otlur state. Tlio following Htati'iiient liy tlio tax coiiiinlFHioiicr hiiouh tin; total tnxeH lev luil for nil ptirpOHcH, Including tlio fed ctal government, for 11)22. 'I lie f tli rnl taxes Invlti'ix "lily those collectfd direct, liowrvcr, as hIioum by tlio report of tlio Secretary of the Treasury, the tariff UK collected on Imports anil cuhIoiiih not iiciiik iiiciuiimi: Amount ret. ceoerai income St I'roiit Tax $ 9.2ir,r.53.C0 l'cderal MlNcellmieoiiH mill ititernnl Kove- mm r,.nir,,S.i7 03 Total Federal .... 16,201,390.75 Statu Tiixvm 7,.1111,'jnn to County Tuxes 'J.8n2,!i.1B !I2 School Tuxes 24,31.1. Rfi'i It City . Village- Taxes H.I-j.VGKMG ToutiNhln Tuxert . .. 1,172, 03.1. 7U All other tuxes, ter- 22.19 lii r,s it :is :ir. .is 11 'J2 2 It initial, ilrnluncc. Ir rlKUtloli, poll, etc... 7.0G1 G9 .1.31 Clrntiil Total ICS.71S. 872.31 1 On fin I ho sources from which the federal inlHuelliiiitouH ami internal revenue tax In derived Includes stamps, pluvlng curds, frclKlit, express, imsHctiKer trans portation, telephone ntid telegraph, In Huruiue. lifvuinKcs, oleomnnrurltu', opi um and narcotics, corporation capital stock, admissions, dues, receipts under the national prohibition act, punaltlea, and miscellaneous. Tho total federal tax of which tho forn ftoltiK Item for federal tax is a pait. col lected In the t'nlted States for th fiscal year l'i22, was 13.l!)7.ISI.(iS:i. llnnod on J1'" tux l!i20 census icturns, tho per capita for ( tieli num. wnmt... n.,,i .1,11,1 i. mi' nuuon woiilil ho l.in 21 While a total of Jlfi 2fil,;i'in 7fi was cot lerted In Nehraslm tills dues not rep resent the total paid liy Nebraska po Plc. for the reason that on mannfne. tared articles, such as automobiles, for Instance, the tnx Is collected In the sttit.i where the article Is manufactured, hut ,. S ,r,,'llMv J'lld liy the ultimate user. If Nehrasldi s share of the total federil tuxes coliix.it.il were fomputeil on a per H'-J.'.'"! niV.H. 5' U wo"ll, ,)0 I'lcrtawcd to - . ........ ........,, ,,,,., ..,, ,,i State Tax ('niumlssMncr jr. Smith baa made n compllallon show ing that $1. ,-'(, l, :i!M).7C, or "LM!I per cent of nil taxes paid by Nebraska people goes annually to tho federal government. A call for u national conference of "l0 nalmnal progressive party hns been issued by Hoy N. llarrop, temporary chairman. The conference will ho held ut Omaha November 20 to 'J2, Ihiegatos aro expected from thirty states. A coiniiierclal club hnx been organ ized ut Lodge Polo, with tho follnu. Ing gen ; tirer, olllces; President, WllliumOetln secretary, C. i:. Vunhn ; Troas U. V. Knglert. A niembei-slili. drive Is planned for the near future, and tho club expecta to out'lne an ex tensive program. Klre, Hiipp.i'od to have started from an overhe-ited stove destroyed tho largo frame farm homo of Floyd An drews near Liberty. The l.re started In tho night an I the 1'nmlly wns awakened barely In time to 'escape with u fo.v articles of clothing. Air. Andrews was forced to drop from an upstairs window to escape. A White Leghorn hen, belonging to John Welch, Omuba restaurant owner, broke all previous ogi: laying records when she scored her UTdth egg for tho year beginning November 1, ltiliil. Tlio previous high mark for n year was 272. Along with 200 other hens from Nebraska and other states, .Mr. Welch's ben lias spent the entire , ear of the contest at the state agricultural farm at Lincoln. The oldest county In Nebraska, II not In the entire trans-Missouri conn try, was ltlackhlrd county, named In honor of tho Omaha chief, Itlack- oiui, won wiii one oi tno nr.st rem s of the pioneers and trappers, who pushed their boats up tho Missouri river nearly 12,ri years ago. Tbo county was maintained Intact until 1S70, when It was subdivided Into the present counties of hurt, Cutnlug, and Dakota Three test lots of cattle were placed on the South Omaha market last week by II. .1. Cramllch of tho animal hus bandry department of the agricultural college, Fnlversity of Nebraskn. All three lots, each composed of 10 cattle have been fed at the college for 1 10 days. Lot No. 1 una fed on corn and alfalfa hay and In ought S0.2." per bundled: No. 2 on sudun grass tnul corn brought SO; and lot No. ;, on corn anil sweet clover In ought $S.,"0. M. .1. Lively, railway conductor on the hiirllngtou nt Wjiuoro, has Just returned to work atter having lost four months (hue on account of be ing accidentally hit on the end of the thumb with a pitched ball whllo Tie was playing at catch In a ball team composed of members of his crew while he was laying over at a ter minal. It was uoiossiiry for him to go to a hospital for treatment. Tho right thumb was amputi.ted and it was thought for a time that ho would suffer the loss of his right arm. 1 The annual output of foodstuffs , manufactured and wholesaled In I Omaha annually amounts to $27..- ll.'.HM), accotdlug to tlgures complied by the Chamber of Commerce. When the safety deposit nox of Mrs. sacfe Trump of Lincoln, suppos ed to be dependent en roomers for her living. wn opened, it wis found to coiituin .S,:ioo wo-tb of securities with interna overdue nit" 21.022 m currency. .Some of It was wrupp d in bundles so old n...t the rubb T bands holding It lul rotted. It took two hours for bun!' tellers to count !I0 'nouey. Mrs. Paul c. I'crryman of Ord, and Mrs. (leorge Prater of North Platte were nominated for president of the Nebraska Federation of Women's Clubs ut tho annual meeting of the organl.atiou at heatiiee last week. In return for lending aid mid ma terials to them, convicts nt the state penitentiary have sent a check for $2,'U.l(t to the Nebraska Memorial as sedation to be applied on the con struction of tho new stadium at Lin coin. The money Is tho proceeds from a minstrel and vaudeville performance given by tho penitentiary dramatic association. Converts in I I . Id 4idPn w?Wfffe;i' ' A:' s- Iwl mi -tn . rJNJ5ff Mssrasaaaasssaa hev. I. A. Callahan of the Interdenominational church ut Uloomlngton, III., completing tho work of a revival recent y held when he converted so many that it was necessary to use the lake to baptize the converts. They wt dipped In the lake In relays and the wholesale baptism occupied the greater part of a Sunday afternoon Forest Fires That in. !i',o1:."m.,Ur0.SS ,l,0,Vl!r(l"K v"Ucy at foreSt llrLs u',,,c" for lmint I,liK'"" M'vor"1 ,,,M (,f 'uMfornlu In peril, includ ing the mtlllonulre colony of Pasntlena. Many summer homes In tho hlllo were destroyed. Women Paint Long Island Church When recent Ij It became necessary Hempstead, Long Island, repainted the So members of the ladles' aid society Seventeen of them put on overalls and Shown in the Humane Conference u &.y.A .vrrA:A.s.s.?..y"xAt'cTrpi'1Vrhjr q This is an exhibit of Instruments used for killing nnlinals. shown at the International Humane conference In the Hotel Abler, New York. Twenty seven nations were represented at tho gathering. SCRAPS North Dakota ranks first among tho states of the Union In lignite deposits. Owls cannot move their eyes. There are -10,000 muscles In an ele phant's trunk. A large steamship may have as many as 1GS furnaces. Halibut Is found In nil tho northern seas, and the fish le the most valued food llsh In the world. Illinois Are Baptized in Relays - .Bfc Ttrgr.Y 1-' ' TM. Alarmed tfie Residents of Pasadena to have the Unlondale chapel at Knst painters wanted too much for the Job. decided to do trio work themselves. speedily painted the chapel. Constantinople In early days was called hyzantlum. Semaphores were Invented by n Frenchman In 171)1. No part of Scotland Is more thnn -10 miles from sea water. Three thousand merchant ships fly the Japanese Hag. Texas produces over one-hnlf of the sulphur supply of the world. The largest peach orclmrd In tho world Is In Arknnsas. 'A CHECKS UP ON WEATHER 13. 15. Calvert, meteorologist In charge- of the forecast division of tbo U. S. weather bureau Is shown hero listening in upon weather reports sent from broadcasting stations. This re ceiving sot wits recently Installed as a menus of checking tin with tho Lweathor reports now being broadcast from 11.) radio stations throughout the country. The weather bureau hag no broadcasting station of Its own. IT'S NOT A SILENCER Tho devlco this young woman is wearing looks like the latest thlna In silencers for women. InsteatI of that it Is the newest respirator for use In I dusty factories to protect tho health I of the workers. It was exhibited at tho chemical nnd industrial exposition in New York. "Words, Words, Words." "Sho thought forlornly, 'These dear men! When will they learn that we want words nlways . . . that we'd rather bo deceived by tho words vvo need than set prosaically on thrones . . . when n man loses his lover,' he remembers what sho did how she served and soothed him, with what pa tience and tenderness, hut the woman remembers what ho said. , , ," "Helio," by Margaret Itivers I.anninle. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunda) School T Lesson T (By ItEV. V U. FITZWATEK. D. D.. Tenchor of English Ulblo In th Moodr Ulble Institute of ChlcnKO.) (. 1913. Western Newipuper Union.) LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 11 SOME MISSIONARY TEACHINGS OF THE PSALM3 i LESSON TEXT 1's. 47, 67. 100. UOMHi.V TEXT "Let tln people praise Thee, O God, let alt the people prnlHo Theu." Ps. C7:3. 1'KLMAUr TOPIC Everybody Train ing God. JUN10II TOPIC Everybody .Serving God, INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP ICS All Nations Called to Serve Jehovah. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC Missionary Hymns of the Old TuatA rnrnt. The Jewish people were called t& bo missionaries to the other nations. The I'&alter, their hymn book, is saturated with the spirit of God's grace to the world. Its dominant note Is the call to come back to Cod, I. A Call to Rcconnlzo God's Power (I's. 47). Man's first sin was to cast off God. .Such abyssmnl darkness followed that the race has gone on In Ignorance of Its Creator and Itenefactor. The first and primary need of the missionary Is to get the heathen to know God. They must come to know Him not only as a mighty King, but as n personal, tender-hearted being, looking out over the worltl with compassion, desiring to Mtvo and bless man, Ills only crea ture In His image and likeness. Oh, that the heathen knew Cod as their true and great King whose mighty power He desires to usu In salvation and blessing to nil ! Let us make this known to the ends of the earth! II. A Call for the Nations to Return to God (Ps. 07). The central theme of this psalm Is the universal diffusion of Cod's grace. The order of thought In this psalm 1b that which sluiil be carried out by the Lord In the completion of His work of grace In the world. 1. Cod's Ulosslng Upon Israel (vv. 1, 2). This blessing Is necessary In order that Israel may be fitted to mnke known God's way to the nations. This grace will be poured out upon Israel In the full coming of Pentecost. When this grace la poured out there will be such missionary nctlvity as has hith erto been unknown. When Israel, like her national representative Paul, shall go forth In such power of the Holy Spirit in witnessing for Christ, truly nations shall to born In n day. That which shall be manifested by Israel for their Cotl-nppolnted task Is needed by the church In her witnessing. She needs tho Spirit of God to fit her to preach the gospel to tho hcMhen. 2. The Convvrslon of the Heathen (vv. .1-5). Thanksgiving will be given for salvntlon offered and accepted. Not only this, but there will be re joicing In the experlenco of salvation. They will rejoice In the fact now thnt the great and righteous God rules the earth. The uew-born snul rejoices In knowing that a dispensation of Jus tice tempered with mercy has been ushered In. What gladness will bo In tlit hearts of men In the day when Christ relgim! tl. Itestoratlon of Hlesslngs Upon tho Kurth (vv. rt,7). When man cast off God n cuiso was placed upon the earth which limited Its fruit fulness. Imme dlutely upon man's return to God this curse will pass away from the earth. Tho supremo obstacle to prosperity la man's rebellion against God. Let tho nations return to Cod nnd Ho will send His blessing upon them. The only wny to bring back pence and prosperity Is by the preaching of tho gospel. Man must he called buck to God. The supreme need of tho world Is not n league of nations, but a re turn to Cod ; because Coil will remain separate from the nations as long as they are In rebellion against Him. III. A Call to Recognize the Good ness of God (Ps. 100). Praise should go up to Cod because Ho Is God. Doing God Ho crented U8, sustains us and saves us. For His unchnnglng mercy and goodness prnlse should he continually ascribed to Him. What Life Consists Of. "A mun'u life consistent not In tho abundanco of things which he pos sessetb." In these words Jesus strikes nt the populnr error of all ages the belief that life consists In things. For nothing are wo under dr-eper obliga tion to Christianity than lor this, that It corrects our easy views of life. Since tho first mnn staeted heaven (vard, there have been two conflict ing Ideahi of life; one teaches that life's values nre In the things we get and keep; tho other holds thnt the chief end of man Is to develop hlj highest powers, to live In fear of. that v.iileh Is beneath SUni, and in reverence for Thnt which Is ubove him. Ilev. O. C. Albertson, D. D. Neglected Chlldien. It Is often difficult to tell which nro moro neglected the children of tho very rich r the children of the very poor. Kenneth D. Miller. Love for the Home. Tho first Indication of domestic hap piness is the love of oue's home. Montlosler. Break or Hardens the Heart Contact with the world either breaks or hardens the heart. Chnm-fort. v