RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF CTWPWI1II LlWil. w I 1 NEBRASKA NEWS V .1 in nrMorn rnnii IN DENSER FORM I , .1 ' - Recent Hnppenlnga In Nebraska K .1 Given In Drlef Items For jw 5S ft. ft Duoy Renders ft' ? ft.' oddfellows of Omaha lire planning to erect n ?ir.O,CMM) building to house their organization. Twenty horses porMied In n fin of unknown origin that destroyed the Phillips livery Imrii lit Alliance AllgUtt I.OWI'. Inriuor living two miles from (ionlon. Ims u Hold of corn that Im making 70 bushels per licit'. Sunday baseball won by u majority of HIS votes In n "pedal (lection hold nl Humboldt. A total of lfS votes wore cant. Three young women hnvo purchased n (i.iicrn unci Odin lii Hir ltoatrleo and will engage In the poultry business , In the spring. Thieves broke Into u rural school bouse In district fi7 near Silver Creek, completely looting the place of new library and text boifiTs, coal and fuel. Two men held up "Ino t'nlon l'ucllle track hihorcr.s In u bunk cur ut May Statu siding near Fremont, oncaplng with Si. 000 In cash A. I'. rM'lhal, a farmer near Puwnoo City, has 10 hives of boos which, dur ing the summer Just passed, produced for him a ton of honey The American State bank Is tlio title of a new commercial organiza tion Just opened at Itushnell with u capital stock of $15,000. Tho civil sorvleo commission has called an culmination for December 8 to (111. the vacancy in the postolllco ut Alexandria, Thayer county. Tho Fanners '-'(Ideational Coopoi atlvo union National convention will bo hold in Omaha November 20 to '-'2. Oor .'00 delegates are expected. A white pelican, one of the extra large species, was i.hot near Plains lew by one of the students of Wnjno state normal who embalmed and mounted the bird. I'.ortram .!. Spencer, -17, professor of civics at tho University of Nehras. ka for fifteen years, died at I'nluTslty hospital at Omaha last week after an Illness of two months. Thirty thousand fish have b ecu planted In tho sand pit lakes near Fremont by State (!ame Warden (loo. K. Kostor, In co. operation witli mem bers of the local Itotury club. In the home of Mr. and .Mrs. J. It. Tomploton, in Pawnee City, there is u clock which has been running con tinuously slnco isas, when It was pur chased by Mrs. Templeton's raronts. A fourth cutting of alfalfa wns har vested on l'latto valley farms near Kearney before the recent snow storm. Alfalfa and hay growers of that vicinity fared much better thau wheat growers. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Williams, of Stelnauor, have been named by the stato Park board as caretakers for Arbor Lodge, the now stato irark at Nebraska City, formerly the homo of .f. Sterling .Morton. Mrs. Paul C. Perryman of Ord, nnd Mrs. (Jeorge Frater of North Platto were nominated for president of the Nebraska Federation of Women's Clubs at tho annual meeting of the organization at Iieatrlcu last week. An egg show will bo a feature or tho tenth annual poultry exhibit to bo held under auspices of the Omaha I'oullrj association at tho auditorium No ember 2t! to December 1. Silver loving cups and cash prizes will be given. C. H. Hoke, who has been oporatlng a bakery and store at Ode 1 for the past year, Iiiib sold out and accepted a call to tho pastorate of tho Methodist church at Duykln. Ho was formerly a minister for eighteen yoars. and ran tho store for the benefit of his health. Mr. and Mrs. .lames A. Pinkernian, assisted hy all but seven of their thirteen children, thirty-two grand children and thirteen great grandchil dren, celobrated the fiftieth anniver sary of their marriage, at their resi dence In O'Nolll. Friday, November 1'. The board of control of the Nehras ki Masonic homo association author ized the building committee and the architect to proceed with the plans for the now Infirmary, which It H estimated will cost 70,000 and be tho first unit of tho new buildings that will be erected at Plnttsmoiith, even tually making the Nebraska Masonic homo one of tho lluost Institutions of Its Kind In the nilddlowesi. The annual Poultry Show to bo given at the Auditorium tinder the auspices of Omaha I'oultrj association, will bo held November 110 to December 0 The Omaha Poultry Show is grow ing to bo one of the biggest in tho I'nltod States. Omaha's population is approximate ly lit 0,000 and Is growing fast accord ing to dependable llgures issued by tho census huiciui of Washington, b'ised on tho latest sc'iool census estimates. Tho figures Indicate an increase in population since 1!)20 of I7,ri00 or an average of approximately 0,000 luoroaso a year. Ilolton C. l.estoa, who has Just re tired from eight years' servieo as postmaster at Red Cloud, has accepted tho position as cashier of the state tlon with Organized Agriculture vv eel.. Hank at that place. . Tlio various stato agricultural as- Miss Florence Helen, -i student sociatloiiB and the state Home Hcon nurso at the Paxton Memoiial hospital ! oiuics Association will begin their ut Omaha, fainted on tho steps of the I meetings on Tuesday, January 8. Tho building as she was going to woik. Farmera Family run-Feed, the big She was taken insldo where it was 'banquet which was inaugurated last found sho hud suffered an mute at- year, Is to bo repeated on Wednesday tack of appendicitis. An operation evening, January 0. Tho general coin was immediately resorted to andjmlttee has practically completed tho successfully performed, and sho Is now i piogram for tho mass meeting of all rapidly recovering. She is a duuglitor agricultural associations Thursday of Police Ofllcer A. K. Jojon. I afternoon. January 10. Scnrclty of cornplckers lins enmed , the wage of (I cents to rIo to 8 cents n kiixhcl In many parts of tho state. , .lohn A. .McSh.ine, 7.'l, former con gressman mid state senator and it leading business imn of Omaha since ' 187-1, died Saturday afternoon In a local hospital. The new hydroelcctile plant lmllt hy ltlnck llros. Mllllni; company on tint llhip river at Itluo Springs, at n cost of nearly SltHMMM), after nine mnutha of conBtrtietion, has lioen placed In service. .loo Sherman of Omaha read that overclso would make licii' lay more eggs. So he scoured a gont and placed It In tho chicken pen to run the lions around. The lions laid, hut tho coat nlc the eggs. Tho Standard Oil company liasinudo a 2-cont reduction In thtv.prlcc of gaso line, bringing the rotall price to 11',i cents In Nobrad.u. The tank wagon price in I'J'i cents. Independent dealers met tho reduction. Chicken thieves who roldiod the coop "I u Saunders county farmer of a niim uer or vultiuulc fowls, dropped u wallet containing nearly $700, which ' was found Ijlug In the poultry yard, next morning, by tho fanner's wife. The annual poultry show of Ante- I lopo county will be held in Xcllgh j on December .", (i ami 7. The Ncllgh i mimncr oi ( ommerco ih noninu me movement ami giving every assistance possible to mako It us big a sueeo.' as possible. Tho Atlnsiiuiik of Nellgh has been ordered closed by tho state banking department. It was one of the larg- est state banks having a total of .?7S.'t,000 In deposits May IM, when It was taken over by the former stato hanking administration. Thete Is a crude counterfeit of Chi cago federal reserve S10 notes being circulated over tho state, according to operatives of the secret son lee. The face plate number Is fU.'t and tho buck plate number 8S0. The signa tures on the counterfeit -ire "A. W. Mellon" and "Frank White." Four employes of the Uncoln Trac tion company nairovvly escaped soil ous Injury when the injection tank of ii dlosel oil engine exploded. The force of the explosion was so great that the bislness district of Lincoln was shaken and fragments of cast Iron were hurled 100 feet across tho ti.-Ktion (ompau.v's power room. Farmers from all parts of the 1'nltrd States will moot in Omaha November 'J0-L2 to attend the annual convention of the National Farmers- Kdiicatlonal and Co-Operatlvc Cuion. On the sanio dates the Nebraska Farmers' Co-Opera-tive firnln and Livestock State as sociation will meet. All national or ganizations officers will bo In atten dance. Six prizes of $20 In gold and certi ficates of honorable mention will bo awarded to Nebraska students by tho American Chemical society In con nection with a nation-wide essay con test, it Is announctd by Dr. William M. llarr, 1'nlon Pacific consulting chemist, who Iibb been named con test chairman in this state. A Btnull paper-back volume, "Tho Second Funeral of Napoleon," by Thackeray, purchased for 10 cents by M. 1-2. Northvvall an Omaha man, I Is a duplicate of one that brought $0.10 at auction In New York In 1020. Mr. Northvvall bought tho book ut a local book store, and neither he nor the proprietor discovered the value of tho volume until afterwards. Death recently of three persons at Morrill, from eating some homocanned beans marks the first discovery of "poison soil" in Nebraska so far us la known hy Dr. J. D. Case, suporinten dent of the stale department of health and welfare, who Is Investigating t Do ease. Kamlnatlou of tho beans ut tho State .University laboratory In Lincoln, disclosed tho presence of "botulism" poisoning, believed to hnvo been drawn from tho soil at Morrill where tho beans were grown. Uoboit Samler, an employe of an Omaha publishing house, Is wearing ! a smile that won't eomo off. He has Just located u hi other who disap peared nine years ago, and for whom he bus vainly sought during all thoso jours. Tho brother, Lou Samler, la now living in .Minneapolis, but beforo settling in that place, has mined in Alaska, was a member of tho "Princess Pat" icglment In France, was gassed on the Marne, was "treated rough" at Met, sent to hospital and finally re turned to New York. From there ho wound up In the Minnesota town, finally getting In touch with his brother who smiles and Is counting tho days until they meet again. With an averago attendance of nearly 08 per cent for the first six weeks, Kearney school children seem ingly are out to smash records. Tho enrollment now numbers 1,01.", as compared with 1.S0S in 1022. and 1, 718 in 1021. O. T. Chaddock. 80, civil war votoian and Mrs. Alex llample, 70, both of Peatrlce vvero married recently at Marysvlllo, Kan. Mr. Chaddock who i bin been living at the Old Soldiers' homo at Mllford, recently re turned front a trip over the southern battlefields whoro ho fought with tho union army when young man. Tho Slatr Poultry Association l holding Its whiter poultry show hi Lincoln .lanuary 7-11, 1021, in coimec- Austrian Royalist Troops Reviewed by Hitler Adolph Hitler, loader of the Haviuian Fasclstl, does not rolj wholly on that organization lit his efforts to restore tin tiorman monarchy. A large number of Austrian troops are said to bo allied to his royalist party, and they wear the swastika, emblem of the liavurlan Fuse stl. Hitler is shown In this photograph reviewing these Austrlans at Salzburg. Putting i IX ill vvsffirj ? ":::"rkH'MK 'Hi i Ity m In the llrmnment of screen stars the latest are tiny microbes. As the result of research by biologists and tech nlciuns ot London with the cinematograph, tho public shortly will see u number of films delving deep Into nature's dra matic underworld. In the photograph are .shown: Man on loft, filming microbe; center, man watching movement of microbe, and on tight, controlling the light by which the film is taken. Weaves Cloth for Mr. Coolidge President Coolidge Is soon to have a new suit nnd the cloth will not cost him one cent. Mrs. J. M. Jackson of Needham, Mass., has been weaving It at the rnte of one and one quarter yards per day on a band loom nearly 200 years old. The cloth resembles the familiar Irish homespuns, tho mixture being white nnd a dull red. Schoolhouse for Continuous protest that the children of railroad section hands were not M'ttlng a decent iducatlon, because of the constant Jumping around of the men folk in tho work, prompted a southern railroad to hire a teacher and full equip ment of school supplies. An extra car was attached to the others In which lived tho families of the section hands, and every morning the children can bo found In their aouts, answering tho roll call. the Microbe Into the Trackmen's Kids Movie MAKER OF STONE PIPES Joseph Taylor, one of the Inst In dians near Pipestone, Minn., who Is carrying on the art of stone pipe muki lug, nn art which will soon pass Into oblivion. A soft red clay abounds in this region and In days gone by Indians made long trips t() the spot to get material for pipes. The stone Is easily cut, Hied Into .shape with a coarse tile, and given a high polish with a piece of flannel. PILLAR OF BOLSHEVISM New portrait study ot Carl Itmlek, Soviet leader, whose strong hand has often guided the Russian ship of state and kept It off tho rocks. If FOB GIRLS WHO WORK Mrs. Lodic Tells How Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Compound Helped Her Tyrone, Pa. "A friend told myhua band how Lydia E. Pinkham's VcRota- uio compound nad bclncd his wife, so my husband bought mo a bottlo becauso I was so run-down, bad a nervous weak ness, no strength in my body and paina in my left sido so bad that I could hardly do my work. Dcforo I wn3 mar ried I U3od to work . III hllU AUUIAJIJ, LillU X had pains just tho samo then as I havo had since I havo dono my housework. I would not bo without a bottlo in tho houso now. It has stopped tho pains all right and I havo found out that it is a wonderful body builder, as it has mado me well and strong. It is going to bo tho 'old reliable' with mo hereafter, and I am always willing to tell other women how it ha3 hoi pea mo. You can uso this letter a3 you wish as I can hon estly cay that my words aro true." Mrs. M. Lodic, H.P.D. No. 4, Box 40, Tyrone, Pa. Letters like this brhg out tho merit of Lydia E. Pinkhnm'a Vegetable Com pound. They tell of tho relief from such pains and ailments after taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Ciiticura Talcum Fascinatingly Fragrant ' Always Healthful Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and SOc, Talcum 25c. Repeatedly Protested. Mablo And did you object when h kissed you? Sable F.very time 'eSief FOR INDIGESTION -- ruAHs Hiixrriir mom 6 Bell-ans ty&&-W "ot water Sm Sure Relief 25 AND 75 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE .Many u man has that tiled tueiing because of his utrcuuous efforts to avoid work. Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes for baby, If you uso Ited Cross Hall I'llue. Never streuks or Injures them. All good grocers sell It. Advertise ment. Was Too Severe. Iieoch Why did you break your en gagement with the school teacher? Ash If I failed to meet her every night she expected me to bring u writ ten excuse signed by my mother. is a Combined Treatment.both local and internal, and has been success ful In the treatment of Catarrh for ovex forty years. Sold by all druggists. F. J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo, Ohio -ciS FOLEY'S HfiKMAR ESTABLISHED 1875 tARCKTSEuiNcCoucH Medicine wtheWoru REFUSE SUBSTITUTES Stop their pain in one minute ! For quick lasting relief from corns. Dr. Scholl's Zinc-pads stop the pain in one minute by removing the causa friction and pressure, . Ztno-pads are thin, safe, antiseptic, healing, waterproof nnd cannot pro duce infection or any bad after-effects. Three sizes for corns, callouses and bunions. Cost but a trifle. Get a box to day at your druggist's or shoe dealer's, DZ&cholVs . Put ono on iha pain It gone, 111 mm W H I i Sierell vn rV" jCSlV V V.T-rf-Z VFZ l'lsa PELL-ANS fev toughs CORNS iA V-. UA :