03-14-1919Mmii 'Z 1919fnmmm m mm sn T H E E N T E R P R I S s ~ s a w s - n m m x u
no FAVORITIB
GENERAL AND LOCAL NEWS AND c o m m m '
~llair, Washinton County, Nebraska, March 14, 1919 NO, 5
x>Aé1~: voir:_ _ .. , . . . . _ ¢ - n- I
U c o xn ma NE D "
snrnomnuceeu.vem m mthei lz i n i lo ncadet!
NEW BERRY SURE OF SEAT
Wanhinton,Marc h 3-Democ ratic ,
leader: othe senate today withdrewt b a i r . g h j s ~ c t . i n n . s t a t h c ~credentials of Trurnan H.'c\sberr5,,,
republsenator-eieet from hiiehl-gxn. wlwse election is being contest-
ed by Henry Ford, democ rat.They: d dMr.Newberry wasu.alumd~'of
..I
~U CAN HATCH MORE
D sjrR0NGER CHICKS
ITH soFT-HEAT
-~ -dpunuiu,
~riy mdnwd. pus
of whicEurope
u~'Thelibertye highly ovenub
nvin gaandw pbought 1.n-the"Ifn\:>f°¢i¢\li¢:r with
notoriousper
nself-dmiolo m
M. C. A., the Y. M.
or chosnttl, tobacco
un-dscountto omelionte thx
handsomelyreorslly boosted fn
L.Everyoneassnmdereduplan
y effective service.
equipment,from
trucks to the Imit-throughinhue
end' ofthewas
ent n oun : pla c anl of doiiln worth
o fa ult. d tho mnblamedtoMr.
~ftheadminioln
"SAFETY FIRSTE"
-Mr. Stock Buyer
9 _ 2 - 2 :
Brlre you invest your hard earned
cuin any kind ofStock,ggtthe
advice and inside lnformailun oinne
man. who knows.
vI
probable in,yr.-stmgat on.
||. _L AN|)l§l2S0N
§?'*"?"€?"Tile Casing and 'lubular Wells.
D E A L E R I N
Windmills, Engines,
Tanks, Pumps,
Feed Grinders,
Lawn. Swings,`
Pipe and Fittings
&c.&c.
OppositeOROW E L L E L E TA TOR
§?,'?hBlair, Ncbr.
11s
, If you want to know what. your in-
vcstment in Stuck is Worth and how
tn cash some ui them. write me,
ciao. SCHROEDER, Financial Cbunsel
542 Railwhy Exchange Bldg..
omm, NEBRASKA.
\~
There is Nolietter 'lime 'Hun House-Cleaning
H. ULLEIQMANN
GA - S
1
for Iigbning (Qu hearing.We'|l glkdly give you expen. advice
and help in nba mazwn and submit eecimnxes.OT course :here
is no obligation on your paninasking for the fam and figures.
We are so suro than gas as :dual and illumiuann willpruve so
superior tuotherways that we promise yuu'lI End it well
worth your while Lu iiivul-liunllf.'We, ol course, dun'\ expect. yuur patronage un any other
basis than |.h;u. yuuwilliurvu you' mvn inusresw bygiving
it w_g.s.Why nuv.'xuveex\g\ue¢Andwdayl
BLAIRGASCOM PANY
B L A I R ,N E B R A S K A
Four Doors West of the Castetter Bank
BLAIR::::NEBRASKA
THE LARGE5'|' AND OLDEST _\;XCLU5IVE
n .n:wm.RY sums :N THE c|Tvx
. . . - . . . . . - - _ - - --.-h ¢ - -
oaceLopear,as for inltunce.when Lharlea "§=mb took over the
buiidlnz of thips, Stettlmus bec ameaur Quaricrmaucin !I\§!, Ind R anbegun on the adrpprof run.k u
them reform: were ado pw too Inu
ur be of Mectivo war service,"Cornpulriaon of successfulAmerl
canenterprimm dexupex-ating
administrationfmiluresprlcntash.
most ¢1a.rn.nin.y; indietnwnt 0_5 a parlis
f I
tion in thewnduct of the warare
wellnighnumbcrieas.Theybegan
withtheobstinaterefusalfartwoill! | im!! y ua n s o h ulaNady ,s m
wlmra they will and no man c an sa)
zz is dmost impouibie to cute un ms
mace of 'whom an administnmon c.fortreallyauawded.Thuwlzticr.
were amrted in taining \asth wooue:c wandodd-lotunn on m,dnllin;an mudand dcepingininsaniwr)
camps.Thrvarereturningwithou.
.goun LOTHROP,
1LAW
Practice in stale nw federal mutt:
(\!|l¢¢ ln Wdlner Annum, Flu!
boar Soueh ol City Halt.
BL AI R,NEBRASKA.
"".»~. "s',i ~
Let us prove these claims by demonstrat=~
ing the Soft-Heat to you, and showing you~'
what others have done, and are doing withBroods Hundreds of Chicks
this Wonderful Hatcher.'°swfgne£e°"
6SEE THIS GREATEST 0F ALL lNCUBATORS AT 0UR FACTURYo
vonma iwculmola co.&a'":,1.':iz'i;';":;'i,, M.. House.
_Blair,Nebraska.
- n .
rcgular 3-cent stamp, and postmast-
er: wouid sell Victory stamps only On
regluest..h e n e v s t a m p b c a n t h e ti g u r e o fLibcny vlctorious, lxelmozedg and with:\ sword in one hand and wales in thc_
§f.h§".hf2§a:j:°f§¢1.sh' Arnericgg
f;;#=f»fg- gy,f , 3511;-3Bndmdialisn
|gsraore.nizc it c ompareswithuerspecial
-tampa. and is wider and shorter thu
ahc odinary stamps.g g m If u m t s .m a n yo ft h ew o u n c l c dw a t h o u
p r o p e rh o s p i t a la c c o m o d a t i o n s ,~.
t h e i rf a m i l i e sh ey et oe i n
t h a i ; - p l l o f t m e r n t i .va dn u .
a i r p l a n eb r e a k - d o o,o r d n a n c e
o r e s k - d o w n ,a n ds h i p - l r. . : l l d l n l
a r e a k - d o w n .T h ec o u n t r yI ns t r e w n .
w i t hw a rm e t e d s lo fe v e r yd c s c r i p
. i o n\ \ h i c ht h eg o v e r n m e n tb o u g h t
w i t hap r o d i g a l i t yb e y o n dr e a s o nu m
. s e v e rd e l i v e r e d ,a n dt h eg r e a tg h .
. z l l t p t l te n d e di nd u m p a g ca ts e ab e
c a u s ei tW ur e a l i z e dt o ol a t e .B u t
. w oo fl " o r d ' s' E a g l e s 'e v e rl l e w ,an.
c h i l la l m o s tt h es o l ea c e p t i o nt om l n
g e n e r s is u c c e s so fA m e r i c a ni n d i v i d
o a te n t e r p r i s el st ob ef o u n di nt h x
f a c t o r l o so fsp a c i f i s ta n dp r e s i d e n
t i a lf a v o r i t e .O u rt r o o p sn e r ot r u n a
p o r t e di nf o r e i g nv e s s e l so p e r a t i n g
u n d e rt h oA m e r i c a nf l a g ,a n dG r e a t
B r i t a i nm u lF r a n c ee q u i p p e dt h e i r
w i t ha l a y l z n e s ,g u n sa n dp a n t y" i t h
c l o t h i n g .
"Where pressure of public opinioncompelledAdmlnlstrstionl'('f0llrln
and able men were eventually draft
ed to carry on war-work,resullo ul.
-laureoueraeyto l i eIonian! in slth e ww o f h i s to r y .But it h as nbrightside.it indic atesthattltt
people themselves are were with the
goods; thatiz. ls the ndminlnretior
whichthey were bezoiledintosup-
poning on the plea. 'Ile kept on outof tc m' that is rotten tothecore
Am!in1920, the Americanpeoplexelectlng the lammling-iron of the Inspecter (§eneral's Department ahouhl
;;==~=;gf~1° Ithrizlxide ofhc Dvimocrottcon ey . ' ..,' mean mr' nspeetecl
andCondcmne¢¥."i-Hen.JonathanBourne, Jr., President of the Republi
can Publlclty Association.
'TIIRPIE-CENT VICTORYl'0S'l'AGlI STAMPS W ILL
c o m u z n o m r r n P E A C H
Wn.lhinq'i.t\n,MarchB-Vidor;.|
pos-lagn 2-tampa,n 3-cent Issue,tocommemoratethesuccessfulconclu
sion of the war. wiil be on sale shortly throughout the eountri;.Announc-linp the 1.usue today, theostofllee de
onrtrnent amdthe supply would not,bc oufiicientlylarge to replacethe
ggg~..n | . ~
LEGISLA TURE REPEALS
STATE COUNCH.. OFDEFENSE ACT
Requiem I'or State Council
Thefuneralservices of thestatecouncil of defense were conducted bs
the j1_»di¢iar;,- committee at its meetal|Zeway dternoon. It mommend
cd for passage ILR. coo, by Flllts,nop:-aling the law that gave it birti
and sustenance.Mr. l~`ult.s said thatthe council had done some good worl:and it had done some that was bad.
Some hot-heads had abused its pow-cra, but on the whole it had done gom
flurinftheperiodofthevcar.Itsusefu nens has now ended, and as sh.
po1.'ernorhad recommendedthat 5'
die, he thought it should bo remover'from the statute books.The bill pro
vides that its records :haul be handedover to the state historical society fo:
use, ll' desired. in the preparation on history of Nebraalwa part in theworld's war.--State Journal.
_____ _ .,_. __.
The' Soft-Heat Tubeless Incubatoris
.Different---Practically Automatic
OMBINES zo SUPERIOR FEATURES:Center Lamp and Heater;Absolutely Equal
~rabure; Only One Filling oi Lamp Makes Complete Hatch; Requires Only Due Fifth
i lofOther Makes;Eggs Turned W ithout Lifting or Rém ovmTrays;Perfect and~atioBalance o1Heat,'Moisture vénm auon and R1nii w',egu aonquiree Less Time,
and Attention.Less Than Two Minutes aDay.'
T -HEA T IS LIKE
URE'SOW N--Not
arsh Dry Heatof
ordinaryHatcher.
e's,as much dlffer=
as there is between
and Hard W ater.
ENT Y-FIVE Years
UCCESSNULIN=
ATORBU IL D IN G
IND IT
i
n. ~.IL
¢*
7 ~J.._sp-'Ex-5
~ j
~N Y !
.~"»;v»;~.';
, 1.=~_,g,
ncTI f i .;~.r v ~ ~ . , . . . .Q..
'<
~w
Children Operate the
Soft-Heat Successfully.
YoucabgetMORE
€H lCKSat less expense.
T heProf itsF r omOne
Hatch in the Soft=Heat
willP ayfortheMa-
chine andGive You
~LDUN D E R A N~'Some Surplus
IRQN -CL /inMoney Besides..
GUARANT EE.
SEE THIS BR00l)ER S'l`0VE
Nearly Three Months of the~
t Hatching Season isyetbe=,"1
e YOU.You can make several~1 ff~f
~ndred Dollars from yourpoul-pl
by getting started witlva~ ~1 = T = r | E A T H A T c H 1 N o o u T 1 = | T~i ~ J ~
»»_. >¢n.
A IDCAI. mzwsnnn
FOR ALL THE worm:lxsvscrsn AN
" t u r n w e r o n
Pn¢"ll¢'ll11' every ¢mrricau people in
In :I-.em m :ph
V01
I
whileinalmost1elrnruofthead
in diana! fdlure?
"Our noidic d, t
larcalledi m m1brieflytrained, pcup u tight the hi:
neverwitnem
Lum: were an a r-;;i;;=1»thewar
t r i:tampaJ 1; ¢ nwp k' wh oafoodhadoncebe
formedmalveins
Red Crust, the Y.ll. A.. the R. G. 1
mullitc ratunIless #ther nclivitie
roldi¢~r'slot,wenqaonded lo, and gl
overthelimits1
LXXIII
NORTH DAKO TA IN BUSINESS
:g g~ = Hu gi n g a n dA F lo u r
monW '' m m é b y 3 ~ .u
B i m , N. u.. March 1;-'raw laws~ nnitting the state of North Dakota
go into business under the indus-risl P=°ff="°of the national non-
~eague went into edect whenrnor Frazier rec ently signed theills.Bmlrinz.home building,and
-r milling are among the vr°,l°¢*-Ioveredinthetenconatltuuonud~endmenta adopted at the lm gen
ral election.The zent bill createsstate industrial mmiaaion com-aed of the governor,eommisulonea
I agriculture ann the attorney genrml, who are given blanket authorihn elta_blisl1in§neaasary m u d e l
ments.'lhe commission is givenuthoity for thsngpeathtlon of ;;5g
.l o er e name Iof North Dakota.The bankin measure provides forof 52,000,000 in bonds u.
umish api te l.The system will
tart "whenever the aura of $3{000,000s s n e d b y t h e s t a t e a s p m d e d b ;w"beende1lve1edtothe com-
~ion.The beak will become theepodtory of all public funds of the
te, counties, cities and school dia-
General banking. business ia~tho:ized, and in addition the Cen-state bank will bec ome the do
~sitory of the reserve funds of sewrel hundred private banks chartered
y the state.These reserves are nonldin Sr,Paul, Minneapolis and
~lean.The state bank will hav:
ref of the issuance of state bond:ilnsnee industrial enterprises andlls c t a a s r u r a l e r e d i tb a n k f o :
romotion of ajrlcul .The industri commission bin and~e banking act have passed both
ouaea by twrfthirda msjoritles,whic1.
nnlts the inclusion of an emer-
ey clause putting in to i m»-~effect.T h e o b i ll s s n
-~-- top ass aoo nwi th eemer
'i~"§'L °?,.1 b m.
o r esxue pro pro-e for the erection tetminal ele
tora end flour mills,and extendto credit to all eltiaens desiring te
er nrmoc lhomel.of th hi d
liminsteg taxationeosmcertsdn im
rovements,provided state hail in»0 n c m N , " ' t j§ d u § td | li n~»-= for 'lmrkingmemb an,;leman3
2 t m ua d o r a t i o n ~ar
The milling mesrure authorizes tha
.~lishm~t of a sy stem of ware, d i a t o m l l o u r m ma a h d f a e
all moved into the c ity .The residence of Walter Gurnnock, au rintendent of the cotton mill, and Jil lo-
cnl mprumtatlva of his eutorn rel-
atives, is now the residence of A. C.
limeen.Anal no the old buildin was left. Itilnally naehed a :tate J dllapidation
and feneral ruinand dec ay seldomequal ed at such great distance from
the Hun howiuer.Butwrh at lt lonln personal appearance it wood ir
1om=mtir:fl.1\o\:.What fairy-naryloting c lnld c ould fail to be thrilledby a gigantic building in a. mee ol
decay. almost medleud, with a aure-Enuugh ;3"=f» and a g=°;°°°¢h ~
vrgrou pusage eu ng n a ytmly walled-in well-like concern withog; v ib le M-; ~,, of Erik. anddhelgen
a t i s a a p o o un e: fr nu n e .1-ber thru wluch an enclosed atnam nl'
water gurgles and an atmosphere ofchilling damp prevails on the hotter!summer day?Not to mention tum-bled in staircase,_rotted .o o ta ,tunoke-blackened walls la d ;l theMal. Of it.
Denison Buys rI.. A. Denison.ro r of the,Midway hotel in Etta °"f»rooently
purchased the ~;eu.¢n.mi1 profertymth the intention of W dklng t for
salvage and putting m a UMf\\l-pursu. the und on which it atanda.3 1 ;M T M price was 812.900
hhich in itself turnlabel a little study
an the deterioration M pmoparty. Frompg; wll b gi lt old mlll,h; n ~ g g ltr
rep t up tance,.ohundreds o tlmuaandl .of brick, can
[pmt-1 of lumber and scrap iron.
The work of w~»»=f==~f is program-ing daily.Already a argzenportloa
Q! the upper story h u tornaway.Some very interesting fac t:
n tho subjec t of salvage are beingly disclmcd.Perhaps the moat inresting feature of the whole wrecklnrz process will be the teadag down
d that smoke stack, one hundred and.wonly foot hi h and twe nty dg hlfeet square at the base.
No n ms IS L INE D U P
AS AGAINST LLQAGUE
Nobrukl Senator A Convert To The
Opposition
Provision In Proposed Coulltnliou
That Ho 'Drinks Dmgeroas-
Conlthm President ForGoh; A broad
ttauhington, Marc h 13--'Zhu oppo-
Mtion won a new convert in the acnato today in the person of SenatorNorrisrepublic an. of Nebmlkl. Hg-ator Norris declined t o l i n o
pledge to support the Lodge reaolu~Lion and heretofore hu been rvardtd
as in favor o! the g ;A l o hcvoted agdnn war and been char
ac terized as | puinn, Senator Nor-ris, in an open latter to a c onstituent, !0¢\Y dochred thtfthe propose
constitution hu providona In it thatare "dan roo|.""I thin ." he mote, "wo ought 1-
tako the srofld as it is and not la wrwood like to have lt.It seems. thom-fone, inadviltblmto me to ante intranyagreementthat would m i .il
neasnry for us, or any other mum.
to mdntagn ltendinndlrrniel for !!1¢support o new e t government:that i t h in tended to es-
tnhlllh among semi-clvlllxod pooploSuch 4 couno is not onlyda.nln~ruuand win, in my judgront, him; fait
gm; 11 that part of enterprise. out
t a nn o o e n s o n o e o u n r y to mn i nuln the peace of the world."
Senator Norrll nswllod the presi-
dent for min: abroad."In 'lac nemo of demooney Ind fortheavowedpurpose ol'li nk in (thc
Earls! -o for ~;»~;,°=~v ho wont to
ro za a :pon or gorguouavneu. 'Kem equdied in the history of
the world," he wrote."Whiie his follow dtiseiu were zlrrifuc ing in overg
pondble amy ha used the money thatrome frmh million! of honest toilorv
in 1| display of wealth never equalled
by any king, monarch,or potcntatr-from the bolflnning of history "Senator orria aroused the proxi
dent of condemning the opponents ol
the I e in "onpatriotic terms" un]ehnr uthet "the worst kind of g11Jt"
is to Im found In executive depart-ments of the government.
SINN Hu mans H1 38 w xns on'
Lloyd-Gonna nd liz -Pmeddelt Taft
*Share Sun Trulmnl Al New
Yc rk Matting
Ne w Y o r k , Mu c h 6 - Hi n a ( n e t:
fd the names OI Woodrow Wilton,
Lloyd-George and W illiam B. Taftwhen they 'nrée nuntimld tonight at
th e C an trd op e n Mun a th an Si m
Falun zztihered to ==¢g=-»_;,=g;°1-
e.y upresent as an F he t.P m
w :"\-
m a i a m m s m
took nomo the bleon; took =.m°§ °{ £I
whole h , and Wilson brought homeme »¢~»&."L-»
ll. Qu inlan go t b o th :h a m m l
hi uo r wh ln he r d mu d to " so ld i er srotdng nz Br ut lr h lll Hu resident
of the 1rorld '| grutest np I l ¢ I n
dia l; ot!than -plate!ofnlling
~IDNT REDUCE CQNSUMFFIQ)
Americ an Reiner; Cldma lt W u
Same Aa For Ten Years
Jersey City , N. J., March 12.-Put
ing the United States on a sugar raion dim! not reduce the consumptionu 19kB according to the annual re
~rt of the Arnencan Sugar Remain;
ompany,issued here today. whicl
ted that the daily consumption op
~raximate 10,000 tons, the some n:
or the last ten years.
I t aiso wavannounced that wa
imc sugar prices were lower in lhlr
oontry than abroad and that the;
d not increased eorrespondingl;
ith other siaple articles of food.
The company did a ;2oo,ooo,ooo
uainess. making a profit of 36,661.
; , which was $3,393,607 lean than
t of 19k7, tlge report stated.
in gnnuufnc tum and mldztinf
£ :mn lrmduc ts. ,"I'he milling usolation wi!! be capiulized at $5,000,
| ~, part of the money to be obtain;-1-c q ltni n f un d s h stla es h tetr u a
r y u d p x r tth m t h e m ln o . f a h h~ndn .
CREEL RETURNS FROIIEUR OPE AND RE TIIES
I- ' a o u P u a mc s x nv ic n
New York,Merch 1 1 - - G N TCroei, heed of the eommitte on pulie information _il W ashington,on-
nounced todo 3118 return fro Eusf on rn -rope aboard the trilaport Agamem-g n h i s i n t e n t i o n t o " r e t u r n t o p r i v a t e
e n
"I a m no ion ger with tha n," uid
Hr. Creek, when asked for o | 1110~t ab out the attivities i n Ewm
...¢".m . .-
ies.-sed?" he uked..When his questioner: infonqd him
they had not heard of the statanont1-elm; released, Mr. Croel dictated t'|efoiiwingzr -"am going to retu rn to p vatelife.The domestic activities OC Ihr:committee on public information end
ed in December and I have made armngeroents for tho dineonfnuencu of
nl! foreign work.My only relationwith the committee on public infunu
ation no from nzmh l wi!! he n nom
I i nnoction th th fmaone.n eo vn e or-mn! features of settlement.
W uu S IMM F ar Activa Fund For
Ne w Yy r k Co n mllt n Ammu
uovsnuon ASKS vuuosFOI HOME BOUND 'moovs
Wll.8(|N 'l'!Cl'H..El) AT RESULT
ol' l'IL!1CTloN :N PENNBYLVANL
On Board Steuuship George "mah
m m l l a r c h 7- P mli d r n t Wllfo5'axprms-ed hi mn lf ms unail
pleased at the outcome of the e cdi~in the Twenty aecond Pcnnsylvnncongressional district, particulnriy r
the league of nations W u madeissue.The President sem a wirclem°='"2==to Joseph P.Tumulty ,Ili
necntury, as foilows:."Please extend my cordial eozggan
ulations to llr wllnon (J . P. "ll -democrat)just eiectod in Pannsyvania,ané e xp mu my gratidutio
that he wan upon the issue of 1.langue of nations."
YOTBRS 'ro :uns o1?zcmL
NEWSPAPER IN EACH commr
N m m m n li- I)'D i g e fi lh . d f1. -e tore o
*.loomed, P--'IJ as one of lu £3 acts
" * * ' " ° ' § ,~§ fb '; hi ¢h ° °' P' P; §f =" _<§_'
y uvalllego! notice: and advertiaemenuuired lo gemrubliahed, whdher re-E l n g to p c business or to the
.neu of iodlfidw nm: or oorpor-
ations.Hltherto In this :tote everyrepel of general clreulltion c omply-
ns wi th eertain modente Ire-mruta has been accounted 9. hg pq.
per and entitled to print lei!! notio
oo, Uhile three "gg" in eac h c ountywer e d ldh la £0 a n i m e ollklll
each year for thewpriatixgg of lend
no P-=comm y neu.Under the hw, whic h will bec omeoperative on Juiy 1 unless deferred In
its operation by a rdenendum petilion, the :Lute pr in z glo ommlu io n
may designate la o g r " f o r
ouch of the |tlte'| 52 c ount s.whichshall continue to be olhcid until afterthenearfgonerulelection.A t that
time,and hlennidly therufter,thehw provides the oikiel newspaper
for ueh ooouty ahdl be selec ted bytho voteh.
..Lg Zn
1
.
.16
a
f
SIMON LARSEN PASSES
The death of Simon Larsen occur-
|at his home at Omm o n last""d=~g» the Bth. inut.He had beenn poor eallh for a number of yeah-
~ut able to be around and attend to~uslneu most nf the time, though Ivd given up farminr turning over
he nmnagement of his fine fam, justorth of the Omm store a short dis-nce, to his soul.He was a native
I Denmlrk. coming to America, lami-na: at New York, in 1868, and urns-
rom there to Chicago where he rc-
"Mayor Roberts h u I . a li for a
mms meeting of the tu p a y e n el-
pecially" etc.atc ., any siuy '|warcry.Why "wp a y o r a ¢»p¢¢hnzyz"Everybody is n taxpsyer,w ?
thdr mme: may not appear onassessment rolls, they r a y mu . d i -
re.ctiy or indirectly, an are interest-ed in the c onduc t of p ublic llnin.
They pay taxes, indirec tly, for "fg
thing ihc y consume or wear, to eseller or producer.
J. L. THOMPSON
Veleran Of Civil War
Blair friends were apprlsai M thc
death of Joe L. Thompson st the Sol
c inn'}lun3°clL£Burkett,Neb., Inst'.e was an ear hmIdc nt o¥t.hi| city for mg y ennunlnl
mi n s to the Soidiem'ome s f ewr u n , W lie wua a vetcnm of thv
Civil ar, n member of Co.D 811
umm, auth 10-¢G<»v. s. fc; Ble-
r _.
.:he ew Yo committee lookin; af-
Plv hom bound Nebnah _solrl~
iers. an additional $10,000 emerqcneyfund to meet rms axtmonlinnry cir
cumstances, and an emergency appropriation of $3,000 to provide the committee with immediate funds.
'lhla ac tion follows o re rt Iron*lorrin A. Hose, chzimtan o?othe com
mittee, announcing the opening ofNehrmka heldquzrton In the Hun ol.itltt1¢,No.21, West Twenty -tlftb
street, and ggg nn estimate ot fu3-~,»=»-t»upon o y ears' uc
vlt ez."The lla!! of Staten is hnlnc esi bsthe War Camp Community sc|"\ireand quarterz,including :leak r mm
tights,telephone. heat and _lzmitm'c hic o an provided free to the mm
nittec.lint. Ente Leqse Sqott, formerly ofLincoln, was mute permanent seen:
Lnry of the Nebrunkn hendqmuteru at
.t :Llllry of $30 a week.The hto¢lqunrtera opened hhrrh 1.
In miditton to the secretory,tht~ommittee will employ |. pier direc-
or to visit inmntir ships and get nine on returning:ehrnsksns, mul L'hospital viaitor," to rail on Nebrnuiu
ick and wolmdefl ln the vicinity.Fha committee will also utilize all»f the atnilnbio volunteer service of
former Nehruhans in New York, Mr.
Hum soy a.Burt Whedon hu beenmode treasurer of the committee mu'
Emory R. Buckner nm! Robert T. Hillwditors.
HOG3 INCREASE $1.25 WHENRESTRICTIONSAREREMOV ED B Y U,
(Omaha Bee 13)
Since the rernovai of all gow:
ment restrictions on the lwsinzselling of hosts the price has shot u
with great rapidity.An increue -$l.?.5 a hllndrcwfght since last Hodw was r efi ne Wednesday mon
i n .
.
n. sleek-head c ows.min i ng i nt. . ~ w| , a . r ¢ i n n 'y n g u l a r c u
1:i n r n d t o c a z u a n o m d o f u u u b ln f June 30
who hive had the lemedtyLu lu thick milkwhitfe lg y ftrlckiin~own through lnyer te
layer o - talk: in ine silo I|the stud'n kic k more power!
ihun n mulc wadlop, md its ei!linger for I2 »11.One h uon iysxdultoraln:h i r Adycerlne-like su
stuns; mgmvfm Iter il. z o W 1
o e .}ll'°l1 er zdl rlear od the map, any lhouu wh
have triad it.
The family of Chris Rohwer a n
pkmning on ieaving for Lincoln in a
short time where they will guide, Mr.
Dell Bnilud of Coleman, S. D.. \\I.lin the c ity a short time lui week visiting his mother, Mrs. Sanh Ballardand sister, Miss Gram Ballard.
Mr.and M E ' F u n k Gray anddaughlor havu moved buck into town
and will occupy the residc o f Hn .Gra f: fa the r,Abe Sutherland,wh:
will make his homo with them.AbBennett will occup the homo andfarm th e that of wont of Uu
rily, the place formerly owned by the
late Herb. Noble, now owned by t .Grays und which they vacated wher-
oomim; back to the city.
RELIC OF BOOM W RECKED
Old Cotton Mill At Kearney Sold For
m o o n
Building And Equipment Coat SIDU.:000 in Romantic Days Of The
Frontier
K°=~"=°f» Neh.. March 10 -Th e dl(
cotton mi I, the last tangible evidandoftheboom-de'mannfaduriitg
pla n ts , h u b ee n a o d to L. A . ~
or $12,000 and the work of w i gthe big building for the salvage Ia
ready under way.J. G. Lowe, president of the Farmera'__lmnk. who was payrnnater at tht
cotton mill in its more prosperotlrand his los;-farosperooa wa n . d oe f f b , 53° 1, l:chrntl1u;i m waieh
gree e tt n o e pro oct."'l`be. Comcnoeka," cosedively so-call
ed heanae they were many and thelaH e l l intricate, wege eantem eouoz
man ac tuzera with d great amoun'of ap ltal at their c ommand I L D
iwataon, in one of his eastern tripe
which resulted in th imponatlon oleapitaliata into Keamey by the traitload,succeeded in interesting the
Cttmnoekn in the possibilities of Kearney.The Kearney Enterprise, Kear
noy'a metropolitan daily, kept thcpopulation o the town on the alert
or many weeks with tales ai th:Cumnoelu and thdéegrital, and tlzeil
prospective trip earn13;.Ont
day , in great headlines.e p a l;would announce the arrival of theportant eaaterners on a eertain dat:
And on that date the headlines wottltgive the depressing news, "The Cum
k Co N t nnoe l me o.But there enme a day of jubilatiorwhen the cheering crowds packed the
sidewalk and a _procession paradethe streets bearing' the banner annonneing"The Cumnocka Ha v
Cnme."Such pandee were frequent
in the exciting days of the boom. -Within ninety days,a subsitlf
amounting to $250,000 had been rained hyqppular nuhaeription ln Kea:
ney.o population was only 5,001and other projects were being subs!dized daily.The (mal coat of the
building and equipment wa.1,8-100,000The Cumnocka were the heaviest inventors, but Augustus l'rank il men
tioned as having put fifty thousand
into tho,coneern.'A Few Figure!In a booster booklet of the boondays,preserved by W.S.Clalpp, r
gg s tatistic s nge ; to gp g s ae ofarente<. an t mi .rbemenonedR.passing that ~ §
loom rather large eornpared ~N r
|
G o v s n ma z n r r A m o nRAIL ROAD MANAGER
Experiment Thu For No( A Mulned
r u i n M 51|¢s u n BunenlB .:Geilng Mi k i " B e lu r n n - H o m
nd Elliott Urges Return to
Pr in t: Ov ne n
Chleqo,Mlm):B-T he early re-
hnrn of the r-allways to opentlon In
the mmpunlea which uwu them andth e p uu g e of e o nn r u e tlve lé u xr
tion w =~=-1.;,»;lv-1° opssntluntgg 3
e neue u were vocaHound Elliott, fh-f==\\~a und Emi
nent °gd¢g¢ Nobrvtrn Pa uli: ru way
un nn r u a ore Qra comrnen-.inclub of at n dumar here mnlght.Mr .llott presented som:
dnt; whic h brought out c ontmts between the sltuntion Q! the railway :
under prlvnte nd undar government
operation.' Th o Pennuylvanln ry nem."lu
nld. "furnished 19.2 por c ent of tluton! mn mileuge and 12 1-2 per een!
of the will 'I.'f"5.| ." "°f>»f|°°§ff'°o`§ .az
eember 81, 1917,Lhnt symrm hed
283,800 ern oea, md on December 81:sm mi l 2 78. 101 emesh lnu lws lmo
v mleu than ln 1917 (tho rnllwuys bein(
ln the y ur 1017 under private eon~tml)nsnrl W000 more em lo eewe r e , W i r 16 lmn d le we . . ' L . l. .
volume of business.'l"heae\ state-
me nu a n na t mu le i n c r ltid nm n l'the n llrou d ldlnlnlltnilo n but sim ~ly w =» =-ph-in u w p a u l u m JI.
#Y iwu o government opentien irnot productive of the bed! result:
With tho some rdlmlda n lltilg bet
#_;g;3_\-fv»»¢ln m; 1 8 w g ; l n 1 7
e mme o n n n me u'with different o zu tlon . J dlr~
ectlum and with e had me n work-
ln g u h ad _ u h uman be in g could
work. and wrth net wur wer nm: : : : : : : ' ~ m a ' =§f'::'f ° '
d »§§°¢¢~»..enfrgy .uludolnavr".§3.'if ioiblntlve so lmporunt In tha
m o r a l o l m y ents rlle m d Lintotaloutpu t of thorn w u l e nthan ln»19\'l md won ~Z9'i';»<»- mon
°° ° ", { to t h e ~ot I n Fl vu r 0 Region Plnn
5 "e 1 3 1 ' - y ~ d o n o t b e
o n n ed¢ r vh ¢ g _ " ; \ | ° z ° : : . : " ° = ` ¢ -~
ry ore me ugg; ly stzm.They \;~;=v "gg
P .ceono c mem& § ' &" . ue s o d llemn tr vm th a n
oxiltlng ln foreign c ountriel thnt w.must xolve our rublem ln mlr o ww n y l n d n n t j s p b t l p l u n ~
:I i
used in its constmction.The main room contained 15.00apindieareqaidng 400 horscpowe
for their operation.am!the nnnua
output was estimated at $3.1l00,000.Alth o a boom day enterprise, th
cotton mill did not owe its final failare to the collapse of the boom.Indeed, the manufacture of cotton \\:|
continued an a paying enterprise lon:after the spectacular bursting of th-
hubhie.For nine y ears the mill :lian immense business, fnite unwortlnof the tremendous out ay for build
ing and equipment.It put out muslin and ninequart:-
lheetlng of n quality equal to Imiof the Loom or Lawrenc e Double I.The`entire rnrmiuct was ahipaed 1-
Chineae ma eta by Putnam-1 ool-:eacotton wholesalers at Cincinnati, wh-
latcr took over the machinery.Scar
city of akilied iabor ami, to a leasedegree, increase of freight rates, finatiyrenderedits further operatic.
not feasible. and the mill nhl!! down.
Counterparl In Indiana
in e gm-" W lu is wled the labor quc slio:is., of comic, one of the mont scriou
:n d difficult c o nf mwn g the wholnworld, the railroads in particular. nm
there must be a. broad view of ig am\ lplrit of give and take by dl cla..-ases of people.All good citizens de
sire to are wages and living congilions improve, but there is 1 limithhavereasonable waxes und continu
ous employ ment rather than to forcl
wages so high that industry langilishea, for than the 'wage-earners them
selves will lullcr most of all.Transportation Machine Vital
" A n effective tnnnportation mashined: vital to the interests of th#nation in war and pence.Iti Importanco justihes h»~fg;5 a man in thu
cabinet oillcers d ing with greainational questions and resources nmtogreeentthetransportation. need
of e nation directly bo the prcaidcn
and his advisers."He win not manage a.n¢Ioperntc
the nil:oads any more than tho sec-ericulture mum~ »and
=»fq.,'gf'v1¢-_}»f===»»f Mme.c m n building- was -loBxlof
feet, the boiler room 59x48, dsc ennine room 'IoxB0. the fan room 92x2.7
The xmoko stack is 120 feet high an:
its foundation is 28x28.The noorroom of the building numbers 89.53
-square foot.Over 4,000,000 hricl
H ~....
"Small,unsuccessful a n d s o w lm
'weak iines' that ue depending upon
their connections with the gms'
trunk lines must gradually ba nbso:-bed and become n p a r t of th:
The entire machinery was transfered to Evansville, Ind., where a col.lon mill modeled after the Ke:xme5
pattern. had been built for its !(¢t'[|tion.Kearney people who have Feerphotographs of the livnnxvilk mill
say it is nn exact replic a of he ol'cotton mill here, even the location o'the doors.Anal.there the spindles
Fifteen thousand in number.\\hir¥ence wlzirrefl merrily in W est. Rearney. are whimme to this very day.
Crowdnd together in the low cramp-
opentea the .arms of the country."Some have suggested that the gov
ernment gunantee a fixed return uponrlikrondrroperlyTheraiiwng.executive! be ievo tlnt a guarantorwould tend to reduce initiative Bm
retard eftkziunt mumgelncnt.amthado not nk for it.They belicvrwiadequate ntea,rcamnahle lib
rty to act md good managemowthat hue been wisely planned
honestly financed and well managvercan sustain themselves.Poorly locat
~|.
thaworganiutiosdid and nmnxingl
Producer:of wi.
the nuanufactupe o
tor ofsocks, can
ahlpc.Th ltthefound ihe governn
giutled with billio
of mlterinl was shers. but must b
Maker."Th¢fnilumu
_b'~*'
~ou CAN HATC~
AND sjrR0NGERw|'rH soFT-
Let us prove theseclaims by demonstrat
ing the Soft-Heat to you, and showing yo
what others have done, and are doing wit
this Wonderful Hatcher.'
.".1.2|; .|'
u
The' Soft-Heat Tubelesslnc
..Different---Practically lu
COMBINES zo SUPERIOR FEATURES:Center Lamp a
Temperature; Only One Filling oi Lamp Makes Complete Ha
the OilofOther Makes;Eggs Turne:l.W itl1out Lifting or
Aiitomatib Balance of Heat,'Moisture, Ventilation and Regul
Labor and Attention.Less Than Two Minutes aDay.'
SOFT -HEAT IS LIKE~
NA T U RE 'SOW N--Not
the Harsh Dry Heatof
theordinaryHatcher.
There's,as much dlffer=
ence as there is between
Soft and Hard W ater.
T W ENT Y-FI VE Years
QFSU CCES SNULIN=
CUBAT ORBU IL D IN G
BEHIND IT .
SOLDUN D E R A N
» ,._
§§'€f§f9;~~
t~ 1 5 1 ~ ; :
'""i!1= 2 .
.';-i s
~§,xa~
,`%~ ~"
S
Y
C
T
H
w
IRQN-GLAD.
GUARANTEE.
Nearly Three Months of the
Best Hatching Season isyetbe=
fore YOU.You can make several
Hundred Dollars from yourpoul-
try by getting started witlva
SOFT=I'IEAT HATCHING OUTFIT
SUBYYHUTBB. FARMERS BAY ~
if ~. . . M a
-*/
/T\a
U i a
|.
: r u m w e r e W-: m i n e d f o r sm
m w l g v w u c n u u c l u 'r ' ! "e m i u m .o r m e r z e w i t h o t h e r r o a d s ..w h o s e d a i l y l i v e s u i T o r c d a.l i t a f i l i m l F 0 1 s e v e r a l m o n t h s .
E . . , . . . 1 " ' £ , . " ' F S " £ . = . . .. . . 3 " S o m e o f t h e g r e a t l n b o r o r g a n n z n c o n t r a s t t o t h e w h o l e s o m e f m e f l o m o ' |o D 811'cc lvul at um. :sc um :mm nurse:1ic.h he I`uosdn}, showylgg _ggt g_ _mlilhi ne-=-1
i&iA»1ai|»=ne%i gud Qhis §!évlc;'¢;.£hrf ments
f\;;,§,;'B=;;, xmwr not shark in tho min, for they wrrv . "um" Harrigan, south of mm. is scheduled zo on neun at mennmm lm:va url: xurlucru ucaun: w Hu unuiinnlx.m,.\¢i||¢~¢| tlml nrvfvrrni tho fr¢Nlnn'!nu~nd\ng.}ohu:¥r1 an fnoelefq tsfo story week and a. P15113 f Blair worri-un 3 . 5 : l ~live Sfoek beforeFMS]§§§»§»§iéé"wli held at Ulf!h m l l home on Saturday at oneo'c loc l: P. H. Rev. Ullvelden of Om-
aha ;>reachlnlf the funeral diaeounc:nd the renuns we re laid at rut in
the 'Orem GennetekThe Editor of Enterprise ex-
peHenca a feeling in the nature ol'
personal bereavement over tho re-ported death of his frlend,Simo1\ Lar-
sen, with whom he has maintainedfriendly relations for near a half een-tury of intimate ac quaintance.The
best that can be uid of any person isthat "he was an honest mam" a rdthat c an be truthfully sold of Simon
Larsen.
-wFar1ncrs' Railroad Measure Giving
Parrot-n' Co-Dperstlsfe Unions
Seats In Omaha Esdnnge
Lincoln,Nob.,Msnch 11 - A f te r n
lengthy debate In the committee of
the whole In the lower house, the l-xr-
islature Tuesday ordered House Rott
345, s measure designed to give fI.|\°!!l
ers cooperative unions seats in the
Omaha Grain Exehanrcf to enigross
ment and thin! reading by an almost
unanimous 'foto
uf the farm.In the lust anulsqln, thi~-.ituation mused the failure of thucotton mitl. nm] not the fact that it
was loentecl so for from its imsc,.oIsupplies.The mornle ot' the mill workers was
nnt of the best.They \\ort'. in themain. itiitorzstr' and Locking in ambition.Child labor mul common.
The mlll supervisors!were pluto
rrnls [mm the east.At the annu
lime the various mnnufnctories wereIningbuilt, n allneonnl street.lin;¢lon either :aisle with pretentious rosi-zlunfvzl. eume into existence In Wesllienaney. Later these residences were
nouso wllh ousement on :vs :arm nrsoon as weather conditions will per
mf..lie plans to move the old house
of! the present site and use it for stenant house and hopes in this way to
solve the hm.nl help problem.
oA reception was given by theYoung Peoples* Sociejv of the Denis?
l.uthc.rnn church. nsustod b the Tuinthnlotsafor the soldiers ,of
§|1t!reh el eollegemettttmod from mil-
itary duty.A llne prognam wns gh-en :mel refreshments were serum!
The evening visa greatly enjoyed hsalL. _.as-.
went over one nay lnosn oi. mu umwfor the convention, presumably to do
a tittle Ing-rolling, pick out the posi-
tions of Erominenc e in the organillttion whlr they wish to he chosen to
occupy.
oEtczwation for the buoment of thelllmHe home on W . Linc oln is pro
gressing "og but was halted, tc m-pornrily. by e existence of fro~t.
oThe Moidtouse lco slorsvre plant
was hlled to about one-thin!of itscapacity during the recent cold spell.
This, however, will not Inst for long.
\ J \ J § | I | | l l | . l 5 u m 5 P a u l s n v n a
-noxm-::.| . :~usx'r vwon LEADEIS
Wwlhlngtin.March ll- Rep r e se n t:ltivo I'rank W. Mondell of Ne\.*cef.tl».~,Wye..today \\n»=elected |1~pul~li.:1n
llocr leader in the next consfresn.The vote for Mondell was 161| 'o 21.the lrtller number voting merely ]\\1\r-clit.I-'itty-three votes were lbsent
from the meeting ol' the lepllbllcnnc o m m i t t e e o n e o m m i t t e e s .|
U r
Mrs.Guy Heltman is spending nfew days wit_h friends in Omalu.
1
\.;
, u
I. - »
-as
',_--.A "1 ~- - . p - v q - w r : ~- e1~H'1"5'
:ima mmm
, f -
umm 14, miai»m i we m a i:u x f w n n b s a a Harcix , 1919 'm n m r m n vu r m _ .
l
i
r
A HINT TO THE l.F.GlSllATURE
Seward. Heh., itsreh 1--To the Ed-
itor of the State J ournal: .As one ofthe pnnelpal partic ipants in the timmule ot wahoo, I ke! more thanan
ordmar interest in the fair, candidand iingurtlal hlstorSf`TJf`t¥lir"ii1in-pnr-
tisan gcqm-n1o\em.eat.While lnever doubted the llnsl verdict of his
ton on um movement, it is exc eed
ingly pleaang to llnd the public milimg now to realize that truth. Mil to
ieahze how muc h of irimtic e was
lone the men who were dren out ol'Wahoo like dogg:by that mesi of
omlll bore politicians who were at-
tempting to use the highest emotions
.if patnotisrn to compass their 0\\t'l.ierronnl aanlaibons.lt was of coursemore thah pleasing to note the xer
liet their oun county mend:rmltgainntthemlastfallnt the pulh.
md to observe that not a single mannhl.attempted to prostitute the pa
.riotic sentiment:ot the pea le oftiebraska to their own wond ends
.vas able to escape with the gooalx
tl! of that hunc h are now enjoyim:he rest and quiet of private life. :milroy they long iemain in the olmc~uty their acts entitle them to.A1 ilu
truth cornea out how will those emm<nt rnen who adoreel the state countEl
af offense =gg,°°= to a. candid public?Will their os gain n new lustre.
and on their demise (I means their
phy s lw, for their political de mi i.as alremly ourired)will a grateful
ittlrllt erect it chime marble abufl. tc
onunemon»to the treatment the;gave the leaders in a purely oeonomir
novement, on the Mlumptiorn thatieenuse they dared intimate that the
mekers were profiteerlng,the pro:oeents of the league were disloy aland mutt desiwt from their elTnrt to
how the people of the state a meansifescapefromthoseeornmerriul
highwaymen?Then too, how stillthose others over the..etnte who hai-
.ied our organizers, particularly that
nudge of the district court Hg in theNor th Platte country who eld one
if the organlzeni under anest fourlayr. and |lf~~=tro5ed his Eiberatule rresslngrhimonlywiththreatsof
'ranging if he retumed, hon will thnlruonllan of even lxavuled justice fnrr
ater on at the hands of his ton:'itunts, once the truth cornea to Ei|\;l.t. a.urely at is coming?Then again. all
hose country town editors or o wen;nth hyusterics whenever n Fon] enmi
hrobhinz into town. will they (0T1||o realize that by iightlnz the inter
sta ol' the farmeni and laboring mei!
if this state they had really minedhemxelveu-for that is what the
1a\e done, as the future will reveal tt
them.And I wonder, too, whether the peo-
illr of this state. when the oome teeahze what the farmers o the slate
if North Dakota have done, not onlyfor their own welfare. but for that ofvery man in the state who is doimr
|11 honest business, and then eomrnre
hat work with the output ol' ourirrsent state legislature alll come to
onlin- that l was right when monthrleo I Mild them that the Politicians.elmo controlld 'thu gulm nlstration
rere mere;a ng a oaco .en:h e p e o p le ~ I § | | ll® l7 ° ' i |" a
fart, whether they come to realize itor not, :mil I a m Ne rf - wi lli n g to
asyait until the public. n wuyvslov: toknow those things, really come tnrfull
knowlertge, a1 t ey sun will.TheIegdslaturcofNorthDota,reotiz~.ng that oolrhcvisro and I. W. W. me
hngerotls doctrines, went about cur-ing those evils by removing the cause
for them.Our legislature hm: eheeted its ends by passing it law forbid-
ling the carrying of in red flag aboutIn processionsl -1 wonder if it hasever occurred to any of those galle-
:ncn that there is a :auso for l.she-
unez.That sort of legislation waspopular in the dark agen. when men
rom amutets and bribed saints to in-tercetle for them when the typhus
breathed upon the pea le.Now dayswe kill the cootiea voceinste andlean everything and everybody up.
Azul along with the burning of thenrnuleta and the eessotion oi askingome saint to avert the curse, shoul-l
ro such legislation as that bill overwhic h a bunc h of small bore politi-
.ians waxeil no wonderfully eloaluent.iliul they pushed along some la eal-
.ulateal te enact justice between the
exploiter and his vic tim they wouldlame shown some evidence ot' living
in this age, rather than that of the
il|.t}'| when the rack and the cauldronof boiling ell were favorite means ofconvincing skeptic s of the errors in
religion and science.However, how:utl we expect an;thing more enlight-
ened and modern [mm a legislatureelectedin a campaign which anx'vagal from beginning to ond on
fulwe pretensions.l have long womlered whether thepublic would ever become curious to
to know whenc e came that immehicMlm of money required to wage the
night that was put ve a uinst theleague last year.Prlntelgs ink was
uiteii in torrents, all sorts of l ing|-omphlets bnnlened the malls. llillhen-
a mam disposed to oppose theleague movement :showed h'- feelings.
he had no dilllculty in ronneeting upwith xthat seemed to be unlimitedfunds for any movements he cared to
tart afrmnst lt.l wonder whencecame this money, who irathereci it to~wether, uho paid it in. who disbursed
lt.I have no idea that the presentlegislature will interest itself in thematter, but I should not be at all sur-
prii=ed that, two years from now,when the league candidates shall havewon the next battle in Nebraska. asmrely thee' will the whole luntary ofthe flnsnc nr of that outrage against
dec ent c itizens of this state will behrouiglt out. and I do not imagine it
will at all difllc uit to limi out all
these facts.Perhaps we may tlndthat the packed had something to drwith it.And then. too, certain great
financial lltntlttltlhnn la the state. notso very far frorrf the Iefiaaouti river:1xaybeAo3nd to tp" been implicated
n 'n r some pan , who,had at feeling that a toira oi a ttaincut and shape might look well on hisunequal shoulukrs. as he went shamb-
tinz u m aisles of a Qreat leginla
two l might possibly have hailsomething to do with the disburslug
of it.Who knows?
At any rate, when the nonpartisan
e
sl
i~
as
n
ai
t
o1
nl
c
eJ
t
s
ooI
o
t
1
:W
r. muon.um m m ann
r
"THE BETTER MACHINE"
~ 21 Jewel, Movement ~
HYATT a T|MKEN`RoLLER BEAR|NGs .
J I'"2 "
¢mm,N¢u..uaur.b»°of comgn af :ma a, ma
SUIJSCR1I"1'loN RATES
Ona Dollar | Yur in Advance.
- _ . . . . . _ .. . - . . . _ - . - .. .. . ».
MASSA("llUS}}'lTS TOWNS VOTE
"W E T" ON LIQUOR Q[3F..'~§I'I(}N
Boston, Manrh it-Returns from lstovrmu that voted yeatenlay on thozyxcstion of issuing ii uor lic-\:n»~~=ow that eight chnnzna from dry to
wet.Two of lhe towns, Weymouth.and llingham, have been no-licensrplares for more than a. quarier of a
century.
LARGEST CITIES
The dispnwies say that if Chi-v.u;opamic n the three million mnrk in tl vnf-xt federal census at may nlincrreulr£'n\in as the fourth city of the qlrhe.
New 'fork and London tome lo niuulat once as the Brat big cities.\\'l.ui
is the thirst?One uho doesnl imp
pen to icnou.need not blame liinwlfas u hopeless ignornmus, for the stu
tistica of city population are nm¢=rously erratic nnd insecure.Som:tnbles include political '|lVl\\ion=: only
while others give the pulation ofan entire metropolitan 'IlItiict. which
is nn entirely ~i1flc-ren matter.New
York, for example,n ec he nITl~cinliy an large as is In fact.bo-
caule the c ities west of the lluulson
cannot be counted because of thenJersey adherence. altho they are nctuaily a part of the great metrepnliq.
The largest cities of the world as?1\|:I\ by a pogiular nlmnnnc are nollmrszNework,(1917, area not
stated), i3,73l',492: London, 4,522.96l;PHfl$\ mm; 2,888,0l30: Tokyo, ll9{lH}
2,lR6,000; Chlcnsro.(1910)2,zss,ooe;Berlin. (1916) 1.779.1fJ1.Vienna andPetrogz:ul now stand ahead of Herli-1on tlto face of the returns, but it i.
not likely that these have fm; valueunderpresentconditions.T e lastBerlin census was no doubt reliable.
s
state, =ome oi its friends wi!! bo cur
ious enough lo go on a hunt ufivrsome ol those factu. ami l think ws
shall Md them.F. B. Tipton
@ " 'y g
n
Bhilt up to a standard--not down fo a price"
Van Huss-Antill
DISTRIBUTORS
BLAIR,NEBRASKA.
1 .-
Culeddge Blade:-W e notic e tht!me of the high schools in this rar!
me stale are starting the pub ica
~n of mmll school s\¢P¢'r¢Thi;oem- that the local pgpor will handle
school ==°,3°=' n a }ob.It will
~ve m hope for at 1=>~=;»f°=»- and
:th printer: worth from 20 to $80woek the expense will be a. commutahie item.To ray the expenses the
lnesa men wi!be solicited for ml-rtising.This would be largely a
fplarauon of their local peper adver-sinwe and u th e lo u !paper hasuch Imger__|:irv:uhtEon than a school
~per could hope for anda intoemme homes,this lain;
ooh! be wanted.Host local papers~uid wry 5 sc hool department an» fxgenne zo the school.This 1r ld
:wer every purpose thot a Iper could hope to cover.So hs~t use the lace! rapen?In thh
ay the only loser | the local editor,
ho than Ions the job of printing the
hool paper, but u l. feature In hi:por the school depnnment would~ve a certain value to him.And tha
einen men would not be called up
lo "s1£|I»o| t" wlut all live ldver-
s e r xw de o n a d d e r a p u r e g r n f zorthe bulls of value in ndvertlldngmr-.ulntion among people n e u
~ugh to the duler for him to haveopportunity to get remlu.
The zmwuu P m: mm nz.mem convention in gm-»:~
op to d a r es o lu ti o n f -- > %- =g ;~ ~ f ; - = 1 ° - o f a t ~40
l orln accordance wi this resolutionrelidrtllwillC. lane! of Havelock
~pointzd C . B . C u : o i Ravennarlnm of n c ommi ttee to hl nd h
o matterwg ; * uh pu b li c me ow to ld vlr -
ebruh, except for thc ucrpoufu:nizhing n few politicals with mba. when then 1| nothingdo, : md if than were thou who
meh john \ouldn't be qudided toil.) at public oxreuo?The chid
rp oa e of nd vor ti z ng llton ii a omon¢.Ne b n l h h u wf h i n r u e e p t
4 produciito all md tiny sell road
| at topnotch prices.
0 }~1 I 1
no o e r ulation is Home H 299.This £151
as to do with ilu! lutomobile tn: and
e dlstributian off the funds anzruhwhenetrom.I t pmvld u tb l! th e li
m. shall be issued by the &&tl-~ of 1.11iptlon.li i g h u y a mdrainaze intend of by tlno Secretary
. t s u t e u i s t h e c u - e a t t b e r r m n n l
'» $ i i 0 m='f='¢:1 51."'~¥:'§1f2¢i2.Y"'I.'f
very mntorqycla 'and awry two when"
rurdk ~=;g-=g;oesaf thna onr:'itl\ou
~u a .;ur e altaion °F°..f». motor vrhicle a minimum
f $10.00. and 50 cents addition! for
h 100 poe m in we igh t of su e!an in excess of 2000 pounds.Pro
ided, for trngrs and for can used tx
o n um seven pgu en ena q m a f ?n slmli be »;»_¢ ' » »
sr t o t 1|can'§.,,.'»¢,.'i».'f.1 lo tha capacity, usd ir
I
°g ; f; " *~ ; ;§ m*' = = ~ o f c a nn n a
" a ~ a s v a l ' v u g v q y r ' m . , : ° =
.e n w pau 1.1~rovisinns of the meuure are that all1" $ .3 ? ° {Z uu z s gs f r % § = ? ' f £
ich such taxes an collekted, In thenlkzwing mnaglrs 'TB per cent of ti!
un s e to t rSumo High:|?und" to be used ishe upkeep of t State Highway nysemiThe gfgagggs 25 5" rentdshni
9 IJ TIrs: Iuwl to be use d ~ »J »» lll ~
n g g wu n ty e xe s ti ng mto s sf h n lg
l as u o s v m.ysto1n.F ?ntlmltr d th a t :hi
~=""', : " " , .°a::,1;':°°',1=:
. .
f * f.,':s'n the
EST; ';;nd.'n me
In W uhlngtoll County , the rom*l e n d i g s = »; , »; 1 B h l i r t o O m x h n I r n o v r r
u W I I I I I (2 1 .m u d f , ; + ." ' ? " i ¥ . ' f 3 , . . ¢y a l l m y
Ladlswrxvs~xcs
E Unegln, Nebr., Ihr.il, 1919
nba oe:l\1na5ml?>lil2 9 ; ! : h i c h mg f
m m e 'lr1|the Home ther a strenuousgm, was Liiled in tha Senate yester
-:r-During i i i br ie f :p m o f 18 :wh I Q! ' ty b mu g h t t| 4:.ha heutlr meusebi `thlx1|nnd ~ho thought that soon 133 ri
up to counuer in d e theisnhhues like an honest person in
~d of sneaking u lo the merzhlmlhenthe omc er J ' the law 1| not
:dung Andtgiinpug hlnmir mmu. g g;
t rn a n o ewelnlllildto mf o r u thu _pruanl
lute the mme my tm p roviniunr
hmm as the "B" line, are a pon oftheStateHlz hi n y Syxtnm.Thea
t1 ro ro ¢d s 1lii lle c u ru '! 5p e re en to I
the Auto Broun.An effort wus mud:to ma k e tb e r a ti o 6 0 - $ 0 h \ | tth i | 1 r u
thought unwie u it is hleumbont Lp
on the State ua ltsmrwe the Feder:JGovernment that all tht Nada inc lad3 i n he atate Higlxmy S y stm wit
ma nt;rope nr ne 15:1Government- 3 ; n o t L o its mane
h w u s d s ta n a .Fedenl usiadtnnee
in e very an is on tht B06 0 ba sis
that ll the Stat! malt approplinte anamount emi! to the mm c ontributedby the Fadenl Government.
Burt Hiller
JOHN AYE WAS nano FROMg m ~nous: OP nz\assnN'rA'r1vss
CADILLAC cs899
cols ~
cimzv Tnucns
Sold Exclusively in This tenitory
B Y
Martin Jacobson, ~
HEADQUARTERS AT
LARSEN & JACOBSON GARAGE.
ASK FOR
DEMONSTRATION
=x "212
*F*P 7 " Q " '~e\~ ` <n n 'r ' ~
KERUSENE TRACTOR
HE po pula rity o f the La us o n 2 | Je we l Ke ro s ene Tra c to r is du e toTi ts unus u a l pe rfo r ma nc e i n t hc fi e ld.W h e t h e r p l o w l n mt h r e s h l n g
o r do i ng ge ne ra l fa rm wo rk lts he a v y duty , fo u r c y l i nde r , v a l v e -ln -he a d
e n g i n e p r o d u c e s a s t e a d y f l o w o f e c o n o mi c a l p o w e r w i t h a mp l e re -
s e r v e t o me e t u n us u a l c o nd i t i o n s .-
W h e n o n t h e j o b o u r 2 4 r o l l e r a n d _ b a l l b e a r i n g s a n d e n c l o s e d
c ut g e a rs , ru nn i n g i n o i l , i ns ur e a g a i ns t e x c e s s i v e we a r a n d r e d u c e
f r i c t i o n t o t h e mi n i m u m '
Th e L a u s o n Tr a c t o r i s o f me d i u m w e i g h t w h i c h ,b e i n g e v e n l y
di s t r i b u t e d , w a r r a n ts p e r f e c t c o n t r o l .Th i s ma k e s p o s s i b le o pe r a -
t i o n o n w e t o r p l o w e d g r o u n d w i t h o g t p a c k i n g o t s o i l .'
.A d e mo n s t r a t i o n w i ll s h o w y o u t h e a b i li t y o f t h i s t r a c t o r t o r e -
pl a c e f a r m la b o r a nd i n c r e a s e y o u r a c re a ge c a p a c i ty .I T I S F I V E
Y E A R S A H E A D O F O T H E R T R A C T O R S .
Q-
The hung ln almost lu-tomstle ln ltl operation; any
mm or boy un operate lt:ll you hue 1 Iaumn youdon't require the nenlces ofln Engineer or Meclunk athigh wages an ornte-il,ot er uni tr-inln ¢...e"§.' on the mukd
thlt (ive llirly utillu-toryurvice. but only | few nm-ent,and numerous others
that are worthless mere
mlkelhitllr- tmuhlsmnkenforleltbd tpeepw o uy an rylo operate them succeo folly,.and fllllng tlnxlly junk them.The Linen.every plrt ol' it, 'is amltrneted u nrefully u 1l |»|¢h-uma vault. luls ,t
Watt!' r u net an lmyfabmlulrly warghlm tractor:wld ln-cause they are con-structed cheaply, of inferior
mlterint md workmanship.:md the selling agent get# abiz commhaiun on them.You are wins to buy atractor; you may not thinkso now.but you'l|dnngeyour mlnd-junt la you didnliouthuyinx |ur. .Yonw u do yourself nn infmuecll You buy | tractor beforeimingthe Lmson demon-xtratrd.
We Challenge a Trial Contest of The Lauson
Against Any Tractor on the Market.
in whleh any particular feeling wnahovmilaniin started oz-ai proceed
in g lto mms mz n wh oo e c u p i ec i h a ,
nest.The m m was John Ay e olBlair, one of the nignen of the petition ef <=\;,1»-f»>==»-He i n a f u mu
and need eaier.Hardin luv! movce
aerwa the nilie to permit Aye te can
vena with his friend Miller.Theggutleman from Blair oc cupied Han'a dmir.The litter bioc ked Uh
game to stale that it was his under
vtnding thu seed men had been nelive in seam:-ing lmi iens among:house members: on how to vote on thisbill.lie asked that the entitobby inr
mle be enfroced.
The Ummm: Mo me nt
"hliller ms on his feet before tl.:
member from Harlan had complot¢.¢
his remlrkl.The member fronWashington decimued that he kncu
who Hardin vru urikinr at."I wan!no dun no iminuations that I nm unable to cfmduet my own affairs intel
Ilgently."Milier then dramalic nll;dismiued his friend and stood at hi:
place while Aye marc hed from 1|"¢
hall.Hardin i;;'||l1€d|8'|Cl;Look thr
wanted seat and he and liller wensoon in conversation.
Miller had been one of the first if
support an amendment which embnc ed one obiecticm raised by tht
age at the bill, eluted something of; , g " " " ° ° i n % .'"\§.'°"i'""-i'»'.1';.~'%f°f>. ti
I re mst a 1anm. ¢ s 5 ° '»L...mf for him. rmén-1
opened his mouth, just a visitor, the
gu i lt o f B np r a u nu ti w Miller withwhum he nl °=»g;»= a rac ial visit,wha: a :number w favored the hiiz
under eonaiderutton learned that Jnhnwas a and dealer and raised l nam
pus about ham being; there whiie thfbi ll wa r unaior eonaideralion.Tinstory in told and mmmentcd on by Ihr
Ornahl Bee and Linc oln J ounml inu-tides r~=nr°d°9°d in this haue oi
Th e E n mp r i x.
: |: :I : " r »..
From p u n n p o m of legiahtive
m m -g appou s th élohn Aye.
bg at c l more orEL. ith.. time nina :nf Ihihwidc llou
uf 1, bill regulating the sale of seeds.- ~his in 0. lick, 'lrhereverhe thought
from the bill the pfuvliion giving tht(ood commissioner the right "fron
time to time tn promulgatn such ruleand rtmllaliuns as are necessary amproper to enforce the provisioma am
this act."Morrison olferod th# I;mendment which was ndoimtcd by n
vote of 41 in 17.
In tha n u m Jonrnld'|account of
the controversy in the lower house ot'the legislature ever the pura seed bil;
int Tunday . appeu: the fqllowing:
"'1'heme vu a feature spill to :luproceeding: when Hudin und llillor
who my ndioining seals, c ame tc .words.tho these members havem u s e d in min o r ti iu az thr u Un
thi! Mil and the movernor is \enwo mu-L mth ori tr.Al there 'ii to
he a c omtitutiont mmrentioza holdand a new constitution prepared the
fewer lun enacted at this session oftha lt|,'i|1|¢\lYO the better.
quIn the current issue of the Conlinr
Gentlemen appears on editoriet con
demnin the present tendency tcra1eveof public opinion regnrdnn?
the ullded employ ee and the unsld!ed laborer. lttjlvoinu out, in ctcoo cut
fe-shion, that cue is danger in a P011Icy which allows men, unskilled nm.
without previous tnlnln , to c ompete.
on an equi!nla r y wage bool.with mc o vrell-versed in profcssaonsmd skilled tru lc men.who have
s t long periods an preparation fo..ESR llfe work.While it is doubtless
true, on the article states, dmt on theIarevadlnng salary and wage basis col
ege-tninod men suffer o hamlicnrfor the few years after graduation, irnot the reverse true in later ycmw?
Take for example two youths whohave completed their grammar school
course.One, by his particular process of reasoning, decides to cant hi:lot ln the trades. which are paying a
highly remunerntive wage and chooses an apprenticeship in a factory dcvotod to the manufacture of pleasure
conf.In doe c ourse ui time he bc-
comeo an experienced mechanic ul
which point he becomes self-sntlsnce'and ambition dles within him.Theother Ind. on the contrary, decides ln
Gnlsh his education in high schoolsupplemented b a thorough coum- ira technical 1 school. which. whcr
complete-ri. give: him n imowlcslgc ulfunoamentla and principles of designwhich c ould only come from 3 life-
tlme'e exfrerience-but.,beet of ali,hle embit on has been aroused. sl.attention to study has taught him pa
tience and pereevennce and no suchsitlon an the Ant lad occupies coul|'mid him for long.Theory and proc
tice iudiclonnly applied pril ollluc nq
for any man.Pu-sent ay equity o
sa1aHed men lnd wagearners c nnnot long continue.
I t n lxn . | mt rut:i c ting thtme o f mglr ivy § 2'f. »d ldmini stn
tion, lrcompliahad nothing in the :uwing of sugar; that thru- was as nwci
ww consumed in 1918 as in eac h olthe pre-cedin ten years.The Amer!nn S u ga r efining company is nu
thority for this statement, nn ahowr
in n press dlspauh published in an
other place in this paper.
Representative A lb e r t mlm h m
favored The Enterrriae with o copyof Governor MoKe 1rie'| Code bill, Invoiuminomdocumentof 512 w w .
now under eonsidention by the leglslzture.The passage of such o hull§n the short time fennittrd mrmbow
of the legislature or mmnination andcofnsidcntion in n damrerooa thin!! todoThe fact that it is presented bytrmgovemnr ahouid have no mote in
Nuence with members than if it hadbeen introduced by Jerry Howard
The governor im' t f u a uth or andchances are never road it, in full.The bill is simply o compilation ofLan zu force in other arlates, many of
them of an qjlogtionable chaonder. Too
~c o u m s s x o r mw s PBDCEEDINUB
Co u ly Co mnh h ue n B o nn .Blair.Neh.,Mu c h W - mo .
Burd mul Eunuxnt w ndjaunv
men u k a F e Y; 2 |1919.Present~ Nelnpp, ,H. Us-e~iȢ 15.1
om hu ~*,°;;;_°» his °»;,=_gg~ havem t a p p nt.possi-bly m- " E i u m mp t i o n , th a t ,
now tht the vu 1| over . there muybe Mt I n th is lan d c f ou rs a t leut
name little 'fudge o l our former
" u li b e r d m. I . u k Mn ¢9 bgpermnwg parm y wf u o r q m y p r o -
STATISTICS snow 1.ss4.ooo " FTS CARRY 25 TOW NSSOLD IERS K ILL ED IN W AR N V | . K n o r r ' r ms Y E A R
A S A c A ws 1 ~ l l I N m a
Wnhinglon,Mnrrh l - B u tt le
deaths dunng the war among nil '\lunlpcller Vt.Mu c h 5 - Re tur n sp\n.|c ipanu..w fur as uvailnhln sta-gln. on \c s c ut m wwn md c ity
H u m m ¢on 1:n u - | TB § | § §as .,.,_>I- mme mmi wn .~ $ i" § $' . m. . £' € f
L _ r -J
"THE BETTER MACHINE"
~ 21 Jewel,~M0vement
HYATT & TIMKEN ROLLER BEARINGS
J I'"2 "
Bhilt up to a standard--not down fo
Van Huss-A
DISTRIBUTORS
BLAIR,NEBRASK
~rj ',\,.j~-7 .-m r~ ~. W M ~
KEQUSENE TRACT
HE po pulari ty o f the L a us o n 2 | J e wel Ke ro s e ne Tra c to
its unus ua l pe rfo rma nc e i n thc fi e ld.W h e t he r p lo wl n
o r do i ng g e ne ra l fa r m wo r k i ts he a v y dut y , fo ur c y li nde r, v a
e n g i n e p r o d u c e s a s t e a d y f l o w o f e c o n o mi c a l p o w e r w i t h
s e r v e t o me e t u n us u a l c o nd i t i o n s .
W h e n o n t he j o b o u r 2 4 r o l l e r a n d _ b a 1 l b e a r i n g s a n
c ut g e a rs , ru nn i n g i n o i l , i ns ur e a g a i ns t e x c e s s i v e we a r =
f r i c t i o n t o t h e mi n i m u m '
Th e L a u s o n Tr a c t o r i s o f me d i u m w e i g h t w h i c h ,b e '
di s t r i b u t e d , w a r r a n ts p e r f e c t c o n t r o l .Th i s ma kes po~ ~
t i o n o n w e t o r p l o w e d g r o u n d w i t h o u t p a c k i n g o t s o i l .
.A d e mo n s t r a t i o n w i l l s h o w y o u t h e a bi l i t y o f t h i s t r a
pl a c e fa r m la bo r a nd i nc re a s e y e w ' a c r e a ge c a pa c i ty .
Y E A R S A H E A D O F O T H E R T R A C T O R S .
Q-
The hung ln almost lu-tvmxllc in itl operation; any
mm or boy un operate ll:It you hue 1 Iaumn youdon't require the nenlces ofln Engineer or Meclunk athigh wages an ornte-il,ot er uni tr-'L ¢...e"§.'me u m|e on Inthlt (ive hirly utiltu-toryurvice. but only | few nm-en,and numeroun others
that are warlhlens meremlkelhilllr- tmuhlsmnkenfor pwpk who buy and tryln operate them successfullyand fllllng tlnxlly junk them.The Linen.every part nl' it,is amltrneted u nrefully u ~l |»|¢|\.||-ml, vault. luls xMettler 'run an lmyfab 4
mlulrly warghlm tractor:wld ln-cause they are con-atrnctnd cheaply, of inferior
Lmlterinl md wo
:md the :felling Inbiz commlnion aYou are goingtractor; you mayso now.but youyour mlm!-junt |-3->=-°huyinx |w u do yourselfit you buy | tn:iming the Lunaxtratrd.
We Challenge a Trial Contest of The
Against Any Tractor on the Market.
Bi
~»
/1\
ilI
Ushid bin Llcmas tslm uv sa xn noums mn sau!
trick No. 2
Louis Franke,No. 3Zhu.H.Roh
'Ire:u:urer.
1=§°3s:5e=;=r1 xi §*1aHf1i£~L $2224 Lincoln
tempt to Hear Wilwn and Taft
New York, hunch 3-A Wsll atrétl
J. 0c|0Clc r.n|.Dunn: tu nenawumembers all presentListof Claims Against Washington
CountyBertel Bertelsen, Rom! work
Dist. za,10DvHenry Arp, Road work Diet. IT, 15.00Mary C. Uebel, Electric Light,
etpreas. f°~"¢°»n mIrank Cree y, supper for jurors, 14.54Dr. R. A. Davies, attending
Mohler family,3.00Cray at Gossard, 10 yds. mwin. 300
W. H. Hall, report on road No.30(
574lt. C. Dlevsen, road work Rd.
Dm. tr 6-l3€>A. H. Ruwe, road drag ing,28.75
Henry Hilgenkamp,dres-gin 17.15
Adolpi K.:oigard, supplies for ____
u m a ,v a L I I l i I l l u u u :ua .w i . :u w u r n '
stitution is unconstitutional.To take a concrete example, to beconsistent Mr. Hughes would be forc-
ed to mr that the ac t of c ongress,duly signed by the president, confer-
fi lq o n the postmaster genera!thearb tnry power to deny of his ownsweet will and without appeal the pri-
dlege of the mails to any newspaperor other publication, was constitu»
tional, and that notwithstanding thefac t that the first amendment to theoonstltlation declares in the most ex-
plicit and peretnptory terms that con-gesa shawl enac t no law "abridging
e freedom of speech or of thepr e "| |To q i ;step further,and more
psrtlco y as to freedom of speech.
tk: 1€&==*=§='- tl1e_ ":f'*°=..f=f°"ed. 2°-
»-gg out ai£cen;»c.h
e r o grace as now ex-pired,lf . .Amsberry paid,and the
mlic e in both Omaha and Lincolnve been requested to arrest sl! own-
ers who have failed to get the new
license lates.C RF I P H MA N TRI E S s u lc lo a
Liberal Potstlona of Fresh Milk
Counteracted Poison SelfAtlntinlatered
Crete, Nob., Feb. 2?-J. II.r .ner. a barber of Crete attempt sui-cide in his shop tote toni ht by tak-ing poison. A bucket of mln. prompt-
ly administered proved n w ltldote
and '5l'°'="Fd tho fatal rysu[.'f'"§!*
}leA¢|ld not # is u bo
woman a t e apatthe ofllce of A b ra m ~kias."here the tickets had been given out.
She aah! sho had come fiom Chltlloto hear the agsedxes and sho weptwhen she cool 't get s ticket.
Henry C.Frlck sont a clerk tomake a spocitd appeak but he was too
late.There is a ton or so of mall
applications still unopened.
An Illinois physician who had motors-d into an Ohio town found thc
negro porter standig had ot the ma-
chine laughing."l§at's the joke E"inquired the ownerf "Nut§n', boss.
but you'ro n doctor,aia't you Y""Yr-<1 ""I tho ht so when l saw thel t e d b r a s s ° , , " 5 , .f r o n t o f p o u r c a r .
| ) . .: I r - . _ . . . . . . . 1 . .. . . . - - \ . : - -u - \ . . . 1 . .
L
ADVERTISING rm..m ~ ENTERPRISE
poor,Danish Luth. Publ. House,binding 1918 Tu schedules
rep. numerinl index,w. LI. Linden. mil for Mrs.
Vsu Tassel.C. J. I-lindley, hauling cinders,2.50Nebr. Telephone Co., phone rent Pwd to lls,16=0
umm Printing co. ,Suppliesfor Co. Judge,12.63Goo. Loftis, road grlrazsinz.§-BL
J.Mueller, grocenes for poor,u.5LL E. Hetric k, roadwork andd n s d n z ,22.55
Su Bros., supplies for poor.90.4lK. B. Printing Co., 22 Rnd Over-
uunrn Hmm hooks.\16.59
like one, or any, of these laws, and
was indisoreet enough to say so, hcshouid be locked up in the poniten
:hry for twenty years..And now xt the 1-kk of being heh'guilty of the c rime of lose mljute,
md wi th o u t my ww o ve r wh e lwn gtear of Fort Lenvenworth before myeyes, let me call attention to another
instanc e M the beautiful working ofthis theory of two constitutions, andunconstitutional oorutitution or of no
_ c h u r n:q
The Sevenlmsenger Cadillac
r
B.°H"i~1;lT§-."5F\i for poor.m aFred Krabi; road drlzsrins Dist.
6.H e n r y P .H a n s e n ,b o a n l i l l x r
p l q p ¢ | | 'D . :L ~E .C .J a c k s o n ,a t t e n d i n g . 1 1 3 5 4 .
13.10
Conn,R P. Rasmussen. tackinl JP 'fl'*lfé 0;
antine signs,d 33 ;~ .§'.ii"'EZ:..,1...... §2¥£'m,=..1,-.
a so urn n ro |
°°'3§""*'°'§.!"i'¥'§":°`i Eu
whither be seems fo have gone F;
:he purely beneneient m d adtminicpurposegg'=fh=;';"'°=-ng,\';g°'=
e w rea enlfihvn.th ene hula bamkindly permitted m ll us, nu been;he reclpielit of all manner of pres-
ents from all manner of people from
.he Pane of Rome and the kim: ofuw: A nun., 1.u ." r . . . r, . . . ,- _ , , _a n d E r i n t i n g .26.02
C a r l T o m s e n ,r o a d d r a g g i n g .. ' L i l
C h a s . C a r m i r l m e l , m i l k fo r M r s .M c h l u r t r i e ,1.5¢
Jo h n A n d e r s e n , r e p q . i r f o r s i n s -.12
/ " " \
uw.~-Ruta Printing Co., books andsupplies Co. Tmns.,98.82
Hammond 6: Stephens Co., 100statement..1BE
University Pubt. Ca, 100 setsexam. guestions,5.}£Dr. E.Stewart. $81.00, attenti
iog pood. cut to 1850Carl Yuul, shovelling snow,22~
Geo. P. Brodersco road drug-ging,19.50w. Wulbem, shoveling snow,l.2lWalter Nelson, shovellng snow,1.2!
L.P. Petersen, shoveling snow. L21
A. ll. Beeles, running englne eand msinwner,39-53Albert Hansen, road drarelnz, 27.3-l. Fischer, road s guig,6.7!
A. J. Sutherland,dngxsloe. BaerE. V. Heath, rand drsgglng,I73~
Gottlieb Stork, road rngdntt l9.5l.
Elmer Barton, road drsgung.63.0{M. E. I`yson, ne:ing ele ottlce
C and ,g"'°§»,5 ~
has.o s ro raggmg,Chas.iny nés came before the
Board snrsl asked !or s renewal ol
his License to operate n Ferry ltrus.:
the Missouri river, which was grantea to him for =~;=f»°d of 5 rem- ht
to rw: n fee of :too per y ear to tht
County Tnssurer.Road Petition No.572 'lanover to the next meeting of the osnfor the reason that the Surveyor ha.,
not been abie to locate the rnarkinr
stones on secount of ground bean;
frozen.The Road Overseers of the C0\l!\l.\met with the Count): Board and thfprice of Road Dragging' for the yen'1019. was fused at 86 cents per doubll
mile, and s man sod one team to noi
$5.00 per day. the Road Overseer lmandt u m $5.50,one man end 11-vt
teams $7.00 and single mon to gel
$3.00 per day.Board mlloumed until March 31
1919 at 9 oc toc jt Az ~.1w\_.l-
:ount1~y.For each ond all of these
`pnesents, it is said the president has
:een cnreful to make acceptance.
not one section of the constitutionMft. 1, Sec. 9 paragraph 3) reads as
foltows:"No title of lttiblzttg nhsll be grantedbytheUnitedtotes.And noeerson hotding any olftce of prom ol
:rust under em shntt, without thcconsentofthecongress,accept of
my present, ernolument. ofllce, or ti-tle of any kind whatever from an;"==§» prince or foreign state."
I the constitution as inert nnul tlttntts to the president and congress it ir
.nert and dead ns to the pdvate citi-
zen and the alien; there ls no low any.vhere when the sounee of all low i.fone-when the constitution has he
:ome a. mere scrap of paper-and, ||.
so far as law and government anoncerned, we place ourselves on o
fevel with the bolsheviki of Russia or.he I. W. w. of the United States.Bot the constitution is not dead; il
still lives.Honestly and intthfull;utmintstered, it is eqosl to all emer-
gencies in time ot war as well as in: i m a o f ~A multipllcit of violators o it should not bo loo ed ulp
an s.s lnskin ltheir crimes respectab e,
tnd sll sue ,from the presidentiown, should be held to a stric t oc-
:ountabllitynAmericans whose blood goes hnclto colonial dsys,ns does mine, and
not the foreign born, are the one.eho 'lnost need to he Americsnired.Chartes Wooster
SW EET CLOVER SEEDIN 2}EM.¢\,l*iD
From t2 to 20 pounds of sweet:tover seed should be sown, according
io the fsvorsbte-ness of planting conlt t i o n s ,s a y s N c b r n s k n E x p e r i m e n t: l t s t i o n b u l l e t i n N o .16 9.e n t i t l e d
| l 1 ' - _ . . _ . .f 'a n n "( b u n ¢ i £ ~ l u r f c i n
A Famili Automobile Thor Spellk CADILLAC To Everybody
/r\n v s s s i f w
Most of those whd drive \ aqtgmopile evenjp winfep
|
0
l x n n n n n n
who wish they had, and it's
the next one to a lot of
others.
`\'l`he Seven-Passenger is zz
pretty cozy,coinfortable
1 ;1.." D " "_ - _"- 1C a d i l l a c o p e n c a r i s s u b
s t a n t i a l ,a n d d o u b l e li n e d
w i t h b e v e l g l a s s a t t h e m a r .
Because it's their first Cad-
illac,the Seven-Passenger
of Cadillac service,and in
the total of their senden
bills over a long period.._
s t s t s t s s s s f s s t s s s s
cinltuxc sms risr
FRENCH TRAIN, T00
Returning Arniy iltllcer Tell! Ol Mil-
itary Cnrfu Duplication Of Fuer-
_ite Alnerlcnn Feat
When Colonel ll1om\\ell Mullally,of the California Gduliew, went from
llonlvnux to I':1ri=4 one night, he prouahlknew that he was 1.m\eiinggther fam. in lim 1fewmmont Cadil-
c.Hut he prolsalily dill not know thatthe Carlillnc wa< easily trimming ilu'
fristest train in Frnnre, the Burdeauw-to-l'aria II\1:|1w.Bordeaux is 400'
miles southeast ot I'l.ris.The trainleaves there at B in the evening and
arrives in Paris at 8 the next nsc»|11~
:ng .The story of the recordbreaking
run was brought buck by Captain Al.
U. Waddell,who recently returnedfren:France.Waddell and Capt:in
Halford Bayes xirlrn in. Ilonleaux and
were Innsing on the Express for Par..
is to be in the French capita! for theption to King Aiberi nn the dayfollowing.They dined at the Cafe do
Bordeaux and na they left to go tothetrmlnColonelAiullnllgmwnnjm~trtarting his dinner. They rdml llu;
Express and reached Pads on time,rrqinq to the Univenity Union, \|\.hr\|f\
the ofllcen registered."Imagine my surprise." suit! Wm!-dell, "when I arrived, to limi Colonel
hlullnlly there and Geore Bale, n \\i:ll
known San Ifrnncisco rner,sittingin the Colonelhs Cudilllr Outside. The
only way the Co nel eould have |zot~ten to l':.\rii| w the Cadillac. and
ms he could not ;>osni!:ly have left for
:qi laoyr after the train did. and musthave brrivtmi Qdnsitlcrablgr Ahead, it is
u certainly that the Cadillac bent thu.Inst train by over nn hour."
'wwlciell wins vnthttsinstic over trewoak the Cadillac !n.1.< done in France.The cars uneel by the Army werepainteilolivedrab and those under
Nmy zaupcrtinion were painted 1|.l1il|.~.l`he.~\e were the nwst conspicuous
moeiels :seen ovenaeols.lt will be re
cnllml that the Cadillac has repeated-
ly beaten thatimc of muc k trains nn
fuel runs in America.
/
II
r
l
n
" B f v C . D \ 3 b o l , U Q U B I Y h i e r ;;T U I I \.alU§I5~4 ux a a ul- -1
T H B P a a s ln mmfs PRESENTS
Sil C k. Neb.To the Editmof °nf»f$=u'J=°Ja"f°»¥''°€€=£'!!i':. 'if
sweet c lover neu as me mon awar-ablc, sitho the perennial yellow 9.31310
is also suiubie.Sweet ¢:!over proably wil! be given a thorn test in Ne-braska this year.Much interest insweet clover has developed and lhr
MARTIN B. JACOBSON, Dealer,n
"l l
¢ \ ; | \ | L 1 \ | n n o " Q » --- .. . ,t n b c ,a n d a s p u b l i s h e d i n n i l t h e
b o 0 ¥ 8 » . v f h U 9 h i s w a r c o n s t i t u t i o n ,t h a
n n t ¢ x p r § o G s c d i n s p e c i h c l c m m .i z
s u b s t a n c e ,W u s i m p l y t h i s ,a n d m
more:"In time of war, do as y ou damr
plcast."I have purgosely waited to sec U
my one woul take cxecjion to such
u monstrous proposition, but if any-
of soii ty pe;It should bc sown as
early as possaibh: and in n manner
similar to thc ing of alfalfa.It
may bo sown on n into wet vnou
which is not subject to clrifling.in
which cssc special covering is unnec-
cssary.For assistance in obtaining
=0¢<1. sec your county ogcnt.
LARSEN & JACOBSON¢ GARAGE
ty."--Boston Tll\==l¢fil¢-
"y ~.f~: I / 4 , . i _~ ; ,_ ~ .,..'~,. . . -...;, ..1~a y m "~7s:v:,:a=,;'f ~-"..€"\¢'7X`*`
~ima; 14, imJ
M u r c i a i i ,i m
__»
W i ia w wa a af n
h u -~fw>w# m e a m i
ft-Heal hatches more chicks.5-af
BLA IR Bn m rs -u m a nd Pe rs ona l.
ma SALE
he Porter Inc ubator Co. informs
writer that they have sold two ol
.~ 1
modelm An Unsur-
Cui! at Z5 oen°f.i= pu pound
Kréah Sdted P e ll u tl at 20
ts.--Blair Rtc ket Store.
~and barley for u h a t A y ethen' Seed Hnlue.44--If
George Hose and wife journeyed to
u on Saturday evening for nlt with the parents of Mrs. Hoseo reside m um c ity.
Mus Ruth Sappentield ns an On:»huainus visitor on Monday.
R. w .F. uEm> mL|..°s DENTAL0Bee located our State Bank.
D. L. Booth hu returned to Blairr spending the winter in Colorado.
John A. Rhoades was a Calhounsinesa visitor on Tuesday.
D m a J » ¢ A u t o d a n l n u a n a n e r v y
M A S S M E E T I N G C A L L E D
To C o n si d e r B e a r e r P m p n d l i o n
|
swab sum for ale.'mn 1- nn ofah: bca hu on un uma.John A. Rhonda
County, Nebraska, died on the .lBth
d a y o f N o v e m b e r 1 9 1 8 , l e a vi n g n o
l m w i l l a n d T e a t n m e n t , a n d p o u e u -
|a a .
Thomu F. Mutin Dec euod:The Heirs,l a w -D tv i l ll l.
Next of Kin md p u m a m m m -
e d m la i d u ta h I n H6 8 0 6d u r on th t 2 7 t h q q d
1919, Ann: Cook Liutin med a -
:ron in uid County Court w w
among other things that Thema .
Shit al Nehnlh.g..
\\uh\n|\on Gwnly.
COUNTY COURT.IN P n o m v m
n v
lwlv bun no u »nof sound 33 gmeni.p»u_ "Z
o h n ~ a ~ b u s i n e s
itor a ,n nPureS J me a s u r e which m a
Clarence Anderson has purchasedinte rut in the Model Cleaners,
ich wili be c onducted by this nvw
rtnership in the futune.
Mis:° ' § "McC.\il visited hmm.lk ! n u r emuxd arly in the wuk.
sm lb tmt Sd!- Heat m in thi s Plper.5-il'
y.
p . tn . ~F°¥°¢P
BUY A noun
use coat und bona ts oi 1 sure: ay:tc m an d th e ma tter a t mi n: o n nproposition to issue bonds toconnlrnct
a sc xwr sy stem for the c ity will bcdiscussed.
_J. S. Roberts. Mayor.
the general public me invited to nr.-tend a mum meetin _ at the dty hal*at 8 o'c¥0ck next.uesday eveningWlarth i8th. to rozuider n proposivon
for the construction of seweragfor the city.A represanutivo nfmivil engineering concern of Bmce &
Smndevcn. of Cun ha wid present
so .
u bcttiemant of said £a.Wilneu my hand Omen! Sei]
this 2?t.h sla n! Febru ary mo.'B. Carrlgm,
1431)County J udp.
mated at $1800.00 md vr lr l n r for""§'F'°i""}'§f"` thlnof.4 g
you Lo a pea: lt yConn on the zzngday of l h m h 1919,
at 10 o'c1&ck A. Mdaéad content uid
tstion a tIhfnrtinor s o me 3 " s ui ta b le
pruentativel
.46 1. rn. daiiy except Slmchy
45 p. pn. ddly.
I I. . s n . S u n d n y o n i y .
. T r l d n s S m i t h .
..
.
Trains El-| t.
1.13 s. m. Ddiy.4.35 p. ln. Daily-
Tninl West..0:10 l.. m. Ddly.
8:00 p. m. Daily.
c .. s. 1» ..a I. | ¢ o.
Tr ai n No rth.
\.
A.
BUY A noun
h I W ? y u h .4 ha u m m
o 1|f$'&?¢f L. ..§¢¢..:u'£., sul lmue
Z§I§k°'f?'|.'}."i"='ll n d : '° "" §
limited md um idal »EZ§°f~ A fur
ily wh wishes tn keep a cow andchicken and have their wa » <
3 your garden leeds noir.We
~are the Websta Mammoth Pack-; seeds s 5 c ents pn ke t a tper~hir a.5¢.¢Store.5-21.
The dance ag tho B. F. D. Opera
Lester' Axuall is back in the itil.)
hunting a favorable location nfter a
winter spent at Logan, Iowa.
Mr. A. G. Ludiig c ame down frumEmerson for n c ouple of d a y s lu !
week..
o'Soil-Heal hatches more chielu he-
chamber and trays,-
more uniform distribution
posit for Six,Nine or Tsrelumonths.All depaaails an protect-
ad by the Guarantee l'und ol she
Stale of Nebruka.(3-t
some tim i rti r igazed M? ?=1"'§$l'f :auf es o r n
Jay Bolt is substituting at ec ho!!!for lfdism Beulah Roberts 'while aim 1:
nurmng her father and mother winare cenfmed to their bed with the huhir. and Mrs. Jacob Railfs visited
ln addition to my Hlllinery Slac kI have ldded a nice line of Hades7
in Silk and Colton, in the prevalilngColors, also a nice line of Gauss Un
(41-lf)
.There will be a cake auction, cm
mval and St. Pailic k's sugper It the
Rose um schoolhouse on riday erening, Munch 14
Far Parlor, omni Room, Kitchen or
B e d r o o m F u r n i t u r e s e e J. E . ( b m p -
`1 1 .
ther nrn dig nmt fo~Thei 'is
'under quxrantine.gg; ad about Soft-Heal in this paper.
o e n ~ n l u s a y a o .
Do you know thu the bei; incubate:
ever mule in ln-ln; mlnnfarlured
hero in Blair not because we ul;ao, hu! because anon from all parts
of the United Slalu my ao.5-I!
Clsrente Simpson and Stanley Goz
snrd start active work so-on on thai:
fum in the Mf.Car1hy district.
allSee big ad of Softlesl elsewhere inthis paper.»5-tf
harsh dry heat of the o ~ l ~ !butcher.5-lf.
z - D AD TI M E TAB L E Bertheul num, of Umsoln wu-;;§»» urn | county aes: visitor onChin n 8 North Vefestexn.zr o
"Jim" Stapleton, of Cmig, was in~ #Lv on Monday and called at The
M r ~ H . ~l ~Ark w it h h a r . a mi » £ L h . . ¥ ¢ m
than for treatment, uni was :net bs
Rudoiph at Gmahn on het us.
BARGAZNS IN mans L.\NDF§
# b n n n -
Hr. and Hn. Rudolph Hd~at Hot Springs, S. D., arrived
city 'hmaday no vhit : d u i
nt 10 |.m.Morning u m m bn"Cheer ln Tribulation."Evening nr
mon on "Wink is Chrillilnllg;Ou:ubjett ll to inculean n x nlinl
carnal me devout christian I a In
our community and throuylwut Unworld. believln mun mlu uhb ly lt 1|the will a nd p uf God for ever;mu: and woman uggwlure. and be-lieving'too that in every c ivillud
c ommuni! . elpednll,lt enahllnhmln every .Efe u o mn relations with
the lilo which now in and €h| ¢ whlchl| to c ome.Th e L e n ! n o on ml h lbe h elpf ul to may la e onxlder .i
~ | mg mn. "Analv w lr I ng; 01 1|church th e b u t Adapt fur youCame md nee.
A . I L I n u , F u ln r
The family d Hlr|-y Smith haw
mmrd from me I-'red Dkkmeyuf
Eeraperty in wut Blur lo mo homeluring In Hn. Peter Doenan. on
a u t .inc aln umm.
CONGREGATIONA L GH uncs
nature of a Innrell slipper for Hen
ry ,who leaves soon or Califomla.grhm he intend: to make his fuhgn
emo.m p r. pro at cJ amer llo ae Rif.. was of the dnent: :une f~»\'?».slndwiehes. cofhe,
cake,cookies,candy and Bic s-laodwith the lu i k sIn0,c d oinnry 11.141 ea
up a mlm:es to pe nnthe most futidious lnc rntzdwhich me
did ample uatlce.Tho boy : ull wir
him an ytble uc unlon but hop:thzt the uf the Golden Stan
may not intorut him for Ioan and :speedy return will than be in order.
M i n Ellen Lund retirned to I m
work at the Blur Telc phonc #Gel
Mo n da y . : f u r a two 'lle h d a y a nhome an :recount of mickneu.
nMrs. C.S.Nieison Ind da ,Mn.. Chrh Gutnhow, Minnie ..?f3'.'.§.
nie Nielsen were Omaha visitor;Wednesday.
' n. §.* ~
.~
;
nh
itedoandaylutnnkatthsholm ~vfher |L1ter,Mrg. Jean Hiilna.'.f
ber so f the B r b u n d ten der ed;hanquet to one ol' Qzdr number, ltr.Hu m - y n u m ; s m h lf b é i r i I n uband :inet it'| or|'|,niI.|£ioa,somc
Stale of Nebr~~<3-Wgshinflnn St. with ju bua|.li11£
Soil-Hut is made in Bla ir,-ac e bi;ld .5, l
m Omaha the tifst of the week.Mr.Rahlis returnsd home Monday eve-
nig while Lne Mm stayed for the remainder af the week.
Mn. 'r. c. am~ ~ ~m~mm~
Successor zo E. C. Pierre.
( I l- H)
Anhui' Gustuon has been n prettybuy nun ol llcauuperlnlandlng the
moving of bil furniture and house-hold1food.| to Fremont, in which cityhe \l emblhh his xeddunc a
Going to Housekeeping?Lei me
hir. and Mm. J. S. Robo~ am lat:
Very few were fortunata enough to
put up an ce dunng the recent coldsnap; nei r was the quality of the
Robert Aiahel.ha=¢ been wmoved tsnn Omaha hoapntai. his condition 1'present writing. being quite serious.
Lyle Beehis back in his ca~it of
Hoxnni Griffith returned lust weekfrom Arizona, md, to nil appeanncss.
is the embodiment of health.
Son Nl ul ol Sol(-Hell elsewhere in
this paper.5- ll
bliss Non Jensen. of Herman. 1\°|.s
a z u m a t th e A . Huc k h o me n r hin the week.'
Mr . a nd Mn .Kuhn. the photo-
grapher:-. were omm businen visi-mn an llonday .
-Penton Co unty ~ ~E F .~te I ~o
Sauk Rapids, Hmm.
'Wu-n.F ,Johnloa, l wall-huvn
m Evlng iglul ul ||||» aed '-;=
. on y,y a n ,: vm ndlnans with which he had bien uliieb
ed for name time put Pumni ner-vka vnu held lt the Danish Luthenmmmm I n th i s a n y W d ne n h P. as.
R e v . A . T h e o . S d r u l u ~
..I ..1FarmLands,wild I n d imp r o mGood loil, no c rop failures, country
well leltled. close in railrnadn, gun.
-\i!||k¢\8| |?;od roads, srhonla, rhunh
rs, R. F.. md telephones.'Ae haw a tour farms to evchazgoWhvt have u to tmrio for n funn?I f y o u J i .to vi dt this dbuntry.
Mr. W. W. Schmitz,tmdentof the P0 suncuhstnr Co.,r usome minon
l xln g u md improm-mentl in their new product, the 600
Elmer Road. 9 maiden! of mu my
25 or so yean lcv. md lor a Llmurz hool umm oiker md jmiwr. died
at hh home on 1 hm nur Scribneron lu! Sunday md d m bo dy v ubmught here md buried on Tllcsdlq.
An open meeting of the Queen .thar Circ le wi!! bc held at thc hom:of Hrs. J . K. Winc heil, to be enter
tained b y H n .Winch:ll and Mrs.Planck.(49)
n
The Box-:acid and danc e held at
the Gaming City school house was udecided auoc eu, quite a large crowdbeinin evidence and sate of boxea,
lnfta! ed about $45. Bert Jensen beingullrtloneer" -
_
Soft-Bell is nude In Blain-Rf Ml
gg# about Soft-Heat i~ :hh nlven
a .
bookkeeper nt the Slate Bhnk; lockswell and feels baker.
FOR SALE: Two power feed milk.
:halting and puileyn;one rotary
pump.(3-40
Gwrzv Hedelnnd hu rented the A.Gununn vw w n y o n West LinwkxSLund il moving in
Mmvlunen Joe Guuchmr md Chris
Gulrdmw leave tnmom-nv. Snt\|rda;.ar Monday for Euehlor Mmwhen th zy awill m u h :te.|y
whi lntha t h r l l d y l l h k h g h g z .
ment.Ch-is wlll accompany Lhqnmd g e t them c ondorubly lo c a l!
,when he wll! mum w look Afler hh(arming openlionn.
nw ms S ER VICE S AT ' rm-:EPISCOPH.. (°|4|lRCH
Rev. Harnh, of Blair, pastor of tlie
Epineopatl Diocese.'o°' Decatur gy"»hi:»» will conduct Divine Senvi ntthe Epineopd Church of Decatur,
next Monday evening. Minh uuh, at7:30 o'elock p.m.Rev.Marlh harbeen the "rnininter in charge" of the
Episcopal Church of DOCl'\lr, nt In-°er\'d.|, for the put thirty y esrl, and
l corn lete attendance of its memhcm
in das ed by him at these nerviam.
A most cordmi invituiun if. extc nriuitom w b v d r .to attend.-DecaturHerdd.
'rua STATE B.\1§u< of mm. Nebr.
will PII yen -1 per cent interest pe:
Norman Bryant son oi William
Bry ant, of this c ity , is homo for abrief visit with relatives and frienda
132: u"$"&§.¥°i'§;2'f'§*?P'several day: Int week.
I
|.aj
I
ze
s u n A l
I |i |
been attached lo it,It might haw
been al!right.The first roll cal!
showed 52 voting for it wilh 40
against, but a bm with an emerrfency
clause requlne:two-thirds msjor5l5
'o pass.Undgr the rules t was de-
flan-si iost with the etnergency clauw
:md the roi! again called.
Smern! chrmgca their vntcs so that
ihe as-cond call lhowcd it sc \"ml
votes short.After seven! of the .ab
sentees had been brought in tle rr
tllt stood 50 to 45.-
I
THE BANKING HOUSE OF
A~~CA§?5'I;!J;!<
SIXXUIY
e c o n o u vs n \ s F A c 1 | o N
The Pioneer Bank of Washington
County, ln Successfd Uperation
For More Than 50 Years
QE
D
communs 5*
Osreola, Neb.. ~
ty ml! ourdimu I
val decided at 5 -nan member: bel
in J nnury the eorvfuaed no npproprontinuation of fn
4
mo F AR MIN G a x ma r r
SENT A. H. F. SOLDIERS
{)!IrrnI Al Aid To B-aldien Wh Plar
" H u m Fa Farms
"5~ua! Samplv.-n" will ildp Cuitintion1J duraliun in Aly Slate
/k ~r»r+=--,\ ;eo.ooo fuming mc-
iMOVED
Have moved my stock of
goods to the Bugeon buiid-
i ~ng soutH sidefof~"Washing»=
ton street.\
lui/E ME ATRIAL
l assure you :mix I will treat you!
.1 :
Y for More »H|s ¢f iiusinés.
James~Kirby
Old Cddger-I often kiated you
then won were s babv.-f
I 2 I 1aval dec ided nts mecli of :farm bn-}¢,... member: held in "5-mn. today.
in Jnnunry the c ounty c ommimonen
rf-fused no appropriate funds for U10
I |i |
been attached lo it,It might haw
been al!right.The first roll cal!
showed 52 voting for it wilh 40
against, but a bm with an emerrfency
clause requlne:two-thirds msjor5l5
'o pass.Undgr the rules t was de-
flan-si iost with the etnergency clauw
:md the roi! again called.
Smern! chrmgca their vntcs so that
ihe as-cond call lhowcd it sc \"ml
votes short.After seven! of the .ab
SALARY BOOST F-NLS
County Auorneya'In-:reuse Masters.
53 In Punt. Bal Goes Down
On Later Count
i v~e stock~ »*bs introdu~ion of pun:
l~o e ~ l~ t. o f ~ 3 ~ m ~ t y ~ g e ~ t .1azmen br personal subsniptionrz L ' wd a . fu n d of $ 1 ,8 0 0 tn c a x1 y a n
:he work and employ a county agent
l l l l i l I l l I l l 5 I
L Hi'I
4 I |t i l t s t o o d 5 0 t o 4 5
1»
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.' D.,.'1_.N
Why Telephone Bills
Are Paid in Advance
I
Suppose we charged your account this month with 10 cents more than your
rezuiar telephone rent.
Then, when you asked about lt we told you it waa at part of the telephone hill
.lanes or Smith or Brown did not pay.
" - _
That might seem unfair. but it is prac tically what we would have to do if we
did not require prompt payment of telephone rent.
I
If we did not collect telephone rent in ndranee some people never would pay.
Thua we would lose the rental and the cont of installing and removing thc tele-
phones.
_/"Q
And, ln addltlon to Ioelng money on those who did not pay at ||| , If we did
not require advance payment, are would have the ezpenae of eerrying "alow" ae-
eount on our bookl.`-
It is the practice ol' all business houses who do not require :ash down to add
enough to the selling prlee of their goods to eover "had debta."
In order that one aublcribef will not have to pay indirectly a part of the tele-
phone bill of another, we lon; ago adopted the pcley of requiring' payment in ad-
unee for telephone rent.
e w w ,_________
15 nmn.sm£LEruo1u: conrlyv
~||||*|l || " ' l l I 3|I"| |f ;" " " * ~v
Aa¢
r0
¢oe
r
,f but n tinzln 'rote H. R.104. thrva-:nty attometgs' salads: hill. faiieedof pntsake in e lower branch of ihr
'e¢1sl\ture Wednesday.Even after n all of the house had
twice been re°orL<~d to the mi ni ng\0t0 could not be mustered.The bd! did not affect the minds;
cf Douglas and Lnncastvr rounty nt-
lomeys.
;or ~ ~ .~i~tmdu~on ~of
pun 1:stoc k is i ded will be
upon n co-operative p .
Will Cudld ?uHic Sale:Any-4
when ud Guarantee Silk-_ 1
~n am-
SRXD#
WQMR
a m n u m s a
r u v o n
A|}dn~u me by phone or lettnr.~
Chas. s. CAMERON,1:
HERIIAN.NEBR.a
i l s l i s l l u i i n a l l i l m
then.;
Old Codge1--I could,and did.
Boston. Tnnncript.
The Inter explained that he ina bc
ing kidded and cautioned hing abouinot letiing Smanwtlec ku put; any
thing over on him.A few dzya mea
I
THE BANKING HOUSE OF
A~~CA§?5'I;!J;!<
o £ L h e b e l n c r o p g r o w n i n t h i z »other states for | | m y purposes
stil! £0 be marketed.The nn y dmands have been filled and fm wa
houses an bulgin as the re mit o
sawed it every where but in Commemorn.The one pan a f Inland tha'has dways kept pcsceful and ioval i
Cormunom, for there the peasantdon't speak En lish. and the pau-ioLc|.n't -epcnk m.'L»
S h e - ~ e , ~ i s , ~ w e l i v
wnlhout them.-Buxton Tmnseript.
Seurnu 0'Rourke.the Irish a m
:aiu in a iec ture in Cbitllrvr "Irelanc
THATS THE POINT
He-3Shall we live w§th your par
some bind ned." A ~ , ~ o n ~ " ~
ned the clerk, "you can? kid meBird: is hatched from eggs."
g
The Pioneer Bank of Washington
County, ln Successfd Uperation
For More Than 50 Years
Sec retary of the Treasury Glu: tr
:lodge the work of enforcing prohibi
tion is na enough.The lnterna`
Revenue de ment c an't collect in
come taxes and meanwhile do Polic#
duty for the states under any organ
ization easily conceivable.
~year.~n account of th~ high prim-ln the iam. year or two, beans ..1zo be a staple and bec ame a luxury
Fhcy lost much of their Pvrwdlrilrand demand for them fell muc h -
Iow par.Nchrvka. growers are noreceiving about 5 cents a pound fo
piolos and 'I cents for whites.Inriifations point to even lower prices.
P L E N T Y O F B E A N S F O R A L L
Inforination hu reached the Uni
V |-o
th~a 'World w~ ~ sr h~am ~ forher so-sailed patriots.Thele moz:
I '.|.
W ITH LIBERAL, SAFE MANAGEMENT
.-a
I ' I ||:
STATE BANK GUARANTEE LAW
Q
.Q ..
4 per cent per annum
A general banking business
conducted.: `:::
We sell Exchange, and Loan
Money, cash checks on other
banks, pay interest on time
deposits for six,nine and
:Q
1\|v u . ,. .'" ; 5 u | | » . n , n a U n i v . ;" 1[ 1 V F u n m b s l m :w s u w o r k c o u n c i l o i
: n v Y o u n g M e d s C h r i s t i a n u s o c j g .
' f i r m i l .i x .u s e d f o r t h e i n s t r u c t i o n n i
Umu and: uf noluicru in the Amedunn capeuitaurmry force, who want tamlurntu Hr fauna when their mg!
nvntq are dcmobihzed.The axhibi!1 ...as :mu-snlaied by the United Stlter
|»!¢-prutlnult of agricultun at the requeal of the war dopnrlment.
lt inflmicn sampfea of soil fron.<\¢.ry c ounl;of the United Statendairy uivmui , egg testers, cereal am
rom sanzrlm., inaeclkklen and Yung*\i\|E.'¥, an other material nuihdcnt tcull live c am.
"Nath lhix matcdal will go 2:France faur government experts ic
.uyn-rvi=u thc setting up of the c x|Iil»:'. mul to prepare for the work oi
1
iiI
i
2
\11
"|
rt.ilrxxetion ln France.These expert
:ill rrmnin with the exgeditlonar,mre four months to tene men asigneilfromthe hrrny lo that thi
.ork of instruc tion c an eontlmtn mmr nf t!~e Anierisan troop: are heh
\rr~=e:|s.A. A. Onnsby , M the de:nl.ntnl of u;n'lcu1tur~e, is in chlrgf.
r thc ¢-xhibit.it in announced thai
he ahipment of this mater!!! is theMull of a gtfdggpfggd demand amen;
he lljzhting mon overseu for instrucionir.agriculture.Dr.Ken on Liuttorflcl-il,president of the l'.f...n.husettl A|.;1'ie.1ltum¥college andienmlzt r of lhf! Y. M. C. A. Army Ed
cntion rommhuion, his eltimltc dhastone-fourth of the men .ln th:nnerican expeditionary Ions tttttn
mm Luo Iurms of America and thatfnnilnr mopunion of them want tr.
etern to the farms when their milinry servlet! isended.Un its arrival in France,the ox
ibll will be divided into four partsrailedon trucks nm! moved from
unp to camp for demonstration.Tie gowrernment will ply the sal
li"J: of its experts and the Y. M. CL. will pay their exlwnsezt It is ex
entail that tlc miitnry ozatlmoritiei
'ill nz~-iam bevernl hundred instrucnra from the "mf to use this exhibil1ngiiculturade¢ueation.I t is an
ouneul the Y. 31.C. A. sent tor:1nec in .lnnunry more than $'i0'0,00'
.nrih of text books, vihich boar upornurses of ngric ultum and that them
nurses nw open to all fighting mer.
f the United States ns long as the)emnin 0\0ISf."D8.
Shipment of samples of soil is in
ended to enable the soldier to diicotr how best to utilize the farm hlmlr
If hi., home town, whether he mayomefromMaineorOregon.The
iurenu of plant 'lnduslly has contrib-ilml exhibits showing how to iight inertpeat:s and fun diseases of
»l:mt life, nnd the urenu of animalmluwtry has contributed model farmQuilelinm-¢,nm.,and poult barns.
m¢»i3ns.B y t h o u s o o !and:ther exhibits, the soldiers 1\'mbe
aught srlentiilc farm management.
l]
ames~r~y
.\|
At Your Service
iHave a iion Gary
Truck and .am prepared
to do all kinds~0f
TRUCK HAULING
McKEl.VlE ASKS STATE
2 ATTORNEY PLACED IN
\JUSTICE DF-PABTMEN1
Lincoln.Nebr.,Harsh 10-Govor1 " Mc i i c l vi c g f f g w t wo h i l ls i n
i w s u m sem s moon, ones.10d1lymng tha stltate covering thc
p0M¢rs and authori of tht attomegagrnemiandthe a er c overing tinrcor~ga.ni:.ation of the Nebrukn .Ns
Uona! Guam.llze tint bill changes the attorne;gzeneradk oiilce to the Department ol
Justice*d extends to *bg attgdrneue m m o :mme powers uctf..- c dlllina!proaecutinm lztmcoilnig
summers poneu.The blli also pm
hi bi lsls hi t ollltloall from teggdag
:pecan n p r u e n em1i£i};BUol'\ ===3; on #1-=w°=g;,v of nl
er eruor or m v .s The Nationgl Gun bil! providv
that the all of th e n d ju tu t p ne r a l s h a ll ~ 1 » - f ° ; d , ; f $ 2 . 3 0 1
r ear In lnITMJ' ol' l\,50(lt also rnvlégolhaz
the 5-y y -=»fu n g a l g y : : di1`u:t
nnl=0 a o u fs:removed !or emu on & funding of I
4:-'nun-|1m.rth1, il disabled or ruinsTl*-0 blll provides Hu t th e olhoen~ » . : , ; ° m' § m m e " m a n n e r
pn 'c n n:nent instng of by elediou mm th !
flfstmzfxtionl. 'That mvi m m m b
nn t e rc o a tH3 1 exc e p t fo r c a mel wir ap l to
1
Phonaprden to W|}tor Laraalfs Garage.
GWB ME A TRIAL
| ' N b r s
DAN MURRAY
a .A k
..__1
J. E. Fischer
ANNDUNCEMENT!
I have moved my shoe repairing de-
partment from the Blair Shoe Co. to the
Bugeon building.Have installed some
dew machinery and will be pleased lo
meet both old and new customers in my
presen! location.
.l ,
A SQUARE nm;`rAlx TREATMENT.
A TRIAL WILL corwlncz YOU.
ONCE A ROADSIDE .
PEST; NOW i"»\\'0lllTlI
oz' i'ASTUlll*I CR{)l'§-
a :
Sure-el Clover Mule To S¢rrel.'|cfv..l
Purpose: in Gage County
Beatrice,Nc hr..-Through the inthenceof members of the Hugs'
County I a r m Bureau. sweet c luwlhu been axldeel to the desirable :mul
protitabie 1rep list of this section.Before the bureau was organize(and unlil an active campmign hm;
been carried on this member of tinlegume family was :lassrd only me |rouiaideojaeat and ronsiciemd of ncvalue. T sy it is recoqmired ihmugn-
out the county u I. mtl building plantbpd n superior pastuze crop.lla mer
iu .have been hewde-cl at farm Ilrhl
onxtratlons, ry auto toun,throng!the ff m- an by almost every mean
avni ubke until human ofllciuhn pmliet
that (diy 200 Gage c uuniy Iarmenwin have acreage: planted to the cm;this ear.afL. Boyd Rlst. the mrounty agent, re
pods oniers new on hand for 1501pounds of the and this <»;1rins;'¢.
drive hu :timely started.The em;h u f u lly demonstrated its abilityhere w release and .stem plant foods
for other crops and Lo suprly an :bundanoe of ferare even w len otherpasture plants fs L _;,"J
Watson. 'Py30n..J\. wnjn aqgrd
.3
old»r .a v
2I
R1
_mnu
wig.; 5;
/
i h s
Lhf
p m
n o i
m l
n _~M !. f ? * ¥ ° a ! r . .° e = v ° e ¢ ° f !
D o y o u k n o w i l u !tl l efr e'|a s m u c h
d i l e r e n e e b e t w e e n S o f t B e a l a n dt h e h e l l n f * o t h e r i n t n h a t o n a s
t h e r e i s b e h r g c n S o f t -a n d H a d
1 r l !e r .5 - l l
vn u l u u a u b |vll u| ¢n .\ :|VA l | u \ . | u l | U |a l l k i n d s a n d f i e a c r l p t i o n s i s B l a i r n i
i t '| b a t , t h e p w o t a l p o i n t o f t h e m o b !
fe r t i l e b e n i n t h e U n i ve r s e .
oF o r F u r n i t u r e o r U n d e r ! s k i n ;s e r
»|
County, In Successfd Uperation
For More Than 50 Years
g
A Conse rvative Bank
W ITH LIBERAL, SAFE MANAGEMENT
I ' I ||:
STATE BANK GUARANTEE LAW
QA general banking business
conducted.: `:::
We sell Exchange, and Loan
Money, cash checks on other
banks, pay interest on time
deposits for six,nine and
twelve months at the rate of
4 per cent per annum.::.
srmmxc ITEMS
l Blirt c ounl
| retired fmmlxo and woule!
The Now York Giants will have. it .oLas:Fridxy evening.Harsh 14was the eighteenth anniversary of thrbinh of Miss Heian Hindley, and ilu
occuion was made one of good :heelbyn surpds-e party composed os
twenty young people, neighbors am
close friends.Games being the orvdelof the evening md n most exc ellent
luncheon was served,nfter whichthe merrymnkers indulged in dlinciny;znli! the wee sms' hours of the morn
nt-n I
J. E. Campbell, Successor lo E. C.Piaree.|( i z - i n
oA few ladies of the W. RIC. planned and executed a surprise hinhdap
:wiv upon Mrs. J ohn Mc Quarrio orInst '1I"~d=r» March 11.a\ splendidtime to reported by all fortunate
enough to be praent.
oLawmnoeUnderwood escaped un-
hurt, from what might have been :.em-sous aocident on lalt.'1'ucsday a. m.
is thought, their entire line-up mme:for the curtain-raiser in the National to WuhingtnnQndlocate In
mng ymrs and
neo |11operiie.cw.He drumlmera liu t he
leer days, timemined the "1-lf;
wen nnd Hi m
mhz shoppersrI
On Monday lftemoon, liar. 10 theYonnl Huaicinns' Club, under the dl\'tc lion of 1.heir teacher,H i n Ger-
trude Mead.met at thc Ed W ulf!home, to he entertained by their Iittle
daughter, lisa Audrzr.A p r o r u n o f m u e l n d s a h o f t
study o °° gg ° °° ~made the aaa-slon n profl le as well an 1| pleu-ant one for the "muuidanm"l i n .Wulf acrwcel ddnty rcfrvrhments It
the flour nf thr vronam whlrh addedto the already dsliglstful afternoon.
% : ° ' . » ' L J % ! " L { ' % J ' % f f . : % . » '
I u p |p p g h ¢ . l v . \¢ ,
s h H ;0¢ »n o, »q u n,
\.
League.
Stechafs recent defeat at the handsof "Strnngler"Lewis rclegates the
Nc hrmks grapy ler to the ranks ofthe "has-bccns. '
Much prominence has been attach-eel to the declarxtion of Earl Caddoc
tilie holder,announcing his retire-ment as a resnit of exposure While inforeign held servxco, cutting short the
care-or of a rnoet promising mat mt
isi.
Jack Johnson. erstwhile ring °'"'"{pion and for a number of vmrs pus ,
an obscure b.\ll-lighten is back in lla-vana. the scene of his downfall, wi*h
the announced intention of wros:nlz
tho bolt from W illnrd-not much wig-nificnnco, however, is lttnchcd to hasdecision..
The finish match between Pesrk,the Shoiton wizard and JohnFrcb¢"g.
ihe Swedish chamrion, to be heh* IllOmaha Munch 2t,Q to bl an out nndout finish mulch, Promoter Lf~wi> an-
I
4
4
4
4
4
I M
Ola: Fu rn itu re , n an . mm. ek .
at J. E . Cmvb elh.Pleree'| ma
s m a .(ll- lf) .
Min Priscilla: Ilhoades. daughter nir. and Mrs. John A. Rhoades, wie-
Comlng into the city slung [he Omnhn
road at iL's Sntemec lion with SouthSL he struck the edge of the c ulvrnturning\| \e ur and driver upsidndown m the dimh. Lawrence escaping
unhuxt, while the :lr suffered u brok-
en vmmhxm mx ma shed -in Mp.
bmlcd her ulxth birthday on Tue#
dmy Mnnh ll. issuing lnvitatlom to| n umb er u l oan; ( rimdx,who
helped to make in 'estive oouulr-n ahugesuecesn.A dmlnty luncheon
served by Mrs. Rhonda ruumled oul
tnin, tlxe day of all dlys,which, "henpmperly observofl. linger In n c hlld'|
memory,the high-light: of a happychildhood.
We have l large line o l l w u and
embrolderlu.hook them over | ¢
tha Blalr Duke! Store.5-zz
BEGINNING FEBRUARY IST, 1916
4 per :ent kne vlll be Dlld on
e e n l i u l u of depusil iuued (oldx mon ths, n ine mo nllu. md om
mr . - ' r a s B A NK I N G HOU S E o fA . c A s 1 - E r ma .
Russell Dugeon was another ol theln n u n a ta having A birthday Lu (
week md sevenl friend: mmembem'and dropped In on him. The cvc nlnr
was enjoy nbly spent ln mein!inlnr
course and xmunements of vznriomkinda and at .l late hnur mfruhmenb
§nounccs, or no ,money changes hands.
V(mon Ilrecdloro,fonther-wrightchampion wrestler of the world,mc-ressfully defended his titlo against
fflnudv Swindcli of Lincoin. contextnnt,rt Counrii Bluffs,lwednosaluy<°\enin;:,gaining two falls, in l u :
than 1 hour and 30 minutes, the :Bratfall bang obtained with hcnel 1uis~=ors
:md doolrha mm Eork in I bf. 4 min.an¢l)8~¢¢;¢,, and tho second fall bybod.friason and hu!! nelson in S0
min 4 second;Brrcdlovo was thea;{13rcasor thruout the mulch.
The nnnonnccment of tho clash for4.h|\mpion~h§p .honors in the hf::\"3.-welght division betwixt Champion
Jess Willa!!! and Jack Dempsey, con-tender,is arousing oonwidcnblo zn-
lcrost among apomlovera thruoutthe country ,this be-ing the flrst nenitry out for Champion Jess sinc e the
Horan: tangle.Dempsey has rr-almeritback of his ehnmpionr-hip :tsImirations and in conswquenre In much
n the limelight.The retircnce ofWilllltvl in risk the belt, in many Irv:lanc os. has made him very unoopm
lar while IJempsey'a unusumc d nz
gresaivonews won for him hosts of ad»mlrors.Nevarthelra.-n, ft in pre¢ii¢ladWillond will stop into the ring o 2 to3favorite on Independence Day.
Q . - -
Willio was in a had temper.Hiamother had font discovered that them
was not I fc eau nigmshirt Nady forhim to wont."Never mind, W illie,"1-he amid. fconloiingly."You wi!! haw
to put on one of y our alltel"s nichtgrovrroutoniriht.""W hat,a 2ir|'s?"snorted Wil io, dravring himself uphnughtnly.'"| os.why not!" asked
Q1i:§ mother §n surprinn "I won't wear
o \
A party of friends surprised MissEmo Jones on her sixteenth blrthdly.the evening of March 12.Abou t M
teen guests were in attcndmcc.
Games and music were the order ofthe evening md refreshments wore
served at 11 lata hour.
n"J \ul" Tay lor has nud e a mon
rnmmrndnhle and muchmeeded i1n
35" served.Mrs. W. C. Linden pre.tad Russell with n wonderful mk
adorned with seventeen canclhrswhich was the correct number.
oLE T Y OUR _ : DL E MONE Y earn
aomelhiag.The Slit: Burk. Blair.Nebr., wil! pay Four per c on! in
terest on time Certificate: for Six.Nine or Twelve monlhs.( 3 I f )
d
4,Popular PricedI§»I§§\3é§{é§m2`§\§ mb £g;|nii bb}, th:
nish n lied n an artisticilPmaka g xn
lerior.same treatment is Il0\\being performed in Um City Clerk':
omceby Mr. Taylor.
o
Qayhart Mthrc ns was u \|.cl€clmfisltoratlhe Enterprise cflice nnMonday and whlie hcrc !QqUP°slfd that
'mis Enterprise be acidrcsscd to Longleach, Calif., for which city he du
parlcfj gn Monday p. m.He docs not
Mrs. Mary Jensen, who resides of
East Uncoln St.. issued invitations trn lumber of friends and nd mborn tc.be hor guests, in honor of r 62nd
birthday,which oocuned on las!Tuesday.These sweet:gathered 51afternoonandcvenimr:mel wen
treated to an exceptiowly fine \..1nc11
eon prepared by the hostess.M nJaneenwasthe recipient of mfg?
belntiful and useful gifts.Thetlmoon , spmt i n mu t w discourseund other diversions, passed mmJ1 1.01:
nviftly, as such occnoninns nlwnyo dountii the eelebrators went tlaeir vmi
Cun ways, wiahingathelr hostess memreturns of the y.Those pmaenwere: Mrs. T. C. Hiiton. Mrs. Vranl
attend, however, to make this 1ity hi.=germanent stoppingplace,but it iszis intention to visit other points in
zho Golden State.
o
Luge Variety of Nke Fresh Candy .25 cent: per pound.3-2t Blair Roc ket Store
o.Mm Eizy King and daughter, Sy l
van, arent present }|;ulient.| in on Omsha hospital.Bot lu vc undergonriiwerallonnforremovalof ton.aile.
iss Sylvan suffered considerable pain
md consequent loss of bio-'ui throu|;h1 hemorrhage.She il now much im-
proved.Q
Our Productions
Are First-Class
1'._1 :T\ _ . ¢ _ Z lliL n L v e r y u c l a u §
é1Il
" V N, The NminerLinden and mn. lin Karl Kollerman
Mrs. J ames E. Maher, Mm G. lllncxMr s. K lr l Peterson and son,Mm:
1imma Carlson, Mrs. Johnston. Mrs§l1e'l1¢:lfi Goldiq_SmiL_§. Pdaflf fmith.
nIcordiallyImflle every buyer lr
visit my :lore-My Collection of Nor.ellie: in Tailored. Trimmnd Ind Pal
Ien Hats sjarnuqen :ny foqmqr ellnN ®mrs. unnrop, mrs . nuns Home lm'-y et popular pric es preuli.the Misses J une and Eiiubeth Nohlc l Mrs. T. C. Hilton, The Mllliner
pr," 1ll.'(|!l.1'!N1 me small boy. "i'd ruth.hi work al The Enterprise niic l.er go so bed raw.".r
1
*Marvii 14, 19113~wif
is rf bondr<dgrnELv»'ino ies-:the home of Wg] er.
FI. Walker.. jr., two miles wen
uve.an said lo have been the "Tuf alcoholic Iiquor nude n
n since the prohibiiory law1l§t»|:ti\s.The barry?con-,C00 gaiions QLWTYIQ, sgal
,---H -'Jine.wa lu l. h u n piieéd
Imum and the Wai fa werewizh iltegnl possess n of li-
Tlny :ruled that they wovhl
ease. on the grounds that theri nat been iliegdty xrmnnfnv-
Thry wld the -:tame : m u3' had been paying the ful
on their wine nndglking re-rronding zo lhe f eral I i w
1. they were unawme of hav
ulml any Inv.; Thr elder Wa¥k
vvzua old and his son in 40.
. e a r _.
"SAFETY FIRS'l`!"
-Nr. Stock Buyer
n - n n
Before you invest your hard earned
cash in any kind of Stock,get the
advice and Inside information ofone
man. Who knows.
\
\I...
gflw Gretchen Mnmmert celebrate-.Ehedghth birthday, on th? afternoon
of March 8. Eight guestswere prtsnlltto help make the oauion a succ ess.Games were played during the aIt=.1-
YOU CAN HATCH MORE
AND STRONGER CHICKS
w|1'|-| SOFT-HEAT
1 y |
If you want to know what your in-
vestment in Stock is Worth and how
to cash some of them. write me.
e
GEO. SCllROEDER, Financial Counsel
542 Railway Exchange Bldg..'
°0MAllA, NEBRASKA
ai unl nmr Florence for man;fore Nebrnah went d n
popular howtess
served s duinlgeiuncheon, the centerofsttnc tion ins'a fine birthdn;
nice bearing eight -cmdles. The evrntwasmoat enjoyable for a ll prgnenl
ll. J. ANl)[l!SON
C°n§\f@~¢¥¢t Tile Casing and Tubular Wells
DEALER IN
Windmills, Engines,
Tanks, Pumps,
Feed Grinders,
Lawn Swings,
Pipe and Fittings
&c.&c.
opp te CROWELL ELE iAToR
£21 *'"mir, Nenr.
There is NoBetter Time Than House-Cleaning
I |...\ m l i l o f ) '»n n r c t i o n w i t h t h e p o n i h h
t u r n n f 'l ho r o n l h c n t e d wi n e
:l y I .!9 l '1 , t h #W a l k e r s lula'
v a g n n t a L h n t t h e i r g r a p e vi n e
|
G-AQS
'Sin \-guzmgiuu peering,we'|\ gladly give you expert adviceand help in the matwn end submit estimates.01 course there
is no obligation on your part in asking lor the facts und figures.
We nre so sure that gms as e fuel and illuminunt will prove sosuperior me other ways Lhnt we promise you'll find xt. well
worth your while w investigate.We, of course, dun't expect. your patronage on any other
basis than Llm: you ivill serve your own inmn-sw by giving
il w us.Why not investigate!And wdsyi
BLAIR GAS COM PANY
BLAIR,NEBRASKA
H. OLLERMANN
Four Doors West ot the Castctter Bank
BLAIR ::::NEBRASKA
THE LARGEST NNE OLDEST EXCLUSIVE
l JEWELRY STORE IN THE CITY n :
VAN V ALIN DEP AR TME NTSTORECHANGES HANDS
.. . . . . »
Ovens And Smlaon Of Omaha And
»i |-
-were kiilecl during the unnruai winter from the floor.He proved to be J hnBIG ll HA U L .following the pnmage of the p|1>hlb»-hi? of Blair, a """'$'?¢E1'°"' n$e?§;|¢|
-hi Mon nw.eprf scntnlive er dedle ~o .. I lan~ Ofi l »The aiding squad Iocated bar;hi:n.\rrlfb; explaining that he MZ' in-
- -*
Floy d Van Vslln lut week sold his
Ha mm d e 5 : ; \ a e n t store to L.M.Owens of and F. A. Slllnun
ol Bloomfield and Thursday the storewqs c losed for invoicing.The new
owners announc e that they will openwith a outprice sale that will matorédlreduce the stock.Jr. Von Valin tnsdes lhv shock for
farming lands near Bloomfield, Knot
county, He wall not leave Herman forme present, at least, having other in
IQYEBIA to look after hone.His deal
with Owens and Salmon does not include his rlsno business and he ex
pects to ul spate of his present storkol' liuiruments, at least, in this terri-
tory.He still owns s store at l`Iel.1.l:er. about six miles west of Herman.
Mr. Van Vdin been in bu-incaohere about seventeen gems and ~been one of the live business men uf
'Herrnan, and at ls tho general foclimthat the town is suffedng o dislim1
ions by his \\'i1hdrnws1 from its business circles.Mr. and Mn. Von Va
lin will be missed no less in the social
The Ur uha .Automobiie Shaw isnne fair gausge of the prosperity ard
uurchnsinx power of the llinzzmmalley buying public.This show, at
whic h almost every known make iaupon exhibition from the iight pieazs-
ure ear to the huge truck, of a qualityto mi t most critical judgment is :1rle1:i|||:d rl:-|mriI.|re from ai perl-dd, not
so !nng since, when prospective pur1ha50r$ were interested in most av;:art of n 'mobile with four wheeln, :1
ium.'s frame mul one-lung mom:
vneolumlsm.
- olie:-man Rec ord:-Charles Nelson.
county commissioner,cannot be ac-c|.n¢£'¢l Q! spending the cm.\nty'a money
on the roms near his home zo the dez»imlnt efmther {:;\nions of the county, an-ranting.:-to r. Camemn who de-
clares the road near the Nelson farmis the worst he tindx in his ierritory
1.PURE SEE D n m, ( ;0E5 To
DEFIIAT xx TIIE 1m1:=x:
g Li{sh-coin,Nob..March l l - A f r n1emrrmiiivi n t\:§¢§|e,yi + z " '»;"J=.@ ma~/a'n"&faa°§,
zsw,f1r¢§°&|so, iw fm-1.54.g1.\u=. nml
g-f»== as tha pure mul bifl, wen!
1 wn in ¢|£f('a'l.Mnrriaun bf Sarpy county mmlc :\motion to incl;-Iinib.ly puntpoue Un
bili and than was e.1r|'ic|! by 11 r u bstnntinl majority.Reynolda nf Douglnw svnel one nf
=ho¢c,who ie-J in the fight. on #ho lnil.fvbich ins Cpposed by ali nf ihe me-I
izouaes in the state.He' pro :owl various armndmeuLs. ali or \\l\icl\ won:Iraignc d to tum; the teeth out nl th--
1Il|. but thr-y al! fniiml.'On# of the sensational inli||m1l1 nl
:he debate occurred when l2eprc.svni.\l£\e Hamlin ca!lrai nttentinn to t!;r
|~n!k~r r e ~ c e .A modern winepress and other uuznails were in the
basement.
JOHN LOTHRQP,
|A r r o n n e v A f u w
The M"1hodi»=t church pe le :le-cidrd at. n buaincss meeting ednes-
day evening to cléluy their plans forrvmmlcllnthe church until some fu
n e t 1 e p r e s e n |w e e |. V a s n i n g t o n r o n n l y l u u l 'm r n g u m ! o n
h e fl o o r o f t h e h o u s e . a p r r w n i u t m -
w i r d i n t h e d e fe a t o f t h e b i l l n m ! \ . \ } 'n
:~ M i
r \ c U c T i h l o a n d K i m n T e o u r i i
Oi il ce a n W al ke r Me n us . Fi rs t
Do r n S o u t h o f Ci t y ih l l .
BLAIR,NEBRASKA
.,.,..¢,_.'.¢~,~ ~' f.Hn~ 1< ;~
L e t u s p r o v e t h e s e c l a i m s b y d e m o n s t r a t -_..~' ~f'""§_'.§,
i n g ' t h e S o f t - H e a t t o y o u , a n d s h o w i n g y o u ~`§ » ~-
w h a t o t h e r s h a v e d o n e , a n d a r e d o i n g w i t h Broods Hundreds of Chicks
t h i s W o n d e r f u l H a t c h e r ." . 2 § f ¥ l 3 $ " § $ ' l 1'1 2 ° "
6 SEE THIS GREATEST 0F ALL INCUBATORS AT 0UR FACTORY e
|>0n1|i|z lwwrmole co.§;'":;a::i1'§fJ:":;'a,, ~ me House.Blair,Nebraska.
te nde d t o h i m t h e con rie me :\M n
} a fm - ¢ » w i t h o u t a n y S i m n l e r o r u l t e r i o r
m o t i ve .
d~ide to go el~where.-H~rmnn Rccord.
` The Soltélleat Tubeless Incubator is
.Different---Practically Automatic '
COMBINES zo SUPERIOR FEATURES:, Center Lamp and Heater;Absolutely Equal
Temperature; OnlyOue Filling of Lamp Makes Complete Hatch; Requires Only One Fifth
the Oil of Other Makes;Eggs Turned W ithout Lifting or Removing Trays;Perfect and
Automatic Baleaoe of Heat., Moisture Ve tilatio and Regal ti.f ,n n 9.on.~~~ L o s e ' l i m e
L a bi a ff a n d-At te nti o n..L e s s Th a n Tw o Mi n u t e s a D a y ..
SOFT-HEAT |sL|KE
NATuRE's OWN-Not
the Harsh Dry Heat of
the ordinary Hatcher.
There's as much diifer=
ence as there is between
Soft and Hard Water.
TWENTY-FIVE Years
of SUCCESSNUL |N;,
CUBATOR Bu;LD|NG
BEHIND IT.
SOLD UNDER AN|RON-CLAD
GUARANTEE.
~.;_N ;
z e ;
"E-s*. , / *
Children Operate the
Soft=Heat Successfully.
You can get MORE
CHlCKSatlessexpense.
The Profits From One
Hatch in the Soft=Heat
will Pay for the Ma=
chine and Give You
Some Surplus
Money Besides.
so: ms ouoootx siovs
Nearly Three Months of the ..
Best Hatching Season is yet be-/Q~_
fore YOU.You can make several $215. ~
H.undred Dollaizsfrom your poul=-i ~ ~
try by getting started with a ml ~ ~
S O F T - H E A T H A T C H I N G Q U T F I T ~r
l ,;, h f 1' .r~l~.~ ~
iolnlion of the antilobby mls' of lla ture time.The cod was to be in \}¢-ol e !fei¢l\b0r?\00ff of $3006.00 and a mn-Mr. J ohn Iilnco of Kennnrrl. uns a\ll .,..{n Jnninon eliurlcwl U=<"jni!.) thought. this yen}° of high prir-.mflqar ugisimr today, dropping: in foy unmrmnL,.m,.a,,|___¢.mm, zo 0scnrt lhv pcrxon | vs not conducwe to oulldmg.usd. wvth the Editorof The Enlerprmv
\r m .
- $A L0C~§1- NEWSPAPER ~' 1 " \rn| N'rs 'ra n zrws '-zfmdlu
r o n ~.|Ri»AY§N0 r.e.vom:za_,
GENERAL AND LOCAL NEWS AND COMMENT
-*- +=:-_=....__..__._......_:_-...-........__._._. mb. sum- hirtorlccl .F/OL . XXIII `.Blair, Washington County, Nebraska, March 21, 1919 .` ~NO ,7
$00631
M
A ru;1! 0 3 h a u
tm - d a yl r .a n d
u f E10n
1 h i n 1
f f l m i d
N r L r a ¢ l
h w g m fla i n c r i I
nt L~::é,0
'i
- r n u a nr h a r z w l
n u n r mIi r h t i h -
wn 1 h u
1~n~1!.
t h a t U v
e m i t h x
I n r t !rlu n d Qhu
| ! w \
n e w vi m
\ r : v¥ '.!} l r 5 r d
i n l h 5 |
i n f~
r n l m l fn
zfmrr~~t h v . t a l
nm 'm l
.»..4 r 1 1
I I
PEACE OVER \v1|.soN°s BRAD
Senator Potndexte Bear ColCm Act IndIepend:at1:r
W u h toutgn,H u s h 1 1 -eau-greenmen t h e m ?heldV over t a r uthe proposal made wdw by Senstor
Poindmcter of W uhlngton when Nu!-
iny |. Parts dtspeteh stating that theAmerlctn peac e dale;ntlen ern "el-
taunded"m d " p ved"beeauwFnenehFoxeigainlsterPiehoa
:courted the feasibility of includingthlue league in the peace treaty.
a p e l e e t z e e t y i s to b e n u e a tybetween Genmny md the ellis, andu Ge r n m ? y i e n < ; tg . me : n b e r g th e
ro etiu e . t r l t neegow that can be embodied in e. treaty
with Cennxny," be llld."Le t ne ue
be madeand our troops bmught hour.W h y B n o t the entento able tae
m a n n g m i n E u r o p e . ?I! th eAmericanlegntiou refuses to nuke
peace with Germany. let the eutentemakepeacewithG°'=m{_ and let
congress muemble end dee ne peace
an d p n u e ia vr tn i ar ln g f tha ltmu t-can nnny home."Congress hu the mme power to
de ela re p ea c e m I thu tod ec lxn e vlzand hu run contra! of :dl movementsof the a my n ad " gg i nc lu ding the
romm|.ndcr~In-chief.ere have beeneomemisconception: of the elemen-
l 4 y_n'eatures of our government.e dispatch quotes the pnelidenlnu sayin thlt the 'league ls vital tnAmerica.On the c ontrary,in his
s p e e c h ln Ne w Y o r k . h h lu t p wuttcrauee In this country. he h mae!!mid it would be a 'supmne ,tm-ig.-,,,'
" th a t the American delegationJlouldbu piqgd at the French
nothing new.zhmve consistentlytended to oppose Frenc h and tofavor the Gemma; u to boundaries;
as to punitive indemnitier ll to ln-'~ = m- =; ° w-agf the fileltoan lz
.as to ns 1min g; u -ishment of the kmimr, dna the ver;beginning of the conference.ThelehorAmericanpoop,we n t , u e orFmnm."
»
x
2.
ar\ ~
<
.
\,
I
r
a n
i n u p n n i o n n f th n lu wh o ws n ~ fnc tly lntlrutad.The grave maceth lt wg g n " Mg o n t h e f a n s ; u
ure man or 1 51,~Hg.=,pg_-<1 |.| tho by magic. The old
cu 'returned usd these mensmiled as they have not amiied fo.days.T o t h e f u a o u t h o f t h e g a l -
len, nz n group of umznen wht' Iuvcworkedconnlsiznllforthebill
There were no smi es on their fue:as the negative votes piled up_nn;ithe day app-earrd nureiy kat.
\
i . .r r l fv 19\f*g»-1;1 ;§Y | . »
G IU G I II s o f u h u l d e t e r m i n a t i o n .
Se na hr Lmmc t declared he fav-rud the e n !lu i I th e 1-p o a g u a»~»»»%f"\»»= woutd not be merud
|voting for the connitutiun asnaw~nm: without amendmcat.
CONGBBSS HAY END W AR
WITHOUT PEACE TREATYSAYS S EN AT OR L xr mo or
Walhinfton,March 15 - If P ra d -d#-nt W in n d oes not negotiate n
pence treaty taliafnetory to e u n -ntv, Senator Lenroot of min.repubiic ln, said ln an lddrnl on the
Eoeszrw of nations before the Wuh~=\n=m ;s=1"l> hm ~,,-
ANDIDATES FOR OFFICE-CITY AND scnool.
" ~ th u :e m u an °Us\r¢ha'~ed with more nihltnry powers
~u were ever yielded by any dea-t on earth," he uid."Here ix- abum of nve men, without my lim-
tions whl%a1be\l;er "P§== Iiiheir auth-
ty ,t vr one ec on,oucu~»-€3f§:'§1~ is no upped save to
~ed torees.If this be not a mem
n of of the very command of therid, than the language of agree-
nts cannot create powers."
iting the questions which he amiduld be brought before the leatgue,ator Reed said that among emht be n grant by Mexico of landspan, or,slle by Colombia of iand
some foreign power which c ould
mam! the annna c mal.
e disarmament provisloos of the1e cjmrler. the Missouri senator
ned, would give Lhe executive» il absolute power to limit Amer-nrmament.He added:
'We may be beleaguered by ene»~All the enemies of destrudion
y be gathering about us.Yet. onwe can gain the consent of thu.mxsbers of the world {the exec
ve rouneil), we must remain un-pared and meet our fate with
ed hands."\
AGI TATION FOR sz-:wana
Quite a crowd congregated at thecity council ntee1l:_1{ at the city coun-cil chamber last csday evening tohear a discussion of a proposed sewer
system for the c ity by a representa-tive of an Omd u.en nearing con-cern.It viii be rmm§'..e1 that En-
¥iM¢1 Maru, of Linc oln, who plan-ned and installed the municipal electric light and power plant, was em-
ployed #af the city council,on the
completion of our electric plant,to
make a grade plan of the city for ansewer servic e and was paid $500.00
out of the c ity tnaaury for the same;
and that at an elec tion called for thepurpose of voting on the proposition
to vote bonds In pay for the systemthe proposition was defeated by n dcdelve majority .
Municipalities are much iike individuals;there are at tot ol modern
conveniences that it would be nice to
have if the means ot proc udng themwere available.It must be remem-bered that these engineering ooncerna
are looking for lucrative employmentmore than to =g»»interests of the
community in w ic h they have no interest, other than to get the money.As lndividuda we would like to have
all the modern conveniences in ourhomes, but, as a rule, the successfulbusiness man Berocuroe the money to
pay for them fore installing them.this is what th e gy sh ould do
first, provide means to so the Inou-
ey lo pay for them;and when themoney is in hand proceed with the
conn ion.
It was decided to hold anothcnmeeting on the evening of the 28th
inet. at the same place wherrn rt°,»-resentatlvo of the engineering om.
eorn will again be present to further
elucidate and present an estimate ofthe cost of the system proposed.
'rlasrr !dADB'0F CONCRETE: C411
Pi nt One Ever Built Delivered TcIllinois Central
Chicagv.March 17 - Th e ti n t 11'
inforced freight c ur ever built.w|.~
delivered today m the Illinois Centralrailmui for operation in its con! ur-
vice.Th e u r was duiirnad W*onwar demands made :tee for twa-mercill uses Mmm: unobtairralde.
The car is light. it.: walls being oneand one-luif inches thick an the
floor two and one-half inches thic k.It hu been tested for a c apac ity of190,000 pounds.
mo o ~:c n ' r n mx s iv r n s o x
IS TTEAlP'l'!NG sou? n'E'rA'r
Vrashingtnn. March 18»--Medill llc-
Cormick.rapublican senator-elect
from illinois. il-mod a ltltement tu-dly ulerting that my ¢f=\=°°1'd\i|> 1|up naw; from Amoriea to Great B45
mn and Flnance could have been im-posed only to prevent pdblication of
me 1:Rinion of tht Alnerk-an peophande xmi tu de o f :muo n to wa rdthe constitution of Use lemme d rm-
llunl."Europe must c ome to undentxmd
um Hr. Wilson u attempting as coup
¢l'etat in delhnnu of the diclalon ofthesummonpeople of Amerlca ut-
tnn d I t the lut e lec tio n." th e : hwment said.
BAILFY RBNOUNCESDE MNewarkNJ?| ° 5 2' { " ° p A g T
||a Iinsthatthedemoc ntic party h u"ceased to support democratic rin~ciples," former United S u m J L .
tn t J m p h :i i d B ill; o f Te xuti lle -
cares i n mess re t theerxld "aever again vom for thb
ta .n n wnantlir redgcex .Sir lb e r s t y a n d ~
esuri y increuea our taxes."
ool olllcers have been Bled in theclerk's ofllce, as follows:
r Mayor: Magnus Johnson.r May or: Harvey Poundl.r City Trunrer: R. G. Allen.»
r City Clerk: Harry Morriar Councilman-Fin! Ward: Geo., W.a mi c h u l.\
1 Councilman-Second Wind:John
. Newell.r Councilman-Third Ward:L.A.
qrnbcrg.
Quoted By Dealers From Th irir To
Forty Dollan Per Ton
Hay has made an ldtitudc records
U. is now from $28 to $40 n ion.OneLincolndealerMondayafternoon
quoted hay at $28 to $34 a lon.An-other quoted hay ll. $35 a ton, ml=-aid he had bought a ca: of nlfulfm
at Kansas City 1|-It 'W ednead\y. ~of $35.25 anion La b.Th e f l c g imin on that hnlay to Lincoln was 13 I-2
cont: por hu red giuouldl, nmkin_Fhitcoal. #$?.55 in Limo n on track.L1same dealer has tried in mnnLplac~es
to get hay but the model; in na.
Arthu r De witt nays he went toOmaha Sunday :ml was on :ha mur-
ket for hay Monday morning.HewantedtobuyTherewereubovl
twenty c a n on track.Among tbuyers wem about Mlec n h mwho had nt up lll night in onler to
he on hand when the m.arl.c£ opened
in the morning.'They were after hywith a \eng!:mr.°e and tho prices sud
°~ howhmulfhs they rvanttnithl 5, t5, no t! e lqua it ,u "-Ea ton on trork nt Omaha.It in mi l
that pro Ie have c omo to Unroln on-lrc mumotr qw day s in tho hope um
:I car of hs would nrdva \\h|¢h thoy
rould buy.The dealers have sold o \ttheir stock..'Pho storm is blamed for the hay
1hortagn.It is said tha road: wornso had farmers could not gut to the
.Conn Palos: Penn 1'on num.
re-Bred Hereford sow For Fan§Thousand Dollars
hi ng e, lhr c h 2 Wh.lt 110.1 11.-~to ben wor ldr ec o rd H0501
,ooo for a ure-bred He ord hui
annon today by J. B. Fergu
as luvinx been glaid by I'erzusorz~then of Canhg.inn., for "RilrFi i r h x, " a weyear-old racis
aninul.The best previous Amcanpricewas$31,090 fo r "A n ire," sold by 'W. L. Yost to W . ll
erin; both #gf Kansas City . gnu
t I |»|
"Czc n d l m a a F o u r t h W a n d : S t e p h
n l W a r d .'o r m e m b e r s o f B o a r d o f E d u c a
.( T w o t o b e E l e c t e d )D r . W . M
H a r ;E d .Gi l b er t a fo n ;D r .C .R
a d ; E d C a r ve r .
" Ie c t i o n 'l " u u d \ : r .A p r i l l s t .19 1 9 .
'I'. McCny of Kentland, Ind.Hrlive years old last November amiis believed he is the best llrrefnn
l in the world.His wei~ht is be-
nyc, between ~une I ~n~....,. .
. .a |I |0 xp e d i ve l a r g e a d va n c e s t o r a i l r m u l
fa r i m z s t h e c o r p o r a t i o n w i t h i n a i g h t o f
\o w s i b !e e x h a u s t i o n o f t h e h a l f b u l l i o n
Io l l u r s a u t h o r i z e d a s o r l g i . n l r u p i t a l
.un the bureau until May 15. bywhich time it will be necessary to re
Jnee the pay roii to n frac tion of its,snsgnt extent unless congress is in
BONDS RAISE RAILROAIJ F U N I
War I'insure Corporation Contem
plates Hosting $200.000.000.
Washington,March 20--The \»\:u
Iinance corporation is consideringfloating a large bonl issue, probnb
if $200,000,000 within u few week: li.provide funds for railroads and li
meet any other demzlndu on the em
poration.The interest rate eontem,alated is 4 3-4 per cent.
The bonds would run for a year 01possibiy a year :md a half nefonlim
Lo tentaiive plans.They wouid inold privately lo banks and big bu:=i
:ness interests in order to mininnizi
interference with the popular vietnmiiberty ionn campssign.
The bonds would be exempt oi oh'oxen except estate,inteHtanrc e.<
:Iss Profits, vanr proms nni nurimmmdntereit on $5,000 owned by any:-ingie interest would be entirely tn
*xemph The corporation ham Lathe:.ty to 'sell its bonds below pnr.ily low the our finance eorporntior
nay issuorgg to $9,000,000,000 o'"omi~=, neeu by coliatemi taken 'z
onneetion with auhznncea alrvmlg
. .. s é.r ..,.
namln -terg enew,who had relin-|uilhed about s2.oog.ooo,ooo of the
entire amount re.-stmrd to the tremvuv. auddenlydiseovered wat he ned
.1i $R29,uoD,00t= for the tramporta-.ion of troops and for subsistence. Itxae explained that later informnlmn
from General Penhing na no :heleeds of the army in Europe Ind ln-gglited a misenlculation nad been
e.On the eve of the ldjoummenl. of
;olurres.s the war depnrtment asked.er the amount mquirell by the quar-
.ernmsbcr c orps but..it was zoo lair
| 9l the legislation to which the.rnendment could have been attaches
.vas being swamped by the iilihwter.1'he quartennuter general is doing
.he best he can to make contracts fm.ubsistence and obtain transportation.sf troops en credit.
Trying To Scrape Up Money
Unless congress is called into scs-
sion in May *tho dependents ofsol-diem and sailors will experience evengreaterdelsythan at present in the
.eeeipt of their ailowanees.The ne-
.sesdty for funds for the supggrt ofme war :ilk bureau, whic h llld}L1
me lllownneea,is rapidly beeoming
.c ute Sec reury Glue is endavor-
Nameel very Httlc about music,-nzany thing dsc , only :of swear, and Idon't. do so 'gf weII at that."
George St e, a lliair man is orbomwd this ship too.llc in a g|;nner'
mule.I atm saw n 'Joy I had the 13|
last full with.J was all over Philnalcfphia and saw loL1of'histozy b1§
won ho will be subject bo the charge
2 lilibuslering quite as much as thu
arpublimns nr o klllfd the appropria-.ion bills in the Iut c ongress" said29|»resentaU~;c Good of iowa,wh-J
Jil be chairman of the house c om-nittee on appropriations." I jucgc
irom the letben I rec eive that epeople do not approve of Falibullcdngby either legislators or president."
NORMA N l.0rH ROP WRITER
Norman Lathrop.who is a mm!
ai m in Sousa's Celebrated Nawaiband,writes his folks from HanantonRhoades,Va.. under date ui
Mnrch 15th.a brief account of }=itinery from which we are permittr»
to eww, a few P=1Hz\'nnhs.lm !ol!o\\>f"e came here the 12th.fronIfhiladelphiaandhadsomecrui=r
3 | |I I .l .m p r i n t i o n .
H e i n t r y i n g t o o b t a i n a f e w m i '
i o n a f r o m t h e p r e a i d e n vs s p e c i a l w a r
. u n d b u t H x .W i i l o n t l r n d y h a s r u -
.u s e d t h e s e c r e t l n 'o f h b o n ' s a i r m -
a r np p e m l o n b e l u l ! o f t h e g o ve r n -
n e n t e r n p l o y r n e n t s e r vi c e ,s a y i n g h e
A i d n o t h s ve t h e m o n e y t o s p a r e .T h e
. m r e a u z d r o p p i n g 2 , 0 0 0 o f i t s 1 3 , 0 0 0
ugmpioyes t h i n w e e k ,i n t h e i n t e r e s t
J e c o n o m y -Tfh e m ep u l xl i cg n l h a ve c o m p l e t e d
..:1 l lN{;
W e l l . I w i l l h a ve t o c lo s e . X0 o n 1 . I. r
t o p s i d e a n d p l a y c o i o r a .A s e ve r .
N o r m a n L a t h r u p ,
C u r e o f P o s t m n w t c " . l '. S .
S. Bi r nm m nt a . N ew Yo n !- c
C u r e o f B a n d .
moeo DISABLED so|.n11»:asIAK ING V OC ATIONAL TRAI NI NG
New York.March 20-Approx:-rmtcly 50,000 American soldiers dis-
bleui in the world war have taker.dvnntago of tpe |.go\e\:|1{|1on2.'s pro
.|I l I .1m a n y o f u s t h o u g h t : h c o l d t u b w a l :
g o i n u n d e r .B u t s h o : s t i l l fi o al s .
" 1 i s s h i p i s g o i n g t o d o l r x n s p o r
d u t y a n d c a r r y t r o o p s b a c k f r o m
F r a n c e .W e s n ;[a n d s o f aolslicr
c o m i n g b a r k . "" " "" I m a y f o r m
n c m l t i n p y o u r p a r t a f t h e c o u n t r y h »
f o m m a n y m o n t h s .I h a ve b e e n sr*
_mens :nd are awaiting the signal
.rom the president to get to work.Msny omrmhl, viewing the plight of
.ho government. deem it unfortunate.hat Mr. Wilson should have decreed.hat congress should not meet dunng
sis. absence.
Georkv Bvnc k who mmmiltwl smirirlv by hanging lnimawlf at his W
sml nf Calhoun Isnt Momlay walra 'IHopsonofHenryehmuck,who
nz to an rmtimatemml~ by Iiiajor A.
}. Cmne, uttarhefl to the rlivision of
~hy:slrul rcconslruction in the surgeon:eneral'I chica.
mid Srnalor Henry Cabot |in
replying to a quc stion of Presldent\. Lawrfncc ' 'fzmwli of Harvlrd, dur-
ing their debate on thc league of na-linns covenant tonight.
"I " g y f r o m my he u t i t wi ll b e
amend ."he added." l hare thathlith A league will be fum nome-
vhcrc.In my be lief it will not bedone in Ptria,"
15 ~ m a y J:*I'I"»'.-.
C i u b S l n l e d w o n E i n a r no
S e n a t o r L e n r o o t m i d . " t h a s u p p o s -
.ri c lub over th e mm of po stp on
ng pence in stulfed with straw," seld
.nga"lt dpce not seen io Bora occurred
1.0 the preaident that if he 1| not will-mg so negotiate a treaty of pace aot-
oonctory xo the American people con-,gress may itself, and undoubtldly
mill, pau a joint resolution declarin.he war with Germany tonninatelfireconsultationclothescongress
.with the power of declaring war, andho body that ia given this power un-
lueationlbiy has the power to ter-
ninato the war.
"Germany is whipped. We are uk-
nog for no annexation. no indemnitzlea.We have accomplished the : w w w-re had when we deeialvd war andwhile it would be desirable to have o
fmnal treaty of peace will: Germany
.rin not neecaaory.
"We can declare the war has ended
.md zo on about our business and I
»:¢1nfld¢nt*y predict that this ia whatwill he done if the treatv ia not rntisiodby the senate.The proposal
zengne of nations will then here to be:onsidervd separately il' it ia consid-
.red at nll.By this course the Unitol
:Stance will lose nothing, for the emi-,fntionn imposed upon or by the pro
;ooed '°'§"= far outweigh any poe-siblo none ta coming to ua."
The senator quoted from ln .or-
lrcns by President Wilson in 1914 invhich the executive said "we 8hol.l||i#ot form alliances with any nation in
the world" and also from a statementby former British Ambassador Bryce
onunending the senate for "discour-nrimr tho executive schemes for for-
rigfl. enterprises and to have the coun-Ery (the United States)from being1ntnnglod with allianc es.protector-ates,rcsponsibilites of ai!sons be-
,tnd io. own frontiers."
EDUCATION REFORM URGEB
Wluhingrton,llarc h I5-Ado ption
n Amndcan sc hools of more modem
v:¢U.'ms of education was urged smihp first open mnvting of thu- Associ
.;El*Z:\TOR z.0uG£'s.»n1»:c|..m.vrzo1~z
Boston,March 19--"If lhe Ieagut<hnll be put in suc h ahlpa that itwill
promote peace instead of ba nding
Eisordcg and will work po injustice 13
:rc-ssivc Exlucationf Mu n i wen'
made for conducting a nntionwidvmembershipcampaicludngwhich
:nm-tings wil!be h in ihe princ i-pal cities of the nat.
I MO H'SENATOR mon ulssounl nm YLEAD wrru WILSON DEFEAT DRY ACF cuxcusss MAY DROP PETITIONERS Pnovs
NATION LEAG UE
Reed Crhldnn Pmpued Plan to h-lon.-e Pace Before Joint Seidelnt Mluouri Lqblllure.
JeifersonCity.Mo.,Mmh 18.-The Missouri legnlnnre. in ioint us-don, today heud anaddrvnsby u-|_._.. Q...._¢.__... "__. .uf.
mn sxnu sz-:ssloN 1-'umm or Liquor Tnhe 01|-min LEAGUE or Nnlons 'roo xucn Fon ml:
c w w :c u m u s Y k Sensua l-unmo\Thn| \¢uAC ~ l o r Huh 'r 'ru vllemben 01 By Blu 1 un 1 A lkchreWlre:Jn :'ohlbilloa neu Made Pence an ni I a n m.°'i f...Z G ok
Pmaama or American Tohacm Gm Juinl Revolution Eldlu War wnn M s¢c¢¢»r»m sm mud:ca° 'u*"§"'¢§,"'}.~,ff§§'§1':,,"'v°°,;{}§~" of »\:.-»¢;:\i¢n 1;~»=ou -ny Wilma Tnsily, fy-.Ti m n r n.'w m¢ B1 v i . <5
mor ne - e n u m ra e l A xlHutling £."|2."'¢12»."°" To |uh¢ny°`;» The Plea n su¢g~'f~a lm v m uulell Three To W,
L
m w u ow l.I:.I o e u l u l f naman ul.m l : -s o u n ,i n c r i t i c i s m o f t h e l e a g u e o f
n a t i o n s c o n s t i t u t i o n .
,S h Jlaril. 3llrc| } I8-Lord.Rober! Cec il Them fqintgg no nL,\_gl),
E
' W e th u :e m u an ourlrc ha'clothed with more nrhltnry powers
than were ever y ielded by any dea-pot on earth," hc uid."Here ix- atribunal! of nve men, without my lim-
itations whatsoever upon their auth-
ority,r 1.lnlt whose decision,once
rende , there is no appeal save tonrmed forces.II this be not a meg-
tion of of tho very command of theworld, then the language of agree-
ments cannot create powers."
Citing the questions which he amidwould be brought before the leatgue,Senator Recd said that among emmlght be n grant by Mexic o of landtospan, or,sale by Colombia. of land
to some foreign power which c ould
command the anlma canal.
The disarmament provislons of theleague cjmrler. the Missouri senatorasserted, would give Lhe executive
council absolute power to limit Amer-ican armament.Ho added:
"We may be belenguerod by ene»mics.All the enemies of destrudion
may be gathering about us.Yet. onless we c an gain the c onsent of thelivc mxsters of the world {the exec
utive counc il), we must remain un-prepored and meet our fate with
naked hands."_
CANDIDATES FOR gFFICg_._,._
CITY AND S CHOOL
g- .. . .. .. . .. ._.
Petitions of candidates for nity andschool omcera have been Bled in thecity clerk's ofllce, as follows:
For May or: Magnus Johnson.For Mayor: Harvey Poundl.For City Treanrer: R. G. Allen.»
For City Clerk: Harry MorriaFor Councilman-Fin! Ward: Geo., W.Carmichael.\
For Councilman-Second Wand:John
W. Newell.For Councilman-Third Ward:L.A.
Fqrnbcrg.For Councilman-Fourth W ard: J. E
L t1: z.For CoundlxamFourth W and: Steph
en lWord.For members of Board of Educaiion. {'l'v.o to be Elected) Dr. W. M.Hallor;Ed. Gilbertafon;Dr.C. R.
Mead; Ed Carver.Election 'l"uuday .April lst. 1919.
RECORD PRICE P AID 1'on BULL
Pun-and Hereford sow For Fin§
Thousand Dollars
Chic ngo, lhrc h 2 Wh.lt 110.1 11.-c la r e d to b e n wo r ld r e c o r d dec o?$50,000 for a ~ure-bred Herefgrfl hui
D Q *
fs
;_ ; ; : ';|
lution, create n "s\}per-government of
the world"end once the UnitedStates into world-wide dinlcullles and
policing obligations,Senator Reedchadlenged eeaertions of its edvoalce
that the leegue's decrees andlrowerswould be merely advisory.e ln-
eiated that its action tvoul be manda
tory end involve °' command of theworld."
Entnngle America.."If, however," he argued, "it is con.tender! that the obligation is mo:slly
binding. then, indeed, we are worreoff. because the United States will
keep lt ::nord obligations.whereassome other nations might not."All those tdnlentfunb were utterly
dectroyed by the president, who, when
hetgresented the league oonatitution
to e peace council, expressly stated'Armed foroo le in the background ofthisiwogrsm.....A n d lf th e
mom R-ree oi the world will not eu!-flee the phydcel force of the world
nfnml o e m.
ehalL"
Decladng thst the tentative confti-
tntion wen of British nrlrln, SenatorReed asserted that America wodd be
directly entangled in European alli-
ences.Asserting that the league c harter
contains no ¥rovision for withdraw-el of notions rom the league, Senator
Reed continued: '"
"Those who con lved its structuredidnotintendto allow the UnitedStates to escape, once it should fate-
Iuily step within the entangling web."The American people were tolu
that the constitution of the leaguehed been conceived PY .American nepresentativen and was being forced on
reluctant Euro .. .lt nowtrenxplrfeau m
to rug,5001. inmeoshipt
The executive council feature of tHe
plan ns attac ked enpseldly by tie
eenntor...-
solutely unable to meet runnpenses,President Wilson is
an; by me mbe rs of the c amil the new congress into ext
-Irs session by May 1.Secrethe Treasury Glass. who wool~
have the congress convenedas h le y L h a s c s b le d to th e n
A comprehensive report on 1..gency the government faces, i:ng that the eituetion will be
one if it be not met elfec tiMay 1.Another member ofinethascabledMr. 'Wilson
congress la convened May 1 itposdble to put thru the dellcie
1-ronrintton billrmoat urgent!ed y the middle of May.
The mm dgna le of green
trese to go up are from the qmaster corps of the army.Th
tenmsster fences!has repole is comp etely ont of funds
taann rtstion of troops andof su etence.For this env:
ary situation the rcsporudblli
pears to rm noteo muc h ~--green or upon the "three muskwho lllibuetered the deficiency
.lefeet in the eennbe as upon
rninistration ol Secretary oIleker.
Turned Back Too Much li~
Ample appropriations had
.nsdo by Nngrrts for the mn
.ance o1".£he army .Then aio
»:u.osry the ndlelnlnlttene. be.all attention tothe guest ec o
.t was ellec ting not only by
.ng contracts lor munlttons,.urning- buck to the ay
J dollars in nnexptn npp.noun The war ntneckapproximately$3 5,~.n ac tu al cash which it eta
wt needed now that the wa--'end the army was bein.; da
The president on Feb:good the bill under which thns restored to the treasury
appmprlstions thenfor rev~
-'~ d a y s l a t e r t h e
,
. .. s é.r ..,.
namln -terg enew,who had relin-|uilhed about s2.oog.ooo,ooo of the
entire amount re.-stmrd to the tremvuv. auddenlydiseovered wat he ned
.1i $R29,uoD,00t= for the tramporta-.ion of troops and for subsistence. Itxae explained that later informnlmn
from General Penhing na no :heleeds of the army in Europe Ind ln-gglited a misenlculation nad been
e.On the eve of the ldjoummenl. of
;olurres.s the war depnrtment asked.er the amount mquirell by the quar-
.ernmsbcr c orps but..it was zoo lair
| 9l the legislation to which the.rnendment could have been attaches
.vas being swamped by the iilihwter.1'he quartennuter general is doing
.he best he can to make contracts fm.ubsistence and obtain transportation.sf troops en credit.
Trying To Scrape Up Money
Unless congress is called into scs-
sion in May *tho dependents ofsol-diem and sailors will experience evengreaterdelsythan at present in the
.eeeipt of their ailowanees.The ne-
.sesdty for funds for the supggrt ofme war :ilk bureau, whic h llld}L1
me lllownneea,is rapidly beeoming
.c ute Sec reury Glue is endavor-
.un the bureau until May 15. bywhich time it will be necessary to re
Jnee the pay roii to n frac tion of its,mnsent extent unless congress is in.nzssion and prepared to make an ap-
mpristion.
He is try ing to obtain a few mi'ions from the plesident's special war
.und but Hx. W iilon already has ro-.used the secretory of lsbon's airm-
ar sppeml on belul! of the govern-nent ernployrnent service, saying heAid not hsve the money to spare.The
.mreau s dropping 2,000 of its 13,000
empioyes this week,in the interestJI economy._
The cepubliesns have completed
.noir or¢|.n.isstion for the new cen-_fneas ond are awaiting the signal
.rom the president to get to work.Msny omrmhl, viewing the plight of
.he government. deem it unfortunate.hst Mr. Wilson should have decreed.hat congress should not meet. dunng
sis absence.
|.
won ho will be subject bo the charge
2 lilibuslering quite as much as thu
arpublimns nr o klllfd the appropria-.ion bills in the Iut c ongress" said29|»resentaU~;c Good of iowa,wh-J
Jil be chairman of the house c om-nittee on appropriations." I jucgc
irom the letben I rec eive that epeople do not approve of Falibullcdngby either legislators or president."
: u r i ;:xident
emm~ducat-
grave:ly byo cab
hat ifrlll bc
cv ng
Amarican Tobacco company;Josepl.W. Harriman, imesident of Lhe_ Har
riman Nations bank.and Rnc huuF`ried1=l1um, president of B. Altman 6.
Co.No person officially connected
with the orgunizotiols. is was declghed, has any inharut, directly or nn-
rectiy, in the liquor business.Plans for orgznimtion of branches
in twentyimine states have been hid,
ate.Senator Lenroot of Wheondn.rfpublic an, uid in an address on the
ivumlo of nations before the Wash-:nylon Commenc id club here tonight
congress mnydrua a joint ruolu onwummnrili en nz the war with Gm-many vaituntal 5 tr°§\1f.§a\l;1x Amer
.cnn p cs on m e § | u e onations to Péuf. determination
Sonator Leqroqt declujed he !a.vo:~
lacgusavt IIN VUE! ox IDU ¢0IllllI1.\tncy had c ried out lu jn u t th o b nand rnemban ncniled at frm thinlv
In; c onstittunu hid put them in of
Ec o So me ma mbe n my u pi r u ucome back or go elsewhere and ir
either event, it il esumed um the;may again feel Inc ined to scccpt huno x c h m n upon them dong .shout
tisonme.At noon Mnndnu whnn lmlh qldm
_ : n l
an
\
1 um hyLiliananpriu-urnoumoon\ Wuwa
I ,~m.in¢Eui¢>=i.
bandf
ry zI sumnuml
n
\.
/1
* H
I l la n
Pil~Rrel\\lInas,
iw
' W e th u :e m u an ourlrc ha'clothed with more nrhltnry powers
than were ever y ielded by any dea-pot on earth," hc uid."Here ix- atribunal! of nve men, without my lim-
itations whatsoever upon their auth-
ority,r 1.lnlt whose decision,once
rende , there is no appeal save tonrmed forces.II this be not a meg-
tion of of tho very command of theworld, then the language of agree-
ments cannot create powers."
Citing the questions which he amidwould be brought before the leatgue,Senator Recd said that among emmlght be n grant by Mexic o of landtospan, or,sale by Colombia. of land
to some foreign power which c ould
command the anlma canal.
The disarmament provislons of theleague cjmrler. the Missouri senatorasserted, would give Lhe executive
council absolute power to limit Amer-ican armament.Ho added:
"We may be belenguerod by ene»mics.All the enemies of destrudion
may be gathering about us.Yet. onless we c an gain the c onsent of thelivc mxsters of the world {the exec
utive counc il), we must remain un-prepored and meet our fate with
naked hands."_
CANDIDATES FOR gFFICg_._,._
CITY AND S CHOOL
g- .. . .. .. . .. ._.
Petitions of candidates for nity andschool omcera have been Bled in thecity clerk's ofllce, as follows:
For May or: Magnus Johnson.For Mayor: Harvey Poundl.For City Treanrer: R. G. Allen.»
For City Clerk: Harry MorriaFor Councilman-Fin! Ward: Geo., W.Carmichael.\
For Councilman-Second Wand:John
W. Newell.For Councilman-Third Ward:L.A.
Fqrnbcrg.For Councilman-Fourth W ard: J. E
L t1: z.For CoundlxamFourth W and: Steph
en lWord.For members of Board of Educaiion. {'l'v.o to be Elected) Dr. W. M.Hallor;Ed. Gilbertafon;Dr.C. R.
Mead; Ed Carver.Election 'l"uuday .April lst. 1919.
RECORD PRICE P AID 1'on BULL
Pun-and Hereford sow For Fin§
Thousand Dollars
Chic ngo, lhrc h 2 Wh.lt 110.1 11.-c la r e d to b e n wo r ld r e c o r d dec o?$50,000 for a ~ure-bred Herefgrfl hui
D Q *
fs
;_ ; ; : ';|
lution, create n "s\}per-government of
the world"end once the UnitedStates into world-wide dinlcullles and
policing obligations,Senator Reedchadlenged eeaertions of its edvoalce
that the leegue's decrees andlrowerswould be merely advisory.e ln-
eiated that its action tvoul be manda
tory end involve °' command of theworld."
Entnngle America.."If, however," he argued, "it is con.tender! that the obligation is mo:slly
binding. then, indeed, we are worreoff. because the United States will
keep lt ::nord obligations.whereassome other nations might not."All those tdnlentfunb were utterly
dectroyed by the president, who, when
hetgresented the league oonatitution
to e peace council, expressly stated'Armed foroo le in the background ofthisiwogrsm.....A n d lf th e
mom R-ree oi the world will not eu!-flee the phydcel force of the world
nfnml o e m.
ehalL"
Decladng thst the tentative confti-
tntion wen of British nrlrln, SenatorReed asserted that America wodd be
directly entangled in European alli-
ences.Asserting that the league c harter
contains no ¥rovision for withdraw-el of notions rom the league, Senator
Reed continued: '"
"Those who con lved its structuredidnotintendto allow the UnitedStates to escape, once it should fate-
Iuily step within the entangling web."The American people were tolu
that the constitution of the leaguehed been conceived PY .American nepresentativen and was being forced on
reluctant Euro .. .lt nowtrenxplrfeau m
to rug,5001. inmeoshipt
The executive council feature of tHe
plan ns attac ked enpseldly by tie
eenntor...-
solutely unable to meet runnpenses,President Wilson is
an; by me mbe rs of the c amil the new congress into ext
-Irs session by May 1.Secrethe Treasury Glass. who wool~
have the congress convenedas h le y L h a s c s b le d to th e n
A comprehensive report on 1..gency the government faces, i:ng that the eituetion will be
one if it be not met elfec tiMay 1.Another member ofinethascabledMr. 'Wilson
congress la convened May 1 itposdble to put thru the dellcie
1-ronrintton billrmoat urgent!ed y the middle of May.
The mm dgna le of green
trese to go up are from the qmaster corps of the army.Th
tenmsster fences!has repole is comp etely ont of funds
taann rtstion of troops andof su etence.For this env:
ary situation the rcsporudblli
pears to rm noteo muc h ~--green or upon the "three muskwho lllibuetered the deficiency
.lefeet in the eennbe as upon
rninistration ol Secretary oIleker.
Turned Back Too Much li~
Ample appropriations had
.nsdo by Nngrrts for the mn
.ance o1".£he army .Then aio
»:u.osry the ndlelnlnlttene. be.all attention tothe guest ec o
.t was ellec ting not only by
.ng contracts lor munlttons,.urning- buck to the ay
J dollars in nnexptn npp.noun The war ntneckapproximately$3 5,~.n ac tu al cash which it eta
wt needed now that the wa--'end the army was bein.; da
The president on Feb:good the bill under which thns restored to the treasury
appmprlstions thenfor rev~
-'~ d a y s l a t e r t h e
,
. .. s é.r ..,.
namln -terg enew,who had relin-|uilhed about s2.oog.ooo,ooo of the
entire amount re.-stmrd to the tremvuv. auddenlydiseovered wat he ned
.1i $R29,uoD,00t= for the tramporta-.ion of troops and for subsistence. Itxae explained that later informnlmn
from General Penhing na no :heleeds of the army in Europe Ind ln-gglited a misenlculation nad been
e.On the eve of the ldjoummenl. of
;olurres.s the war depnrtment asked.er the amount mquirell by the quar-
.ernmsbcr c orps but..it was zoo lair
| 9l the legislation to which the.rnendment could have been attaches
.vas being swamped by the iilihwter.1'he quartennuter general is doing
.he best he can to make contracts fm.ubsistence and obtain transportation.sf troops en credit.
Trying To Scrape Up Money
Unless congress is called into scs-
sion in May *tho dependents ofsol-diem and sailors will experience evengreaterdelsythan at present in the
.eeeipt of their ailowanees.The ne-
.sesdty for funds for the supggrt ofme war :ilk bureau, whic h llld}L1
me lllownneea,is rapidly beeoming
.c ute Sec reury Glue is endavor-
.un the bureau until May 15. bywhich time it will be necessary to re
Jnee the pay roii to n frac tion of its,mnsent extent unless congress is in.nzssion and prepared to make an ap-
mpristion.
He is try ing to obtain a few mi'ions from the plesident's special war
.und but Hx. W iilon already has ro-.used the secretory of lsbon's airm-
ar sppeml on belul! of the govern-nent ernployrnent service, saying heAid not hsve the money to spare.The
.mreau s dropping 2,000 of its 13,000
empioyes this week,in the interestJI economy._
The cepubliesns have completed
.noir or¢|.n.isstion for the new cen-_fneas ond are awaiting the signal
.rom the president to get to work.Msny omrmhl, viewing the plight of
.he government. deem it unfortunate.hst Mr. Wilson should have decreed.hat congress should not meet. dunng
sis absence.
|.
won ho will be subject bo the charge
2 lilibuslering quite as much as thu
arpublimns nr o klllfd the appropria-.ion bills in the Iut c ongress" said29|»resentaU~;c Good of iowa,wh-J
Jil be chairman of the house c om-nittee on appropriations." I jucgc
irom the letben I rec eive that epeople do not approve of Falibullcdngby either legislators or president."