Cut of One-Third in State Tax Levy Is Made by Board Reduction in Valuation Alio Made Saving to Property Owners, of State Nearly Four Million!. . Lincoln, Aug. 2 (Special.) Re (lured valuations ind reduction ol JJ l-J per cent in Hie state levy were announced - today in resolutions adopted by the atate board of equali- aation presides over by Governor S. K. McKelvie. ' The levy for the atate general fund I. 4 II . I i.. inn year 11 i rrwn unacr ine rctgiu tion adopted. The levy la it year. was J mills. Thia J-mill levy exclusive of the 3-IO-mill levy for the atate capitol fund in effect laat year and thit year. The capitol fund levy ia fixed by law and the atate board of equalization hat no juridic- tion over ft The total taxable valuation- fixed by the atate board of equalization laat year waa SJJ127J7.092.64 saainst taxable valuation thia year of $3. 191,804,071. Thia meana a decreaae fit valuation on Nebraska farma and other properties of $120,932,941.64. Saving Will Be Large. . Laat year money railed aggregated IO.VW.541K. This year it will ar regale $7J41,149J6, a saving of $1,589,398.26 to Nebraska taxpayera ia the expense of operating their atate government State officiali declare the vnprece dented decrease in appropriation! and levies ia due to three factors, the code system of government, the ad' ministrative burdget system and the falling of prices, together with cur tailment of improvements daring the money shortage. All .of these fac tors, they declare, entered into the apecial session 6f the legislature and made -n possible to reduce expendl hires. , The code system, they declared, by making heads of departments re sponsible to the governor followed mum i winter wncn yovcrnor McKervie told them to cut expend! turet. Aided by Budget . The budget system, they declared, made it possible to estimate in ad vance, expenses, and to inform legis lators wnere cuts could be made. The falling prices, they declared, made cuts possible because the orig inal appropriations were made at a time -when prices were at peak. Ia creases in the atate levy over tfiat ot ivu are explained by Phil Bross, a - f r . . . secretary oi iinancc, as louows; "The total state tax in 1917 amount ed to $4,484,999.27, and the increase in this year a taxes over 1917 of S2.- 856,150.09 is more than accounted for aa follows: state caoitol. $960,000: increase for good roads, $513,000; educational in stitutions, $790,000; state institutions', $275,000, making a total increase of $J,53tJ,UUO tor these activities. The 2-mill levy will create a sur plua of $527,313.51. "ItiiShould be noted that this is the iirsti itime that money to cover ex pense! of a session of the legisla ture' has been raised previous to the session.' Heretofore expense for a session has been included in the levy following the seasion. Speical Leviea Repealed. "In accordance with the action of the last legislature all apecial levies were repealed, except the capitol fund levy and all expenditures, except for the new capitol are now made from the general fund. Before there were special levies for the university, nor mal schools, state aid bridges and state aid roads. "The capitol fund levy is contin ued by statute for 1922 and amounts to J mill, making the total state's levy 2. J mills, and the amount of the state's fixed taxes charged $7,341, 149.367 . Black Hills Mayor Fined for Violating City Rules Deadwood, S. D., Aug. 2.-v(Spe-cial.) That the law enforcement of ficers in Deadwood are no respecters of persons was indicated when Mayor W. . Adams, one of the most prom inent of Dcadwood's citizens, was ar rested on the charge of parking his automobile within a prohibited, dis tance of a fire hydrant. The mayor appeared before Police Justice McDonough and entered a plea of guilty and paid a fine of $5 and costs. As far as known this is the first time in the Black Hills that a city officer was fined for violating a city ordinance. Nebraskan Captured Near Rapid City After Chase Rapid City, S. D., Aug. 2. (Spe cial) J. J. Gregg, wanted at Valen tine, Neb., an a charge of criminal assault, was arrested 25 miles north of Rapid City, where he was work ing with a road construction crew. Gregg had attempted to conceal his identity by using another name. He was brought to Rapid City pending the arrival of officers from Valen tine to take him back for trial. GROW THill TO r.USIC With Wallace's Re ducing Records Pounds can be lost for ever in this pleasing and healthful way. . We have a complete stock of WAL LACE'S REDUCING REC ORDS. Stop in and ak for further information. These records will not remain in our store for long. Come in NOW. Terms to suit your con venience will gladly be arrangtd. . Cijlir fi Ucsllcr ISM-MVM rMA 1. Tt. Dm. t- rtM41?J. la 1SSS. Inventor of Telephone Visitor Here in 1886 j A 1 . .: 1IM tMiam Hall " Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, who died yesterday morning, visited the Deaf and Dumb institute in Omaha in 1886, accord ing to E. M. Moriman. vice president of the Northwestern Bell Telephone company here. He was interested in deaf and dumb institutions because his wife was a deaf mute. A telegram expressing the senti ment held by the Bell telephone sys tem throughout the united , Mates following his death was received yesterday by W. B. T. Belt, president of the Northwestern Belt Telephone company, from H. B. Thayer, presi dent of Hie American Telephone and Telegraph company. , i Alexander Bell, Phone I , ic f t J InVentOr, sO, IS Lead I (CoatlaaaS Tnm race On.) feated. The next case taken into the courts was that of the American Bell Telephone company against Spencer, which waa also decided ad versely to the defendant. ', The most bitterly fouzht contest of Bell against Drawbaugh, the case i.;nCT Pri vr anrt hfirw final- 1 AflAmA in R1l'at 4)a vnt DraHaVak baugh, a Pennsylvania mechanic, some time about 1872 made a work- in model of a telephone, using cisrar box. a elass tumbler, a tin can and other crude instruments. With this telephone Jie claimed he' had carried on a conversation over a wire several hundred feet long, and when testimony was taken in Penn sylvania more than a score ot per sons were found who testified that thev had either heard of Draw baugh's telephone or had used it. In Drawbaugh t atatement it was aaiq that he was too poor at the time to take out the necessary patents, but the other side showed that he was not too noor to apply later on for patents upon other devices of com paratively no importance. . : Suit Against BelL ' Suit was also brought aarainst Mr. Bell by Elisha Gray, who . claimed that Bell derived by accident or fraud a knowledge of what was con tained in a. caveat filed bv Gray, der scribinsr a nractical and useful form of telephone, a so-called liquid trans mitter. This caveat was filed be fore Mr. Bell applied for his first patent, and it was charged that the patent examiner employed upon the case xoia oeii wn uriy uoum, and how he did it. The lower court decided against Gray, dismissing the charge of official collusion and the oeciswn in ims case, a wcii the others, was confirmed by the United States supreme court in 1888. The profits from his invention made Mr. Bell a very wealthy man. He gave much time and study to the problem of multiplex telegraphy, and to efforts to record speech by photo graphing the vibrations of a jet of water. He was an earnest advocate earnest advocate 1 JLTyVA this question in frequent public ad- iV;.; ? hA v ; Z T,hrt Xte.w Jt JJ HUhlS of aerial navigation. His wife, the dresses. He also took considerate Invents Boat in War. Dr. Bell's laboratories have been located since 1886 near Baddeck, Cape Breton. . There for many years he conducted research and experi ment in aerial locomotion and other scientific subjects and maintained his private museum showing the de velopment of his greatest inventions. He encouraged Samuel P. Langley to invent the first flying machine and declared after witnessing its flight at Quantico, Va., in 1896, that the age of the airplane was at hand, although Langley's machine was destroyed. Dr. Bell formed in 1907 the Aerial Experiment association with head quarters in Cape Breton and its ob- ject to learn to fly. It is claimed .that it was with the machines de veloped by that association that the first really successful public flights of airplanes in America were made. In the world war Dr. Bell and F. W. Baldwin invented a boat called a hydrodrome. which developed a speed of 70 miles an hour and was cauca ine iasicsr in-,ine wona. n I used an airplane propeller and car ried beneath H a series of planes which lifted its main body above the water as its speed increased. It was intended for submarine chasing and scouting, but the' armistice pre vented its use for those purposes. ' Beatrice Hotel Leased .. Beatrice. Neb.. Ausr. 2. fSoecial.) --H. H. Severin and wife of DeWitt have leased the Beatrice house, Sev- entn and Urart streets, for a year and took possession yesterday. They succeed Mr. and Mrs. Ben LaSelle, who hare been- managing the place tor two and a half years. JnelmropnxioK SECURITIES BLDG. he had charge when she was a child. JffSS Railroad Charges Employe Kidnaped by Havelock Men Affidavit Filed in Federal Court Here Alleging Work er Abdueted and Beaten Arrett Ordered. Kidnaping of strikebreakers Havelock, Neb., is charged in sill davits filed in- federal court yesterday by the Burlington railroad, in behalf of Fred Tillman, 19 an employe. Federal Judge woodrough signed writs of attachment for the arrest of the rmalradrra in the mob. Rkhwd Roe. John Doe. William Boe and George Joe. Descriptions of the quar. Itet which will l.'ad to their wentiii cation, are included. i he alleged kidnaping took place Sunday on Tinman's arrival in Have lock from Kansas City, where he was hired. The mob surrounded him, bustled him into a ear and drove him miles 7 '."" to-nwjr, a v " - ' . . L . . . ... I.1.I..J h M out and otherwit a abused mm. i ne yoh r "" '.P in t.h. open that night, and continued his walk to town next . morning. He bctrged a drink of water on the way, but was without food for 25 hours, the affidavit rets forth A policeman was standing near when he was attacked at the railroad station n H:velock but did not inter fere, he avers. ; The Northwestern railroad started :milar wction for the arrest of Ellis Hobbs of Fremont, for an alleged attack on Carl Kuehl. July 31. Hobbs "thumbed his nose" as well as shook his fict at him. Kuehl it clarts. This took place on the cor ner of Fifth and Bell streets. Fre inont. according to Kuehl. eight striking railway shopmen m three towns of Nebraska were or dered arrestd today by Federal Judge Woodrough for alleged violation of lL. ;!; mAm Tlae tittmallfl dered arrestd today by Federal Judge for their arrest were issued on com' plaint of the C. B. & Q. railroad. Lee A. Foose. c A. Knight, Leo Yountr. Elmer Dcnbo. Pete .Brown and Richard Roe, known as "Dum my, all of Bridgeport, were ordered arrested for an alleged' assault on James Lee. 23. July 28. They are f,hr8ed with knockiifg h.m down and "blacking" his eyes. ; Amous Smaha is charged with at Peking Lee McCord in front of the ,rwei oarr in Rvenn, juiy n, Senator Reed Leading in Missouri Primary (OMrttama Hm Fan Oaa.) returns shows that the present ratio, if maintained throughout . the -miss ing precincts, would give Long a plurality of approximately 1,800, In such a close race, however, a change of two and a half votes to the pre cinct in tavor ot Reed would change the result; -.'rk , ' - Stubbs Loses Lead. Topeka. Kan- Avar. 2. (Bv A. P.1 vv ivswiua) esa arvs igiuiiii v v K. Mubbs,' tormer;,governor4rapped below W. Y. Mararan. Hutchinson newspaper man and former lieutenant governor, in the race for republican nomination for governor when re ports from 47 counties in the re publican and democratic primary had been received here today. . The figures, largely from middle sized cities and smaller towns were: Mnrrr 1 CM . 3nhhk l.tftlA T, A. McNeal, 8,057; W. P. Lambertop, 6i771; Fre1 w. Knapp, 4,287. Elisabeth Lorraine Wooster, who opposed dancing in public schools and the use of cosmetics by women school teachers and the use of to- bacco by men teachers, , was running behind in the contest' for the re publican nomination 'for superin tendent ot schools. I he vote was: Fred Seaman. 10.778: Jess Miley. 12.- 552, and Miss Wooster, 8,642. Campbell Defeated. Pittsburg, Kan., Aug. 2. Rep- -... j - di ufc he ou" of representatives and . p.m X, ThirA rr ..... j..,.t -- - .(-. district for 20 yea wasjlefeated in yesterday's prunary, according to ' ija w h Campbell campaigns, conceded this morning. v : , - '' fititVirt mtiA tn Wrnnf ' Charleston. W. Va.; Aug. 2. Senator' Howard Sutherland today kept the lead in the republican United States senatorial contest as returns came slowly from yesterday's general primary.. His vote in 1,598 ot the 2,093 precincts was 45,782 to 40,571 tor H. L. Ogdqn, nis principal op ponent - Swanson wins Easily. Richmond, Va., Aug. 2. Practi cally complete returns from three- fourths of the. 100 counties in Vir ginia and scattering returns from the Others received by the Times Dis patch give Senator Claude A. Swan- son 67,803 votes, and Westmoreland Davis, 22,841, in the contest for nom ination to the United States sen ate. , '.; . . Mr. Swanson has carried all of the 10 congressional districts in the state, registered majorities in all of the - cities and probably 95 of the 100 counties. Oklahoma City. Aug. 2. (By A. P.) Eugene Kerr, campaign mana ger for Thomas H. Owen, candidate for the democratic gubernatorial nomination, today conceded the nomination ot Mayor j. U Walton of Oklahoma City. Hyeri Says Strike Zone at Chadron Not Dangerous Lincoln, Aug. 2. (Special. Fol lowing repeated reports that there was trouble and danger in the strike zone around the Northwestern shops at Chadron, Governor McKelvie who last week sent 25 guards there dis patched State Sheriff Gus Hyers to Chadron Sunday to make a personal investigation. Hyers reported that there was no trouble. - A m04 tnttm tt ' Pwaataa ia a antiaa. Ma CUaMfara. Ktkar ar athar anral aaatatta aaaa. A aata taanataa ta rrtrr taaa aeeaataS far traatoMnt. aaS aa aaaaay ia to a paM wM aaaa. WiMa Sar kaak a Baste! Maaaaaa. wHk aaaata aa taatbaoaiala at son tfcaa t Usee araaiiaaat aaaala wka tan taaa aaaaaaacaUy aasa. . SSL a. St. TAMY Smnrl im. Fatara THE OMAHA BEE: THUicsuAr. AUGUST 3. 1922. U. S. Receives Stinging Note on War Debt Great Britain Will Cancel Obligations Only if U. S. Abandon! Claims for Repayment ' CaMmahl. let!. London. Atur. 2. John Bull stepped out yesterday afternbon snd laid ths troublesome pauper snd waif the product of Europe's financial and economic chaos rignt square on Uncle Sam s doorsteps. A stinging redhot note was ad dressed to the allies, big snd little, snd "communicated' 'to Washington by the mild, affable, aged Lord Bal four, who was charged by his hearers at the disarmament conference with having called spades spades snd hav ing said outright that Great Britain did not intend to lose anything by any cancellation of debt proposals. On the contrary, the clever old diplomat who excelled under the conditions of old style secret diplom acy just as he did in Washington last winter, made it pretty clear that Great Britain is only willing to erase worthless debts owed by Russis, Greece. Juao-Slavia. as well as other doubtful obligations from the late stlies on condition that the United States sbsndon claims for repayment of the cold hard dollars ladled out lavishly every time the British em bassy in Washington asked it during the war. It was all thickly sugar coated under terms of "the greatest internationsl effort in the cause of freedom" for "s great purpose com mon to all, snd he shuddered to think thst "this great event in his toric setting is treated as no more than an ordinary commericisl deal be- tween traders. Contains Warning. With the ' phrases Lord Balfour outdid himself, but elsewhere the passages in the note revealed dicta tion by Prime Minister Lloyd George in warning the united btates that its demands for payment from Great Britain made it necessary for 'Great Britain to out the screws on the allies, thereby speeding up on the route toward financial and economic chaos and worse. Desoite repeated statements from the. Washington administration de. soite advice from Auckland ueddes despite warnings from Ambassador Harvey that America is not willing to mix ' up in European affairs, whether diplomatic, political, eco nomic or financial and history has proved how they are intertwined Mr Llovd ueoree announced tnai the United States controls the British oolicv. and France and the others must pay England its interest and principal exactly in the same manner which America makes .ngiana pay. ; Tha note .is carefully silent con cerninsr what Great Britain reaped throufh victory scuttled the Ger man fleet, seized German colonies and riches, and British supremacy in Eurooe. It passes over the fact that Great Britain's allies owe itrl.000, 000.000 sterling more than it owes the United States to boot. The note bluntly tells. France to get ready to pay up right away un der the syrupy promise that France will not have to pay a higher rate of interest than the United States demands from Great Britain. It maffnanimouslv asserts that "we could not desire to make profit" The note overlooks this admission imme diately following, when stating how Great Britain "provided," meaning that it sold to the allies, "food, raw material and munitions." America then rets a jab for in sisting on lending funds to Great Britain s allies through breat Brit ain instead of direct, and on British security. Also Has joker. The document concludes by of fering to "abandon all claims for German reparations ' and allied debts," and here comes the joker, if it is a part of the sreneral plan for dealing with the problem as a whole and finding a satisfactory so lution, which, translated from dip lomatic .terms, means "if the United States wipes from the slate what we. owe it" ' It is sismihcant that the note men tions the 850,000,000 pounds (about $3,782,500,000) which Great Britain owes the United States and then in cludes the 650,000,000 pounds which Russia owes Oreat - Britain among the allied assets, totalling nearly 2,- 000,000,000 pounds, exclusive of Great Britain s . percentage of Germany's reparations for 1922. John Bull stepped out to stop Germany's reparations. It will be recalled that at Genoa Lloyd Qeorge offered to write off the Russian debt admitting its worthlessness, and be came angry when M. Barthou was examining the problem. While a certain section of the press- acclaims the proposals, the independ ent newspapers realize that it is ill- timed, especially in view, of the United States' reiterated refusal to do any such thing.. , Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 1 6 Belimns Hot water Sure Relief 'ELL-AM S 29 and 75 PacKage tvarywhw CASTOR I A For Iafaata aad CbJUrea N USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS Always boars Signature Fistula-Pay When Cured it that ran PUaa. fbtola aa athcr abort thac witkoat a aarara aafaiaal Traat BUAj. (Baa BMftM Glenn E Plumb Dies of Heart Affection IfTSBIIIIIglVII, IU . UICII1I Cm Plumb, counsel for the sixteen larger rajlroad organizations and author of the celebrated Plumb plan of railroad operation andbwnership, died last atght. Death was due to an affection of the heart from which he had suf fered for several months. Mr. Plumb, a native of Iowa, came into national prominence in 1918, when he advanced the plan for rail road operation that bears hia name as a solution for the problems of post-war treatment of the transpor tation lines then under government control and operation. In brief, his plan was nationalization of the car riers with control vested in di rectorates in which the public, the executive staffs of the lines and the railway employes should have equal representation. , , The plan was endorsed by railway unions and the Plumb Plan league organized to urge its adoption. Mr. Plumb was active in the affairs of the league until ill-health forced his retirement last May. He also con tinued his work as attorney for the 16 labor organizations until that time, his last active appearance being befpre the Interstate Commerce commission to argne the then pend ing general rate advance case in the interest of railroad labor. French "Tragedy Girl" to Star m Movies Paris, Aug. 2. A French film company has signed up Pauline Jacques, daughter of Madame Bas serabo, recently convicted of her husband's murder, to star in a film portraying, in a romance, details of the crime. Pauline was acquitted of com plicity in the murder, although she admitted she helped her mother pack tne Dooy ot tne slain Basserabo m a trunk and ship it to Nancy. On the grounds that there is a mystery wnicn neither she nor famine have as yet, divulged, Madame Basserabo has appealed for a new trial Lightning Tears Off Arm of Cross on Church Spire ' Moorefield, Neb.. Aug. 2. (Spe cial.) A rain of an inch and a quar ter fell here Monday everting. It came in torrents, the wind, changing three or four times during the show er. During the storm lightning struck the German Lutheran church and tore off the arm of the cross on the top of the spire. The damage is small. rdPeerie $225 used Htf dntu $265 Do yea want osel rw?'iV'''-. h JLUTUFICTUBEBS' FEICE Sold with Defi nite Loan Value. Equitable Credit or" Exchange New Baby Grands, $350 . F. 0. B., Factory Standard Action, Standard Keys, Quick Sales, Small Profitl. A standardized product built by revolutionary process. Ths Osborn Grand embodies such aual- . Ity that critics throughout the world have challenged their ability to produce . at the price. Without obligation, make comparisons on our floor with the high- ' est 'priced pianos manufactured. Piano experts are welcome. - OS lth and Howard 10 to 50 Discounts Furniture, Ruga and Draperies Stoves and Refrigerators Bala aa -Used Sewing Machines Darla, SS.SS HaaaahaM, VIM. Haw HaaM, Sew WMaer, su.se OaaSrlek, siase SU.se. Till It TKRHK ARK OTJK TERMS Bl( radactiaaa daitaa- aar Aagot Sala Aak ta Saa Our Maw Tm Saial KXDRKDGK tat tha If aetata Far far ttatlf . , Hawart St, Bat. iota ma Mtk Sta. iScoiviNaTo5l n Parents May Lose "Doll Girl" of 11 They Sent to Stage Juvenile Officer Begins In vestigation of Child Who Come to Omaha to Enter Show. Little girls of 11 should be at home playing with their dolls and going to school instead of going out alone to get on the vaudeville stage, in the opinion of Omaha Juvenile authori ties. ... That is why Grace Reece, freckle faced and with her red hair bobbed, is in Riverview detention home while Juvenile Officer Esther Johnson in vestigates her esse. "I sm inquiring through Kansas City juvenile authorities the home conditions of Grace," said Miis John son. "We are going to do more than merely send her home.. We rti't aindnratinrf hnur narentl could buy a ticket and send a child off to another city to an unitnown man who advertised for a girl for vaude ville." The girl's mother, a former dancer, it now a ticket seller at a Kansas City movie house. Her father sen sheet music. . Milliken, manager of a vaudeville kbini. Mmnanv. Frank O Neil. 318& North Sixteenth street, met the girl at the station here at Milliken's request, he said. Aiuuicen dis appeared after the girl arrived. Rejection of Harding's Proposal Halts Parleys rAHtlnuMl From Fan Ona.) new aspect cm the settlement outlook. So far as the so-called original settle ment ntan waa concerned, it was re iterated by qualified spokesmen that both Cuyler and W. "VV. AiierDury. operating head of the Pennsylvania system, were agrreanie to us accept ance. Stand of Executives. V.u, VnrL- Allff. 2- "Disintearra- . - "i - iLi," nf ih ctrikino- shoomen s ranks. aivia w a - t was declared on behalf of the Ameri can Association of Railway Execu tives to be "the only logical result of the refusal of the terms of set tlement argued for by Secretary of Commerce Hoover on behalf of President Harding. That the executives, claiming pub--Hrlivf that thev now are the masters of the situation, was. the tone taken in a statement by John G. Walber, secretary, speaking for the association. -If his declaration is adhered to, the roads will refuse to lay before the United State rati board the question as to whether returning strikers shall resume their niAriiv ctatna. That the roads re gard thcwhole seniority system as a means of .safeguarding them against strikes was indicated by Mr. Walber's statement when he said that only un der ' federal control had the roads, "against thir. better judgment," re instated strikers without forfeit of seniority rights. l Quotes Resolution. Otherwise, Mr. Walber declared, the restoration of such rights never had hern ihf naliev of the' roads in settling strikes. A rail board reso lution that seems destined to play an important part in the present strike as that of the labor board which has been internreted as "nutlawini? the strikers," is one on which Mr. Walber said was adopted by the and Player Bargains 2!? Player Player Brand 5ew Like Kew $435 $485 Amelo, Player $460 If so, let Quickly. 119 So. 16th St, Omaha, Keb. Investment MEANS putting jour money away pafclr that it yiddi a steady and aura return. It lettins year capital work aa that it re ceives good waxes and no penny ef ft ia ever lost. THERE .IS SATISFACTION in knowing that your funds are in vested in well-chosen security, the first mortgages on homes, and that they are earning qser terly dividends at tha rate ef t per annum, compounding them- selves, ar a regular income to you by check. Can aa aar officers and allow them ta explain our plan. ASSETS - - - - t),St 1 ,242.34 RESERVE - - - , 4IJ,M.00 BUILDING LOAN ASSOCIATION lath aad Haraey. 33 Years ia Oawha. yrf When ia Need of Help Try Bee Want Ads . board shortly alter it creation in 192(1: "It must be thoroughly uudrrttood that the board cannot and wilt not undertake to hear any disputes or controversies, except those which it is suthdcixed by law to hear, can not snd will not bear the spplks tions of parties who are acting in dis regard of the law and who are not complying with the law snd the rules of the board." It is the position of the rail ex ecutives that by striking agaiiut a wage decision of the board, the shop, men have put themselves outside of the jurisdiction of the board, and no appeal for them on the question of seniority properly csn be carried to the board. Papers Taken by Robbers Is Found in Wheat Stark Beatrice, Neb., Aug. 2. (Special.) Some of the papers taken bv rob bers who broke into the Rock Island depot at Ellis last week, were found in a stack of wheat on the R. R. Carpenter farm by threthermcn, Alleged Auto Thief Is Captured at Alliance Rapid City,S. D., Aug. 2. (Spe cial.) Berney Mclvin has returned here with a stolen Hudson car and Carl Stuckey, a former State School of Mines student, who is accused of An Unusual Sale of Silk Hats $6.95 Taffetas Satins Faille Silk Thursday for Interesting Sale on Linens Irish Linen . Table Cloths $6.75 cloths, $4.50 $8.75 cloths, $6.38 ' $10.00 cloths, $7.50 Turkish Towels - The 20 by 12 size in a heavy absorbent quality -with fast woven selvage. Four for $1. WashCloths . Knitted ones in size 10 by 11 H inches, 36c a dozen. ' Linen Section 1 1 J cVi Telephone Your jj "Want Ad" 'r 1 Today iS Omaha Bee y "Want" Ads , ' Bring Better Results at Z Lesser Cost havins stolen the automobile. Ths young man was captured at Alli ance, Neb., after an exciting chase, during which he nearly escaped from the officers who were sftcr him. Striken Restrained by Judge in Wyoming Cheyenne. Wyo., Ag. 2.-Federl Judge T. Blake Kennedy yesterday granted the Union Pacific railroad a restraining order prohibiting interfer ence with operation of that rosd's trains during the shopmen's strike. The order was directed against the officers of the six leading ahopcrafis unions snd of the local organisations of the crafts at Cheyenne. Lsrsmie. Rawlins, Green River snd Evsniton. Wyo. t Nationals Occupy Callan. Dublin, Aug. 2.--Callan, the mosl important center Held by ths Ir regulars In county Kilkenny, has been occupied by the nationals. It was the most northerly point in the line held by the irregulars and Us evacuation seems to indicate that they intend to fall back toward the river Su'- . . . , In county Denegal the irregulars are said - to be completely de moralised. One of their most prominent leaders has surrendered to the nationals. Large, drooping and off-the-face models in -distinctive .all black or navy others with -white facings and still more with trim- rinihgs of velvet com-, bined vitb metal cloth. All exceptional values. Only $6.95 Crepe de Chine and Georgette fashion autumn blouses in to charming models of the newest mode: Price $15.