THE OMAHA BEE: TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 5. 1022. Woman Hunted CiWrleaf Division St- Rita Honored : in Seattle Death W!!0m3ha First Time Here Held in Oakland i I in Public Novcna Mii.l of Wealthy Ileal ', Dealer, 72, Found Slain in ! December, Nallrl at fl Oallaml. ,i Oakland. Cat. Sept. 4 -Mr. (U , F.. Shirin Winborn, 28, arretted ( litre on a request from sratile, where ah it wanted In tonnn turn iih the irjfdh of Ferdinand 1 1 hlrun, i wealthy retired real hIjH diahr. Iforhhron't body was found n bit i IrxliH apartment ljecrnihi-r 21. 2ha , declined to discuss ih alfair. Seattle, Wash," Sept. 4 CI.ii ! Winborn wt the maid ol Ferdinand j llochbrun, a wealthy ralty dealer, ,71, from I lie time the wat l jcjii , old until hi death. t llochbrun, a bullet wound in th back of hit head, n found dead i : I email alcove off lh bedroom of i hi ward who alii was hi house j keeper, December 21. IV.'I. The cor inner believes llnrhbnni bad bren Mead two months. 1 If body was ! found by J'irr Chrtodal. who oc cupied an apartment below I loch j'lrnin and who had gone up tiair lwifh a plumber to repair water pip, j Starch Br gun. Police immediately started a learch for Clara Skann Winborn, Slit wat i known to havt vitilcd Hit llochbrun jiapartmenti two or thrtt timet ",wfk over a period ol five weeks j liprior to the lat time llochbrun wat I' known to have brcn teen, bh left I fceatil November 2d, almost a ' Iroonth before Hit body wat found, j y boon alter Ifochbrun't diappear , ante letter! to Kdward von Trobel. i the old man'i attorney bad directed I ; him to end money rrutdl to Jloih- i ' brun at varioui addrcitrt in J'ori-1 land, ban Dernardino and Oakland, j 4 1'ohre aearch for Mri. Winborn fol flowed in the three citiet, also in ban (Francisco, bant4 Barbara and olln-r California eititi. On the evening of .the day of th homicide discovery, I Captain Charlei Tennant. chief of ! detective! of the Seattle police dcparl- fment, learned that tli had hren (tfayina at a hotel in San F'rancisco up ,to within a week ol that time, an ' Francisco detertivei found on calling ;at the Doran that the young woman (had left the hotel that morning, No Motive Eatabliihed. The police have been unable to ntahlish any motive lor the killing r( llochbrun. In a locked trunk in Horhbrun't room, detectivea found , if 1,960 in currency. No attempt had (been made to open the trunk. The "tnan'l troutert pocket had been cut Loot and only a lew nennict were left, i Hochbrun wii known to be of a jealou diipoiition and violent tern jl'. jScribner Man'i "Party" ; Endi in Stabhirig Affray ; L. S. Spath, Scf'bner, Neb., came into Omaha Friday with a load of 'ihog arid after telling them decided 1 10 remain in the city for Saturday, to "put on a party," he told police .JSunday night. j," The party ended in the rear of 2513 N treet. In tome manner a ; tight ttarted. Spath wan dabbed in t. the back, He wat taken to the , bouth Omaha hospital. Later, William I'renton of South i Omaha wa arretted and identified jby Spath at one of the-two men (who tabled him. " , Spath't condition it not tcriout. te ' ; ",in Hearing Partially ,' Restored by Ride in Plane Chicago, Sept. 4 In an experi ;ment made in Chicago to test whether a perion can be cured of ','deafnett by riding in an airplane, . Augiiitut S. Ilarrin regained partial hearing after having been pro ., nounced hopclely deaf. i Before ascending in the airplane, EHarrit w unable to hear even the iticking of a watch. When he came to ground an hour and 15 minutes (later, having risen to the altitude of I 15,000 feet, he wa able to telephone fto hi mother, Mrs. Elizabeth ' Harris. I'oit .'"lirling, Minn., b'pt, 4 -Onuli wa ir'tited fur the 1V.M fathrring of vejtrant of lh Mih r t lovi rlcnf ilivii..ii whiih com hided itt annual rruijU-ft here tod .y. I he date will be art by Maj. Anan Kay mond of Omaha, who wai rltrl pretident of tljr divt.iuii, Reception Will Be Given for New Cotncr President Rev. Charle E. Cobhev, who hat 'retigned the pastorate of Firtt Chris !tian church, Twenty-sixth and Har ;ney ttteets, to become pretident of Corner college at Bethany, Neb., and Mr. Cobbey, will be guest at a ji reception to be flivrn bv members ,fnd friend at the church at 8 Wednesday night. The Cobbevt will ." leave Thurtday. ;l Prohibition Agenta Killed 1 in Battle With Indian .1' Dallat. Ore., Sept. 4-Gle.i II. !fTrice and Crover C. Todd, federal . prohibition agents, were killed by Phillip Warren, an Indian, in a fight ' at New Grand Ronde, near here early yterdy. Warren wat wounded k and later rreted. W, The liiiht followed a raiil on a J dance hall wlwre Warren and other '! were laid to havt been drinking. rj Half MTlTiIUlr l ire ' Logan. W. Va, Sept. 4-. por j tion of l.ogan't buiuea dmtritt wai f- detroytd bv fire yetrrday. The bt tfit tinmated at more than fVki.otui, J Tba tire stsried Iront an unknown i cam in a hilli.ir.l bat), The W hile ' and drowning ldnk wti drttied ! anil the I he,ipelt and 1'ittntn.ie Telephont umipany'i qnartnt wet t birned, A Queer World Traclirr MMr'i.merizra Hail-lire-ii and If yjinotirtt School flointnitlce" Dry" -Work Help Pull Wt t" Trurk From I)iuh-"I)rya"' in Cali fornia I'urc lixtinitioti. Worcester. Mass., Si pt. 4 "Thoc hypnotic eyrt inuit go," choruied the pa i ml l and pupilt of llie Slouevillc district, and then they lallid in the boriety for the 1're.veiition of (!ruelty io i niiiircn. "She metmericd the children and the hypnotized the school committee into keeping her eight yean," th girl exclaimed, "and then they accused th principal of their ichoot, Mist Gladys Daggett, of cruelty." Grace llougton, an investigator for the society, hat recommended to the ti hool committee that the teacher b dismissed. She also hat made an ap peal to the state board of education. The school committee it Handing pat, and iayt Mist Daggett will stay, hut two. assistants, Fraucet Gallery and Mildred Walls, have been kcd to resign. . , Well Weill Weill La, Salic, III., Sept, 4-(By A. 1'.) The, irony of fate, early this morning brought O, Christ' gau, editor of the American 1 untie-, and two Anti-Saloon league dramatic lcbatort from the Uni versity of Minnesota to the rescue of the motor truck which Friday delivered the big Wine and Beer" petition at the ttale capitol in Springfield, as it wat tturk on a highway construction detour and about to slide into the ditch between I. a Dalle and De I'ue. It had blocked traffic more than two hour when finally dislodged about 2:30 a. m, by the combined etrength of the."wet'' and "dryt." Working shoulder to thoulder with the "wine and beer" advo cates, the three "dryt" taw the big truck on 'it way to Chicago again, Mr. Chrlttgau said, with banner torn and the painted "Liberty Bell" with an honest crack athwart it alongside the painted crack. - The truck was held in the road by a rope thrown around a tele phone post when help arrived. I'.arh attempt of M. G, Dchire, the driver, to get it out, sent further into the ditch until the "dryi" lent a hand. , After the truck was dislodged Editor Christgau acted at a traf fic "cop" until the accumulated car had been cleared and was on the way again at .1 a. m. Chief Wilt Squaw to Mlntwaata Solon Nobody to Lead 'Em. San Francisco. Cal.. Scot. 4 Un- les the prohibition party in Califor nia can get together a ticket that will bring about 3 per cent of total vote next -November m the general election it fa:e extinction, J. H. Zemansky, registrar of voter for S.'n Francisco, announced today. With the defeat of Governor W. I). Stephens and Mattisnn B. Tones of Los Angeles in the recent primary, the prohibition tuTTet was left with out, a head. Governor Stephens wan the prohibition ram'idatc as well a the republican candidate for nomina tion fur governor. Mr, Jones was a gutieriiatmial candidate on both the democratic and the prohibition tirkrts, The tUfeat of the candidates on the democratic and republican ticket, it wa averted, hatred them from tnakinii the race in the fall on the prohibition ticket. Man Jailod at Beatrice on KiniVtcmctii Charge r.eatriie, S'rb , Sept, 4 (Special TiUgr.un ) J. M Walrath ' in tad ln-re tlurgcd ith rmhr .tiling tit fiom I A. Vaitboi Uim, piiidue in.iit, Vaiihorkntn alleaet Walrath Id an ton lua I of nirloin in the mmuiy nul fuled l turn tu the ih, Freight Hates tint jn l'i.iu,,i, bt 4 Re iliif Si, I'aul, bfc 4-S llrfii In.lau tqttiitti, 10 luiv Lib vi war it, nev. tttl baits M Iratbeit " uthrr ot' i dniU, W(i willt l i Mi !s.ir i ratiK-k Mltrv ol Wa!kr, by 1 Iml ( jibiH4it l)mi k.m ol th tee.h 'i lak iitiivn ;n Mu.s. J ton. whrt drd rien!tv, lh nit'r nn.Min.. bi lldv 1M hit ild viii. Xf.ttif'if t , tKat t . w s ... ii 4il per cent in tb fi t(f file 1 H Hiimn, prtbtdi t'. Wall bi'.nd. wtxhl I'u'p Iwid. litaif.iij j li. (ii'isiMte, ih.nd itt'l and the iKl c'u.r tt1ri rm tatlriii ;,ttU I tl I'. ' wet atii 'Mii. i l bv the SuutHmi l' fill,1 l (I1JV , lt' fibul'-'ll Will t r't-il . i ai I ail 111 H'l l' !teHil Shrine It ronslrurtr in Holy (ho! Churc h and Relic la Of-ferfd. The first tiublie solemn novtna ever held here in honor ol St. Kite tha kinii of lha inuiotiiblt. wat opened yesterday morning in Holy Ghoit ihunh, h'lliy-sisih and Q Augiitimuin (athrrt have tretted beatililul ihnn in the rhunh and service will be held at K W a. m and 8 n. m. every day of the no vena with Kv, John u. uroeu ion itucliitlr inlentiont may be delivered by mad or in tirrion and all will 1 placed in the thrme and prayert wil! b fffertd for them. 1 h rHe o St. Iit4 will be offered lor ventre lion Kit of Cticia, Italy, wat born in MHO and married at 12 to become lb mother of twin tout, and when ibev son lit to avenue the murder of their lather, the trayed and they died, reconciled to God. Church hia lory show t that, although a widow h wai riublad bv divine interven tion to become a nun. Il wai in .Spain that reports of her intenes tion rauird her io gain the nam "1 he Saint of the Iinonssible. bhe was tanoiued May 24, rXl, Japan Fx peeled to Refuse to Hecopoiie Sovielism Chang ( bun, Manchuria, Sept, 4 (By A. I'.) Delegates of the lap ane.e, toviet and Chita government! arrived here yesterday prepared to ducuss terms for a teitlement of the outstanding problem between Japan and Kii'tia, Matsn Daira, head ol lb Japanese delegation, indicated that Japan intend to decline the Kussiau delegates proposal lor rec o irii it ion of ihe soviet government It was suggested that Japan will rever rerognie sovietism Vfithout a miliar artton by the other great rower. Adolph Joffe, representative of the Moscow government, insists that recognition is necessary at prclinu nary to any tubttantial understand irg, but they will proceed to Uiicust other prohlcmt when negotiation begin on Wedneiday. lioth tidet profest to foresee r tult mutually brnrficial. They will endeavor, first, to settle disputes af fecting Siberia, then to reach a trade agreement. Pacific Mail SteamHhip to Hongkong Goei Aground Shanghai, Sept. 4 (By A. 1'.) The Pacific Mail liner President Cleveland, which ran ashore at the mouth of the Yangtsc river while en route to Hongkong, w still aground. One hundred and thirty cabin patsengert have been landed here by lugi. the W steerage pas senders remaining on board. It it generally believed the vel- sel cannot be relloated tor several day, although an attempt will he made to do o Monday, There it little danger. Railway Men Rename Work When Guard. Are Removed AshfVilc, N, C, Sept. 4,-With- drawal of all guards around the Southern Railway shops and yard here wa followetd by the return to work tonight of the ihift of fire men, switchmen and hostler -who left their jobs Saturday night and caused a paralysi of practically all traffic until this morning. The men quit because they claimed the com pany had failed to carry out an agreement to remove the guards. Motor Horn Routs Ferocious Beasts ADVERTIHKMfcN'T, Relief Is Found From Stomach Trouble Hope for the millions of unfortu nate men and women who are victim of stomach trouble is ounded by Mr. Mary Manatt, 310 North Second Ave., Marshalltown, Iowa. Mr. Manatt was a victim of stomach trouble in its worst form but wa completely restored to health by tak ing Tanlac. She tays: "My food did not digest properly, for after eating I suffered from gat on my stomach and a distressed feel ing for hour. 1 coulU .not sleep only in cat naps, and mornings 1 got up feeling all tired out. "I started taking Tanlac and now I'm feeling fine once more." Undigested food ferments in the stomach and toon the entire system is filed wi.i poisons. Tanlac wat de signed to restore the stomach to a healthy condition and build up the whole body, Millions everywhere have acclaimed its wonderful power. Get a bottle today. Tanlac is told by alt good druggists. tfc iKtafwfti iMdwiH WIM m I 0lf fcf IU -I I KAKi'UMl Maainl UrJ rwly. I.MW mrlm S alr,t IHlfctnltto mtmitmfmmtm i m . ma I. !,. I. I, J Mm Wt4tw, l'4. l.,Ul4J,aM. Sleapa Ilk flaw Boy" 't ! ft m i tjtih t) m H tMi ? Af4a4 m Wt( tkM t mamI (vSl tail mi m ftntt . k r4 I timM I4 aW lW f -J W4 ta-4tt vtht tll, TtMUft. tWUt ltM I4(J tU1 ikaxaaj i ktaaut,. t ax m mm Moat) Ptilllitt) IUlitat4 It Rat SilhM im sh, a M.i, lire ! Mutvo WHh Cutlcura Soap The New Wuy Without Mud k. Vuvr.-j' ml.'.M,, iu : THft Mi Fiotula Pay When Cured " ' , ,h '.': ' ' j JUlVfiaV (. .M,. ,k. a ... t. wlm 'al ti I '' i' ri ... k ..-i. tikM f kmi !( Fiona Attacking Oirn Put to Flight by Slirirk of Siren. Nairobi, Kena Colony, Fl Af riia, Sept. 4 The toot of a single motor horn hi been found tui luient, in Afii't, to quiet stampedrd on and came a trio of fleih-hunt-in g hont to slink awiy into the l.uhes. Two native drivers were recently conducting a wagon drawn by 16 on to th railroad (imp, in the wilds near Ntkuru, tha til of the new L'atin Gishu railroad, when the srant wrre attacked by three lions, lb driven nd to nearby lr, The ovtu licKine paiiic-strtcken anJ i datlied down the ri'Uiib road. 1I141!- ging the body of one ox, killed by Hie lii.ii. with i'i twaviiig wagon be bind them, Th lion lullowed their prey. 'Hut wai llie Mud prucrtioii that greeted a lone !ii"tont at a curve c the road He bad no nlU and it, was almost an lunon-ciytis uiove-i iiirut that look Ins band to the horn' button. At the brst sound the hunt! lined nonplused. Ihe moturut thru blew long and loud, a the tin-1 ranuy and sustained shruk ru'ej above the clamor ol the Iriglilrued aminaU, the lions slunk away among the rocks, headed lor the shelter ol the bush, and the oxen swung clear of the diot eovcrrd automobile and tame to a stop at the side of th rnad. The rscape of coal gat into th oil is injunoui to Irics and shrub. If copper il added to pur gold the product It known at "red gold Darkened Attics Kcveal Helics i Achievement Pay at Meadow drove Bring Forth i Many Relict. I Rattle Cretk, Neb,-(Ry A. !'.) jit is surprising what the darkened 'attic toomt of the avenge Nebnt 'k.m contain. This wit mad evident 1 it llu Arliirveinent Dsv iiroarm and community lair held at Meadow Giove, when a huge exhibit of thcie antiques ai shown, A number of the relic that at tracted attention were; a mortar liom Bohemia, ISO yean old, e diluted by C, A. (Mrodahecs a bawl from Bohemia which hat been in fl Ctmilw rtl AnlAit I'ontar for bS years; a powdtr horn 100 yeart uld. shown by J, R Dow; band painted dithet that belonged to Dr Kindied'i gret grandmotber; .Ull made by Dr. Kindred's toother, v tin h took priirs at a number of firt 75 year ng.i; parr disclosing kccuunt of the attsitination ol President Lincoln and bard tack brought back limn the civil war, shown by Mr. Kibbler; a Moravian head-dress belonging for 50 year in tha family of Mrs, Vrrbony; a wed ding vest that belonged to Mr. F. M. Acton' greudlathrr and in use 7S year ago. In addition there wen homespun and woven counterpanes, feather wreaths, spinning wheels and old time bed warmen. Communist Youtha Clash With Police of Bfrlin Berlin, Sept, 4.-Rifle firing and rioting enlivened Kurftuitendtmm, llrl,n la.limHuhla west end. late J , w , - - - - - - - - yetterday aft'rnoon when massed or- gauuatinnt ol communisi youms a tempted ta demonnt on tht home grounds of plutocratt. Friction b Iwreu the young reinninnist and paserby fcecmt to ' frominuout that the tecurily poliia intervened. Tha guardians, not being tuned wnh night sucks or even day dubs, but with rapid lire revolvers and tcond tin re.etv rifle and hand grenades, could do nothing rUt to restore Aider but fire into Ihe crowd. Two of the noier wttt moitlly wounded and a score of other received gunshot wounds. Th fact tht bloodshed took place in Berlin aristocratic e! nd is regarded at tlgnificant. DRESSES New AreUalt Dally at MODERATE PRICES Julius Orlun Labor Day! What Does It Mean? Somewhere a Man stood up for the first time, under the bright sun, and surveyed the world about him. Wonderful trees furnished him with food and shelter. Ity his cunning he could waylay and seize certain lesser beasts, or a fowl, or perhaps a fish. So he could eat, and sleep. Hut his constant pursuit of food gave him little leisure for any other occupation than that of supplying his creature wants, and those of his mate and his offspring. Also his existence was made doubly precarious by the presence of other basts, larger and more powerful, ferocious be yond expression, who added terror to his daily round, and who disturbed his nightly rest by their unwelcome visits. But Man's mind was active, and the glimmer of reason was dawning. One day. he cut his foot on a sharp flake of flint by a riverside, and a thought, came into his mind. If the shard he had stepned upon would cut his flesh, why might it not as well cut the flesh of another? Tied to the end of a tree branch, he had his first weapon, fashioned from the stone'that cut his foot. Civilization was born, for man had reasoned from effect to cause, and had applied the result to his uses. He learned to shape the flints into more effective form, and found he could cut trees as well as kill game or defend himself from animal enemies. Thus he could provide himself with per manent shelter independent of the fortuitous cavern or hole in the ground. His range of action broadened with his independ ence, born of his tool, and he found more and more leisure time, for he was able to provide himself with a surplus of food beyond his daily wants. His mind busied with other thoughts than those of securing enough to eat, evolved new ideas, and he commenced to do things. Thus was Labor born into the world. Not the child of hard Necessity but the offspring of Liberty. For Man became free when he found he could produce food faster than he could eat it. Communal life began; occupation was varied; men divided according to their calling, and were shepherds, tillers of the soil, artificers in wood and metal, weavers, engravers, dyers, all the list of artisans as improving experience taught the need of the new craft. Cities sprung up, temples were built, pyramids took form, ships pushed their prows into the mystery of the things hidden beyond the horizon, and the world was brought to light and peopled, for Man had learned to do useful work, and his labor was not in vain. Came a time when the tools wielded by hand could no longer do the work of Man. Machinery was needed. Tower to drive the machinery must be had. Water was harnessed, and the air,' and all manner of contrivances, and Man's expanding needs outran them all. Then came a revelation. Heat was put to work. Out of the call for more power came in answer the steam engine, and a new world was opened. Man's labor power was multiplied a thousand million times, because of the new agoncy. Yet even that did not provide for all. Something better, more powerful yet must be had. At length Man laid hold on that mysterious agency which permeates all creation, which leaps from world to world, through mch vastneiws of unplumbed pae as appal the imagination, subtle, imponderable, powerful beyond measurement, y t docile to Mart' direction as the dinosaur may have been to the troglodyte, Klectricity was harnessed. Men stand before a great flu-place, and guide a steady stream of crushed and dirtv coal into a vcritaMo Hades beneath n huge batter)' of boih-rs. Water is e)n ei ted into .team, and led away through a huge tdpe to wlu re another group of men control it entrance into a cylindrical cufing. A haft revolves, a corn plicated H'i of wire-wound tee cores movts Inside another similar but stationary net, and out pours a force, equal tu the combined effort of 37,000 horses, urged to their utmost exertion. Other men control and direct the distribution of this mighty volume of power, and it streams away over wires, to light and heat a city, to turn its wheels, drive its machines, transport its people, to minister to their every need. And this is Labor, and the mighty machine is the direct descendant of that sharp flint on which a wandering Man cut his foot as he stumbled in haste along a prehistoric stream. How has the tool increased the. range of Man's accomplish ment? . . , It 'was estimated during the fever of shipbuilding that a single ocean-going steamship of modern size and equipment , represented an average of 5,000 years of man-labor. That is, ' it was equivalent to the constructive effort of a single man through all the days that have passed from Adam on down to now. A single ship is but a little bit of what is daily produced. Man and his Tool create wealth faster than it can be counted. All this is Labor. It is the product of human skill added to human brawn, and directed by human brain. Man has flung bridges over the great gorge of the Niagara; Man has spanned the mighty Hudson, and the wonderful Columbia, and he put a bridge across the St. Lawrence at Quebec, a triumph for the gods themselves. He has hung railroads on brackets over yawn ing chasms in the mountains; he has tunneled through huge ridges of living granite, and has burrowed under rivers and arms of the sea; he has sent his ships through the air; he has conquered the elements by his audacity. Labor is the mighty giant that intelligently assails the stubbornness of unconquered Nature and brings to Man's needs, comforts or luxuries those things which Mother Earth so muni ficently provides, and so carefully conceals. Without Labor there would be nothing. Labor creates, and wealth is the fruit of Labor. Capital is surplus Labor, capable of reproducing itself only when employed, and useless when Labor is absent or idle. Labor, too, is. the most perishable as well as the most enduring of all things. Labor, or the power to work, dies with each tick of the clock. The labor power that is not used today will never be used; yet the Pyramids have stood for thousands of centuries. Labor imperishably locked up in human achieve ment. Man's genius and power is expendea as often in destruc tion as in production, the latter being the slower process. It requires 5,000 labor years to produce a ship; the labor power of man for a few hours will destroy that ship. Men are slow to learn the greater lesson of their power. Labor Day is dedicated to the nearest approach Man has made to (Hod, the development of his creative faculty. It glorifies the power of Man to do things, it magnifies his achievements, his strength, his ambition, his will; and in this it also magnifies the greater glory of Him who created Man, just a little below the angels, and endowed him with that wonderful capacity for con reiving and carrying out in perfect form the thing as he conceived it, for bringing forth useful material for the good of a race that is purely moving on to a higher plane and a better life. lal)or Day is then for all the race of Man, for btbor symbolizes in itself the Divine impulse Mining in man to do, to create, to bring forth, to produce, Quietly ami with holiday purptw alt who can be spared from the absolutely necessary work of keeping alive the great city, will celebrate in one way or another the day that U net apart on which Man pay tribute to Iihor, because or Its dominance in all human relations. "labor U noble and holy," runt an old motto. Verily, it is to, NtbiskiSPvtrC . ti SiMAt-. who '' br .! t il i 4 ...t.inS u, . ai'.K.a t n. .- . M M M j ! .! . r-M kK.w., ! mtmn 4 IwfA-aW i mt MM ). - ! W. piMMHI , t. . sv I Mat MSMhMa, rM ta , a I va htv ' ttti.ttl il U wltt ht wiull l Vt lU