THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. APRIL 30. 1912. .LINCOLN WRITES CENSURE i'HEObOPHICAL LLCIUEES IAU TS 05TAH English Clath Hats Special .85- JSsiMiniilPdPwieir AbsoIutelyPure The only Bakinfl Powder maderam Royal Grape Cream ojTartar Don't beDeceived Read the Label Alum Bakina Powder will not BRIEF CITY NEWS are oet Print IV. Slsetrls Irons Bura-eas-aranden. &. I. CaarehUl, Dentist. 411 Brand els Bleotrle Pus Burgesa-Oranden. mobbed Walla Asleep As James Mo ran of the Continental hotel slept Sunday night someone took $7.e from his clothes. lea Cream stolen Six gallons of tee cream were stolen from the Saratoga drug store at Twenty-fourth and Ames venue early yesterday morning. Korea Paneral Taeeday The funeral of W. V. Moras will be held this morning at W o'clock from ths family residence, 198 Davenport street Inter ment will be private. senslnrt"a bp Womaa's Cue-pa George Crook Woman'! Relief Corps will give a Kensington Thursday afternoon. May X at the borne of Mrs. Maud Tennant, Z7M Meredith avenue. Aato speeders Pined R. O. Krstx. Sit Capitol avenue, and 8. Enymlger. -North Twenty-fifth street, were fined IS and 110 and costs each, respectively, In police court for speeding with automo biles. art peaks Prtday Albert Bushnell Hart, of the chair of history of Har vard university, will be the guest of the University club at luncheon on Friday noon, at wtrlch time he will make a brief address. Third Type writer gtolea For tba third time In a month a typewriter has been stolen from the American Commer cial college at Nineteenth and Far nam streets. O. A. Rohrbough reported that ' the last machine was stolen Friday night. Xnaoeet for Mrs. PeUreoav Aa inquest to determine ths cause af the death of Mrs. Mary Peterson, who waa run over and killed by a Missouri Padfla freight train at Fifteenth and Orate streets Sat urday afternoon, wilt be held Tuesday morning at I o'clock by Coroner Crosby. Local aafldara Bid a Blair Many Omaha contractors are submitting bids for the erection of the new city hall a Blair and a public library at Geneva, Plana for both buildings are on Ale at the Builders exchange and local builders are figuring on them. The bidding will be closed about May 15. Bale of Three Working A quaint ap plication of the rule of three was demon strated by Recruiting Officer Lieutenant Post of ths local naval recruiting station. In bis report of the number of men who Bled applications to enter the navy and those accepted and rejected his figures Hand as seven rejected tor physical rea sons, seven for other reasona and sevea enlisted of the twenty-one youthful as pirants who desired uniforms. Lumber Ooaapaay Sxpaaas Growth of business baa caused ths Updike Lum ber company to expand Its yards at Forty-fifth and Dodge streets. Purchase af the property extending from the Belt lini to the proposed Saddle creek boulevard and from Dodge te Davenport street waa made from the Harrison A Morton Realtv Cora pa ay. - The consideration was not mads) public, but according to the realty make healthjul rood people a price three times the prloe asked five years ago was paid by ths lumber people. Pined for Beating Ooadnctor - The sight of a street car conductor seems to rile Lawrence Wilson. He waa tried In police court for assaulting Jos Cooper, conductor on aDeat Institute car. The assault occurred Saturday night at Forty- fifth and Grant streets. Wilson toll Cooper that he did not stop for him arid Cooper tried to explain. For Ms endeav ors he was struck three times In the face. Witnesses said that Wilson ha1 attacked other conductors on that car Une. He admitted having had trouble with street car employes and was fined CM and costs. MOTORMAN IS HURT WHEN HIT BY STREET CAR J. P. Nestlebush, a motorman In ths employ of the street railway company, waa painfully Injured yesterday afternoon when he waa struck by a street car at Twenty-fourth and Maple streets. Hs waa thrown a distance of fifteen feet to the curbing and rendered unconscious. A doctor waa called and the Injured man removed to his horns at Hut Maple street, where It was found no bo nee were broken. Nestlebush alighted from a southbound Twenty-fourth street car and waa cross ing the tracks In the rear of It when he waa struck by a northbound Hsnecora park car. AUTO SPEEDS ON AFTER HITTING A PEDESTRIAN Thomas Blrchall, ttOl South Thirty fifth avenue, was badly bruised early Sunday, when he was struck by aa automobile at Twenty-eeventh and Leav enworth streets. He was crossing Leav enworth street when the machine turned the comer on Twenty-eeventh and caught Mr. Blrchall, throwing him . to the ground. After striking Blrchsll the mi cMne put on more speed and kept on going. SLANDER IS ADDED TO ALIENATION CHARGE Slander Is aa additional chance brought against Henry R Gerlng by Benjamin A, Redman, who several month a ago filed suit against Gerlng for E3 0O0 d am is; ee for a-lenat.on of Mrs. Redman's af fections. Redman has filed au amended petition la district court. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Anna Caswell, la charge of the kinder garten department of the Kearney Nor mal school, was la umaha loca. n her way to Lies Mot! e, wnere e e wi.l attend the Internationa. Klnetrartea union. w&Kh will be held there this week alMlas Perasita. Sarah C. Bushy. ls North Twenty-L-r-t- avenue, frame dwelling. 12500; Gate City Investment company. zMs Hout Thirty-third street, frame dwelling. Kjux Gate City Inveetaseat company. ft brown street, frame dwelling, ANNUAL MAYOEANOP DAY Mayor Dahlman Name Wednesday at Time to Start EVERYBODY ASKED TO DO R Street Censaalastaacr Will Aaatat tat tba Moveaaest aad llesasrve AU Aeeaasulatloa f rata tba Streets Tbars-lar Wednesday la spring "clean-up" day and every person la the city Is supposed to make other business on that day a secondary matter. Mayor Dahlman Mon day morning Issued a proclamation that May 1 would be the day to dean up yards, vacant lota and alleys. Hs requests every one to lay aside ordinary cares and labor and direct attention to cleaning up ths city. The street commissioner will re move all accumulations of rubbish oa Thursday. May 1 Tba Preclssaatlaa. Following is the mayors proclamation To the People of Omaha: Spring la here and the rubbish that has gathered during the winter should be removed. As mayor or the city. 1 request that on Wednesday. May 1. of this ear, every one lay aside tne ordinary cares aad tabor and direct our attention to the ceaning up of your yarde. aileys ami vacant lots; aici those owning pro pert that le being used for billboard purpvjoe they must be cleaned up. 1 hope that the press, trie schools and all others In the city will Join In arousing public sentiment toward mailing this sua grand ciean-up day. A city is as lu people make It If we all do our duty our city will be beautiful. t'pon noUilcaiion the ctrext commis sioner will remove all accumulations of rubbish on Tnursday. May t J AM ICS C UAHLMAN, MIW. REVOLVER DUEL TERMINATES FATALLY FOR PRINCIPALS MARTIN'S FERRY, O.. April SV-In a revolver duel here today Earl Shaffer, aged V wae Instantly killed and Philip Smith, aged K. so badly wounded that ha died In a hospital a abort time later. Mrs. Earl Shaffer aad her soa, Robert, by a former marriage, are la custody. Smith formerly lived at the Shaffer home but left recently at the request of Shaffer, who was a well knows mill maa. Smith was a teamster. Shaffer is alleged to have beard laat night that Smith and Mrs. Shaffer were going driving today. Shortly before noon Shaffer vis. ted the Pike road and waited. Soon two buggies came) along. Smith and Miss Mary Voll. aged 17, occupied the first, and Mrs. Shaffer and bar eon were in the second. Without warning. It at aaid, Shaffer stepped into ths road and commenced shooting at Smith, who promptly returned the fire. Shaffer fell, shot through ths heart, while Smith, wounded several times through ths body, was drives to a hospi tal at Wheeling. W. Va.. where be died. Shaffer's body was left lytng by the rnevMe until recognised by the authori ties. Three revolvers were found at tba scene of the shooting. Two were empty while one full cartridge remained Is the third. To whom the third isrotsct be longed has not teen definitely decided. Son of Martvred President Critiiizes and Condemns Roosevelt FATHER'S WORDS PEE VESTED Tr, Em la Great Crisis, Die Rc ( Aeaatl Jaaldarr Woala Hsts Aekored laa Praaoasd Plaa. ON BOARD PRESIDENT TAFTS TRAIN. NEWARK, N. J . AprU !.-On his way north to carry the tlgM Into Massachusetts, rree.clent Tali laat nigiit mad public a latter from Robert T. Lincoln, sno of President Lincoln. In al.ih Colonel Theodore RuO rvelt la enuclaad and condemned for what Mr. Lincoln dsclarsa la preverslon of th truth. "My personal feelings." ths latter read, "are unimportant, but I am not only Impatient but Indignant that President Llnoola'e words and plain views should be perverted and misapplied before trust ing People Into support of doctrines which I believe he would abhor, living." Mr. Lincoln's letter was written, he says, in s newer to a request for an opin ion of "repeated assertions by Mr. Roose velt that his attitude on certain radical doctrines la supported by ths recorded views" of the martyred president. The letter In pert follows: "The government under which my father lived was, as It Is now, a republic, or representative democracy checked by the constitution which can be chanced by ths people, but only when acting by methods which compel deliberation and exclude so far a is possible the effect of passionate and shortsighted Impulse. A government In which the checks of an established constitution are actually or practically omitted one In which the peo ple act In a mass directly an all questions and sot through their chosen representa tives is an unchecked democracy, a form of government so full of danger as shown by history, that It has oeased to exist In communities small and ooltoentrated as to space. A New England town meet ing nuty be good, but such a government In a large city or state would be chaos. Means Revolatloa. "As I understand It, the essence of Mr. Roosevelt's proposals Is that ws hall adopt the latter form of govern ment In place of the existing form. This n simple words la a proposed revolu lon. peaceful perhaps, but a revolution, in support of these revolutionary doc trines, which. If successful, would abolish ths form and spirit of our existing gov ernment and sorely, I think, lesd to attempted dictatorship, resort is had to what is claimed to be the words and teachings of President Lincoln. "President Lincoln wrote many letters, mads many public addresses and waa the author of many documents. I do not know of ths existence In any of them of a word of censure or of complaint of our government or of the methods by which it waa carried on. He was sincerely and faithfully obedient to our constitution. In the single act for which ha is most remembered the Issuance of ths emancipation proclamation, be ex pressly supported It aa an act warranted by ths constitution upon military Fallhfal to Coaatllatloa, "On ons publio occasion be described the effect of the counting of slaves in congressional and electoral representa tion. In comment lis said: " "Now all this la manifestly unfair; yet I do not mention It to complain of It la tba constitution and I do not for that causa, or any other causa, propose to destroy, or altar or disregard the constitution. I stand to It fairly, fully and firmly.' "Ha hated slavery, but his reverence for the constitution and law waa such that Its said publicly again and again. If a member of congress ha would faith fully support a fugitive sieve law. "His attitude toward the Drad-Soott decision is urged as In support of the pernicious project for the recall by popu lar vote of Judges and of Judicial de cisions. Laval te Judiciary. "Hs thought It an erroneous decision, but his chief point In reference to it was not Its error, but that It Indicated a schema, and waa a part of It, for the nationalisation of nemen slavery. He never suggested a change In our govern ment under which ths Judges who mads It should be recalled, but said that he would resist It politically by voting, if In his power, for an act prohibiting slavery In United States territory and than endeavor to have ths act sustained In a new proceeding by the same court reversing itself. "Is then to be found hers, or any where else, support for a project to abolish the essential elements or any ele ments of our constitution? And yet he is cited In support of such action. The oettyebarer "Prayer." "He loved the government under which be lived and when at Gettysburg hs prayed (If I may use that word) that a government of the people, by the people, and for the people may not perish from the earth. He meant aad could only mean that gov srn meat under which he lived, a representative govs, lent of balanced executive, legislative and Ju dicial parts and sot aomethlng entirely different an unchecked democracy. "These often quoted words of President Lincoln are sow deliberately altered and arguments founded oa their altered form. "I may 1st permitted to nay that I do not think the public wishes the Gettys burg speech to be rewritten aad its words changed by any one, however dis tinguished, for any purpose, least of all In order to support a proposition that President Lincoln could not possibly have had In mind." Peary's Companion Drowns in Sound CRESCENT BEACH. Conn, AprU S. George Borup of New Tore, who was with Peary In his successful dash to the North pole, and Samuel Wlnshlp Case at Norwich, Cons., both graduate stu dents of Tale, were drowned In Long Island sound this afternoon when their power canoe waa suddenly overturned by a heavy see. Borap g red :s ted from Tale in BO with the degree of B. A., and was pursuing advanced courses la geology at the graduate school. He waa much Interested m arctic travel and . had made several trips to polar regions. He waa prepar ing another expedition to leave within a few months. Cass was tba soa of Sam uel B. Case, a prominent Norwich resi dent. Ha graduated from Tale la 101. and was taking graduate work In the Sheffield scientific school. A Horrible Death may result from diseased lung a Care coughs and weak, sore lungs with Dr. King's New Dteeoverv. Mo and SL. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. .VT t i ' eea a A : M " -.a' D. 8. M. UNOEK. CHRIST COMINGSAYS UNGER Tell Theoiopbioal Society We Need ChriU for Teacher. SAYS HEW RACE WILL BE BOSK Sixth Sab-Raee Kmpecte Cosalng af a Carlet Who Will Valta All Men lata s Cosaaaoa Brotherhood. "Christ Is oomlng to earth again aa He did two years ago," according to D. 8 M. Unger of Chicago, who lectured for the Theosophlcal society of Omaha last evening In the Omaha School of Music at Eighteenth and Farnam streets. "The world Is calling for a religious teacher that will sound out a new note of life," said Mr. Unger. "Science, art, lit erature, music, capital, labor and all economio questions are waiting for a so lution of their problems and history has taught us that whsn a great teacher Is needed he Is sent. "In Egyptian history you may read of the great teacher called Hermes who gave to the people of the second sub-raos their policy of government and religion. The great teacher of the third subrace was Zoroaster, who gave to the Persians a religion of singular purity. Later Or pheus cams to the Greeks and taught them the law and beauty of life. Five hundred years before Christ another great teacher came, and this time to the Hindus, Oautama Buddha. At the birth of the fifth sub-race, the Teutonic the teacher waa the one that wa know of aa the Christ." The "Great White Brotherhood. Mr. linger spoke of a "Great Whits Brotherhood." composed of men who have reached the highest development of occult powers, and who Uvs In such places as Thibet and Egypt, that havs sent out the word tba Christ is really to revisit the world; that a new race is to be born, spoken of by theosophlsta aa the sixth sub-race. In looking over the different tub-races h World-Teacher came," declared the speaker, "and according to the needs of each sub-race shaped and moulded the different Ideals for their own special aad peculiar evolution. "By the testimony of ths ethnologists, a new type of sub-race la now beginning to arias. What Is the Inevitable corol lary T Shall the World-Teacher refuse to come aa Ha cams la every similar bv tana? No. "The new note must soon be sounded for humanity, and the Christ will sound It, and with It a new religion will be born that will unite all religions. Theos ophlsts every wnsre are endeavoring to prepare the world for His coming, and thus avoid history repeating Itself by the asms sad tragedy of the cross. "His creed will be brotherhood of re ligion brotherhood of man. Ha will tall tba rich their responsibility to the poor, and the wise their responsibility to the Ignorant; teach such virtues aa oo-o Dera tion, tolerance, gentleness, revsreaoe and magnanimity. Tba great movement of to day toward universal peace will, la the near future, be incarnate la human his tory." NORWEGIAN STEAMER DROPS ITS RUDDER SAN FRANCISCO, April fd.-Ths gov ernment wirelees station on Tirbana Island picked up a message tonight from ths Norwegian steamer Admtrelen that It had dropped Its rudder twenty-five miles north of Humboldt and wag unmanaga- f Makes Wall Paper, Window Shade. Art Object., Etc, Spotlessly Clean AND without rubbing or drudgery. Just vripa the article with Abeorene and it is instantly restored to fcs original brightness and freshness. Grime, soot, dirt, etc, disappear like magic Wall Paper Cleaner No work, no fuss, no getting ready and DO cleaning; up afterward. Cleaning with Absr-rene M as simple as it is effective. Absorrne simply cats dirt it absorbs it as s sponge absorbs water. ' Why not hart your horn ipodetily clean and ave time, bbor and deronti&g bill by wiiaf Abfoirnc. A ovrfr ma. plmtr tockwa m entire room COM but 10c Get a eaa todsy and lett t as roatnaf. Yoa will mcr be fnlikgat AiMoreaa Far Br iJMteft WlVlt.ia t. U. bittrlbUkt W U Tttw IV. ttanMtert, ObmIw ilat A Gtam CaKpaar DialMm. In mmmm Vlafrta. fUrla-Hcata !vf CV. DtMrlk f . n o H Bi-rv- Abaorene Mfg. Co. n, j w.eoieysTaaPwkelClseae. Bit Oeser alasl j af a an. Clever Heid Ceps for Toon. Tcllowi MO ud Jc fyiilM THE I it mM MB jy WW ll swa. uxj i-. itj js II "Beauty is ai beauty does" - III and the Ford's a joy. It's II the one car that has stood all jj the tests. And that's the rea II son we will make and sell this II year seventy-five thousand II Ford cars to seventy -five II thousand delighted users. ml The world over there la no other ear like ll! I the ford Model T. Its lightest, Tightest I most economical. The two-passenger car HI! costs but 50, t. o. b., Detroit, complete llll with all equipment, the five passenger but llll 1690. Today get Catalogue 101 from llll The Ford Motor Company, HI! Harney llll St., Phone Douglag 4500, or from our De- i trolt Factory. iiil li'l 1 1 1 1 M i: , i;b , tr,i In i u i mm? Reduced Rate Bulletin for tht Imperial Council Meeting Mystic Shrine, Lot Angeles all lines will name special round trip rates. See that your ticket reads returning via Canadian Pacific thru the Canadian Rockies "Fifty Switzerland in One" No expensive side trips to view the grandest Mountain Scenery on the American Continent. Special Trains will be operated from Vancouver, May 18, to accommodate Shnnera returning home. Far pmrticwlan aw its CEO. A. WALTON. Ceaeral Agent tie Seata dark Seres. Caieasa iv lesea Comic Section The Sunday Bee Young chap who ara painfully exacting in tfceir dress reQutra mects will find that wa hive anticipated thlr vary want In tit way of hat fashion yooll never get so moca class la a bat at the price as we otter to day, at ' 81.85 Stetson Hats $3.50- Every wearer of a Stet son Hat is positive of tlie fact that his hat la the very last whisper In faultletanesa and correctnesg. It you've never teen the entire collection ot Stetson hats, tbls li the one (tore In Omaha where the entire line la rep resented. S3.50 f PWARDS. I anaavaesaaaMawsa h- . is iMiiiiimmiti'imnrrmiiimwimMimn i": ; I Bill Iffi S fi K ....:...'I.Lh,f,uj..j..rJil,ui,.fliljui...lJ With Happy Hooligan. Ut Nemo, th Katzenjammer Kid ana tht whol mumtma tamHf