Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 17, 1912, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE 1?KF.! OMAHA TITPSnAV RKPTKMRWI?. 17 1Q1
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Nebraska Nebraska
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I
FIGHT POTAIOJATB RAISE
Railway Commissioners Register
Protest at St. Paul.
SEEK TO BOOST CARLOT CHARGES
CoTfrniiiMit Experta Have Nothing
Definite to Recommend In Con.
nectlon frith Treatment of ,
. florae DiRease.
f (From a Staff Correspondent.)
' LINCOLN, Sept. I3.-Spec:al.)-RalI-way
Commissioner H. J. Wlnnett and
Bate Clerk U. G. Powell of State Rail
way commission have returned from St.
' Paul, Minn., where they appeared before
tne interstate Commerce commission In
a protest against a proposed Increase In
jthe rate on potatoes from Nebraska to
Chicago ranging from $8 to $21 per car.
( The Increase Is asked by the North
western and the Burlington. Mr. Powell
was the main witness in the case and
presented an array of figures to' show
.that such an increase would be unjustifi
able. Mr. Winnett Is of the opinion that
Mr. Powell's figures made considerable
Impression on the commission.
Water Cane Goes Over.
An attempt was made to take up the
hearing in the Babcock water applica
tion for the Loup river privilege, but
as Attorney Strode, one of the attorneys,
was awiy on a vacation, the matter was
carried over to September" 30 by mutual
agreement. ' '
Forage and New Disease.
' There is nothing new to report from
the office of the state veterinarian re
garding the horse disease. The work of
investigation is being carried on as hard
as It is possible to carry It, but at pres
ent the investigation has not made much
headway other than to gain knowledge!
on which to work. "There may be some
wiwection between the use of forage
or. newly cut hay and the disease," said
Dr. Davison, the government expert, this
morning. "One thing that leads us to
think that this is so is the act that
animals In cities and larger towns which
have been kept on dry teed all summer
are not afflicted with the disease." '
Aurora City Institute.
State Superintendent Delzell returned
Sunday from Aurora, where he attended
a city institute in that city. "This Is
ouiucuiiiig new lor Nebraska," said Mr.
Delzell, and was not inaugurated In this
state until last year. The Aurora meet
ing was about the fifth or sixth held in
the state and Is proving to be a good
thing." Superintendent Waterhouse of
Fremont was the chief instructor.
Cnnter for Ticket.
Treasurer George was exhibiting a clip
ping this morning taken from a Broken
Bow paper, which showed that at a
meeting of the Custer county republican
committee last week every precinct In the
county was representd and twenty-eight
of the thirty-one membra of the commlt
lee present. While the committee was
divided as between Taft and Roosevelt
it agreed unanimously to support all
candidates of the party regardless of
their personal preference on the head of
the ticket , :;.rj ' a..-. . ; ...
Work of Food roinnilitsloner. ''
The food commissioner and his assist
ants made 716 inspections during the
aiontli of August, divided as follows: :
Groceries, .168; meat markets and
daughter houses, seventy; drug stores,
thirty-six; hotels, nineteen; bottling
plants, thirteen; restaurants, etc., eighty
seven; bakeries, six; saloons, thirteen;
stock food stocks, three; feed, flour mills,
etc., twenty-five: paint and oil stocks,
seven; Jobbers, two; produce, three;
cream stations. 24 ; creameries, ' two;
dairies, sixteen. There were forty-six
chemical analyses by the chemist, sixty
eight sanitary orders Issued, five prosecu
tions and thirty-seven complaints.. There
was $2,226.05 collected in fees and -turned
over to the stats treasurer.
Morrill to University. '
Prof. Walter J. Morrill, for several
years in the forest service of the gov
ernment In Colorado, has been selected
to head the department of forestry at
the state university, He arrived In Lin
coin a few days ago and has been get
tlnng acquainted with the work here
preparatory to the beginning of the
school year. , Prof. Morrill Is a graduate
of the Maine university- and of the for
est school at Yale.
Days Agone Are Recalled
in Modern Bubbling Fount
Assignments aMde
For West Conference
BLOTCHES ON FACE
BRY AND SCALY
Eczema Began in Hair;. Spread to
Face, Came on Hand and Aii Over
' Fingers, Itching Terrible. Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment Cured.
205 Kanter Ave., Detroit, Mich. "Soma
time last summer I was taken with eczema.
It began in my hair first with red blotches
then scaly, spreading to my
face. The blotches were red
on my face, dry and scaly, not
large; on my scalp they were
larger, some scabby. They
cam on my bands. . The ln
. side of my bands were all little
lumps as though full of sho1;
about one-sixteenth of an inch
under the skin. Then-they
.went to the outside and between and all
over my Angers. It also began on the
bottoms of my feet and the calves of my
legs, and Itch, oh, Myl I never had any
thing like it and hope I never wilt agate
The Itching was terrible. My hands got so
I could scarcely work. v
"I tried different eczema ointments but
without results. I also took medicine for it
but it did no good. I saw the advertisement
for a sample of Cuticura Ointment and Soap
and sent for one. They did ma so much
good I bought some more using them as
per directions and in about three weeks I
was well again. Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment entirely cured me." (Signed) BenJ
Passage, Apr. 8, 1912.
A single cake of Cuticura Soap (25c.) am.
box of Cuticura Ointment (50c.) are often
sufficient when all else has failed. Sold
throughout the world. Liberal sample of
each mailed Tee, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad
dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston,"
, 49Teoder-faced men should us Cuticura
Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free.
w
At Fountains & Elsewhere
Ask for
f iBI 11 771 R B.H If)
SCOTTS BLUFF, Neb.. Sept. 18
(Spectal Te'egram.) The conference of the
West Nebraska Methodists closed Its de
liberations last night, with R. P. Ham
mon's missionary sermon. Bishop Mc
Cornell announced the following appoint
ments: District Superintendents, Holdrege Dis
trict J. W. Morris:
District Superintendent Holdrege dis
trict: J. W. Morris; Kearney district, R.
P. Hammons; North Platte district, B.
F. Galther.
Assignments of pastors were as follows:
Holdrege Distrtct-Alma, C. S. Haw
ley; Atlanta, G. H. Wehn; Arapahoe. H.
M. Plnckney: Bartley. W. J. Miller;
Beaver City. B. F. Kberhart; Benkleman.
J. F. Hageman; Bloomlngton, J. G. Hurl
but; Box Elder, to be supplied; Cam
bridge. A. D. Burrlss: Culbertson, R. N.
Throckmorton: Danbiiry and Marlon,
Hex Barr: Kdlson. John Gallagher;
Franklin. R. B. Gllpli; Haigler and Laird.
E. G. Sta'.ey; Hartr.etl circuit, to be
supplied; Hendley, Henry Martens; Hunt
ley, W. H. Mills; Hoibrook, Kent Clifton;
Holdrege, I H. Sh'umat: Hildreth. C. A.
Norlln; Indlanola. M. S. Satchell; Lowell.
Norlin; Indlanola, M. S. Satchell; Lowell
circuit, to be supplied; Loomils. C. H.
Chader; Mlnflen. M. B. Carman; McCook,
Neil Johnson; Oxford, A. C. Spencer;
Orleans, W. S. Porter; Ragan and Sacra
mento, H. C. Barrett; Republican City.
U E. Lewis; Rlverton circuit. Richard
Gibbs; Stratton. C. E. Catlett; Trenton.
C. L. Anderson; Upland . and Campbell,
Harvey Anderson; Wilcox and Axtell, A.
J. May. and Wilsonville and Lebanon, S.
W. Longacre.
Kearney District Anselmo, C. K.
Shackelford; Ansiey, W. S. McAllister:
Arcadia, IU, F. Scott; Arnold, R. M.
Fagan: Berwin and Westerville, H. S.
Hutchinson; Broken Bow. A. L. Umpel
by; Burwell. IT. H. Miles; Callaway, G.
M. -McCarger; Cosad. Bryant Howe; Elm
Creek, H. S. French: Gibson, A. Gllson;
Gothenburg. C. C. Wilson; Gandy, J. A.
Tabor; Kearney, first, R. H. Thompson:
Kearney Trinity, to be supplied; Kearney
circuit. F. C'hadwlek; Lexington. B. C.
Ncwland; Lexington circuit. R. H. Carr,
'Nathan English, assistant; Litchfield.
J. G. Jeafers; Loup City, D. A. Leeper;
Mason City, to be supplied; Merna, G. B.
Mayfield; Mullen, A. B. Shepherd: North
Loup, R. S. True; Ord, Allen Chamber
lain; Onl circuit, to be supplied; River
dale and Amherst, J. W'. Henderson;
Rosevllle, Albert Elliott: Ravenna. E. ,L.
Baker; Sargent. E, H. Maynard: Shelton,
J. R. Martin: Sumner. J. W. Crist: Wal
nut Grove, M. H. Crisler; Whitman, J.
A. Seabrooke.
North Platte District Bayard, Edmund
Thlckstun. assistant. Mar Jeffer: Bradv,
A. E. Korvler; Bertrand. C. M! McCorke);
Chappell, F. A. Shawkey; Curtis. Henry
Zlnneeker: Big Springs. X. W. Paxton;
El wood. A. H. Wrink; Gerlng. M. M.
Loiib: Grant. J. .It. Smith; Hershey, G.
E. Oltlett: Imperial. D. . M. Rlckett:
Kimball, Raymond Rush; Lewellen, J.
F. Mcabee; long Pole. J. A. . Kerr:
Mavwood. C. F. Luscher; Mitchell. F.
J. McCaffre: Miniature. O. E. Richard
son: North Platte. B. A. Cram: Ogallala.
A. J. Clifton; Palisade, Lemuel Hans
bury; Potter and Dlx, A. E. Murless;
Scottsbluff, W. C. Harper; Sidnev, E.
J. Hayes; Smlthljield, F. H. Johnson;
Stockvllle. . Alfred Chamberlain: Suther
land, J. J. Chrlstner; Wallace, P. J.
Kirk: Wautieta. C. F- Woodson; Bethel
circuit, Farnanv Harrison. Morrill.
Mnmt Zion and Highland, to be sup
plied. " , . ,
Conference evangelists: Joel Smith, and
T. W. Owem . ,
Six JlnlR4er Ordained.
v Sunday was a big day for the min
isters attending the Methodist t confer
ence. At 9 a. m. the conference held a
love feast and at 10:80 o'clock Bishop
urank M. Bristol, D. D., LL. D., deliv
ered the-sermon. At 2 p. m. six young
ministers and that number , of elders
were ordained. Memorial services for
the departed members of the conference
were heldat 3 p. m. -At T:30 . m. the
Sunday school anniversary was held. Dr.
Bartman gave the principal address. All
the pulpits In the city were filled by the
visiting ministers at the morning and
evening services.'
At the morning session Dr. H. J. Coker,
field secretary of the board of home
missions. Dr. I. Garland Penn, secretary
ot the Freedmen's Aid society; Dr. B.' F.
Ktrkbride, agent for the American Bible
society; Rev. William Esplln ' of the
Crowell home spoke. Mrs. J. - I. Mc
Laughlin, manager of the Nebraska
Methodist hospital of Omaha, reported
that more than 2,600 patients were
treated there the last year, and that
$12,000 was spent by the hospital to care
for the free patients.
"7 imz rcJ$&
All old timers who have any real rem
iniscenses ' relate how they used to
kneel down by the rock-covered spring In
the hollow near the little red country
school house and with deep drafts of the
nectar which Jupiter ought to sip placate
that burning esophageal sensation.
Undoubtedly there was never any
thlrst-slaker like that, although latter
day sports insist that Jupiter has gone 'In
for mixed drinks, spring water has fallen
Into disrepute and medical men have
pronounced the old oaken bucket a germ
laden danger.
Canned water is all the rage now.
Wonderfully complex campaigns against
the belligerent microbe have rung the
death knell of that valiant little devil.
It is the mandate of modern hygiene
and the old timers bow before the wisdom
of science, but when they visit Omaha's
schools, where bubbling sanitary foun
tains have displaced all other watering
systems they have at least one regret.
Individual drlnklns? cups are no more.
Well and good, they say, for a cup it a
nuisance, but the bubbling fountum hus
an IWonic fault. When the man of real
remlniscenses lines up with the kids at
recess to take a drink he pauses When
his turn comes at the fountain.
He stoops over and the cool water
gurgles up Into his mouth. The taste of
the water Is not bad. The trouble Is the
fountain Is not big enough, for ny man
who has cut his Initials on a bench in a
school house "some forty years ago" will
tell you that the only way to drink cave
man, old-school fashion Is to bury your
nose and half your face In the water.
And how can any kid do It In a foun
tain gushing half an Inch above the cad
of a quarter-inch, nickel-plated pipe? j
Hay den Brothers
Annual
Opening Display of Fall
'odels
M
Representative of the most recent Creations
of the leading
Paris Model Houses
Showing Original Importations and
American Modifications in
Evening Gowns and Fine Dresses
You are Cordially Invited to View this Display
September 17th and 18th.
On Second Floor
RAIN MARS ClfflGYS' MARCH
Parade of Catholics at Eucharistic
Congress Held at Vienna.
MEDIEVAL POMP IN EVIDENCE
Emperor Takes Part tn State Coach
md Prelates In Line In Glided
Carriages of Olden
Times. '
Trotters and Pacers
Race at Sioux City
SIOUX CITY, la,, Sept. 16.-The new
niair-mlie track at the Interstate fair
grounds was opened for the first time
here today. Rain Saturday and Sunday
made thetrack spongy and the time was
slow, t took five heats to decide the 2.20
trot, which went to Hishland Twist.
Frank Clayton won the 2:14 trot 1n
straight heats after losing the first to
Axlon. Summaries:
2:20 pace, purse $500: Highland Twist
first. Cover second, Dakota Prtncethlrd.
Best time: 2:19.
Best trot, purse $500: Frank Clayton
first, Axlon second, Jim O'Shay third.
Best time: 2:2H4. .
Runninp, four furlongs, I and 3-year-olds,
purse $100: Little Jake first, Jack
Lamar second, Eddie Fitzgerald third.
Time: :5244. Golden Thought and Sail
Home also ran.
NEWS NOTES OF PAWNEE
ANDJPAWNEE COUNTY
PAWNEE CITY. Neb., Sept. l.-(SDe.
cial.) Several officials of the Rnrllnirtnn
railroad were In town yesterday confer
ring with the citisens and business men
about widening the road underneath the
Burlington bridge on the west side of
town.
Several farmers in this vicinity are
having trouble with their hogs, large
numbers of them dying from cholera.
Changing the high school from the old
building to the present location has not
bettered the crowded condition. Two
hundred and twenty' are enrolled in the
high school, and as the assembly room
will not hold them all a few are com
pelled to sit in one of the class rooms.
Only two of the high school teachers of
last year returned this year, the new ones
being: Mr, Gilbert, mathematics; Miss
Hessler, Latin; Miss Osbprn, German;
Miss Harmon, English, and the new su
perintendent, Mr. Clark. The high school
dismisses this year at 3:30.
The Rock Island railroad has been do
ing some .rnucn needed repairing on IRK
track in this vicinity. For the last sev
eral weeks a bank leveler and a steam
shovel have been employed to grade and
ballast It. , .
H H Ui-iV M HUB B'7
19
The Crlglna! and Genuine
MALTED IV9ILK
The Food-drink far All Ages.
At restaurants, hotels, and fountains.
Delicious, invigorating and sustaining.
Keep 'A on your sideboard at home.
Don't travel without it. .
A quick hutch prepared in a minute.
Take no imitation. Just say "HORHCX'S."
Uot in Any FJIiik Tiu&4
1 VfVfjrif I
NOTES FROM WEST POINT
AND ADAMS COUNTY
WEST; POINT, Neb., Sept. l.-Spel
clal.) The annua mlss'.owfest at St
Paul's German Lutheran church at West
Point was held Sunday. At the morning
servtices Rev. George Weller, president
of the German Lutheran seminary at
Seward, delivered the sermon; in the
afternoort Rev. Mr. Martin of Stanton
preached, and in the evening Rev. Mr.
Krause of Fremont filled the pulpit
Large audiences were present at each of
these services,
The usual Sunday biue rock shoot of
the Buffalo Gun club took place at the
farm home of Peter Nelson, in the pre
ence of a large company of sportsmen.
One twenty-five-bird event was shot for,
with the following results: ,' Earl Keri,
the champion shot of the county, scored
19 points, followed by J. Bleimelster with
18; Charles Belter, G. Haeffelln, J. Albers
and Julius Radebaoh'each scoring 17.
Four young men of Cuming county,
studying for the priesthood,- have re-
turned to their respective colleges,' They
are: Ferdinand Mock, to Joseph num col-
Wege, Columbus, O.; Joseph Gocken, to St.
Pio Nona college, St. Francis, Wis., nnd
Jocph and John Paschang to the College
of Conception. Missouri. -
---t nanrh to Have Dank.'
FAIRFIELD, Neb., Sept 16.-(8peclal.)
The Farmers and Merchants bank of
this city is erecting a building at Spring
Ranch and within two weeks will install
a strictly upto-date bank. : .
viii-iWNA, Sept. 18.-The brilliance of
the great procession concluding the
Twenty-third Eucharistic congress today
was marred by a continuous downpour of
rain and chilly temperature. From 7
o'clock in the morning until 1 in the after
noon, when the emperor followed the
papal legate, Cardinal Van Rossum, with
the host through the Burgtor, rain fell
unremittingly, drencWng many thousands
walking in the procession as well as thou
sands of spectators along the route.
Parts of the parade showed little but
lines of umbrellas, beneath which tram
pled Catholic societies, clergy, venerable
bishops in full canonicals nd others,
through mud ankle deep and under such
conditions that it was Impossible to hold
the celebration of mass in the open air!
on the top of the Burgtor court. j
The procession simply passed through
the Helden-Platz from the Rlng-Strasse
Into the Inner court of the Hofburg, where
the papal legate, the cardinals, the em
peror and Archduke Franc Ferdinand
1 entered the Hofburg- chapel and deppslted
the host Vast crowds lined the route
from the cathedral of St. Stephen to the
Hofburg, standing patiently for hours for
the procession to pass.
The city was early astir for the crown
ing feature of the Eucharistic congress,
the people beginning to .gather for the
first part of the procession before 6
o'clock. Several hundred marshals ar
ranged the various groups and the pro
cession began to move an hour or two
later. Only men and youths were per
mitted to participate, ' Along the spacious
Rlng-Strasse the houses were decked
with" flags and the route was lined with
troops. 1 ; ,
The miners from Tyrol in quaint cos
tume headed the procession, and were
followed closely by the bakers' guild from
Munster in picturesque attire. -Then came
the various Catholic societies and the
representatives from foreign countries In
national groups, Including Belgium, Ba
varia,' s England, France, Switzerland;
Spain, Albania, Hungary, Croatia and
Bosnia. The four groups last named
wore grotesquely colored peasant cos
tumes. "
Clergy and Bishops. J
The second division was composed of
the olergy and bishops and civil author
ities to the number of 10,000. It was
headed by the - seminarians, and these
were followed by members of the Relch
scrath, provincial diets and the city coun
oll of Vienna and government and muni
cipal officials. The clergy to the number
of 8,000 were In full vestments. :
The court division, a mile and a quarter
In length, formed the last part of the
procession. The emperor drove in a
magnificent state coach of plate glass
and gold, drawn by eight horses, led by
grooms in black and gold liveries, from
the Hofburg to the cathedral to attend
the removal of the host from the high
altar to trie state coach of the papal
legate. Privy councillors and the highest
officials of the court and empire went
first 1n court carriages, and then the
archbishops and cardinals.
The cardinal archbishop of Olmuts,. one
of the wealthiest of the Austrian sees,
drove in a splendid golden wagon built
in the reign of Maria Theresa. It was
drawn by six horses brought from 01
mut for the occasion.
Following these dignitaries came the
archduke in state coaches, and last of alt
the emperor. Behind the monarch rode
the most striking figure in the whole
procession, the papal legate, Cardinal
Van Rossum, bearing the host. His car
riage was a ponderous gilded affair spe
cially built for the empress Maria
Theresa.. The monstrance containing the
sacred elements was one of the most
costly specimens of church plate in th
empire.
ALLEN ON THE WAY HOME
Virginia Court House Murderen Go
Through Cincinnati.
MI33 IB.0LER IN THE PASTY
All Denr that Glr Gave Clue to
Whereabouts of M(.n Wllllng-ly
Detectives Explain How the
Trick Was Turned.
MOOSE QUESTION COMES UP
OVER RUNNING NEWSPAPER
GREENSBORO, N. C, Sept 16.-
Whether or not a newspaper Incorporated
under the state laws "for the purpose of
promoting republican doctrine and
espousing the candidates of that party"
has a right to land its editorial support
and influence to the Roosevelt and John
son ticket Is to be determined In the
North Carolina courts.
The first step In the litigation, will be
taken here tomorrow when a minority of
the stockholders of the State Dispatch of
Burlington, N. C, will petition judge
Whedbee to restrain the majority stock
holders and the editor of the paper from
publishing editorials or articles support
ing the national progressive cause.
Snrjirlse on Manager I.anK.
Andrew Lang, manager of the Snauld
ings. Is displaying a pennant In orangf
nnd black, the club colors. He has beer,
its owner since Saturday night when the
members of the base ball team gathered
at his home and gave him a little sur
prise. During the evening It was decided
to start the club dances soon and con
tinue them during the winter.
Political Notes
A committee of 100 Sioux Falls cltliens,
nonpartisan, was appointed to go to flloux
City on Tuesday to escort Governor
Woodrow Wilson to Sioux Falls.
Sco Eczema
Vanish! Geo
. Blotches Ho!
Cost! Ton Only 25o to Try ZIM0 and
Prove What a Wonder It Eeally Ii.
Apply a little ZEMO a few timet on
those ecieaa aerea. that nothing else
you have eve tried has benefited and
la a few days those very sores will be
rn"Jmoiu.tel3r on! There's no
Soubt about It, a trial of 2EMO proves
t positively There will not be a spot
left, the skin will be as smooth and
Jlear aa thougrh you never had eczema
tn your life. No remedy la recent years
bai enjoyed suoh a salo, because you can
Jnnk on 1W and everybody knows It that
lias tried It.
If you have dandruff, there's another
snance to prove how wonderful ZEMO
Dandruff is eczema of the scalp.
That! why ZEMO positively stops it
To make It easy for any man or
woman to prove what It will do in
:uring eczema, Itching, inflamed or ir
ritated skin, dandruff, blotches, pim
ples, cut and sores, and to ret a real
mrprlse, your druggist will supply yon
frith a afrcrat bottle. Then, when you
iave "seen for yourself, "at small cost,
set a $1 bottle which contains six
.lines aa much as the 25-cent bottle.
ZEMO Is told In 25-cent and fl hot
Bee at drug stores, or sent direct, on
receipt of price, by E. W. Rose Medl
lne Co., St. ixmis, Mo.
ZEMO is sold in Omaha and guaran
teed by Sherman & McConnell Drug Co.,
Cor. 18th nnd Dodge, lth and Harney,
J4th and Farnam Sts.; Loyal Pharmacy,
i07- No. 16th St
CINCINNATI. ; O., Sept 16.-Hand
cuffed, guarded by three stalwart detec
tives and aocompanled by the girl, who
unconsciously gave the police the clue
to their hiding place, .Sldna Allen and his
nephew, Wesley Edwards, who took part
in the shooting up of the court at Hills
Mile, Va,, on March It last, arrived here
tonight from Des Moines on their way
back to the scene of the crime.
Their trip to this city from. Des Moines,
where they were captured yesterday
proved uneventful. Chief of Detectives
Baldwin said the prisoners were Ideal In
behavior and In , far from a dejected
frame of mind. With the exception of
Miss Maude Iroler, whose love for Wes
ley Edwards led the detectives to his
hiding place, the entire party , apparently
relished their food and even the ex
changing of jokes was not Infrequent on
the trip. . .
The younger of the two prisoners as
well as the girl herself were solicitous
in having a rumor denied that she had
deliberately betrayed her . sweetheart
Wesley Edwards. Detective Baldwin cor
roborated their statements and told the
story of the events leading up to the
capture to prove that the girl was no
traitor to her lover. '
He stated that, when Edwards left
Mount Airy, ' N. C, the girl's- home, he
had left C0 with her to be used to Join
him when he was safely secreted. The
money was stolen and then replaced and
in ' this manner Miss Iroler's father
learned of it Detective Baldwin said he
had two ef his men working on the
Iroler farm and in this way learned of a
correspondence between the' girl and Ed
wards. ' .
"The remainder Is easy," snld Baldwin.
"We watched her. When Kho left, these
two men, Lucas and Monday, followtd
her and I was right behind them, on the
next train. You. know the stoiy of the
arrest and that is all there is to it."
The party took supper In this city and
left for Roanoke, Va., at 8 o'clock to
night over the Norfolk & Western rail
road, expecting to -arrive there tomor
row at noon.
With the exception of desiring to cor
reot the statement concerning Miss Iroler,
neither Edwards nor Allen would talk to
night confining their conversation to
"It's too warm to talk."
Haadenffa on an Allen.
CHICAGO, Sept. 16. "All the trouble in
Virginia was caused by a deputy sheriff
who Insisted on putting handcuffs on an
Allen," said Sldna Allen today during a j
brief stay in Chicago en route from Des j
Moines east In company with Wesley Ed
waida and Mls Maud Iroler.
The trio were In custody of Chief of
Detectives Balwln, who said bis prisoners
had been well behaved since leaving
Iowa. , ,
Sidna Allen laid the capture to the fact
that Edwards, his nephew, had insisted
on going to visit Mies Iroler at her home
In Mount Airy, N. C.
"I told that boy he would gt in trouble
and we both would be caught, hut he
just naturally would go," said Allen.
"We could have lived in Iowa the rest
of our lives If he had not been In love
with Maud."
Allen talked of his wanderings with his
nephew througn the Virginia mountains
and In Kentucky and Missouri. He in
dignantly denied that he and Edwards
were outlaws. '
"I never saw an outlaw until we got
away from home," Allen said, "In Vir
ginia we don't have locks on our doors
and nobody ever thinks of anybody doing
any barm. But during our travels we
saw a number of persons who would kill
a man for a dollar."
He referred to the assault on a deputy
sheriff for which Floyd Allen was tried
by Judge Maaslo - when the judge was
shot.
"The deputy for spite put handcuffs on
Wesley Edwards and his cousin," said
Allen. "It was the first time handcuffs
ever were on an Allen and It made us
all wild. That was what caused all the
trouble."
"Aunt Delia" Gives
Birthday Party for
. Nephew "Will" Taft
MILL.BURY, Masa. Sept 18,-MJss Delia
Torrey gave a party today In honor of
her nephew, "Will" Taft The president
was 5S years old today and- he was the
guest ot honor, but Mrs. Taft Miss Helen
Taft and C. P, Taft, the president's
brother, Rnd Mrs, C. P. Taft wore present
"Aunt" Delia had plenty of apple pie,
such a the president was fond of when
he went to school n Mlllbury, but there
were many other things to accompany a
perfectly good birthday party. The presi
dent went to church In the morning with
Miss Torrey, took her for a motor ride
In the afternoon end started baok for
Beverly with all the guests later in the
day.
FREMONT MAN ARRESTED
ON CHARGE OF FORGERY
FREMONT, Neb., Sept 16,-(8pedal.)-
Otto von Gnmmlngen, who lias been
driving the United States mall wagon
between the Union depot and the post-
office while the regular driver was tak
ing a vacation. Is thought by the officers
to be responsible for some mall disap
pearing from the postofflce. Iftist week
he went to a creamery office with a
check payable to William McCready and,
representing himself to be a son of Mc
Cready, asked to have It cashed. A num
ber of other checks sent through the
mall by the same concern to their cue.
toiners were traced to him, and late last
night a warrant was Issued for his ar
rest on the ground of-forging an en
dorsement to the McCready check.
BEWARE OF ME PENNANTS
Presidential Campaign Pennants Are
Not of the Eight Colors.
COLORS SAME AS THE COLLEGES'
Colors on Pennants Shoald Corre
spond with Collea-e Color from
Which the Candidate la
Gradnate.
Pennant salesmen who have attempted
to sell pennants in Omaha for the presi
dential campaign have experienced some
difficulty in not having their colors prop
erly arranged to correspond with the
standard colors of the colleges from
which their candidates were graduated.
It happens this year that the three can
didates respectively represent the three
most important universities of the east.
The college Idea has been carried out in
the east in the manufacture of Taft Wil
son and RooBevelt pennants.
The Standard Pennant.
The Taft pennants to be standard must
be white on a field of blue to represent
the colors of Tale, the college of which
the president Is a graduate.
The Wilson colors to be acceptable must
be orange and black to represent Prince-;
ton, the college of which the democratlo
candidate Is president emeritus.
The Roosevelt colors in order to repre
sent the colonel's alma mater, Harvard,
must be white on a field of dull crimson
Tet a pennant agent had the nerve to
walk into republican headquarters In
Omaha and try to sejl Taft pennants in
all colors from orance and b:ack to white
and crimson. He was told there was
nothing doing until he learned the color
of the candidates and made his pennant
conform, .
A Song of Pabst
"Blue Ribbon" Beer
" 'T is a drink for the gods," and my sweet ladye fayre,
Raised a glass to her ripe, rosy lips, '
And honeybee-like, on a hollyhock spike
She daintily sips and sips: ! V
"I drink to your health, to joy and to wealth,
To years of delight and of cheer;
And to this I drink, bid your glasses to clink, V;
To PABST FAMOUS 'BLUE RIBBON' BEER."
The Glad Hand
Is seen when liver inaction and bowel
stoppage flies before Dr. King's New Life
Pills, the easy regulators. 28c. For sale
by Beaton Drug Co.
The Persistent and Judicious Use of
Newspaper Advertising is . the Road to
Buelness Success. , ..
Odd Fellows In Seealon. -
WINNIPEG. Man.. Sent. 15.-Twelv
thousand delegates to the sovereign grand
lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fel
lows, which opens here tomorrow, lmv.
already arrived. Thy are here from all
parts of the United States and Canada.
(ml J i
"As water that springs from the hillside and sings,
And laughs its way down to the glade,
just as pure this beer, so drink without fear,
For 't Is best the world ever made.
'T is science, and art, 't is conscience, the heart,
With nothing to shun nor to fear, .
Drink once more to my toast, the Nation's great boast.
PABST FAMOUS 'BLUE RIBBON' BEER."
Bottled only at the brewery In crystal clear bottles,
showing at a glance that it is clean and pure.
Don't forget to order a case today phone or write.
The Pabst Company,
Phones Douglas T9, A 1479
- - Leiwnwortb. Omaha. Nebt