Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 02, 1915, Page 3, Image 3

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    niK nr.K: om.ui.v 'rrnsii.w. maim it t n t r.
Bringing Up Father
m
Copyright Iiitarnatlooa)
Saw Sarvioa,
Drawn for The Bee by George McManus
BY COLLY -t
LOCKED
ME COAT-TAIL
THE SAFE -
WHAT AM I
"lO DO?
'
CeVTT IT
HOME: ONLEbb
I TAKE TH
"bAf'E WITH Mf
I LL DO T !
6 c"
'A4
MACC4IE
WILL KNOW
VMAT TO DO '
, v 111 Y'
DARlN' - Me
COVr CAUGHT
IM TMF bAVF!
VAEAVEM.'
V'E HAVE TO ET
The dook
blown off
r
WHY -FATHER - TOO
SLLr THN - JUST
'AKE OU COAT
ERTA1HLV- I
IT-b A, OOD
THIN ed WE
HAVE A
daughter:
SIX STATE LEAGUE
CLUBS TO PAY COIN
No Forfeit Money Received, but Six
Clubs Send Assurances to
President Miles.
YORK AND KEARNEY DROP OUT
LICENSE TO HUNT MOOSE !
COSTS HUNDRED DOLLARS.
HIRTH PRESENTS
r-
, RAILROAD CASE
Missouri Editor, in Address to Hast
ings Commercial Club Discusses
Proposed Rate Raise.
HASTINGS, Neb., March 1. (Special
Telegram.) President Miles lias received
assurances from six clubs thai their for
fait money for membership In the Stat
Hose Ball league Is either in transit or
will be sent Immediately. The towns are:
(.rand Island, Columbus, Fatrbury, Nor
folk, Beatrice and Hastings.
The. Columbus management has not I
ben heard from directly In regard to
the deposit, but a club manager has been
employed there and all preparations are
being made to continue in the league.
Kearney anil York have dropped out.
iconic of the clubs favor limiting the cir
cuit to the six towns which have quali
fied. Hut Aurora has made inquiries rel
ative to a franchise and if that town
.loins the league there will be a vacancy
for an eighth club.
This is the last day for the depositing
of the club forfeit of but as several
lays' grace is allowed, the money may
not all bo In until the middle of the week.
In a few days 11 will be decided whether
to continue with six club or admit two
new. towns.
IT' UP TO THE PEOPLE;
Reed Favors Links,
Says Hastings Man
CIIKV F.NNK, Wyo.. March 1. -(Special. 1
Governor Kendrick by signing the game
and fls'.i si t Hissed by the recent Wyo
ming legislature has made It unnecessary
for big game hunters who desire to bag
a moose to go to the wilds of Canada.
The new law qualifies the closed season
on Wvomtns moose which lias been In
effect for several years by providing that j
fiftv moose may be killed In this state iPUTS
each year. Hunters desiring to' kill a j
moose must procure special license cost- HASTINGS. Neb., March 1 (Special
ing ln and must do their killing under Telegram.) William lllrth of Columbia.!
the eye of the state game warden, or I Mo., editor of the Missouri Farnio-, sd
that of a deputy warden assigned to su-1 dressed a large body ot representative;
perlntend the hunting of the animal. The ! business men .t the 'onimcriial clubs!
Thoroughfare district of Park county Is 'lunch today on general business eondl-1
the only section In which moose may he thins and their relation to railroad In- 1
killed, and only hull may be killed. All Uresis. He defended the railroads' pica ,
expenses incidental to the attendance of j fur the right to raise passenger fares
an official at the killing must be borne j from 2 to i' cents in Nebraska. K. N
hy the hunter, which means that the bag- Clarke, president of the Commercial club,
glng of a moose in Wyoming will be a ; presided at the meeting, which maul
right expensive pastime. ' 1 frsted a friendly feeling tor the speaker;
jand the railroads. A large number ol ;
RACE HORSES WILL BE ! Hastings business men have signed a PC-j
Cfll n AT CUCQirr'C CAI C Uttion urging the legislative not to enact ;
OULU A I in-HIrr O OftLC nny nfalr antl-rallroad measures, and.
also that the railroads be accorded a full
BF.ATRICB, Neb.. March 1. -(Special.- j ,,,d far bearing.
Kleven h-nd of rue- h"rs belonging tot ..A1 tUH railroads are nsklng for at,
I, N. and K. C. Miller, former proprietors j this time is simply a fair hearing," said ;
at
FIGURES IN THE ALLEGED PASSPORT PLOT
Richard P. Stegler, German reservist, prompted by his
American girl bride, is said to have confessed his part in
a plot to traffic in United States passports to Germany.
Documents foiind in his possession bear the signature of
Captain R. Boy-Ed, naval attache of the German embassy
in Washington.
BOARD OF TRADE WALL WEAK
South Wall Bulging Out Already,
Delare Directors of Wrecked
Building.
SETTLE QUESTION TUESDAY
Mr. Hirt h. "The Interstate Cnmmcrcr
rommlsslnn told the president of the
American railways to carry their case t
I the people, t i discuss It in the forum of
of the Touzalin hotel, will be sold next
Thursday afternoon near Wymore at auc
tion In order to reimburse the First Na
tional bank of Clarks, Neb., for money
advanced ly the vmnk. The nanli noma .public expression, and that Is precisely-
tvin chattel mortgages given hy Miller I 1at n0 alr attempting to do. W e are liv- !
and his wife, anil It Is to satisfy these j nsc n xc pra of j,,, t, proi,,. rule, and.
claims that horses, raring carts, etc., e are now assuming that the people are ;
were levied upon. Sonic of the horse . the ones to pass upon our case. There-'!
have established rcords on the track' fore we are here prerrnting it to thi-m, i
and are known as Neetle Woolsey. I.adyjand we know they will hear iij fairly.
.Maude Miller. Katie C. Miller. Tanner "American busineog is fairly In the p j
UASTINTiK Vnh Mirr-li 1 iSnei-lnl 'ollller. 1 od OolSCV, lUldll USUI. . Lil'irlh. 1 Kit Inn of a. Iiutli.nl lir l.u. I,..n 1
Telegram. I Conch Schlssl-r of Hastings an ''H Carfrey. . . . pelled to take the medicine of a dime-.,
High school tudayr profited to Guy 14. i ' jdifferent doctors, each doctor Innistiug;
Iteed at Lincoln against the arrangement ! STt JOE TRADES M'DONALD lhat lie shall gulp down lili particu.ar
m' the qualifying round of til" stale bus- iinfsii -mrU Triii hlnl of ni strum. As a result we arc Iti
ket ball loiirnamcnt. ullcging disc rlmlua- 10 JACKSON. ItllCH TEAM the throes of an industrial nausea. i
tions in favor of the pairing
as against Hastings. Omaha
of Lincoln ;
and otltci i
contenders for the rhntnpl mshlp.
Marty 6'Toole Will
Play with Columbus
i
COI.CMni'S, O., March 1. -Marty j
O Toole, plti'her, formerly with the Pitts'-
burgh Nationals, signed a contract totluyi
to play with the Columbus American assn-j
iation ti am the coming season, accord-1
ing to a mesrasc from South Framing-
ham, Mass., where Man ,;er Qtilnn signed j
o'Toole. He will he considered part pay
lor
I
ST. JoSF.PIl, Mo.. March l.- T.ynn Mc- i
j Ponald, pitcher of the St. Joseph Western
I leage base bull lub, has be-n traded to
; the JacI:.io:i .!ub of the Southern Mlchl-
r.nn league for IJjtn Hrown, outfielder,
! aci ordlng to in announcement today by
Jack Holland, owner of the local team.
ADJUTANT GENERAL ISSUES
BULLETIN FOR DEPARTMENT
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN. March 1. (Special.) V short
four-page bulletin, full of snappy news
Ilinchman and Gerber, sold to the , and items of Interest tothe citizen sol-
i dlery of the state, Is being issued by Ad
jutant General Hall under the title of
the "Nebraska National Guard." The
first edition, bulletin No. 1, Is Just off tha
presses.
It will be Issued from time to time,
possibly monthly. Its aim is to keep up
the interest of the members of the guard
in their organization.
Pittsburgh club last fall.
TWENTY CUBS BEGIN
THEIR SPRING TRAINING
TAMPA, Fla., March 1. Twenty mem
bers of the Chicago Nationals begun to
day their spring training here. Other
players are expected late today.
The Cubs will meet the Philadelphia
Nationals at St. Petersburg, March 8, in !
i
b S Many Keel Tired.
"Spilng fever" usually is the result of
their first practice game of the season. J sluggish bowels and torpid liver. After now they pay 11.81
Investment Are l)lcre,llle,l.
-'eeuritles and Investments genera'.Iv
aro dlsi redited. lri!e men by the thou?- ,
amis abound In every large center or !
population, and progress and expansion'
everywhere Is at a standstill, and In Cici
meantime the banks are filled with mil-;
lions of capital, which is afraid to ven- j
tore out upon an uncertain' ;ind tem
pestuous financial sea. Surely It is time'
lor political specialists ami quack doc- !
tori to give us a little rest, for upon this;
depends whether they will have a patient ;
to practice and expeilment on In the
; future." j
Touching the railroad situeti in, Mr.
Hlrth showed that the railroads o. the I
country pay out for labor almost 5(1 cent!
ot every dollar they earn. He showed
that It now costs practically double to
operate a railroad what It cost a few
years ago. For Instance, in the mutter
of increased pay to employes, he showed
that In fourteen years the pay of en-1
glneert had Increased 5 per cent, fire-'
men, 64 per cent; conductors, 45 per rent;
ordinary trainmen, 70 per cent, with i
similar increases all along the line. The
same, la true of supplier and equipment.
in law railroads paid $1.44 a ton for coal.
i I'M' ill 1 '
i A If If
v h " ' j- t-"vi
? ,.:.;- n -v rL , , V - i
The south wall of the eld Hoard ot
Trade building, recently gutted by fire.
Is beginning to bulge out. and In the
opinion of Mockholdera and dlrcetoia of
the holding company, the walls will soon
begin to crack more and more If not
torn down.
C. W. Hull Coal company, the last of
1 the tenants to leave the wreck, has Just
i taken up temporary quarters on the third
linor of the Omaha National Hank build
ing. Hull was the last man to hold im
o his locution on (be first floor and de
clare that the building was habltabln and
that he should he allowed to remain
until the termination of Ills lease.
"There is snow In the building now
from the recent t-Torm, snd when that
begins lo thaw, or when the first rain
ciiincs. the whole building will be soaked."
Hiiid I-:. M MorHinan, chairman of the
bniiiil of illicilor of the owners of the
htilMIhg. It would be Impossible for any
one to in.ilntHin offices anywhere In the
building when that happens. The south
wall Is bulging out now, and I predict
that as soon an warm weather comes
other walls will begin to show weakneKs
and cracks w ill appear every where."
Mr. Moisiiinn says the Insurance mat
ters are not adjusted yet. but that he
unilir.stanils the mi lous tenants are get
ting their Ini.hiiliial Insurances adjusted
In good shape, lie believes that this will
all precede the adjustment of the Insur
ance on the building itself.
The city council Is to hold a meeting
Tuesday morning, at which time anyone
Piterehteil in snxing the oid building and
JlmWiig It rcp.ilre.l Is to appear to show
cause why the entire building should not
be condemned.
plajcd a fast mime considering the small
floor. (Ynlral city bud the uilsfort mm
t be without two of Its flar men. Grl"c.
forward, and Captain Morrow, unbr.
The scute was III to 14.
ENTENTE STUDIES
AMERICAN PROPOSAL
(Continued from Page One.)
eis of the vessel it sinks; Its methods of
warfare are. therefore, entirely otilside
the scone ol any of the International in
struments regulating operations against
commerce in time of war.
"The German declaration substitutes
Indiscriminate destruction for regula'el
capture. Germany Is adopting these,
methods against peaceliil traders and non
combatant crews with the avowed object
of preventing commodities of all kinds.
Including food fur the civil po illation.
from reaching or leaving the Hrltlsh
Isles or northern France.
"Her opponents are, therefore, driven
lo frame retaliatory measures In order In
their turn l prevent commodities of any
kind from reaching or leaving Germany.
These incsriiires will, however, be en
forced by the Krltlsh and French gov
ernments wltcout risk to neutral shir"
or to neutral or nnncombatant life and
in strict observance of the dictates of
humanity.
"The Hrlllsh and French governments
will, therefore, hold themselves free lo
detain anil take Into port ships ca.rrvlng'
goods of presumed enemy destinations,
ownership or origin. It Is not Intened to
confiscate sin h vessels or cargoes unless
they woul otherwise be liable to condem
nation. The treatment of vessels and
i h rums which have sailed before this
date will not be affected."
CHICAGO GRAND OPERA
COMPANY BANKRUPT
WIFE OF STEGLER
CIIIrjO Mar-h I.-TI.e PliLage,
Grand Opera company filed a voluntary
petition in bankrupt. y today scheitullm;
liabilities of $'i.,4i0 and assets of $'M,r
in rxTfl 111 1 f Firv I pennon incnnii-ii ten typewritten
IS UlSuHnKutjU ' I1"""" of n,lni s of signers to whom the
j roMpoiiy Is Indebted. Lack of attendance
j at the o,eras presented by the company
iCoiitiiiiled from Pa e One I was given as one of the contributing
i i J
Blood Remedy
Sustains World
months Indoors, you arc not likely to
j leel vigorous and sprightly. Foley
Cathartic Tablets are "worth their weight
i in gold" for that overfull feeling, bilious
ness, gas on the stomach, bad breath, in
digestion or constipation. Their action is
.quick, comfortable and com;ilet without
ties.
Then thev paid US
they pay J2 cents I
I nausea or griping. Stout people say they
Myriad Have Learned of ItaRe- 'e .1 l.lesslng.-Sold everywhere.-Adver-
markable Curative Value.
HYMENEAL
cents for
snd up.
Nebraska Railroads Lose Money.
He pointed out that in Nebraska for the
imai year mi the Missouri Pacific j
actually lost more than $150,000 on its
total Nehisska business, and that the St.!
Joseph Grand Island sustained an i
actual operating loss of more than V.br
In Nebraska. Coming- down to the ques
tion of 2'i-cent passenger fare for Ne
braska. Mr. Ilirth cited the action of
former Governor Hughes of New York,
who. four years ago, vetoed a 2-cent pas
senger luw for that state on the ground
that it was Arbitrary and uid not give
lair consideration to the railroad inur-
ENGLAND CLOSES
TEUTON PORTS TO
REST OF WORLD
(Continued from Page One.)
Illlls-Rellamr.
FAIUBITIY, Neb.. March l.-(Specal. i
Cards have been received In Falrbury
announcing the marriage of Miss lona eata. "If the state f New- r-i.
I!' "alnv' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wll- density of population of 24 to the square
Ham Hellamy of Omaha, and ICImer I lilts , mile, cannot produce fair returns to the
or Caldwell, Idaho. The wedding took I railmnds on 2 cents a mile, how can the
place at Salt Lake City on Saturday, j state of Nebraska with sixteen persons
P.h.llfi.v IM Tit. nnui.l. ...Ill V. I I A . k . .
" i vuH,t ,mi m i iiumr i'j m- square nine ne expected to do It
From the Tory fact that S. 8. 8., the after April 1. The bride Is a graduate
famous blood purifier Is a natural medl- f h. Omaha Hlarh sehnnt .n.i i-,,iv-.
ral' " 11 rj. . V?r 'y ' Chicago and taught In the Fair-,S1: Ohio, with
give up mercury and other dangerous
Af- i hury High sc hool until February 1, 1916.
drties. llatilt Is a strange mister.
flirted people use merc-iiy with a blind The groom was principal of the Falrbury
force of hahlt. Not warnrd by the rheu- i school for two years. He is now prae.
matlsm they see all around tbem. tin- I til.lng )aw at Caldwell,
mindful of the locomotor ataxia, partly-
sis and other dreaded results of mineral t Moore- nderaon.
poisoning, they cllug to the fast dlsap- ; Miss Myrtle M. Anderson of Viliaca,
pearlng treatment so surely and positive- la., daughter of William Anderson, and
ly being replaced by
tbe light strike
he asked. "There is Massachusetts, with
441 to the square mile; Pennsylvania, with
not one of which has
a i-cent rate, but here comes Nebraska,
with its sixteen persons to the square
mile Insisting on 2 cents as compensatory.
Twenty Million. In Waaes.
"Nebraska railroads last year employed
IW.iat men and women In this state at an
ggregate wago of over jn.0(Jo,000 and this
i bT k' ' bK"i "fbThr 'Mr T,,om" w- M"" of Republic. Kan., I money did its full share to create p,f
1!.D' psn.ee. for ailblood 'rt b '"'" Saddle ItaMe markets for Nebraska produ. ts and
poses of the liardancUta' operations any
weaken nis of the guard fleet. The enter
prise wii.t carefully conceived with
political ami economic objects."
The premier said that the operations
against Turkey uir:iin illustrated tho
i lose c o-oiei ."' ion among the allies.
French .uy Is I'l-nlceil.
The premier referred to the "plenilld
contingent of the Fr-mil navy which
shares the gloiv and hnrards of the i n-
terpiiH4.V 'i'lieji-trduiu lies operation also
uVmoiikt rated, lie s.iid, the copiousness
and variety of Hrltish naval resources.
The Queen Fllzaheth was Great llrltaln'n
newest super dreadnaught, with h power
of range never before known, while at
its side waa the Agamemnon, the prede
cessor of the dreadnaught.
Referring to the new credit nicasura
which the government presented, Mr. As
quith said:
"The government is making this largo
pec. unary demand with the full convic
tion that after saeven months of war the
j country and the empire are every whit a.i
i determined as ever If needs be at a cost
I of all we can command in men and
As
which they have brought about, Mr
quith said:
i mav sav that the suggestion that
has been put forth from German quar
ters that we have i-J i-tcd c ertain pro
posals muiln to two powi-is by the Cnited
States Im untrue. All ve have stated to
the Culled States so far Is Hint we have
taken this matter Into cai'eful considera
tion in consultation with our aliu s.
"I shall hate to use some very plain
language. Il did not oenie upon us aa a
surprise that war has In en c urried on by
Germany with svslem-.llc violation- of
all the conventions and regulations under
which by int.-inallonal agreement it waa
thought to mitigate warfare. It lias now
taken a further step by organizing an
under-sea campaign of plrary and pillage."
Part of Garrison
of Prague Revolts
PA Kf March 1 The correspondent at
Kucharest, Itoiunaiiiu. of the Havas
agency, has :it a telegram repeating
the report that the Li'sMun had re
oi Copied Kolnmca, in Onliu'ia. and that
tliry were investing Stanlslau. Kolomea
was token after a fierce fight on Wed
nesday, February 2A.
"The Ninety first Czech rcgument," the
1 lavas correspondent continues, in gar'-
rlson at Prague, mutinied and Killed Its
the two men had tried to disrobe, her. 1 1 "uses,
At no time, she testified, was she hikI ! -Matiiket
alone. She c haracterized the j
c harge against her as " Iranie up.
In discharging the complaint against
her, the magistrate said he would be In
clined to send MHtelket and his male
comi'antoli to the workhouse If the tetl
nony concerning their alleged attempt:
to disrobe Mis. Stegler were, morel
definite. j
Men 4'nrr- Mtiltrnaea.
At the Grenoble hotel It was learned ,
that the woman who doacrllicd herself as :
Mrs. Stegler and Matiiket came to the
hotel shout 9 o'clock Sunday night. They
were accompanied by another young
man and woman.
Roth men carried suit rases, which, ac
cording to the hotel people, they guarded
carefully, even refusing to allow bell
bnya to carry them to adjoining, rooms
whii h were assigned to tho couples.
About 1 o'clock this morning a call for
the police came from the room In which
Matelket had been assigned, and when
Detective Burgess arrived he was asked
bv the man to arrest his companion.
He charged that the woman had thrown
a seltzer bottle- at him, but that he had
dodged It, and that the woman had then
beaten him over'the head with a cane. j
According u the police, Matelket .
shoAtied no sign of the trouble, but the
police had to rntertaln the complaint and
they locked the woman up. Detective
llurgea. says the woman waa fully
clothed when he entered the room.
Mra. Stealer Alleges Trap,
The young woman who claims to r
Mrs. Anetto Stegler, according to the po
lice, told the police matron that she con
sidered she had been trapped. Hhe said
that a friend, Anna Hoffman by name,
had called her up by telephone and made
an appointment to meet her In the even
ing, aa she had something important to
communicate. When they met her woman
friend waa accompanied by two well
dressed young men, who Invited her Into
their automobile, and later, she aays, they
went to the hotel for dinner.
It was later when Matelketlt, it is
stated, began questioning her regarding
the passport fraud case that the row I
coming tbe world pan.
troubW-t because It Is welcome to a we.lt
stomach, is taken naturally Into the
blood, I. a wave of purifying Influence
known by Its remarkable ruratire results,
IDd Is the standby of a host of people.
it goes into the blood and remains a strong
... .... . i. t.i. I
our sny " effect V.. U.V of. i . " ' ' "es.ow. upon
nurelr cleansing nrooerty. I
It la the most universally recom- ilia peculiar to her aex. The flashing eye,
mended blood remedy known, and ha. the elastic step and the clear complexion
sustained Its reputation for half a cen- nPVer accompany organic trouble. The
tury. I" InureKlient. re N.'""" " di.treMied expression, lassitude, head-
nite antidote fur germ that create our
wort affliction. (Jet a bottle todsy ( ,cne nd nntal depre.sion are only the
any druggist. Refuse all substitute, tell-tale symptoms. Women so troubled
Write tbe medical department, The Swift should take I.ydla F-. Plnkham'a Vegeta-
Upeclflc Co., . Swift Hldg.. Atlanta, la.. hie Compound, that simple remedy made
lor free advice on bhs,d twublea and how from tlie , h
to overcome tbem. Tills department I Ml , . . . ... , ... . .
of the Hne.t help, to men to fea found th"r "lth 1 normal condltlou.-AU-aoywhere,
and It la entirely fte. i eitiaemen.
'Sunday, February 2 n the residence of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred liuxihau.sen. Uu; North
j Twenty-ninth. Mr. and Mrs. Moore will
I make their home In itepul lic, Kan.
I
Woman's Rraat) o Secret
ill lie In the rare she bestowa
: herself and in keeping at bay thoae dread
money to bring the righteous rause to a ! r officers. After reprisals on the
to build up all of Nebraska a industries
and Institutions.
"But tiii standard of prosperity cannot
jng b maintained if lie are going to
continue to hedge about the railroads
vlth unfair limitations. What we ought
to do In Nehrasks. farmer, merchant,
manufacturer and every other business
and professional Interests, I to co-o;ier-ate
with the railroads toward the upbuild
ing of their prosperity and ours, wiib li is
ntlrely mutual."
A (old la Daatrrrona.
Rreak II us,
Bell' Pine-Tar-Honey la fine for cough
and colds. Soothe tha lung, loosen the
mucous. Only Jc. All druggiata Ad-
i triumphant ts je.
"There is muc h to encourage and stim
ulate us In what we see In the heroism
of Belgium and Serbia and In the un
daunted tenacity wherewith our allies
hold their far-flung linrs) until the mo
ment com- for an Irresistible decisive
advance.
"We have no reason to be otherwise
than satisfied with the progress of re
cruiting I can assure the house that
with all the knowledge and expcrlnc.
gained by the governme'iit we iiover were
more confident than today at the power
and will of the allies to achieve an ulti
mata victory."
Note to I nlted Ulatra.
Turning to the subject of Gel many'
ubinai iiiti activitiua aud tho actuation
rank and flic .this regiment was sent to
Brachoff on thn Roumanian frontier. A
second Czech regiment has lieen sent
away from Vienna and Iwith thee or
ganizations are being replaced by
Roumanian regiments from Trans) I
aula."
STEAMER DACIA TOWED
INTO HARBOR OF BREST
BR F.ST. March I ( Via Tarl 1-Ths
American steamer Dacla, formerly a
Hamburg-American liner, which waa
captured last week by a French cruleer
and brought Into this port, has been
tuwrd iroiu th-j roadstead Into the Brest
naval buiLtr.
Hail a Jitney and
Get Out at Magee's
Things you'll want to see.
Kensington Spring
Suits at $20
These anils are made to our
order for us. The models and
materials have our personal In
spect Ion. You will find them
the very latest and hest. In fact
the suits look much more than
$2( worlh. It Is greatly worth
your while to see tbem.
We show Kensingtons at l-.". I'i
and 135 that no tailor ran produce at
anywhere near the price.
Stetson Hats Very complete
knowing of spring styles, $'l.50, up.
MANHATTAN KII1HTS
Beautiful multl-rolored stripes
for spring, 91.541, $'J.O, up.
I low Ties Blacks, and whites",
and fancy pointed end and open
end ImtwingR. They are the new
things in neckwear .Vic,
occurred.
The young woman requested that
Charles Gilfflth. who Is counsel for
Richard P. Stegler, be sent for, and II
I believed he will appear In court later
today when the young woman la ar
raigned. Dictaphones la Grips f
The police, when tney heard tha story
of the carefully guarded sultcasea, were
inclined to believe that the sheltered
telephonic device for recording con
versations. The men ranted tha grip
with them when they left the police sta
tion. The police learned that during tha
night Matteikct several tlmea called a
German newspaper on the telephone and
a iinxersullun with some one in German.
from altars lllh Win.
ST ROMS BI' KG, Neb., March 1. (Spe
cial ) SI ronixbuig High school defeated
Central City High achool Saturday night
in a (ant game of basket ball. Bulk) teams
413 Ho. 16th St.
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