THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1916. DEATH JOURNEY FOR GOVERNOR BURT first Territorial Baler Took Office Two Days Before He Died. SOME STATE HISTORY By A. R. GROH. The first governor of Nebraska ter ritory held hi office only two days. He was, Francis Burt of South Carolina, a man with a distinguished public career for twenty years before he was appointed governor of Ne- " braska by President Pierce, August 2, 1854. V- On September 11, he started from his home, Pendleton, South Carolina, for' Nebrasak. He was accompanied by his young son, Armistead, and by several neighbors. They, traveled by private conveyance, stage, railway and steamboat. - His son' has de scribed, the hardships of the journey as follows in the "History of Ne ' braska:" "At St Joseph the steamboat could go no farther on account of low water, and the governor hired a hack and traveled in it to Nebraska' City which then contained one house, where he 'odged for the night. "The next morning he hired a two liorse wagon from-the only citizen and traveled in it to Bellevue. 'Thoroughly, worn out, he went to bed and was- never again able to be up,. He had been, for years, a dys peptic and the journey from Nash ville to' Louisville during the excess ively . hot,., dry weather, drinking strong limestone water and traveling day and night in a rough coach so exhausted him that he had to stop in St. Louis in care of a physician." Governor, Burt reached Bellevue, October 7, and continued to get worse. The oath of office was ad ministered to him October 16, by Chief Justice Fergusone, but he died October 18. - , v ...-,.;, Cuming as Subsrlruta. " T. B. Cuming, secretary, acted as governor until Mark W. Izard of Arkansas reached here, February 23, 1855. He resigned in 1857 and Cum ing again acted as governor' until W. A. Richardson arrived, January 12, 1858. He served until December .5, 1858. ' i,v " ' J. Sterling Morton was acting gov ernor then until Samuel W. Black of ; Pennsylvania arrived, May 2, 1859. He resigned February 24, 1861, and returned to Pennsylvania where he raised a regiment, was commissioned colonel and went to the front. He was killed in the battle of Gaines' I Mill, June 26, 1862. After Governor Black resigned J. Sterling Morton acted as governor until Vlay 15, 1861, when President Lincoln appointed Alvin Saunders of ; Iowa, governor. He was the. last ter ' ritorial governor of Nebraska, Nineteen Governors. ' Since then nineteen men have been governor of Nebraska. None of them died in office. The first one, David Butler, was impeached. ' Another was removed by the supreme court and reinstated later. Ana a third resigned . to run for United States senator. The names of the state's governors , are as follows: , , DaWa Butler. IHMI. - W. H. JUDM (OtlltS), iiri-ti. ' Robert W. Furnae, ISTS-tS. miss Garber, 1I7S-1S. , " Alblnm Nan-a. 1I7I-JS. J.mii W. 113-1?. John M Thayer, ltJ.t, ' Junn H. Uoyd, LI91 (removed by drcltlon f Nebreeka aupreme rnurl. Uay I. llll); restored by derision or lmlt4 fiatee eu preme court, ' February 1. 1SI2. - . . John M. Thever, H.!. JamM E. Boyd, lsos-ll. . ! . ' Lorense rrounM, usa-tfi. "'-..'i MM A. Holcomb, ' ISSS.SS. William' A- Pornter. Illi-lltl. . Ch.Mss H. Dietrich, )! (raetgned to run for eenator). Ksra P. Revere, ifOl-SI. Jftn H. Mlekey, 1101 7 1 George L. Sheldon, 1IIML . , ' A.'O. kliallenberier, H0S.ll.''' " I Cheater A. Aldrtok, ltlI-13. . Joan H. Moreneao, leii-ii, More "Don'ts" for the Visitors iiisisr on sleeping ' - weu -oe ovijr too glaih. vM r... i i i i mi wMz..t i -" i s on cue zjc 222? THINK Ut THW YOU LOOK LIKE. THS s- BECAUSE THS MORE LIKE 2on' purehse airy of out skr scrapers -we need 'em ourselves! and Tenember! there sre Queens ncf . . . i tjueans CONNELL ADVISES ALL TOBOIL WATER Sixteen Cases of Typhoid Fever Howell Says Omaha Water is Better Than Ever. . Sweden Comes Back Hot at Allies i Charge It Is Not Loyally Neutral Oitialm Girl Hushes it Ta-Rescne-Student Catherine Qhiria.; of Omaha, a sophomore student at' Bellevue - col lege, struck a heroic cpup-d ctat yes-, terday" for'Jier class when she at tacked and-remted George Pangle of Omaha, a freshman, and thus saved ferry Johns, a sophomore, from s beating. .. , : - Johns' was H grips with two first year men, Pangle and James Daugh erty of Pawnee City when Miss Oil man and two- girl companions hap pened along.:.-The Omaha girl lost no time-in entering, the fracas and yanked Panglt away... Johns then proceeded to beat Daugherty. . Licenses tf Two Dairies k Suspended by Connell Health Commissioner Connell has . suspended the milk licenses of C B. Post and L. P. Jensen, proprietors of the West Omaha and Purity dairies, respectively. Two weeks ago the com missioner notified 25 dairymen, who had been convicted more than once in the police court, that the next time their milk tested below legal standard he would revoke their licenses. These suspensions are subject to ratification by the city council after regular hear ings. - Sleek Young Men from -Chicago Forget Their Game James D. Currey and George Hall of Chicago grew so excited when they observed the police approaching that they handed Ralph Johnson of Red Oak, la.. $43, just $2 5 more than they had beat him out of in a dollar match ing game. A citizen observed the "sport" and called the wagon, with the result that Currey and Hall are bound over to the district court with bonds fixed at $750, and Johnson is $25 to the good. Used Car Auction is to Be Held Wednesday by Wilson The sale of used automobiles is handled in various ways by dealers along the automobile row, but E. R. Wilson has the best and quickest means of turning the cars. "We expect-' to clean up "all of our - used cars Wednesday at our auction and will he. very- much surprised if we don't - We haven't much invested so we can really let them go at auc tion," said E. R. Wilson (Correepondenoe of Th Aatoelated Preia.) London, Sept. 22. The relations be tween Sweden and the entente powers are attracting unusual attention here and there is every indication that the situation threatens to become some what more tense. With the dispute as to mail seizures still unsettled, there now has arisen the charge by the en tente that the neutrality qf Sweden is nr so loyal and impartial as it should be. This has drawn from Stockholm a reply, as tart and crisp as some of the 'notes ' in the mail controversy which were characterized by Viscount Grey as containing words npt usuaMy found in diplomatic correspondence. The new point of contact with Swe den is-th outgrowth at the practice of belligerent shipping in using the Swedish territorial waters , for all Baltic traffic. Within the safety -of this neutral three-mile limit, English and other ships of the entente nations have sailed defiantly into and out of the Baltic, paying not the slightest heed to the German fleet looking on from th outer water. Similarly, Ger man .merchant ships have sailed up and down- the west coast of Swedeij, heavily laden with foodstuffs dtneViron ores, while-Russian destroyers. ih the' northern reaches of the Baltic have been impotent to act. Hue practice placed a heavy re sponsibility upon Sweden and kept its fleet busy day and night, patroling the territorial waters in protection of the belligerent traders, despite which precautions there were several viola tions of Swedish neutrality. Public sentiment in Sweden was aroused am! the government determined to mine the waters of Kogrund channel lead ing out of the sound into the Baltic. I Sweden also served notice that its naval commanders had been instruct ed to fire upon all submarines found prowling within the three-mile limit. this policy scarcely had been an nounced when news came of the suc cessful trip of the Oeutschland from Bremen to Baltimore, and there arose the question as to whether Swedish warships would fire at sight of a Ger man merchant submarine or whether they would only fire at entente allied submarines, knowing these powers were not using commercial under water boats. The reply of Sweden was char istically stiff, "You conclude that in the attitude adopted by the king's government re garding, the two belligerent camps there is' a signal difference, which would seem incompatible with the duties of loyat and impartial neutral ity 'f 'it eai( "It ti tint., ( Um king's government lodeny in the most torinal manner that , the opinion thus expressed has any foundation. It can not enter into discussion on the sin cerity and impartiality of its neutral ity, which -have been abundantly demonstrated. throughout the war It will, however, observe that an alleira- I (jo 9 this nature is fundamentally yu.iuus, uciiiH iuuhucu umy on isolat ed facts imperfectly discernible." The reply declared that all sub marines are to be treated by Sweden as war submarines, if their employ ment for commercial purposes is not established with certainty by common facts. .. ' Should Addroas MeMIUaa. Boston. Oot. t. The committee In charge of preaa arransementa for world' aerlee baee bell gernee to be played n thla city announced todey that appllcatlone for preee enala ehould be addreeeed to Ralph Mc Millan, chairman In hharre 0f the Boeton American league 'Olub, Fenway park. WATER IS TESTED DAILY Sixteen cases of typhoid fever re ported to the health office since Sep. tember 1, and unusual presence of coti bacilli in a sample of city water ana. lyzed at the city laboratory, are the reasons offered by Health Commis sioner Connell for advising citizens to boil all city water used for domes tic ourooses. The typhoid fever cases reported during the last five yean were as many as recorded this year to Sep. tember 1. Four of the cases are at the Klepetko home, 1956 South Fif teenth street, where the victims are Anne, 20; Stephie, 18; Irma, 16; lr: win. 11. "I am not ready to state positively mat tnese cases are ?ue to cuy water, but the evidence before me warrants the suggestion that city water should be boiled. I do not regard the situa tion as serious, but it is unusual," ex. plained the heahh commissioner. . Ten of the sixteen cases were re. ported during the last week. Manager noweu s view. General Manager Howell of the mu nicipal water plant gave the following statement: So far as Omaha s water supply concerned, our method of treatment is more nearly perfect than ever before, and last year there were only three cities in the United States that had a lower death rate from typhoid fever than Omaha. Our chief chemisi and his assistant are practicing constant vigilance, and the report of our daily analysis shows that the water being supplied the citizens today is as good or better than it has been in the past "Typhoid fever is tracable to other sources than a city's water supply. I: is a well known fact that the milk supply is often the cause of epidemics from this tever, and it is much more difficult to control an infection from this source than from water, as for instance, we analyze samoles of all water supplied the city. How many of the various milk supplies are daily analyzed by the city physician? "Again, this is recognized as the typhoid fever season. It is a time when people have completed their va. cations, ' possibly in . places where typhoid germs may have been abun dant. They come back home and set tle down to their daily avocations with the result that here and there typhoid lever cases develop: , i (::. , "If the waterv department believed there was .any: danger in. Omaha's water it would be the first to suggest additional . precautions, bnt we feel Vuimuciii uiai uur water supply, wnicn has been all that could be desired in I he recent past, is just" as good today, .1 not Detter. Fairbanks Brands ; Wilson Statement;,; "Base Utterance" Los Angeles. CaU'Oct. 3.--Charfes Warrert Fairbanks, republican candi- late lor vice president, speaking at the Auditorium theater tonight de scribed as . a "base utterance" such f harges as; that mide by President Wilson at' Shadow Lawn when he eaid the certain' prospect of republi can success in November would be the use of force in Mexico, and en tanglement ot this country m the em broilments of the European war." "The ' suggestion which now and then is heard," Mr- Fairbanks said, "to the effect that republican victory wjll tend 'to. ''our entering the Euro pean war,- is a base utterance, which the stress' of a political campaign does not warrant.'- , . Putting It Over The Line Many a man can think up plays in sport or business who lacks the ' rugged strength and energy to carry them out ;. . .:,'-i, '.-. .; x .'.-"'"- - ' ' Human power comes from food, and it is vitally essential that it contain the elements required by both body and brain in good balance, and in form for prompt digestion. with Cream " ' ' ' . '' V".' . Y . combines all the nutriment of whole wheat and malted barley, including their mineral salts so necessary to thorough nourishment. Grape-Nuts is a winning food ready to eat direct from package, easy to digest, richly nourishing,andwonderfullydelicious. Every table should have its daily ration of Grape-Nuts. "There's, a Reason" GAMBLING EXPOSE EXCITES CHICAGO While Landis Quizzes Witnesses Police Get Busy and Eaid Base Ball Fool Quarters. "BIO BILL'S" NAME IS USED profit from the organization, it wa testified, was, $4,000 a month Police Captain Collins, who raided the base ball pool, said paraphernalia seized indicated elaborate prepara tions had been made for betting on the coming world's series "New cards were made, each con aining combinations of six players," he said, "and there were thousands of such combinations. The documents indicated that as high as $1,000 could be won by the holder of an especially successful combination." Chicago, Oct. 3. While Federal Judge Landis continued today to draw from reluctant witnesses testimony of a nighly developed organization for gambling which the police previously declared did not exist, city authorities scurried around and uncovered evi dence of a base ball pool in a raid on a downtown office building. State's Attorney Hoyne, conducting an independent raid on the Sports men's Club of America, declared he suspected that the funds derived fr'.m a large sale of associate memberships was used as a political fund for the benefit of Mayor William H.;Thomp- m. , -;.... Extends to Many Cities. . . ; Witnesses before Tudse Landis told that the general news bureau, of which J Mont 1 ennes was the head, daily tele phoned racing results to hundreds of cigar stores and saloons, where bets were made. Ramifications of the bu reau extended to Kansas City, St. Louis. San Antonio. Tex.: San Fran cisco, Oklahoma City, Cleveland. Cin cinnati and West Baden, Ind, wit nesses testified. Betting in this city through the various agencies of the bureau was said to have run as h'gh as $60,000 a day. Tennes" personal Keeps Her Children t In Perfect Health Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep sin the Family Laxa tive for Many Years Mrs. Aug. Doellefeld of Carlyle, HI., recently wrote to Dr. Caldwell, at Monticello, 111.,, that she has used Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin in her home for a number of years, and would not be without it, as with it she has been able to keep her four children in per fect health. , Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin that acts on the bowels in an easy,, natural way, and regulates the action of this most important function. Nearly all the sickness to which children are subject is trace able to bowel inaction, and a mild. dependable laxative, such as Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin should have a place in every family medicine chest. It is pleasant to the taste and chil dren like it, and take it readily, while it is equally effective for adults. . Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is sold in drug stores everywhere for fiftv cents a bottle. To avoid imitations and ineffective substitutes be sure you get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup" Pep sin. See that a facsimile of Dr. Cald well s signature and his portrait an- pear on the yellow carton in which tne Dottle is packed. A trial bottle, free of charge, can be. obtained bv writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 465 Washington tit., Monticello, Illinois. that teaches the care of your Car It is a matter of common knowledge that jess " troubles " are expert enced with Studebaker cars than any other in its class. This is not only flue to the excellent quality of the materials that are put into every Studebaker car but also to the thoroughness of Stude baker DEFINITE Service and its success in educating owners to take care of their cars themselves, thus insuring 100 operating effi " ciency all the year round. V Studebaker DEFINITE Service comprehends more than g mere invitation to Vfcop ' in if anything happens." Its purpose is to. forestall all possibility of "trouble" by " ' the regular and systematic inspection of your car which is given for a period of . six months because Studebaker considers this just as important a part .of. your purchase as the cushions or tires. Nothing, would please -us better than to have you come in and let us tell you more about Studebaker DEFINITE Service. ''"' E. R. Wilson Automobile Co. 2550 Farnam St Omaha Phone Harney 871. ' i i SJBBJBBBMaBjaSSJSrSSpSnSOT n'ir-"''.. -" . . .- mm ... mm mm Bast aid Wsst Usitid at Psomontort Poiht, Mat 10, 1869, it Itwcnos ' . of Union Pacific and Centaal Pacific Lisas v : - ' Fccinr on Ihe lintlt track. Hilt world behind tack back. -Brit Hat It," What IhtEnfinttUli.' riving the Golden Spike comoleted the tirst line ot tnis great railroad system and gave our country the first adequate communication between the Atlantic and the Pacific. No other event in. the History of Transportation was so widely celebrated or so important in the public mind not even the building of the Panama Canal. The completion of this first transcontinental line was the climax of a quarter of a century of agitation and three years of record-breaking construction. The occasion was cele brated by public meetings and parades in all great cities of the country.' Every blow on the Golden Spike was recorded by telegraph over the whole land. Public rejoicing in San Francisco lasted three days. Travtltrt and shippers know that the first road vest is still first. UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM - Joins East end West with a Boulevard of Steel L BEINDORFF, CP.&T.. 1324 Farnam St, Omaha, Neb. Phona Dong . 4000. K