, - act The. Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 51 NO. 67. S.tm4 M ImijCi i Mm Id int. M MM f t W tl & ICS. OMAHA. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1921. ft ) ir MWL, Ml) tM . I7.MI 0M (Ml, to li.Mi I ptiaM HUM M UHM t4 Mi THREE CENTS Troops Are Plans For Rate Cut Submitted Union Head Optimistic On Outlook Blind Boy's Vision Restored By Evangelist, Mother Says The Vision of the Jobless Rushed to lOapnUtti mil Br The Chkase TWsvm-1 Coal Fields Clifford Charles S. Barrett Sayi Fa tru er Is Hit Hard But Will Come Bark Strong With Little Help. melton in Freight Charges. I If i Heavy Firing, Worst Since Outlrrk organ, Arc Re ported Along Twenty Mile Front Men Defy Proclamation ", Br Tk AmmII4 Tt.) Logan, W. Va., Sept 2. The fight ing which has been going on through' out the morning out on Sprue Fork ridge wai continuing this afternoon, according to advices brought to Lo gan by Colonel Arnold of the state xxmct and Corp. Carl Dodge. . CataiMr Arnold added that the line was "holduv elLH ' Colonel Euban' o the national guard has been notified that a force ot federal troops , -should reach ho gan by 3 p. m. It became known here this after noon that for the; third time this week wires between here and Williamson, Mingo county, were cut during the night Linemen sent out to make repairs reported that they had been tired upon by riflemen. Additional reports this afternoon .were to the ettect that Colonel Ar nold and the atate police were ore- paring for art important operation on jsiair mountain. Capt. L. E. Lawson with a com piny of. Mingo county militia and some ot the atate police were re ported late in the day to have crossed the top of the ridge and advanced down 'the caat slope toward the Lit tle roal River country. War Department Acts. Washington, Sept. - 2. The War department set in motion today, ma chinery to apply irresistible force to disorderly elements in the five min ing counties of West Virginia, where labor disorders have smouldered into what officials term insurrection. By train from four army camps, an ex peditionary force -numbering 2,100 men was routed for destinations on the edge of the moun) ain country. Brig. Gen. H. H. Bandholtz, the gov ernment's agent on the scene, has been designated in command. Behind this force, Secretary Weeks said, were as reserves another 2,000 men and bombing airplanes which al ready have arrived in the disturbed area. President Harding's proclama tion formally putting McDowell, Mingo, Logan, Kanawha and Boone counties Under martial law is in the hands of General. Bandholtz and will be issued at the discretion "of Sec retary Weeks. . - . ? J ' The government's action in, send ing troops into West Virginia," Sec retary Weeks said, evidently had the 'approval of mine union officials. ' as well as the civil authorities of West Virginia, who had, asked for 'them. He referred to General. Bandlioltz's report that Philfip Murray, interna tional vice president of the United Mine Workers, had joined in urging recommendation for troops. Carry Pull Armament. "When railroads are closed up and, armed bands of men establish them selves in the country, marching to and fro overpowering " ; resistance," (Turn tn Pa w. Coiamn Tw.) aA m... Kn ftm nnn m .Combine Announced I ll.nno Tribune-Omaha Bm !.! Wire. Chicago. Sept.. 2.-A $30,000,000 moving picture combine was com pleted here today w hen the Asso ciated Procers and the First National association voted to be united. The deal involves such moving picture wlsbrities as Mack Sennett, Thomas Tnce. the Talmadge sisters. Charlie Chaplin. Buster Keaton and Charles Kav. The 1'irst National controls 3,5110 theaters in the United States. The Amalgamation which had been discussed by motion picture mag nates for some weeks, is the first great merger of picture producers and picture exhibitors in the history j the industry. The agreement is oh a contingent basis for three years.' '.'.. -- ' . .. Besides I nee and Sennett, Marshall n an and Maurice lourncur arc the producers affected. Harding Plans Vacation On Mayflower Over Holiday Washington. Sept. 2. President Harding probably will leave here to morrow on the Mayflower for a cruise that will extend over Labor dav unless conditions in West Vir ginia make it advisable for him to remain in Washington. IT was in dicated at the White House that .the president did not expect to land dur iflS the crnise. Clay County Suffering From Lack of Moisture .Edgar, Neb.. Sept. 2. (Special.) Parts of Clay county need rain badlv. especially around Edgar. Corn is well out of the way of any damage that might come from drouth, but "no wheat will be sown until some moisture is received. Fairbury Man Serves on Elks' j National Home Committee! Fairbury, Neb., Sept. 2. (Spe- ciaL) Frank L. Rain, past exalted ruler of the Elks lodge, will go toj Chicago to serve on a committee of. nine to agree on specifications . of j a $2,000,000 national home. j School Head Elected j '- Columbus, Neb, Sept 2. (Spe-i ml) At the school board meeting R. R. McGee of David City was! elected superintendent of .Columbus city schools for next year. His ten-1 ere will not begin until next spring, a salary of $3,200. i xm w A i piitii Waller Tole, 6, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tole. 1621 Locust street, who hat been almost totally blind since birth, is now able to distin guish objects at a distance of half a block, following a visit with his mother to the Rc. P. C. Nelson, evangelist, who is conducting meet Worker for Red Cross Returns To Fair Ground Action Taken at Request of Ex-Service Men ; Nurse Who Was Expelled De mands Investigation. Auburn, Neb., Sept 2 (Special.) Miss Sarah Kelly of North Platte Neb., trained worker, in the home service division of the Red Cross, employed by 'the Nemaha county chapter, who left her bcoth at the fair ground when two , Red -Cross nurses were expelled from the ground by the fair board Wednes day, returned at noon today at the request of ex-service -men. Nowhere about the tent in which she resumed her services, however, was there any Red Cross insignia Miss Kelly consented to return after a delegation of ex-service men called on members of the fair board and asWd them if they would per mit Miss Kelly to go back and re sume her work.',-. -The fair manage ment reolied in the af&rmairvei Shall w out uo our tent, or will you provide a place?" the ex-service men asked., : ;. ,' , ' ) i Aids Ex-Servke Men. - v "The 'ffrounds-are yoiirs; do any thing you want,".-came the answer, miss vciy lias unn assismm service, men - witn compensation claims, medical treatment, hospital care, dental treatment, liberty bonds, travel nay. back pay, allotments and allowances,; insurance, , victory, but tons and medals.-' Miss N. M. Mitchell of Omaha, one of the Red "Cross, nurses who was ordered from the fair ground yesterday by vote of the board of directors and who was engaged, two days ago for home service work in the county, today handed her resig nation to the local Red Cross chap ter. v ' ' 'v-;.v-. She stated that her expulsion from the fair grounds so humiliated her that it will be impossible fop her to render service in the county in an effective manner. She notified Omaha headquarters ol her action. . : Asks for Probe. Miss Ann Coulon, the other nurse whose home is in Gardner, Mass., itinerant inspector, in county or ganization work, has wired Chicago asking that a representative be sent to Auburn to investigate the circum stances surrounding her s expulsion from the fair grounds. ; Members of the Nemaha county chapter of the Red Cross were to meet at 3 this afternoon, to consider what action shall be taken as a result of the nurses' treatment Every town in the county will be represented. Members declined "to say what ac tion is contemplated. C. S. Durand, injured auto polo driver, for whose alleged "inhuman neglect" the nurses were ordered to leave the fair grounds, in a swom statement today asserts that the nurses did everything possible to make him comfortable, and that he has no complaint to make. TWENTY years be fore, Dick had ' been . her faithful slave. Now he had come back to dry .' . . The Tears of Dorothea By Elizabetk Jordia A ' BLUE RIBBON story i Next Sunday's Bee ings at Oakland, Xeb., Wednesday, his mother declares. x "He can find his own shoes now," the mother announces happily. "He keeps us busy answering questions about things he never saw before. She ascribes . her ion s apparent cure to prayer and her faith m God. Winter Rentals Start in Lincoln Despite Weather Landlords - Announce Rate' Raise Effective September 1 to Offset Coal Bill; City Swelters in Heat. Lincoln, Sept. 2. (Special.) rWin tcr rentals went into effect Septem ber 1 despite the fact that this city is undergoing the worst heat wave of the summer. " - ' Practically all Lincoln landlords are reported to have notified ten ants that beginning September 1 win ter rentals will become effective to offset the coal bill. So far as is known the . hotels Ticre who heat their rooms in winter will not in crease their prices. The owner of one apartment house has written to the tenants that because of the heat the winter rates will not become effective until September IS. The rent increases are a few days in advance of the influx of university students who must have rooms and apartments.: While the students were away this summer:, the landlords de-1 creased their rentals. : , Lincoln apartment house owners, along with those in Omaha, were charged during the legislature session with entering into an unlawful com bine to keep rentals in the skies and the. appointment of; an investigation committee followed, . Ihe investigation was held in Omaha. All members of the com mittee excepting Representative Har ry Foster of Omaha, "whitewashed" the landlords. Foster, tn a minority report, declared a conspiracy existed, Robber of Curlew, la., Bank, Haunted by Fear, Gives Up in Arizona Globe. Ariz.. Sept. 2. Perpetual fear that haunted him day. and night led R. Martin, Chicago youth, into the police station here yesterday with a confession that he was one of the bandits who- held up and robbed the bank at Curlew, la., on August 19 of $500. Incidentally. the youth had but $3.50 left from his share of the robbery. Martin said his companion, whom he did not know, ioined him at Sioux City in- stealing an automo bile and driving to Curlew to com mit the robbery. Later the two abandoned the car near Sioux City and took a train for the Pacific coast . ' ' The bank at Curlev was notified and a telegram from the Police at Des Moines asked that Martin lie held until extradition papers could be prepared. ; , .. " Chicago Men Indicted Under Anti-Trust Act Chicaco. Sept 2. Eortv-seven la bor .leaders, contractors and mill workers, . including Harry Jensen, president of the Chicago Carpenters' district council, were named in in dictments returned before Judge K. M. Landis on charges of conspiracy to violate tbe Sherman anti-trust act and to prevent bringing int6 the citv, mill, workers from a distance. T-ehty-one firms, six of which are carpenter contractors also werej named in the indictments. With the exception of Tensen. all ot jne others named have been in dieted previously on similar charges. Girl Plans to Swim 1.6 Hours Day on 130-Mile Undertaking Albany. .. v., sept. 2. Miss Mille Gadc,. 22, Danish woman champion swimmer, started on her swim of 150 miles ' from this city to New York at 9:45 a. m. today. She was accompanied by a pilot in a rowboat- and a trainer and nurse in a launch. She expected to reach New York in four Ha vs. swimmincr Ifi hours a day. , , " -. Crisis Near in France : caomet is oeciarea oy tce teho ue Paris, to face what amounts to a crisis. Paul Doumer, minister of fi- nance, is likely to resign as a result ot yesterdays cabinet '.meeting, at which he was criticized when the subject of the mter-allied financial agreement reached on August 13, was discussed ' "... i Would Also Pare Salaries Chlmi TrikuM-Omiiha Ibw ImwI W It. Washington, Sept 2, A proposal that the railroads red joe freight rates on grain and hay 25 per cent and that railroad labor agree to cut of 5 per cent in wages to make the rate reduction poniblc was sub mitted by Umord Thorne of Chi' cago. general counsel of the Ameri can harm Bureau Federation, in ar gument before the Interstate Com merce commission in the grain and hay rate investigation. After declaring that after every great war a period of decline in prices has inevitably developed and that in the struggle to prevent the lowering of charges, the agricultural industry has been the weakest while the railroad industry lias been the strongest, Thome said the agricul tural industry must reduce costs to the prewar level. "I believe that railroad labor might probably oppose any further decrease in wages that would go to the railroad corporations," he said, "but on the other hand, I should like to submit the following propo sition: Submits Figures. "If labor is assured that the en tire wage decrease would accrue to the farmer, what would be its atti tudef "During these proceedings we have heard railroad officials continually stating mat rates cannot come down unless wages are reduced. I desire to ask this Question: 'If railroad la bor shall consent to a reduction in wages for the specific purpose, will you consent to the reduction in thess rates on grain? " , He submitted estimates to show that 5 per cent wage cuts would per mit a 25 per cent reduction in freight rates on grain and hay. Counsel for railroads present said obviously they could not reply to the question, ihorne asserted that the vice president of one important west cm railroad approved the proposi' Conditions Intolerable. "The conditions in the agricultur al industry are intolerable, assertr cd Thome, "and one of the princi pal factors helping to produce this situation is the excessive transporta tion burcren resting . upon aaricul ture-". And yet the railroads claim thev are noV -malttW liat thm law allow, and Vlv v ihov nm censent to any reduction in rates without a reduction in wages. On tne otner hand, railroad labor is inorougmy opposed to any reauc- tion in wages. There is a contro- versy a, towhich tribunal has jur- thoroughly opposed to any reduc isfliftion ovr th mmhWH ;; how far the authority c.f the Intr. omit, vuiuflii.ii.c s-iMtiJiuasiuii vurs. i t,w !, ;r!c,vt; tu. unu iiuw, j c i list, jus sovjivkiuil Ui lllv I uum i a u . flicting factors it is difficult to find a common around nrinn whirl, M- ,it r can all agree.' Toreduce freight rates on grain, grain products and hay without a re duction in operating expenses would be "disastrous" to the railroads, in view of their present financial condi tion and would throw "many if not a majority of the western -carriers into bankruptcy" while no sub stantial relief would be afforded the farmers, J. N. Davis of Chicago, as sistant general solicitor of the Chi cago, Milwaukee and St. Paul rail road, declared. Trip to Advertise ' Cnnnfv Fair Plannorl ouniy rair riannea Xe he i. Neb.. Sent. 2. (Soec al.l A meeting bf the executive commit- tee of the Chamber of Commerce and nffircrs nf thf Antptonp rnnntv fair . association, was held to form blans for a two-dav booster trio Monday and Tupsdav to advertise the county fair, which will be held t,pi-A Qfr,fmKi. t1 I ' President Alderson reported that the Flain han t,as rnncented tn make the first day's trip. The trip will cover in the neighborhood of 120 miles each day. If a night stop is made, Plainview is. scheduled as the most logical point. The fol lowing will be the towns visited: Monday: Elgin, Rayville, Peter?Ure 0f unknown origin broke out in T aik.v rti.j; t:v .. . . . it Ti burg, Loretta,' Albion, Oakdaic, Til den, Pierce and Plainview; Tuesday: Creighton, Brunswick, Royal, Or chard, Page, O'Neill, Inman, Ewing and Clearwater. OTurk Nationalist Forces Driven Back by Greek Army . Constantinople. Sept 2. (By The Associated Press.) Turkish nation alist forces which have been 'fighting a desperate battle against the Greeks in the Loop of the Sakaria river, in Asia Minor, are withdrawing toward Angora. Both the Greeks and the Turks have suffered heavily' during recent fighting, but the Turks were outnumbered, being able to bring only 17 divisions into the battle line against the entire Greek army. Deputy Sheriff Named Beatrice, Neb., Sept. 2. (Spe cial) Frank Kelso Has bee'n named acputy sheriff by Sheriff J. ,C. Em ery to succeed Henry Scheideler of Wyniore, resigned. Mr. Scheideler may go to Lincoln to work at the new state reformatory. . 36 Cars of Wheat Shipped Bigspring, Neb.. Sept. 2. (Spe cial Telegram.) Thirty-six cars of wheat, amounting to 58,000 bushels, were shipped from Bigspring eleva tors between August 21 and Jl. I Poor Food Led To Jail Break, Prisoner Says Women May StartJProbe Fol lowing Assertion of Mc- -Laughlin, Who Asserts Tools Within Reach. inc?'". ?.--?Pecl? " " thing Harold McLaughlin said before being taken to Oniaha for sakekeeping, after being captured following his sensational escape with eight other prisoners from the Lan- -;- -r . - . " . r "st" countv ,L as that part of boys' eft ore be .use ;ol abominable tooa serveo man any thing else. - . . gation on by women interested in . , , - tt rri social service clubs. These women hf forgotten that a big lobby f Nebraska sheriffs appeared before the legislature last . winter and pushed through a bill increasing sus tenance money tor county prisoners from 50 to 7a cents a day, in ail counties except Douglas, where the sheriff is given 50 cents a day for teeding each prisoner. ; - One of the men who . escaped went to the home of a sister, got a square meai, according to repori, then called the sheriff and told that official, where he was and to send a car out for him. He is liable to 1 to 10 years in the penitentiary for the meal given him by his sister under a new law which makes an es caped prisoner liable to an extra sen tence. - McLaughlin also laughingly officers that a tooi chcst from i told which they took tools to effect their es- caoe had been lett only a tew leei from the cell bars by the sheriff. A bioomstick enabled them to coax it Pear pnoueh to tret the tools, Investigation revealed that 17 oris oners have escaped from the Lan- caster iail since Ira Miller has been sheriff. , L-.iA f Wol-ohalH Ql IIOI-WIWU Damaged by Blaze Wakefield, Neb.. Sept. 2. (Spe cial.) More than $1,000 damage Was done to the Lotran hotel, here when me DUUQing at o in mc murmiiK. j. flames were discovered in :he kitchen and had gained ; considerable head way when firemen - arrived. the blaze was extinguished with , diffiV culty. Guests of -the hotel were compelled to flee in scant attire. The heat from the flames was so great that the plate glass windows in the front endwere cracked. Fled Hughart. proprietor of the restau rant, is the heaviest loser. -He car ried no insurance.. The. building was insured. , , , Pawnee County Fair Will Be Held October 4 to 8 Pawnee Gty. Neb.. Sept. 2. (Spe cial.) The Pawnee County fair .will be held October 4 ; to " 8. A rac ing program which is exceptionally, good is being arranged. The build-; ings have been erected and -plans are being made for one of the biggest and best fairs the county has ever had. ... New Dance Pavilion to Be Opened at Central City Central . City, Sept 2. (Special.) The new dance pavilion at River side park will be opened formally Saturday evening, September- 3. The pavilion is constructed of con crete and has a smooth cement sur face. It is 60x100 feet in size. - Rules Dismissal Of Case Against Hotel to Stand Injunction Suit Against Grand -Island Hostelry Dropped Despite Objection by ' County Attorney. ; , . Grand Island, Xcb.,- Sept. 2. (Special Telegraifl.) After a hear ing in the. district court before Judge Paine, or arguments for or against the motion of Country Attorney Suhr to set aside the court's dismis sal of the injunction proceeding brought by Mayor Elsberry against the owners of , the Savoy hotel, the following judgment of the court was entered: "The county attorney consents that the dismissal of the case as heretofore made shall stand, upon the testimony of the realtor that he has no direct evidence : connecting the owners or their tenant, Abrams, with a violator of . the Albert law. All costs after the dismissal are taxed to the county upon tbe consent of. the county attorney. This is believed permanently to dispose qf the action., brought upon the Albert law against the,: Savoy owners, the latter having previously offered to do certain things assuring the proper management of the hotel, which agreement prompted the with drawal of the applic-.ion. One of the grounds of the county attorney's motion was based on a charge that the statutes had not been sufficiently followed in the dismassal... , Irrigation Project To Be Opened jn State Lexington, Neb., &ept. 2. Word w-as 'received, here today that an ir rigation project contract has been signed between the government and the Lower Platte Irrigation associa tion, the improvement to include the flatte . valley from bcottsbluff to Kearney, Neb. ; The contract . has been executed by the secretary of the interior, and an engineer will be sent into.' the fidld immediately to begin his investigation. a Dpard or review passing on irri gation matters has handed down a report holding, that the North Platte river affords sufficient water to irri gate all ..arable lands in the valley likely to be developed and that fur ther, development in Colorado and Wyoming'heed hot be restricted. ; Will Exhibit Poultry Fairbury, ; Neb:,. Sept. 2. (Spe cial.) Jefferson county poultry men will exhibit-more than 100 chickens at the state fair -next week..- Peter, and Polly, Jelf and the Tadpoles, the Jolly Go-Hawks are all in ' iHappylarid Where children '.may spend 'an hour they will, learn to love. Happyland .will appear each Sunday in . The Bee Watch for it next Sunday. '. R. J. Webb Chosen As Trustee for Guarantee Firm Attorneys Crowd Referee's r Office at Meet of Creditors Prettily Embossed Cer tificates Shown A sheaf of prettily embossed cer tificates lay on the desk before B. H. Dunham, referee in bankruptcy. in the federal court room yesterday morning. , - ; . The pile represented the hopes ot countless losers in the Guarantee Securities ; and Colonial land stock companies. Once it aggregated millions ot dollars. Now despair at realizing anything. Chosen Unanimously. ;The hearing was a creditors', meeting of the Guarantee Securities company, called to elect a trustee. Robert J. Webb of the law firm of Mulfinger, Webb & Ratchfcrd was unanimously chosen. His bond was set at ?50,000. Ihe choice ot Webb was com mended bv Referee Dunham because of yWcbb s' efficient service as re ceiver for the Bankers- Realty com pany. ' Back to, 1789. Testimony of Frank E. Shcehan, teceivcr for the Guarantee Securities company," harked back to 1789. at which time Lord Dunsmore of Eng land made a survey of Indian Jands in West Virginia, now held Inder basic title by the Colonial Land and I imber company. . It "was these Colonial securities which wrecked the Guarantee Securi ties and thereby the Pioneer State bank.:1 ,-..,; .,'- ' . The holdings, contested largely by squatters' rights, involve 127,000 acres. . The - court room w-as filled with lawyers representing creditors and losing stockholders. . , i School Equipped With V $6,000 Heating System Gothenburg, Neb., Sept. 2. (Spe cial.) The Columbia school build ing, built : here in 1892, has been equipped with a new, $6,000 heating system to replace the old one which was last year condemned as inade quate. Other painting, renovating and mason work has been done dur ing the last three weeks and. the building is now in good shape for the opening of school September 5. Basement' of Old Building , To Be Used for High School ' Bigspring,-Neb., Sept. 2. (Special Telegram.) Because of delay in construction of the new high school building, instruction will be con ducted in the basement of"" the old structure this year. School will open September 12. The Weather Forecast Nebraska Unsettled Saturday, possibly showers in east portion; Sunday generally fair with cooler by night. Iowa Unsettled weather Saturday and Sunday, with probably, local thunder showers; not much-change in temperature. Hourly Temperatures. Sb.hi.. 1 a. n.. 8 m. m.. m. .. 1 m. tn.. II a. m, . IS M9B.. .74 1 . m.... S Jr...... 4 b. m. ... 5 P. Bl.... S p. m.... i p. bi.;.. ...xs ...Jl V-M ...Jt ....M ....ST ....SS ....St ....IS .... ....IS ....11 ....19 .SS I S . i Will Make Tour of Iowi The head of a concern which did nearly $1,000,000,000 worth of bus iness last year was in Omaha yes terday. He looked like a fanner not one of the be whiskered variety with one gallu, such as is found nowadays only in cartoons, but with the bronz ed, healthy appearance of one much in the open air. He is Charlr h. Barrett of Union City, Ga., president of the National Farmers' union. Although he has lived all his life on a farm he is a veteran figure in- public life, having served on innumerable federal boards and having represented American ag riculture at the Tans peace confer ence. No calamity howler is Mr. Barrett. The farmer is hard hit, but he is going to come back strong, asking only enough aid from the government to enable him to work out his own salvation, he said. Not Up to Devilment. "We want onlv a living and a littls hit of profit." said Mr. Barrett. "Th farmers arc not up to any devilment, and they are not attempting to im prbve their lot by injuring any other line of industry. If the farmer has a little money to spend, there is only one place where he can spend it, and that is in town. Whatever he gets above the cost of producing his crops goes right into the cities and is passed around among the mer chants and working people. "It looks to me like everyone ought to' be interested in the farmer making something out of his croDs. I sometimes think that if I had lived ia the city, instead of the country, I might have been able to solve the rural problem from that end. It is strange that the towns do not re alize their common interest. If the farmers accomplished every one of their dreams, the towns would b better off. , Farmer Is Mainstay. "The farmer is the mainstav o civilization and prosperity.' When-' ever any man is running for office he wants to ride in on the rural vote. Every hypocrite and a great many sincere men tell us that we feed and clothe the world and without us the rest of the people would be in the bqneyard. If this is true.' why is ' there not some united effort for re ¬ storing the welfare of agriculture? "Neither the farmers nor anyone else can hope for much better busi ness conditions as long as railroad rates stay where they are. The edi torial in today's Omaha Bee, which points out that freight rates must be forced down to the general level of other things, hit the nail on the bead. Today on my farm the watermelons . arc rotting- because I am afraid to take the risk of shipping them to market as they might not even bring 1 enough to pay the transportation ' charges. This is only one cf thou sands of such instances, and hurts the consumers as well as the pro ducers. We want to feed people bet-' ter. but we can't. - "The farmer has to pay from 65 (Turn to Pace Two, Column Three,) Police Arrest Girl Who Goes to Columbus With Traveling Man Columbus, Neb., Sept. 2. (Spc' cial.) Marguerite Krugcr, who claims Norfolk as her home and says she is 17, was picked up-by the police. According to her story, she came from Fremont with a traveling; man and spent the night with him., at a hotel. He left her in the morn ing saying that he would return. He did not and the girl went to the sta- tion and got acquainted with -a young lad. v - They walked down the track to ward the brickyards. . Here they were met by five young men, who? put her escort on the ru.i. Accord ing to her i story these men inis-4 treated her. She came back to the depot and was picked up by police. Campaign to Safeguard Irish Interests Started . Chicago, Sept. 2, A new national campaign, in which the safeguard ing of the interests of America and Ireland at the disarmament confer- ence, is one of the four. issues in volved has been started from the na tional headquarters in Chicago of the American Association for the Recog nition ot the Irish Republic, if was announced toda . The call, based on a telegraphic request from Stephen M. Q'Mara, mayor of Limerick, Ireland, and fi nancial agent and trustee of the Dail . Eireann, who is now in Washington, urged the association to double its membership before November 30. Web-Worms May Kill Off Shade Trees in Columbus Columbus, Neb., Sept 2. (Spe cial.) Web-worms are infesting the shade trees m Columbus now in numbers greater than ever before and there is real danger that they will work -incalculable damage unless dealt with in a drastic manner. They ' are mainly attacking the box elders, ash and elm trees, many of which may die unless relieved of the pest. Laborer Breaks Arm Harvard. Neb.. Sept. 2. (Spe cial.) Carl Stapleton. 45, laborer, working at the school house, broke his arm early this morning while cranking a truck