FM MANY MIS ■VENTS OF THE DAY HELD TO A FEW LINES. LATE EVENTS SOILEO DOWN Personal, Political, Foreign and Othtt Intelligence Interesting to the General Readers. WASHINGTON. Secretary Bryan before House for eign affairs committee advocated the purchase of embassy buildings at To kio. Mexico City and Berne. / * * * / Representative Roberto of Massa chusetts urged interstate commerce committee to report his bill to require all steel cars on railroads withiji four years. / * * • / C. K. Mahoney of Denver, vice president of Western Federation of Miners, made charges against mine operators in Michigan copper districts at rules committee hearing. * * * Representative Ffiwler of Illinois end Marsh Lambe/t of Shawneetown urge rivers and harbors committee to appropriate $10®;000 to repair and strengthen levies at Shawneetown. r * * Chairman/Stephens of Indian af fairs comofittee has introduced a bill to provide for final segregation and apportionment of all Indian tribal property. f • • * President Wilson approved the sen tence of dismissal, imposed by gen eral court martial in the Philippines, on Captain Frank K&lde. Eighteenth /infantry, who was convicted on /' charges of embezzling funds. . . . A monument in each state along the Canadian boundary to mark the line and commemorate one hundred years of peace between the United States and Great Britain has been proposed in a bill by,Senator Jones of Washington. The bill relieving miners on gold and placer claims in the Dam creek region of Alaska from the required amount of assessment work on their claims this yejr, because of ruin caused by recent floods, has been passed by ti’e senate. * * * A bill to remove the limitations on the amount that may be accepted from depositors in the postal savings banks was passed by the house. The measure would permit unlimited de posits, but $1,000 Is fixed as the maxi mum on which interest would be paid. * • • Secretary McAdoo has issued a sup plementary income tax regulation ex tending the time for filing itemized monthly list returns of coupon and j registered interest payments for No vember, required by previous regula fons to be filed on or before Decem ber 20, to January 5 next. • • • > The senate passed the judicial Joint resolution already adopted by the house expressing the regret of con gress at the death of Lieutenant Colonel Davis Du B. Gaillard, Isth main canal commissioner and appro priating $14,000, the annual salary of a commissioner for Mrs. Gaillard. • * • Representative Moss of West Vir ginia has introduced a joint resolu tion, directing the secretary of war to Investigate and report on the advisa bility of established wireless tele graph stations along the Ohio river to furnish communication in emergen cies between flood districts and the outside world. DOMESTIC. The Boston grand1 jury reported that It had not found sufficient evi dence to warrant the indictment of anyone for responsibility for the deaths of twenty-eight men in the fire that destroyed the Arcadia lodging house, December 3. • * * Ben F. Moffatt, a promoter of Cbi eago was fined $1,000 and sentenced to one year and a day in the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan., by the United States district court at St Louis. W. A. Wells, president of a St. Paul ice company, was sentenced at Hastings, Minn., to pay a fine of $5,000 for operating his company in re straint of trade. The company, re cently convicted on a similar charge, was fined $2,000. The case was "tried on a change of venue. • • • Dr. Henry Wishard, through whose efforts the first order for the removal of sick and wounded soldiers to north ern homes was issued by President Lincoln during the civil war, died at Indianapolis. He was 97 years old. • • • E. L. Fannin and E. W. Hickman, former president and vice president of the Choctaw Commercial bank that failed at Spiro, Okla., last February, pleaded guilty at Stigler, Okla., to ac cepting deposits when the bank was Insolvent. They were each fined $1,000 and costs of the prosecution. * • * Alfred Goulet of Australia and Joe Fogler of New York won the six-day bicycle race in Madison square garden. Joseph Magin of Philadelphia and Percy O. Lawrence of Denver were the second team. • * • Bankers of Nebraska and other business interests that are giving their Bupport to the propaganda for better agricultural methods in Nebras ka, will try to raise $25,000 a year for two years to help pay the expenses of farm demonstrators in counties ■welcoming them * * * Statistics purporting to show that the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy rail road would face bankruptcy if it granted the wage demand of its con ductors and trainmen has been sub mitted at Chicago to the arbitrators Nebraska'* 1912 mineral/ output was valued at $1,490,582. • • * Mrs. Theodore Roosev t has re turned hole recently fi her trip to South America. • • The 1913 apportionment of the state school fund among the several counties of Nebraska totals $325,078; number of children of school age (5 to21 years!, 379,691. ,* * * Robert A./ Taft, son of the former president, Mas among a class of six ty-four young men who were sworn in in tW Ohio supreme court as prac ticing attorneys. / * • * Au expert estimate of the total vahie of all crops in Iowa in 1913 fqbts up $429,443,437. ThiB is the tfigh record of crop value* in Iowa, 'despite the fact that'hot weather re duced the corn crop by 92,000,000 bushels. * • • The trail which the Chicago police expected to lead them to Miss Jessie Evelyn McCann, the missing Brook lyn social worker, proved a false one. The young woman, resembling Miss McCann’s photograph, proved to be a Chicago woman. • • • I Vandals wrecked the interior of the new Carnegie library of Oberlin, O. Books and magazines were thrown about in great confusion and all card index file* destroyed. Restoration will cost several hundred dollars and require protracted labor. • • * What 4b believed to have been the last band of ‘‘moonshiners” in the Missouri Ozark* has been broken up by the arrest by federal officers of George Smith, thought to be the leader of the gang, and “Pete Bar ton,” charged with being selling agent for th* illicit still near Spring field. • * • Maurice Enright, pardoned by Gov ernor Dunne of Illinois from the Joliet penitentiary, where he was serr ing a life sentence on the charge of having murdered Vincent Altman, ar rived at his home at Chicago, only to learn that he must again face trial on a charge of murder of William “•Dutch” Gentleman. Stephen D. Marshall, 45 years old, was killed and Joseph Sampson and Joseph Bushakra were wounded in Kansas City in a revolver battle fol lowing a labor dispute. Marshall was the proprietor of a nonunion barber shop, and his place had been picketed by members of the barber's union for a week. He had refused to unionize his shop. * * * Governor Glynn of New York has broken all precedents in celerity of legislation by securing the passage, within the period of a five days' ses sion, of a reform program of unsur passed comprehensiveness and Impor tance. The governor called his leg islature to meet on Monday, Decem ber 8. and by the following Saturday a workingmen's compensation law, a direct primary law, a new ballot law substituting the Massachusetts form for the fraud-promoting party-column blanket sheet, a law providing for the election of United States senators by popular vote and a law to creatp a legislative bill drafting department had been placed on the statute books of the state. FORFIGN. The trench government has with drawn from the chamber of deputies the measure authorizing an inheri tance tax and a loan of $260,000,000. * » • * * • A contract has been signed by a British concern for the construction of , a railway from Shashi, in Hu-Per province, to Sing Yifu, In Wwei Chow province, China, a distance of about six hundred miles. About 5,500 tons of cork sawdust are used in Spain annually in pack ing fruits for shipment. Some 40,000 persons are employed in some man ner in the cork industry in Spain with an average wage of about 67 cents per day. • • • The American ambassador at Rome. Thomas Nelson Page, has requested the Italian foreign office to investigate the circumstances surrounding the surveilance by the Italian police of Miss Dorothy A. MacVane, daughter of Prof. Silas MacVane of Boston, for merly McLean, professor of ancient and modern history at Harvard uni versity. * • • The delegates from the United States to the'international conference at London on safety of life at sea. de clare that they have very nearly reached the limit of their patience at the extended deliberations. * * • Nearly 6,000,000 lawsuits are fought out in Germany courts yearly. This number does not include criminal cases; the myriad of proceedings t(j recover a penalty, nor the quasi criminal actions brought for insult, etc. The figures mean roughly one lawsuit for every eleventh person • * • The production of potato flour in Holland increases rapidly from year to year and the product is also stead ily finding markets abroad. The total production is now not less than 275, 000.000 pounds annually. * *- • Dispatches from Madrid say that Francisco Rodrigues, the newly elect ed mayor of that city, has announced that he will turn over all of his salary to some charitable institution. He is one of the wealthiest residents of the Spanish capital and he will go into office on the 1st of January. * * * i The government of Premier Bar thou was defeated by a vote of 230 to 2C5 in the chamber of deputies on the question whether the loan of $200, 000,000 should be subject to taxation or immune, like the existing rents. ... A report prepared by the Vienna Chamber of Commerce on the traffic of the municipal street railways in 1912 shows 165 miles of route, 153 of which were electrically equipped and twelve miles operated by steam. The 1 electric lines carried 309,484,129 pas sengers, the revenue being $9,863.07$. PUSSES MONEY BILL FINAL VOTE IN SENATE STOOD 54 TO 34. - • HITCHCOCK BACK IN THE FOLD Six Republicans and One Mooeer Vote for Measure—Up to Pres ident Soon. Washington. — The administration currency reform bill, proposing a re vision of the financial system of “he United States and the creation of re gional reserve banks to act as strengthening elements in the bank ing and financial world, lias passed the senate by a vote of 54 to 34. Forces that had fought together for improvement and amendment of the measure to the last divided when the final vote came. Senator Hitchcock, who has led the opvosltion to the bill returned to the dellocratic ranks, and Senator Weeks, one of the leaders on the republican side, with five other republicans, and Senator Poindexter (progressive) voted for the passage of the measure. Wide differences exist between the form of the legislation passed by the senate and the bill that passed the house several months ago. Demo cratic leaders have partly adjus-ted these differences, however, and it has been predicted that the bill would be completed by a conference commit tee, and sent to President Wilson for his signature in a short time. The adoption of the administration bill, known as the “Owen bill,” fol lowed upon the formal defeat, by 44 to 41, of the “Hitchcock bill,” which has been endorsed by Senator Hitch cock, and the five republican mem bers of the evenly-divided senate committee that passed on the legislar tion. The senate had previously re jected without a roll call, a “central bank” bill offered as a substiaute by Senator Burton. Phone Trust to be Dissolved. Washington.—Attorney General Mc Reynolds has made public details of an agreement for reorganization of the American Telephone and Tele graph company, “the telephone trust,” which will prevent litigation to dis solve that corporation under the anti trust act and under which compet itive conditions will be restored in the telephone service of the entire country and the combine will dispose of its holdings in the Western Union Telegraph company. The plan orig inated with the company, although it followed many reports that a suit against it might be filed. It was regarded by department of justice officials as the most striking indication offered in a decade that “big business' has come to the con clusion that it is better to follow the Sherman law than fight it. The plan met not only the approval of the at torney general and his chief "trust buster,” G. C. Todd, and officials of the subsidiaries of the combine, but was heartily approved by President Wilson. In a letter to Mr. McRev uolds the president expressed his ad miration for the attitude of the tele phone company and his conviction that such conduct on the part of busi iess men meant a building up of isiness on sound and permanent mes. Ship’s Cook Spreads Typhoid. Providence, R. I.—The epidemic of typhoid fever among the Rhode Island delegation to the Perry cele bration at Put-In-Bay, O.. has been traced by the government health serv ice to the drinking of water on board a Lake Erie steamer, the cook of which was suffering from the dis ease three days before he was taken to a hospital. Dr. Hugh Valia, gov ernment physician, who made an in vestigation, forwarded his report here. More than 100 members of the Rhode Island party were stricken wirh typhoid after returning from Put-In-Bay, and five of them died. Krause Elected Captain. Milwaukee, Wis.—Bert Krause, a junior, was elected captain of the Marquette university foot ball team for 1914 at the annual banquet here. Krause plays at center. Makes Sixty-Six Millions. New York.—The annual report of the Union Pacific Railroad company, shows that it made a profit of approx imately $50,000,000 on the sale of its Northern Pacific and Great Northern railway shares and about $16,000,000 on its Southern Pacific holdings. Standing Prize $100 for Triplets. Santa Ana, Cal.—The county board of supervisors is on official record with a standing offer of $100 reward for each set of triplets born in Orange county. Milk Dealer Pays Fine for Plot. Minneapolis, Minn.—A fine of $3, 500 was paid by A. R. Rubnke, presi dent of a local milk company, con victed on February 19 in the district court of conspiracy to raise the price of milk in Minneapolis. The line was paid to the clerk of the courts. Physician Guilty of Cruelty. Chicago, 111.—James A. Marshall, physician of the state reformatory at Pontiac, was found guilty of treating the inmates with cruelty and his re moval was ordered. Hillen Sentenced to Hang. Denver, Ook>.—Harry E. Hillen, who recently confessed a series of holdups in various parts at the country, has been convicted of first degree murder for the killing of Thomas J. Chase on October 24. The jury fixed hanging as the penalty. Philadelphia Outfielder Sued. Cleveland, O.—George E. PaskerU outfielder of the Philadelphia Nation al league team, has been sued for $20,000 damages by John Farry. Pas te rt struck Farry with his auto. BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA The home rule charter for Lincoln ras defeated. Fire destroyed the Maharg hotel and adjoining buildings at Ashland. The body of a newly born baby was found by a watchman on the bank of the Missouri river. Over 1,000 birds were entered for the annual show of the Dodge County Poultry association. Beatrice had an “everybody go to church” day last Sunday, and the re sults were very gratifying. Seven cases of smallpox have been discovered at Sntton, and it is possi ble the schools may be closed. The city council of Albion has au thorized the installation of a street number system for that place. The Superior Baseball association closed up its season’s business with a small surplus in its treasury. Farmers around Tobias have organ ized a Society of Equity, with a mem bership of forty on the charter. A merchant at Newman Grove has fitted up a rest room in his store for the convenience of his customers. Berg Durinsky, a Russian, was elec trocuted when he went to turn on an electric light at his home at Norfolk. A petition to the county commis sioners is being circulated for county ownership of telephones in Lincoln county. J. E. Dennison, a Lyons plumber, was seriously burned by the explosion of a gasoline oldering pot which he was \sing. J. A’. Bi* vnt, president of an Omaha implement company, suicided by drowning in a cistern in the rear of his home. Clyde Rolston sold ten acres of land adjoining Ainsworth for $200 per acre. This is the highest price ever paid for land there. A thief worked the city hall at Om aha and secured a purse containing $15 belonging to Beulah Byrd, a sten ographer. Verne Flory, a Lincoln boy, was wounded by a stray bullet from an un known source, while out walking with a companion. iorK county dentists have formed a county organization and elected N R. Wildman. president, and E. A Calkins, secretary. Burwell's new $5,000 steel water tank and tower is about completed and now the town will be able to com bat any ordinary fire. The little two-year-old child of Au gust Kleinschmidt at Hampton lost two fingers by geting them caught in a platform rocking chair. Mrs. Martha Whipple has brought suit for $20,000 against Lincoln saloon keepers and their bondsmen for sell ing liquor to her husband. Automobile bandits are worrying the Omaha police and incidentally numerous citizens when business keeps them out late at night. The "blacksmith evangelist.” Rev. M. W. Boyer, has just closed a series of meetings at Nemaha, at which there were nearly fifty conversions. The young ladies' auxiliary society of the First Congregational church at Fremont held a baby show' last week, in which there were 125 entries Little Marie Mercer, a 3-year-old Lincoln girl, fell twelve feet, landing on a hard floor, and received a coin pressed fracture of the skull. Sht may recover. Miss Kate McHugh, principal of the Omaha high school and one of the best known educators of the state, will head the State Teachers’ associatior next year as president. Dr. I. W. McEachron of Oeneva was elected president; Dr. S. I. Alford of Lincoln, vice-president, and Dr. Carl Xorden of '■’•aska City, secretary treasurer of ihe veterinary associa tion at its session just closed at Lin coln. Seventy-eight boys In convention in Fremont Saturday and Sunday took the initial steps looking to the forma tion of a permanent association ot high school students, to hold annual conferences. The sessions closed with a meeting at the T. M. C. A. Sunday evening. After a separation of fifteen years William Smith, a negro, ran across his [ father during a visit to one of the clut rooms frequented by Lincoln colored sports. The public schools of Wayne closed during the funeral of J. W. Tombs, an old resident of that place, and whose daughter has for many years been the principal of the high school there. The five-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs. Meruton GrofT, at Lincoln was so severely burned by fire started from matches with which she was playing that she died at a hospital a few hours later from her injuries. worK on tne box Buue county school house at Alliance is at a standstill owing to the failure of tht contractor to carry on the work. The Seward tornado relief commit tee has tendered a report showing thai $9,450 had been collected and dis bursed. with the exception of about $100. Little Marie Murkadron, sever years old. and Joie Baynardi, the same age, were run down by an Omaht police department automobile. The boy escaped with a few outs and bruises, but it is expected the girl wil die. The ladies of the Altar society o. the Catholic church at York have jusl closed a very successful bazaar foi the benefit of the TTrsuline Sisters school at that place. Stephen Kegley. who cut his throa at Lincoln and who has made severa' efforts while in a hospital to reoper the wounds, is still alive, with favora ble prospects of recovery. Willard Butler, the 30-year-old sor of the old soldier, James Butler, whose body was fouM buried In the cellar ol his home at Fremont, has been form ally charged with murder in the firei degree. An epidemic of scarlet fever ane diphtheria is raging at the town ol Endicott, and Principal Lloyd Meyers has clpsed the schools for severa' weeks. The special meetings which hav« been in progress the past five weeks at the M. E. church at Chappell have closed. There were In the neighbor hood of sixty converts. George S. Burtcb. one of the-first men to come to Nebraska to live, for sixty years a resident of the state most of the time at or near Bellevue is dead at the home of his daughter Dr. C. G. Ernest, at St. Paul. MOlSriFUGHT CONSOLIDATION WORTH WHILE TO TAXPAYERS. 30SSIP FROM STATE CAPITAL Item* of Interest Gathered from Re liable Sources and Presented in Condensed Form to Our Readers. MTiHB County boards act within their dia Jretion when they agree not to call a special election for voting bonds for s county telephone system under the provisions of the Fuller bill, in the opinion of .ludge Cornish of the dis trict court. The judgment was handed down by him in the application of Lancaster county public ownership leaders for a writ of mandamus com pelling the county boards to call the •lection which they long ago pe tioned for under the county owner ship bill. According to the court's finding the county board has the right to either call or refuse to call the special election. The question de cided means that unless the supreme court remands the case after revers ing the finding, the proposition will have to go over until next fall’s gen eral election. Proved More Efficient. Consolidation of several state de partments, a move calculated to make for more, efficiency in state govern ment than the primitive methods which have prevailed for many years, has been shown to be worth while to the taxpayers. In the past year the associated departments of food, drug, dairy, oil and weights and measures inspections have collected $15,000 more fees than under the old system and at the same time have operated at a less outlay than under the scheme of diffusing activities. Food and oil inspections for the year of 1912. un der separate departments, brought in fees to the amount , of $69,100 while for the present year the total has run up to $84,230. The November report of the department shows that of the $8 .771 fees received, the oil division contributed $7,816. Inspections made included 161 cream stations, 203 hotels and restaurants. 777 meat mar kets, 377 grocery stores, thirty milk wagons and dairies, most of them in Omaha, fourteen saloons, fifty-eight bakeries and forty-four confection eries. ADU Fair Managers to Meet. The program outlined by W. H. Smith of Seward, secretary and treasurer of the Nebraska Association of Fair Managers, has been an nounced. The.gathering will be held during the week of Organized Agricul ture, January 19 to 23. H. Mulenburg of Geneva will speak on the "Relation of Fair Officers to Horsemen.” Henry Pickett of Wahoo wrill discuss “A Well Balanced Program.” L. H. Cheney of Stockville will give a paper on “Awarding Premiums.” “State Farm Exhibits at Fairs” will be the theme of Prof. C. W. Pugsley’s address. General discussions will follow these addresses and papers. For several years gambling devices and all ques tionable amusements have been “cut out” by the Nebraska state and county fairs, and a sharp lookout has been kept for progressive features. Nebraska’s Beet Sugar Production. Nebraskans will likely have an op portunity during the Christmas season of enjoying the taste of real Nebraska made sugar. More than ."0,000 sacks of the product are com puted in the 1913 output of the Scotts Bluff sugar beet factory, and the total production at Grand island will amount to 75,000 sacks, accord ing to statements made by Ur. G. E Condra at the meeting of the state conservation and public w-elfare com mission. State officials, university professors and good roads boosters were in attendance, this being Ne braska's first elaborate portrayal in the movies. The sugar beet and apple j raising Industries, the production o; j beef cattle, scenes at the state farm and the “better babies” films, which attracted such wide attention at the national conservation gatherings a! Washington a couple of weeks age* were shown the visitors. All of theso were arranged in snappy style. The semi-annual statement or th« state treasurer shows that total re ceipts for the six months ending No vember 30 were $3,075,381 and tota disbursements $3,141,354. The bal ance on -May 31 was $706,374 and or. the last named date $6 40,401. The university fund collected in accord ance with the provisions of a bill passed at the last legislative sessior was $1,142. Among receipts to the general fund of the state in the hall year was a $15 800 item representing the collections from convict labor ai;6 $16,475 applied as federal aid for sol diers' and sailors’ homes in this state Total receipts of the university dur ing the past six months were $132,079 according to the semi-annual report made to the state treasurer by Chan eellor Avery. The largest single item was $36,973.14 for hog cholera serum a product which is made and sold to farmers of the state at actual cost ol production. The state bacteriological laboratory is being fitted up under the directior of Dr. William Wild, and the plant will be ready for operation within a few days. All indications point to an increased attendance in the winter course ofi the university school of agriculture. Thif course is six weeks in length, begin ning January 6 and closing February 17. Many men of all ages take advan tage of this short course every wintei to gain new knowledge along agricu! tural lines. The school of agriculture will offer lectures and demonstratior work In soils, crops, farm machinery farm motors, animal and dairy hus bandry, animal pathology, farm for estry, entomology, plant physiology horticulture and farm management. THE BEGGAR GIRL’S MODESTY Turkish Young Woman Refused to Un cover Face to Have Pic ture Taken. London.—While walking near the Mosque of St. Sofia Bone time ago I wag arrested with the cry of “Alms for the Love of Allah” coming from the trio whose photograph I am inclosing herewith, trusting that it will be of in terest to your readers. I tried to get the girl in the group to uncover her face, but the teaching of her religion, which tells her that her mouth is sa cred and must not be shown, had too great a hold, and my efforts were un availing. Can one Bay the same of the average English beggar? Her father and brother, as can be seen from their expression, were at first adverse to be ing taken, but a bribe of 20 paras (one "Alms for the Love of Allah!" penny) brought reluctant consent. Ru mor has it that many beggars make small fortunes: certainly the number of them to be found would lead one to think that at least an easy living is to be obtained. Here in this most pic turesque city one can hardly go a doz en yards without having the cry of “Alms for the Love of Allah" flung at one. with the blessing or curse to fol low, according to one's generosity or otherwise. , CURTAIN DOWN ON ROMANCE Asks Annulment of Marriage to Man Who Went Insane on Honeymoon in 1903. San Francisco.—A tragic final chap ter has been written to the romantic elopement of ‘‘Jack” Breckenridge and Miss Adelaide .Murphy, which stirred social circles in many cities ten years ago. Mrs. Breckenridge has instituted proceedings of annulment of marriage because of the incurable insanity of her husband. “Jack” Breckenridge. scion of noted California families, is watched by keepers in Paris. His wife, after ar ranging with her attorney here for the filing of annulment proceedings, left recently for Philadelphia. The marriage of Breckenridge to “Sallie'' Murphy, as she was known by her friends, took the relatives and acquaintances of the couple by sur prise. On the honeymoon trip to Paris the blight of insanity touched the mind of the young husband and all the efforts of the best physicians In Europe failed to cure him. For ten years he has remained there. Mrs. Breckenridge recently brought the young son of the marriage, John i Breckenridge, Jr., to San Francisco to be with his grandmother and with her concurrence the annulment proceed ings are now under way here and in Paris. ALCOHOL MAKES MARE FIGHT Seeking Cause of Racket in Barn, Owner Expostulates and Gets the Worst of It. Bremerton. Wash.—William Bra ken. a Colby farmer, placed a quart of alcohol intended for horse liniment above a feed box in his barn. Short ly after midnight Air. Braken heard a commotion indicating that somebody was pulling the barn apart. When he peered into the stall and gently in quired “What’s the matter, Molly?” that spirited animal kicked him. Mr. Braken returned with scantling and slipped into the stall. The first kick missed Air. Braken’s head, but knocked the scantling out of his hands. Then Molly kicked him be hind the door and kicked the door on top of him. When Mrs. Braken arrived and re moved the door Mr. Braken announced that he would call the battle a draw for the night. In the morning it was learned that Molly’s indiscretion was due to the spilling of the alcohol in the feed box. Aside from exhibiting some eagerness to get to the pump, Molly’s "morning after" was uneventful. CORK LEG CAUSES ARREST Woman Says Husband Had Concealed His Possession of Two Artificial Limbs. Portland, Ore.—Miss Eva Zelmer did not know P. D. Chamberlain had lost both legs when she married him. This is one of the reasons given by the young wompn for readily consent ing to appear as a witness against the man, who is charged with bigamy. In addition to the Portland wife he admits he has a wife and child In Portland, Me. It appears Chamberlain told Miss Zelmer he had one cork leg, but did not say anything about the other. When she learned that both legs were artificial the first quarrel occurred. Chamberlain was released on $250 %ash bail. The money was the same which Chamberlain had raised a few days before to get the release of Miss Zelmer, who had been held in that amount as a material witness. nappy Thought. It had been a rather long drawn out engagement and as often happens ii< those cases his lovemakiug was not as arduous as it had been at one time. “Why don't you write oftener in an swer to my letters, Will?” she asked tearfully. “Because, dearest,' he replied, “your letters were so long and interesting that I spend all my time reading them." Tal ing No Chances. “I see,” said the editor, "that some half-baked scientist schedules the end of the world for next Saturday.” “Yes, yes," said the star reporter. 'Tve got the story all ready. It won't happen.” “Better write up the other side, though. If it does happen we don’t , want to get scooped.” Appropriate. “This gown is what they call flame color.” “Ah! Has it a fiareback?” If a homely girl has plenty of money it's an easy matter to meet a wise man who will try to convince her she is a prize beauty.__ r 81 MERRY] This is the season for good cheer and happi ness, but You mow how I hard it is to ‘ ‘be merry” when Your iver has de- I veloped a “lazy spell.” To overcome this trouble just try a short course of Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters It will prove very helpful. It is for Poor Appetite, Nau sea, Indigestion, Constipa tion, Biliousness and Grippe. GO TO. WESTERNCANADANOW The opportunity of aecuring free homesteads of 160 acres each, anda the low priced lands of Manitoba, if Saskatchewan and Alberta, will |j soon have passed. Canada offers a hearty welcome | to the Settler, to the man with a, |S family looking for a home; to the jg farmer’s son, to the renter, to all who £ wish to live under better conditions. Canada's grain yield in 1913 is % the talk of the world. Luxuriant | Grasses give cheap fodder for large herds; cost of raising and fattening for market is a trifle. The sum realized for Beef, Butter, Milk and Cheese will pay fifty pet j cent on the investment. Write for literature and partic ulars as to reduced railway rates to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, | Canada, or to W.V.BENNETT Bee Building Omaha, Nab. Canadian Government Agi Nebraska Directory MIDTIIDE CURED in a few days nil I I llllk without pain or a sur gical operation. No pay until cured. Write OK. WRAY. 30 u Bee Bldg., Omaha, Neb. SMOKESTACKS Write us for prices. WILSON STEAM BOILER CO., Omaha BUSS * WELLSIAN Live Stock Commission Merchants 284-856 Exchange Ituildlnr', South Omaha All stock consigned to ns is sold by members of tbe arm. and all employees have been selected and trained for tbe work wblob they do. Write-,Sue-Oil, « TENTS AND COVERS 6COTT-RAWITZER RIFQ. CO.,OMAHA Successors to Omaha Tent & Awning; Company and Scott Tent & Awning; Company Try Us-li Will Pay You Consign yonr stock to ns for good prices, good 911s snd prompt remittance. Wrue or wire u“ for any Seel red Information regarding the market. All com mnmcatlons answered promptly We are working for yonr Interest and appreciate jonr business FARRIS PURINTON ft MARCY Ncumn U X. I. Ack«r A Cm. Live 8tock Commission loeullD-mbtlangr Hft-Kstk Tit. Ststiea S (aTtln Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’* Why You’re Tired—Out of Sorts —Hare No Appetite. CARTER’S LITTLE^ LIVER PILLS A will put you right in a few days.^ They do^ tneir duty CureCon-i stipation, 1 Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature PATENTS WANTED JS?TSSftSffinuss Answer now. nuiu wmt rrann, can, Mb, u. W. N. U., OMAHA. NO. 52-1913.