THE OMAHA BEE: TUESDAY. JUNE 27. 1922. Britain to Stop South Ireland Coercing North 1 i" Churchill Announce in Com. mon Nation'. Powrr Will Hpf! Invasion From South. London, Junr Jrt -V i n t o n Ciurchill, tdrrwry (or the cnloniri, rtting to nult hn promised ttc rttntoit Irish afjatrj in the home of commons thi afternoon, i4td the ROvrtnnient deiirrd the freeit and iullrst drhjfe nd one that could be trrrtututfd by a division. The coloiurl secretary said the im prrial KOiennunt had tupplied the northern Irish government itli 50,. iioo.troops for ita defeiue. He added that the nortlifrh government would be supported .tlleciiwejy. and. at all ioU top any attempt that might be made to coerce it into submission to the south. The Sinn I-'ein. Mr. Churchill said, had to realize that they would never ' win lister except by it: own free! will and that the more they kicked ' the urirc it tvniiM h. 4ir ltm Ha ' said tha imperial government would tndravor to stand between the an tagonist and prevent the . loss of life and 'the 'destruction of property and by so doing mtkc it absolutely clear that any attempr ifroni southern torcea to Malt 'into the territory of northern Ireland would be met and, repulsed By imperial powjer. Can't Tolerate. Lapaea.. "The imperial government," said Mr. Churchill, "fetla that after the election, which! clearly showed what wire the wishes of tha Irish people, we cannot continue to tolerate the many grave 'lapse '6t the spirit ' of the treaty" s.nd'the improprieties arid irregularities in its execution which we have put' tip ' with or acquiesced in during fhe fast si months." He said the situation on the Ul ster frontier was easier as a rcsalt of the triple .arrangement made be tween the British, the provisional and norther governments whereby a neutral tone four miles wide was to be established in the Pettigoe and Oelleek districts. Mr. Churchill declared he did not hesitate to say that, all the hprrors that had occurred in Belfast were due to the organization, in that terri tory1 of two , divisions of Irish re publican army &nJ the f antinupus ef forts of partisans of the south -to break down fh .Ulster.. government and force Ulster' against its will to come under the rule of Dublin. Fire Warden Finds No Evidence of Bombs in Ruins Left by Explosion Mmm$pk As . ' . . . ..... MTMi A- m m&. yme Liqu or Valued at $200,000 Seized Three Sloops Laden With Rare Whisky Captured in New York Harbor'. New York, June 26. Twenty thou sand bottles of rare whisky, valued at $200,000, were seized with three sloops early yesterday when at at tempt was made by rum runners- to g;t thel iquor into the city during a violent electrical stprni. fourteen members of the crtw fit. three fishing boats were taken -to ffea. barge office for questioning by the -surveyor of the port, who directed the capture. They were charged with possessing and transporting liquor - in violation ot the prohibition enforcement law. The financial resources of the al leged rum runners' ring and their many avenues of information about what takes place in the ranks of pro hibition enforcement -uiiorjties .was shown soon after th arrivaiVpf the prisoners at the barg: office by the appearance of a representative of the New Amsterdam Surety company with the infornratiibil-hat he Was pre pared to furnish bail ijfcr the mn. ; Unit'edJjtates Commissioner Hitch cock gave the prisoner-; a preliminary hearing and.i 'they were released on , bond of $25;0QO; for thajot. . Fire .Warden John Trouton Mon day investigated' the, rums of the one-story - brick building at 1903 South Thirteenth street "and 'two story frame ho-use north ,of it, 'which were .wrecked -by a raterious ex plosion at 10:50 Sunday '.night. He fourjd no evidences of infernal machines or bombs. The warden stated, however, that he is convinced the explosion was caused deliberately by unidentified persons. Mrs. Fred Gibilisco, wife of the owner of the building and grocery store, admitted Monday she had received two threatening letters last August, but attaches no connection between them and the explosion. She said she and her husband hold $1,000 insurance on ths-uilding and $1,000 insurance on the grocery stock. They have operated the store for the last three months, she stated, but were out of the city tle eight pre ceding months, operating the store tor about 14 months before that. The first threatening letter she re ceived, she declared, notified her tersely to prepare for her husband's funeral, while the second warned her that if she wanted the store, the d better move it away. The Gibiliscos live in Benson. Mrs. Gibilisco did not know of the ex plosion until Monday when her son,- Paul, 16, returned home from spending the night with his grandmother. Aged Man Hit By Train Dies Taken to Hospital in Bluffs After Accident Near Onawa, la. Something to live tip to Heinz Vinegars have purity greater than any food law demands. . Living up to the rep utation of 4he "57" to the quality guaran teed by the Heinz la bel tothe Heinz ideals of care and cleanliness these are what de termine the goodness of Heinz Vinegars.- mmL WRE VINEGARS J- Following injuries received when he- was struck by a Northwestern passenger tram near Unawa, la., Sunday, R. S. Wade, 80, 901 Fill more avenue. Council Bluffs, died in Mercy hotpital Monday morning, from shock and old age, according to attending physicians. Wade wandered away from his home Saturday, as he has done sev eral times in the last year or two, according to police, and his wife ap pealed to authorities to hunt for him. Their search was not successful as on previous occasions. Sunday night he was brought to the hospital. He is survived by his widow, Ra chel; four sons, Zan, Anthony and Perry, of Council Bluffs, and Lee, of Boise City, Idaho; three daughters, Mrs. John Bruns of South Omaha? Mrs. W. C. Lang and Miss Marie LWade of Council Bluffs. According to the sheriff's office, Wade was hit by one train which took him to Onawa, where he was transferred to another train and brought to the transfer station in Council Bluffs. He had suffered a broken left arm and internal in juries, and was removed from the train at the transfer station where a yard man saw him wandering about and called Sheriff Groneweg, whose deputies removed him to the hospital, according to the sheriff. Barrows Asks Separate Ballot in Special Election Lincoln, June . 26. (Special) Lieut. Gov. P. A. Barrows in an open statement today called for a ruling by the attorney general's office authorizing a separate ballot for the special primary and election to be held at the same time as the regular primary and election for the purpose of. nominating and electing a succes sor to Congressman J. Frank Reavis of this district, for his unexpired 4$rm, Several republican candidates for the regular election who also filed for the special election after Reavis resigned have withdrawn as candi dates at the special election, fearful that as none of the democratic candi dates for the full term filed for the unexpired term some trickery was being planned.. Barrows, however, has maintained his filing for both terms and declares a separate ballot would make any democratic trickery planned futile. - . ' Tax Board Afraid of Rich, Declares County Assessor The board of equalization was threatened yesterday with a request for the. personal attendance of the attorney general at all its meetings, unless board members ceased "being afraid of millionaires." ; The threat was-made by Harry G. Counsman, county assessor, when an attorney for the Storas- Beverage com- ' pany sought to have his client s as sessment lowered. "You men don't have the nerve to vote," declared the assessor. "Every time a millionaire . comes to these meetings you fellows choke up and can't talk to record your vote." The other members of the equal ization board are the county com missioners. Storz wanted $100,000 deducted from the assessment. Hearing Held on Subject of Elevator Rental Charges Lincoln, June 26. (Special.) The Nebraska Railway commission lis tened to arguments for and against fixing rental charges for elevators situated on railway rights-of-way. Certain elevator owners claim that on new leases railroads are charging ex orbitant rentals. A petition asking the commission to regulate rentals was filed by the Farmers Co-operative Grain- and Livestock association and the XeBraska farm bureau. Rail roads against which complaints are made are the Union Pacific and Northwestern. , Judge Releases Husband From Paying Wife's Bills Judge W. R. Patrick took the part of the bill laden husband in muni cipal court yesterday and ruled that an account of abnormal size charged against him by his wife need not be paid. Through the decision F. L. .Schell, 2607 Woolworth avenue, need not pay for $884.20 for merchandise Mrs. Schell bought at a local store from March to July, 1921. - , ' "Why, this is the bill ofoods that a millionaire's '.wife mightbuy," exclaimed the judge as he scrutinized items ranging from $1.25 for a ball for the Schell 2-year-old, to a percb later for $21.50. Schell testified that he warned the store to cease honoring Mrs. Schell's orders. The couple .is now divorced. Foreign Trade News to Be Broadcasted by Radio .Washington, June 26. Distribu tion, of. the foreign trade news and dispatches by radio as a means of informing American business men of developments in the fields of in dustry and commerce abroad will be given a trial next month, it was an nounced by the Commerce depart ment. Possibilities of a government foreign trade news service by radio as a permanent practice was indi cated. For the guidance of all receiving stations the department announced, the time for broadcasting will be 8 p. in. (eastern standard time) on both days, July 11 and 12, the sta tion Arlington (NAA) and the wave length 2,650 meters. I Oscar A. Hirsli Is Sholby Wife Wealthy New Yorker Wound ed by Young Mate After Lawn Party. Freeport, N. V., June 2. Oscar A. llirh, wealthy former theatrical producer of New York, is in a criti cal condition at the Nassau county hospital, and his voting wife, llairl, is under arrrt, charged with having shot him following a quarrel at the close, of a lavcn party given bv Mis Kcne Davie. a.n i-trrj, tat 'y ye ttiday morning. The shooting occurred in front of the home of Mist Davits, who y sitter of Marion Davies, motion pic ture lar. Kcne Davies is the former wife of George Ledcrer, theater manager. The taute of the quarrel which led to the shooting is not knowu. Magistrate George J. Douras. father of the Missel Davits, who ran to liirsh's side immediately' after the thootinif. told Assistant District At tornev Kdwards the wounded man had aasnrd: "She did it. She shot me. She said she would get me, and now she did it." Mrs. Ilirsh, running from the scene of the shooting, was heard to say, accoruing io witnesses, un, i shot my daddy." Later, at the police station, MUs Rene Davies told the authorities that the accused woman declared that her husband had kept her a prisoner in their home here for four clays 'with little tood and drink, and when he picked on me I didn t know what I did. ' The Hirshs, who had been guests at the party, left shortly after mid night. A short time later the guests, including several well-known men and women of the stage and screen, and Magistrate Douras, heard a shot in front of Miss Davies home. A charge of assault with intent to kill was lodged against Mrs. Hirsh and she was sent to jail at Minsola, L. I., to be released later on $25,000 bail. :Bee .Want' All? 'Produce Results. Body of Whisky Runner Brought Here for Burial Edward I Joe) Welton, taxi driver, killed when his whisky-laden auto mobile overturned in a ditch near Canby, Minn., will be buried Wed nesday. The widow. Mrs. Laura Welton, returped with the body yesterday. Funeral services will be held at the home, 1503 Willis avenue, and burial will be in Forest Lawn ceme- Welton was running the whisicy blockade between here and Canada when the accident happened. Father, Not His Son, Runs for County Commissioner Frank G. Wallweber, 4608 South Twentieth street," is seeking the re publican nomination ' for county commissiJqer from the Fourth dis trict. His son, W. H. Wallweber, is not running for office. i Boy, 8, Beaten by Brother, 31, May Die Los At'gelrs. Cal, June J6- Ar nold Thomas, i, was held without bail lotUy on a charge of having beaten his half brother, Jack, 8 years eld, to ttftty that his recovsry was doubtful. Jack by selling papers, had actu mulattd If IJ lie planned to spend it yesterday on himself and few boy companions. When he started to take the money from his toy bank his elder half brother told hint he could not "blow it in. Jack insisted and, acrording to the police, the beat ing ioiiowel. I he police Mid the man used six lath end a rawhide strap and kicked the boy in the stomach. me charge against the mm is battery. Brick Will Be Used for West Q Paving Delegation of South Omahana ' (tve Views to County Headi. Paving of Vet Q street, writ of south Umaha, with a brick-surfaced road was assured annareiulv when a delegation of South Omahans in terviewed County Commissioners Henry McDonald- Thomas O'Connor and bophus Neble yesterday. "This road should be caved with what these people want," said Com missioner McDonald after the meet ing. "Ever since wc started the pres ent roaa-Duiiding program 1 have been in favor of paving the roads wun a brick surlace, as we promised to do when the bonds were voted. I j have voted for brick consistently, be lieving it to be best, and 1 will con tinue to do so. Bridal Party Dismissed by Police Magistrate A bridal party arrested Saturday nisht on a charge of reckless drivinsr and disorderly conduct was freed in police court yesterday. the party was arrested after the nuptials of W. B. Cochran, 402 North Sixteenth street, and Lenna Halberg, 1923 South Nineteenth street. They were alleged to have been driving in zig-zag fashion up and down Farnam street. When Cochran explained to the judge that the affair was only a wed ding celebration, the entire party, in cluding bridesmaids and best man, was dismissed. North Dakota Primary Election to Be Held Today Bismarck, N. D., June 26. Voters of North Dakota will ballot in a state wide primary election Wednesday, and for the first time in recent years, the outstanding contest for the re publican United States senatorial nomination does not present a clear- cut issue as between Nonpartisan leaguers and those opposed to -the league. Every time you buy and use Baking Powder that does not give satisfaction you have increased the cost of your bakings, many times? o a o o dfflUURHEF The Economy MWURKG PdDiBBEBS Is the best that coca be mode No waste No failures. Moderate in cost. That's why mil lions of house wives buy and and use it A pound can of Cal. umet contains full 16 ounces. Some baking powders come in 12 ounce instead of 16 ounce cans. Be sure you get a pound when you want it While She Was Waiting in the Moonlight For I don't know what his name is she remembered several specials at Thompson, Belden's and decided to go down there real early the next morning. Powder and More Powder So as to keep fresh and dainty all the time. The kind to carry with you is a large size gold box of Colgate' com pact powder. Price $1. Cold storage for furs; also re pairing and remodeling. Hand Made Blouses, $2.50 Peter Pan and "V" neck models smart est things I know to accompany the sleeve less jersey jacket or the sweater on their summer time excur sions. Specially priced for $2.50. Third Floor Nothing More Cool For summer wear than a jersey silk vest. A special in the bodice style is $1.95. . Second Floor Two Specials in Linens Madeira Scarfs $7.50 (20 by 36), $4.75 Japanese Cloths $2.50 (60 by 60), $1.95 tyain Floor Fancy Hankies, 35c Each Colored ones and white in very fine qualities. Special at 35c each or 3 for $1. $3.75"Rolletles", elastic top half hose for women, in black, gray and white, either plain ordropstitch,$2.50 Fresh and Dainty Sandwiches Take lunch at "The Buttermilk Shop" each day. The sandwiches are fresh each noon, the pastries are delicious and the milk and cream as tasty as can be. Come in and become acquainted. This is the "friendly shop" in the heart of Omaha. "Health in Food" BUTTERMILK SHOP Nertbwait Corner 16th and Farnam POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT OEST DY TEST C. J. ANDERSEN Republican Candidate for Water Board Mr Platform if ""Servict." Every Water and Cai Patron is entitled to eour'tout treatment and we all want reduction of ratea a. soon as possible. "BUSINESS and Not POLITICS" Hotel Castle OMAHA When in Omaha Stop at ; Hotel Rome HULBRANSEN "PLAYER PIANO (TOE TT1P1 I I la I irrn u in 'N'!"?- oB33 tt5n 700 600-495 The Art and Music Store 1513-15 DoufU. Street