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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1922)
"Henry and Me" Day Will Be for "Henry Only" William Allen White Will Not Appear on Program With Governor Of fending Card Removed. l.mporia, Kan., July 24 (By A. I' )-William Alt White, editor of the Emporia Gartte, who (or several day hat heen displaying a placard in the window of the (iaette office, kept his in concealed trout the pub lic eterda. The yellow poster an-iimim-inu, "We are fur the striking railroad men 50 per cent." wis re moved Lite Saturday following the is Mting of a warrant charging Mr. White with violating the industrial 1'itirt tau- The dlitnr immediately i ude bond for hi appearance when " ihc rae is called in the October wrtn of the district court. In a statement given out when the warrant Mas issued, Mr. White de- larcd he was removing the offend ii'g sign, nut in "acknowledgement of the right of the state to suppress free utterance, published in a decent and rderly manner," hut because he be lieved a protesting party should "obey the order or law while the case is pending. For "Henry Only." "Henry and Me day" scheduled to tuke place when Mr. White and Gov ernor Henry J, Allen are on the pro gram to address the Kansas State Normal school, will be a day for "Henry only." the editor declared, in stating that he will not appear on the platform. "No, I will not be on the platform with the governor," he said. "I do not want to embarras Henry. 1 had not agreed to speak at the normal and this idea of 'Henry and Me' day probably was hatched to make a newspaper story." T I . II - I f i nc ycuow piataru tianea a con troversy between Mr. White and Governor Allen, life long friends, ' both publicly and privately, over the interpretation of trie industrial court act. At the outset of the railroad strike, Governor Allen issued an or der declaring that posting signs ex pressing sympathy for the strikers was in violation of the anti-picketing provisions of the law. Puts Sign, in Window. The editor last week placed the sign in his window and published an editorial in his paper, saying that the governor's interpretation of the law interfered with free speech and court ing arrest for posting the placard. The fact that Mr. White has been an ardent supporter of the industrial court law and that he and Governor Allen have been friends has caused much publicity to be given the con troversy. Mr. White said he would not again post the placard in his window. "I will have it framed and keep it as a souvenir," he said. Governor Chuckles. Topeka, Kan., July 24. Governor Allen declined to comment on the announcement by William Allen White that Mr. White would not appear on the same progam with the i vr mil hi inr rnsc i parnnrc college, because he does not "want to embarrass Henry." Governor Allen chuckled when he was told Mr. White had made such- an announce' inent. - ' "I am going to drive to Emporia Mpnday morning, speak at a pro gram of the Kansas Teachers' col lege and leave immediately," Gov ernor Allen said, "I did not know Mr. White was to appear on the same platform. I have no comment to make on his announcement." Fireman Fighting Store Blaze Overcome by Smoke St. Paul, Neb., July 24. (Special.) The Ed Hoover store was threat ened with fire when a shed in the le.ir burned. The fire department javed the building. Ed Dvoracek, clerk in the Hoover store and mem ber of the volunteer fire department, was overcome by smoke and was rescued with difficulty. The box Ublae Opal jar inside Be sure to get real Resinol If yon want to get rid of edema, pimples, or other distressing skin eruption, you will accept no "sub stitute" for Resinol. Preparations similar in name or appearance are not "just the same as ResinoL" Although a fesr onscrupolous deal ers may offer them as or for Res inol. they are often crudely made of little healing power, and some may eren be dangerous to use. Buy in the original blue package. Resinol never sold in balk They are G00D! io Buy this Cigarette andSave Money -- 'VI. RHrvrrTMr; itd W I DON'T ce HOW Jr ... THtWt DOCSN- TO flNO KEH BROTHER . S, M ? jL ""O THE tL WHEN THE VftOUE PotXE J r V'l4SSr Ht roRCC are, n gfr JtsT '?i yy, he- terN LOOKIN" FES'LlV 5EiL ;: ! 11 1 A ) HIM' r Marriage of Barry Wicklow By RUBY M. AYRES Copyright, 1922. (Continued From Yesterday.) Hazel strurk in impatiently: "Uncle is too silly for anything. I'm not a child, and and -" She broke off; her eyes had fallen on Parry bulging portmanteau standing in the h.fll. She turned to him quirkly. "Where are you going?" she asked, sharply. Barry shrugged his shoulders. "I've been asked to leave," he said hardly. "Your uncle prefers my room to my company." There . was a moment's silence. Hazel was crimson with anger. "Mother how insufferable! Whv wasn't I told? Oh, uncle do next? Oh! whatever will I won't btand it!" Mrs. Bentley began to cry. "It's his house, my dear. He has kept us all these years. It's for him to say who shall be here." "I think it's disgraceful!" Hazel said, stormily. "If he thinks I am going to be ordered about all my life like this-" She broke down into tears and ran back up the stiirs. Barry followed two at a time. He caught her as She reached the little landing. Ue put an arm round her. She was sobbing bitterly now. ' "Don't cry, my dear." he said, in distress. "There's nothing to cry for; it will be all right. I'm not going for ever. I shall write to you, and come back and fetch you. It's only for a little while." She turned to him, hiding her eyes against his coat. "I don't want you to go. It will be hateful here without you, and I was sd" happy." Barry was as his wits' end to know what to do. He hated to see Hazel .crying, but for the moment the situation seemed impossible. ; He went on talking rapidly. He would make arrangements and come back to fetch her. They could get married, and everything would be all right. She was a silly little girl to cry there was nothing to cry for He kissed her and tried to comfort her. "I don't want you to leave me,' she sobbed. "I know you'll never come back" She had utterly lost her self-possession. She clung to him and cried piteously. "You'll for get me when you get to London; I know you will " "I shan't upon my honor I shan't!"' he declared, indignantly. "If you think that, I'll go downstairs this minute and tell them that we're going td be married. Shall I do that?" He did not 'wait for her to answer. He started towards the stairs, but she stopped him. "No no it would only make things worse. I'll wait. I won't cry any more. Only -"she raised her swimming eyes to his "you won't forget me? Promise you won't for get me?" Barry answered passionately that he never should; of course he never should. He kissed her again and "again. "I'll write to you and we'll be married soon, and then they can't say anthing. You do love me, Hazel?" "You know I do!" she answered, quiveringly. He did know it. It 'gave him a little thrill of triumph to know it, and yet above her bowed head his eyes looked somehow worried. What the dickens was he to do? he was asking himself. He hadn't any money worth talking about, and if he married Hazel off-hand and took her up to town to his rooms it would be the very deucel The only thing for it was a compromise, for the present at least. "I'll write," he promised again. "I'll write to you as soon as I get to London. There kiss me." He kissed her hurriedly. Such a woe-begone little face she raised to him. and he heard her sobbing as he went off down the stairs two at a time. Mrs. Bentley met him in the hall. "Mr. Ashton, you must have some breakfast before you go." . "No, thanks," Barry answered, grimly. He picked up his bag and held his hand to her. "Good-bve I'm sorry. It's not my fault a'll this has happened. Thank you very much for your kind ness." The farmer came to the sittmg room door. "The trap won't be here yet for half an hour," he said, rather un easily. Barry looked aV him with furious eves. ""Damn the trap!" he said. "I'm going to walk. CHAPER XII. Barry fell asleep on the train. He slept till he reached London. That surprised him he had felt so genu inely worried and wretched he had not expected to get any sleep for a week at least. London was looking its best Autumn sunshine filled the streets. As he drove across Piccadilly he noticed that the women on the island were selling big shaggy chrysanthe mums. Barrv had never noticed those sort ! of details before he went to Cleave X. Mr. . . " . 1 .L. I I arm. Atter an, ripping mougn inc country was without doubt. London ! v.as also one of the finest places in : the world. He let down the window of the taxi and sniffed the air ap ' predatively. I j He was not expected in his rooms. father M. J A I il-liX"- J'. , His arrival threw the housekeeper into a panic. There was nothing in the place to eat, she told him. If only he bad sent a wire! "I don't want anything to eat," Barry told her. "I'm dining out. Are there any letters for nie?" There was a whole stack of them. Harry glanced through them casually and finally selected twor He opened the first frowningly. It was from liulbert and asked in polite but unmistakable terms for a check: "You promised this some time ago. I must ask you to iorward it now without delay." Barry said "Damn." He tossed the letter down aud opened the other, which was addressed in Agnes Dudley's writing. He read the first line aud changed color a little. "You dear, impulsive firebrand," she had written, "w hy must you take me so seriously? I didn't mean it, Barry. I was only just seeing if you really cared for inc. You don't know what I've suffered since you went away and vanished so mysteriously. I have tried to find you by every means in my pdwer and failed. I am now sending this to your rooms in the hope that some one may really know where you are and forward it. Come and see me, Barry; the answer to a question you asked me long ago has been waiting for -you ever since you went away. Yours , as ever, Agnes." Barry groped backwards for a chair and dropped heavily into it. He could not believe that he had read aright. He stared down at the letter with incredulous eyes. So she wasn't engaged to Hulbert, after all! It had all been a Joke at' least, he supposed it was vnat she would call a joke; a pretty joke, when one looked at it in the light of the events of the past 10 days. Barry ran his fingers through his hair. A pretty mess he was in now! What the dickens was he to do? The housekeeper came again to the door. "Mrs. Dudley has rung up every day since you went away, sir," she said, deprecatingly. . "I promised to let her know as soon as you came back." ' - Barry turned sharply. ''Oh, all right." The door shut again. Barry mixed himself a stiff whisky. As yet he could not analyze his feelings, though it was a great relief to know that, after all, he had not really been jilted. One blow to his pride was soothed at all events. He felt considerably bucked. He glanced at himself in the glass above the mantel shelf. He supposed he would have to go round and see her. It was the only possible way to put things straight; and then he thought suddenly of Hazel, and whistled softly! Things had got complicated with a vengeance. He sat down, again and tried to sort himself out, but somehow Hazel and the farm already seemed to have retreated to an unconscionable dis tance. Barry was the kind of man who lived always in the present. Down at Bedmund he had been happy and satisfied he had not missed London one little lit but now he was back there again neither did he greatly miss Bedmund or Cleave Farm. He thought of Hazel a great deal as later he changed into evening clothes. He wondered what she was doing now. He glanced at his watch. Six o'clock. Perhaps she would be getting supper ready 1 He smiled a little. It seemed im possible that at this time yesterday he had been quite content to sit on the kitchen table and watch her make cakes and pastry quite satis fied with the plain "high tea" which was generally the evening meal at the farm. It only showed, so he told himself, what an accommodat ing fellow he was, to be able, to shake down in any surroundings. He wondered if Agnes would be very surprised if he walked in that evening. It was only when he ac tually found himself at her house that he realized he had acted fool ishly in coming; he hated a scene, and he supposed he would have to go through one either way, whether he told her about Hazel or not. It was something of a relief, there- WOMEN will beeltd to 1 ' know of a laitlv that operates without en Din? or weaVanins. ?aff Thousands will tell yon idct eei more saustactorr ;ults from Dr. fsldmir. Stitid Pemin than from nlta. Dills and drastic eathirtim. Sttoo Pernio ia mild, mail cleanser and regulator. It costs oaif about a cent a doee. DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE Take Dr. Cildwell's-Syrap Pentta when constipated, bilious, headachy orout of sorts. Yon will find your gen eral health and complexion so im proved Ibst less cosmetics will be needed. Thousands of women hare proved this true. HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE Few ncap aynjtipatitm, jo rum if yom Ao aoc Trowce A ioxonvc at tfat moment let mc sens yon Halt-Oiaux Trial Bank of my Sjnp Pefm FREE OF CHARQE ss duu you uiU hm it handy when needed. Sirrah send yoNT name and addnn m Dr. W. 8. CiLdnvit, 514 Washington Sc., MormccUo. UL W'ntc mt today. I J" - J IT -f IT THE OMAHA DEE: TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1022. r.U. Offir ; fore, to hear that she was out, and not expected in till nine. He left his card and went off cheerfully to dine at his flub. He enjoved his meal thoroughly. After tall. London was hard to beat. When ! he had fini.-hed he dozed in an arm I chair till nine, then he sent for taxi and drove again to .Mrs. Dudley's. Yes. she was in now. The maid smiled discreetly as she took his hat and coat. She knew a great deal about her mistress and she had seen the sudden fish of joy in Mrs. Dud ley's eyes when she heard that Bar ry had called. Rarrv followed Her soberly across ,thc hall. His heart was beating un comfortably fast, but not exactly with pleasure. He wished he could forget Hazel for a moment, but, try as he could, she was always in his mind. He felt as if she were walk ing across the hall beside him and into Agnes' scented drawingroom. Mrs. Dudley rose from the sofa as he entered. There was strong agitation in her face as she came to meet him" She held out her hand, and Barry saw how it shook. "Well wanderer!" she said with a nervous laugh "I thought you'd walked awav forever." He took the hand she hold to him. He wondered if she expected him to kiss her. Before he went away he had kissed her quite often and naturally, but now things seemed to have changed a great deal. He kept her hand in his and sat .down beside her. "I've been in the "country" he said awkwardly. "I only got hark this afternoon and found your letter." She looked at him reproachfully. "Why didn't you write? Barry, I've been so unhappy!" He had never heard so much emo tion in her voice before. It would have made him ineffably happy once, but now it merely embarrassed him. "I hate writing letters," he said boyishly; "and and it was . miles away from anywhere where I stayed. . . . There was nothing to write about." She flushed. "Nothing to write about! Not to me? Oh, Barry!" He did not answer, and she drew her hand away. Barry s'tared down at the carpet. He had seen it hundreds of times before, but tonight for the first time he noticed that there were pink rose buds in it. He kept his eyes fixed on them. He felt as if he could never look up again. ' He knew now how great a mistake it had been to come: he cursed his folly under his breath. W'ith an effort he raised his eyes. "Well what have you been doing all this time?" he asked stiltedly. She rose to her feet. She walked away from him and stood with her hand resting on the mantelshelf, loking down at the fern-filled grate. Her eyes were mortified. Barry bit his lips. He knew he was hurting her horribly; and yet, he asked himself desperately, what the dickens else was he to do? Once he had thought he loved her. It was strange that he thought so no longer. Of course, he should al ways be fond of her as a friend, but never as anything else. . . . He dragged himself to his feet, went over to where she stood and tried to make her look up, " but she re sisted him. (Continued In The Bee) Tomorrow.) Pawnee County Pioneer, Overcome by Heat, Dies Pawnee City, Neb., July 24. H. M. Foley, pioneer resident of this community, died at his hpme five miles south of here after having been overcome by the heat. He was pitching hay for a neighbor when af flicted. " Mr. Foley had a state-wide reputa tion in church and Sunday school circles, having been active in those lines for many years. He was just past 70 years old. Funeral services will be held from the First Presby terian church here Tuesday afternoon at 4. - COLORADO LUMP $11.50 Smokeless A Good WIZARD LUMP $14.50 Per Ton A Hot, Clean Coal Very Little Ash . PETROLEUM COKE $15.50 No Ash Why not be on the safe sjde of the fence? Good Coal. Good Dealers. Good Service. Consumers Coal & Supply Co. "Dealers in Good Coal" DOUGLAS 0530. DOUGLAS 0530. ft J ICC AND MAGGIE IS fUl PACK Of COLORS IN THE HJNPAV fIC HAVE fOO THtN, or HOW Wl5 WIFE WV. Aerial Is Aid to Safety in Storms Actually IiCOn Danger From Lightning With Antenna Than Without. ' Watch out for lightning beware of fre injury or death as a result of usuing your radio set with a roof aerial! Thunderstorms with atten dant lightning may kill you while you sleep! Protect yourself, your family, your friends 1 Safeguard your life with a Hoosis Lightning Pro tector!" Wow but doesn't that give one the spinal chills? But, is it a warning from the fire department or docs the federal government issue such warn ings? Not much. It is merely an advertisement attempting to sell lightning arresters by the "scare-'em-stiff" method. The use of lightning arresters is not discouraged because occasionally they do protect delicate radio re ceiving instruments and because, in some localities, they are required by law. But hysterical fears, unfounded in most cases and greatly exaggerat ed in others, are to be discouraged. Aerial a Protector. Lightning is the result of a dis charge of electricity between a cloud and the earth. This discharge often amounts to millions of volts, which j sounds very dangerous, but isn t, if it strikes somewhere else. Be as sured that the lightning is not going to follow you around and seek you out for a little light diversion. It seeks the fastest way out and the shortest way down. Now if your aerial is properly erected and ground ed, it will tend to equalize the elec trical strain between the charged clouds over your roof and the earth beneath you. in very much the same way as a lightning protector or light ning rod. In other words, a properly erected aerial is a lightning protector, and is therefore a safeguard, if anything, against lightning. The possibilities of a single wire aerial as an equalizer between the charged cloud and the charged earth may not be very great, but it certainly can, by no stretch of the imagination, be termed an attrac tion to lightning. Extra Heavy Current. Assume that the electrical energy in a cloud decides to come to earth. A single No. 14 wire, strung as an aerial over your roof, is not going to affect the going or coming of the lightning flash in the least. The entire mass of wire in your aerial won't move a million-volt lightning flash one iota of an inch. It is like trying to use a one-inch horseshoe magnet to draw a locomotive off of its iron track when it is speeding at 60 miles an hour. Lightning arresters are of value mainly to protect instruments from the extra heavy current charges caused by excessive static and from high potential current induced by lightning discharges taking place at a distance. But they need no protec tion from a direct bolt of lightning, at least no more protection than the mistaken idea that an aerial offers attraction. , The similarity between an aerial, properly grounded, and a lightning rod, is sufficient to cause the state- Sparks Figures just announced indicate that in New York state alone, dur ing the month of March, 1922, 1,717 We Have It for Immediate Delivery Per Ton Sootless Clean Coal RADIANT $12.00 Per Ton The Best Franklin County, 111., Coal Per No Dirt Ton C N THE HO WTM.'. ttu tv Int t FtATuns Slavics. Inc. I ll 725 new radio corporations were or ganized. Sometimes it is very difficult to get a sensitive spot on your crystal. Try the following plan: Take a dis carded crystal and pulverize it, but not very finely. Put sonic of this in side a metal casing and rcrcw it into the cup of your detector. You will be surprised to note how quickly you can find a good spot now. The "A" battery is the storage bat tery that is used to light the filament of a vacuum tube and is so called an "A" battery because it is the first battery in the circuit and because current in the plate battery circuit will not flow till the "A" battery has been turned on. The "B" battery is the plate battery used to furnish cur rent to operate the date circuit of the vacuum tube. The "B" battery is also the second battery to be in corporated in a vacuum tube set and so gete its name "B" battery. There is also another 'battery sometimes used. This battery is called the "C" battery. The "C" battery is con nected in the grid circuit of the tub? and is used to furnifh negative grid potential to the grid of the tube, mcnt that a god aerial, well erected and well grounded, offers the same protection against lightning that a lightning rod docs. And this is ef fected by the fact that the aerial and the lightning rod both tend to equal ize the electrical potentials between the earth and the clouds above, thus preventing to some degree the light ning flash caused by the difference in potential between the earth and the clouds immediately above. Radio C. of C. Meet Opens in Washington Washington, July 24. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover will make the opening address at the first annual convention of the National Radio Chamber of Commerce, which convenes at the Wardman-Park hotel, Washington, D. C, July 26 to 28, inclusive. Secretary Hoover, who has made no secret of his sympathies with the development of the radio in dustry, it is 6aid, will make several practical suggestions for the guid ance of the infant industry during the coming year. At the convention will be gathered many manufacturers of radio appara tus and auxiliary equipment from every point of the country. New officers for the coming year will be elected, it was said, as some of the present incumbents have indi cated that, since the most arduous work of organization is now practi cally completed, it is thought best to entrust the executive direction to new hands. The present officers are: President, Alexander Eisemann of Freed-Eisemann Radio corporation; first vice president, Charles Keator of the De Forest Radio Telephone and Telegraph company; second vice president, William Dubilier of the Dubilier Condenser company; secre tary, Frank Hinners of the Home Radio corporation, and treasurer, Joseph D. R. Freed of the Freed Eisemann Radio corporation. On the program for discussion will be the various problems of standardi zation, regulation, factory systems, comparative rating of various types of apparatus, calibration, patents, trade marks, publicity, employment, etc. It is expected that shortly after the jiis Dream CdmeTruefA All Six Restaurants MEMBER Drawn for The Bee by McManua close of the convention upwards of 1,500 members will be enrolled on the chamber's records. Those who desire to attend the convention should make reservations by wire to the hotel and also imme diately telegraph Mr. George II. Lewis, care of National Radio Cham ber of Commerce, 156 Broadway, New York. Close Contest in Primary for Sheriff of Antelope Ncligh, Neb., July 24.-(SpeciaU The only real contest at the primary (lection in Antelope county was that for sheriff on the democratic ticket and clerk on the republican ticket. Perry H. Peterson, the present clerk, received the nomination over J. C. Jenkins by a vote of 693 to 634. C. A. Button of Klein received 251 votes over S. P. Christensen of Ne- lieh for the democratic nomination for sheriff. J. D.' Miller of Elgin is the nrocressive candidate. A. F. Bare of Ncligh received the democratic nomination as state sen ator from the Twenty-first district over Clarence Ball of Bartlett by a vote of 272 to 2b5. Edward Houtz of Albion received 155 votes. Elwcll Johnston of Orchard re ceived 485 votes for the republican nomination for representative of the Sixty-second district. Of Course You Hop Flavored THE only question is which one will yon buy? Good hop flavored malt sugar syrup is made out of choice No. 1 malt barley and imported Bohemian hops. It is filled with sugar, rich with malt, full hop flavored, and almost free from moisture. A cheap hop flavored malt extract, on the other hand, is low in sugar content, flat in malt value, and weak in hop flavor, because it is filled with moisture, adulterated with cheap corn, and flavored with low grade loose hops. Such a hop flavored malt extract is of no earthly value even after you have bought it. There is no reason for experimenting in buying malt extracts because Puritan Hop Flavored Malt Sugar Syrup sets the standard all over the world both as to quality and as to price. You can't pay more and get as good a quality as you get in Puritan and you can't pay less and get anything worth taking home. Puritan is the richest hop flavored malt extract made anywhere in the world, and, because of the enormous quantity produced, it is as cheap in price as you can af ford to pay. So ask for and demand HOP FLAVORED PURITAN MALT SUGAR SYRUP For Sale at All Good Stores Distributed by ' THE JERPE COMMISSION COMPANY Omaha, Neb. AT lantic 0850 SPECIAL All This Week July 24 to 29, In clusive, with the purchase of any of our wholesome and health building foodstuffs, we will give for 5s extra a large wedge of ' crisp and delicious Green Apple Pie Remember the kind that Mother used to bake and put on the window lede to cool? Good and deep, the crust short, crisp and brown, the apples baked in their natural juice? it's a pie for warm weather and when you taste a piece you will want more. DONT MISS IT! These Hot Weather Dishes Are Delightfully Cool and Refreshing. ' Salads Made from Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. Cold Sliced Premium Ham ("the ham what am") and Potato Salad 30 Cold Sliced Premium Ham (half portion). Hard Boiled Egg and Potato Salad 30 Cold Hoast Beef (choice cuts) and Potator Salad 30 Hard Boiled Eggs, Radishes, Green Onions and Potato Salad 30 Salmon and Potato Salad 30 Premium Frankfurters (large size) and Potato . Salad so Lamb Tongue and Potato Salad 30 WELCH'S OWN OLD-STYLE SWEET CREAM BUTTERMILK 5 Keol Lemonade ....5 Iced Tea, Coffee or Cocoa ...-.6 OF NATIONAL RESTAURANT ASSOCIATION Man Hunt Staged for Fugitive on Farnam Street PrUonrr Hchl for Trial m Mann Art Charge After Unsuccessful Dar-h for Freedom. Fartiam street was the scene of a man hunt at 2:45 Monday atternoon. Frank M. Davis of Kanas lity, charged with violating the Mann art, was being taken from the county jail to the federal building for prelimi nary hearing before United States Commissioner Boehlrr when he jerked loose from M. A. Kuddv, deputy marshal, at Seventeenth street, and tied down l-arnam. Several persons unwittingly Mock ing the fugitive's path were knocked to the ground. Grabbed by Sleuth. , "Slop him; he's a federal prisoner!" shouted Ruddy, running alter Davis with gun drawn, but restrained from shooting because of the crowded con dition of the street. A handful of men joined in the chase. Just as it seemed Davis was mak ing good his escape an arm reached out and grabbed him and the badge of a plain clothes officers was flashed before his eyes. The modest captor left without telling Ruddy his name. Held for Trial. Bochler was held for trial under $2,000 bond after being caught and taken before the commissioner. Federal agents said they found a bottle of "knockout drops" in his possession, and Lurile Frye, 16, Olathe, Kan., the girl concerned in the Mann act charge, said Davis had told her he gave them to persons he intended to rob. Davis said he is an interior deco rator. The girl will be taken back to Olathe hy her father. School Bonds Defeated Lodgepole, Neb., July . 24. (Spe cial.) The bond issue for a $70,000 school house was defeated. The vote was 80 for and 131 against. Will Buy Some Malt Extract All Six Restaurants