Move Made to Check Big Crime Wave Two Murders, Three Shoot ings, ]6 Suicides and At < tempted Suicides in Omaha During April. Anna (Ireeo, 14, 210(i North Fif teenth street, shot by James ('orbinn Saturday night when ‘lie refused to Jtlope with him, died Monday after on at St. Joseph hospital. Condi ,'i of the father, Alfred (Ireeo. . j.nin ( orbinn attacked witli a knife. AdN reported critical, rt:orbinn arrived in Omalia shortly |!er 3 Monday afternoon by anlo • ■•liile, from Ames, la., where he was laken from a train, in custody of l>e teeth rs Iviliian, Davis and confessed shooting the (Ireeo gilWo Ames po lice. During the month of April. Omaha hits been gripped by a wave of vio lent crime which Inis called forth drastic measures on the part of of ■ ficials for its abatement. •MUVder or attempted murder lias >een an almost weekly occurrence, iwording to police records, and near v a score of Omahans sought to take ^eir own lives. vDuriug the lTionth there were two •layings, three shootings in which lirce persons were fatally wounded. Iti suicides and attempts at suicide, and 08 automobile accidents, one re suiting fatally. ihe latest nf a long scries of shout ings is the wounding of sleltastano Mangenmeli. 1117 North Seventeenth street, proprietor nf a puo! hall at 1624 Nicholas street, by Waller Lawrence, 1722 1-2 Cuming street, Sunday after noon. Mangenmeli died last night. Woman Seeks Life. ► The latest suicide attempt on ihe poliee hooka i.s that of Mrs. 1- an ■ is Qiilnley, 220$ Grand avenue, who sho, and perhaps fatally wounded 1 i rself Sunday night in front of tin home "f A. Havelka, 2212 Grand a\e sue. Ill health is believed to hate prompted her act. She was taken to Swedish Mission hospital. Her hus hand, Knimet Quinley, Is a dance had inspector. Housed hy the epidemie of crimes nf v*eieuetoni ju*t south Sioux Ot> ing of Trail*, south: Road** good Avar to River road Road* good Chlte-Way "7" hgh’vas . Road,, fa.r good; somewhat rough in stretches. <) A. Shortllne- Roads fair to good Vrimary No *. Roads good Weather reported clear at all s’atinn* Edict Against Marriage Arouses IS'ear Revolution at Syracuse University Syracuse, N. Y„ April 30„—Chancel |lor Charles Wesley Klint. of Syracuse ►university, yesterday faced a revolt in his own faculty ranks as a result of his edict forbidding student marriages under pain of expulsion. Prof, Harry H. Skerritt, instructor in the College of J,aw. and member of the board of education, declared that the chancellor's ultimatum had no legal validity. Married students are incensed at the allegation that they cannot at tend fo home duties and their stud ies at the same time. Lower Clothing Prices Sought Retailers to Discuss Reduction at Chicago Convention in September. Ily '\nMlriaterl Chicago. April 30.—How to get clothing to the customer at the low est price, or in other words a lesson in tiie reduction of overhead expense similar In character to an abbreviated university course, will lie offered to everyone "ho attends the 10th anni versary convention and exposition of the National Association of Retail Clothiers which will he held here dur ing the last week of September. According to the arrangements made by Charles E. Wry, executive director of iho association, every one who addresses the convention will place particular emphasis upon this important subject. "The retail clothing dealer who fa vors high prices, if there still exists such a merchant," said Mr. Wry while discussing the preparatory work of the convention and exposi tion. “is standing in hi* own light. We had one sad experience with high prices not so very long ago, anrKit taught us a lesson. High prices don't mean big profits to the dealer by any incans. In fact they mean Just the opposite. What we are endeavoring to do all the time, and what we are going to emphatically drive home to rveryone who visits our convention and exposition, is that reasonable prices brought about by economy in overhead expense, such as rents, ef f cicncy in handling goods and other incidentals to the handling of cloth ing mean reasonable profits and sat i-fied customers. "A careful survey of the clothing industry hy qualified experts resulted in this conclusion, and this lesson is going to be taught at our convention and exposition morning, noon and night." Jim W inn Springs Surprise Wedding in Council Bluffs J nncs E. Winn, 24, Council Bluffs, i xploitation manager for First Na tional pictures in Omaha and formerly a reporter for the Omaha Bee, Sunday married Miss Marion t'opscy. t3. daughter of the vice president of a bank at York, Neb. The ceremony was unscheduled. Miss Copsey. accompanied by her mother, came to Omaha Saturday for a visit. They were staying at the Conant hotel. Sunday, however, the couple de ckled to be married at once. The ceremony was performed by Monsg. F. P. McManus of St. Francis Xavier church, at the church rectory at * p. m , under dispensation from Bishop Drumm of Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. M inn will make their home at the Blackstone hotel in Omaha. \ ictirn of Holdup Men Suffers a Broken Jaw Grand Island, Nftb.. April 30.—Joe Mrkvioka, a carpenter of Ravenna. Neb., is the victim of two thugs who a I templed to hold him up on the M'alnut street railroad crossing Stepping out of a dark place, they heat Mrkvicka, who fought back and finally walked away without being robbed. On one side of his jaw a tooth was broken out and the other jaw is fractured in two places. The victim is in a local hospital. ADVERTISEMENT. JUST A LITTLE POSLAM ENDS THATJTCHING Try this TESTED treatment te» night: Wash all the Itching places thor« oughly with roelam Soap and hot water. Then dab them over with lust a little Poelam. Poelam is am h t.'ONCENTKATED relief tha> the very first touch stops the itching end hurtling and lets vou sleep the whole night through—no more wak ing up to ecratch and dig And In the morning .lust LOOK at your akin! Already It seems less angry. The redness Is beginning in go. Vou can actually SEE how quickly the eoothlng, healing Poe lam treatment w.!! clear away the stubborn old eraema Poelam and Poelam Soap are sold svervwhere. For trial sampls, send the to POSLAM, 243 W «!th St., ,N«W York. Your blood is thicker anil more sIuk Kish in Winter than in Sum raer—it has to he to keep you warm. Then comes warmer days and lighter clothes Your blood. still thick and heavy-laden, la slow to throw off Its Impurities. What happens? The impurities crowd out through the skin—boils and pimples appear—you feel sluggish and tired I The remedy for this condition la S, 8. 8. It la the ideal blood purifier, because thn medic Inal properties are purely vege table. It Is a glorious fact that S. S. 8. has given new, long-forgot ten strength to older people and has made many old and young peo- I pie look years younger. Blood Is life—It's your foundation—make it rich—get blood strength—we all need It, especially rheumatics, S. 8. S. will Improve your appe tite and give you greater energy, strength and endurance. Mr. Harry C. Bachman. 473S Main Avenue, Norwood. Ohio, writes: "1 had akin eruptions—pimpla* and blackhead*. 1 took S.S.S. and we* happily surprised at the result* 1 got its less than three weeks’ time.'’ Try it yourself. S. 8. 8. is sold at .til gootl drug stores. The large size Is more economical. Uet a bot tle today! S. S.S. makes you feel like yourself again Minister Tells of Bank Venture Defendant in Fraud Trial Un aware of Guaranty Com pany's Action. Rev. Charles Roger*. 74, formerly pastor of Plymouth Congregational church, Lincoln, testified in federal court yesterday regarding his venture into the banking business after he had spent most of his life In the min istry, a venture which resulted in his indictment and present trial with 13 other men for alleged use of the mails to defraud in promotion of the Col onial Timber & Coal corporation. 'i he clergy man showed much lack of knowledge of what was going on in the Guaranty’ Securities company of which ho was a director and maria gtr of the Lincoln branch. He didn’t know the company had bought $2,000,000 of Colonial bonds unt‘1 some time after the purchase. If,* salary, he said, was $150 a month. He saw a ‘’sample" of the 700,000 acres of land the Colonial concern claimed to own in West Virginia, This was when lie took his daughter, Dorothy, to school at Stanlon, Va.. and stopped off in Charleston and \.as taken out to the land by Ralph Sunderland. He said lie stood amazed before (he great trees. When, on his •return to Lincoln, he described one of the walnut trees he. had seen to .1. I* llumpe. the latter declared that one such tree would he worth from $2,<)U0 to $2,500. Harry Dobbins of the Nebraska St.tie Journal and C. P. Russell, sec reiar” of the Lincoln Telephone com pany, testified to the high reputation of Rev Mr. Rogers. Pishop George ,\. Beecher, former ly dean of Trinity cathedral, was a character witness for George L. Stick el, a defendant. Car Turns Over Four Times; Occupants Slightly Hurt Four persons escape^ with cuts and bruises when their car turned over four times while rounding a curve on a country road south of Millard Sunday afternoon. They were Mr. and Mrs. Charles I-eeze. Claremont hotel, and Mr. and Mrs. l.eo Chocollek. A blowout caused the accident. Immediately afterward Deese sold the wreck of the car to a farmer for $45. Mr. and Mrs. David Alexander, 2039 North Thirty-first street, and their two children escaped injury when ihe car in which they were riding on West Center street was knocked over a 20-foot embankment by another machine _3k_ Operation for Oar Victim Unconscious for Nine Days Dorothy Wiles, S12 South Twenty ninth street, who has been uncon scious for nine days in Swedish Mis sion hospital, ever since she was struck by an unidentified motorist, will be operated on this afternoon in an effort to save her life, according to her foster father, Dick Wiles. She is an adopted daughter. I I lie opening number of the religious servlets Sunday morning broadcast by station WOAW, was "O Worship the King. ' by the orchestra and dou ble mixed quartet, composed of Mrs. W. James, Mr. and Sirs. J. Ralph Dykes. Misses Clara and Neve Nel sen. Daniel and Simon Ramseyer and i T. J. Nelson. A new feature of the morning serv ice was a Sunday school for chil dren. W. A. Fraser, sovereign com mander of the Woodmen of the World, who holds a Sunday school for chil dren at his home, sponsored the unique service. Scriptural readings were made by Rev. W. P. Iirod beck of Pattonsburgh, Mo. A duet by Miss Neve Nelson and T. J. Nelson, accompanied by the mixed quartet, was appreciated by listeners who expressed their pleas ure by telephone. The McIntosh fam ily. an instrumental tio of violin, 'cel lo and piano, played "In the Sweet Iiye and Bye." Miss Marie Danielson, soloist of the Omaha G cupel tabernacle, sang "Jesus, Blessed Jesus." The sermon of Rev. R. R. Brown had ns Its sub 1 ject "The Seed of the Woman." Announcement of the selection of the name for Rev. aud Mrs. R. it. BrOXMis baby was made at the end ■ of the services. The name chosen, "Jean Marylin,” was suggested by Mrs. George Burkman, 2704 North l'iltieth street, who becomes the owner : of the No. 311, new type, Kennedy 1 receiving set Missouri Synod's Growth G Outlined in Lecture The growth of the Missouri synod Lutheran churches in 50 years from a congregation of 12 members to five local churches with 4.000 communi I cate members, four outlying churches and a loc.TT mission, was described by I’ev. Titus Lang in a mission lecture at the Cross Lutheran church Sun day night. The five local churches which Rev. Mr. Lang described as "growing from the small seed planted 50 years ago," arc Cross, First, Immanuel. St. Paul and Zion, The Council Bluffs and Papillion churches were founded by the First Lutheran church. Churches at Florence and Bennington were founded by the other churches. The first Lutheran church was founded in 1S73 on land at Eleventh and Jackson streets, leased from the wife of President Cleveland. The first pastor was R»w .T Hilgendorf. now of Portland. Ore., who will attend the golden jubilee of the church next Sun i day. Assailant of Girl. Father. G’aptured in Ames. Iowa Jim-Corbino, confessed assailant of Anna Greco, 14, 2106 North Fifteenth street and her father, Alfred Greco, was captured in Amps, Is,, yesterday. Corhino, a boiler maker at 1-Iav* look. Neb . is said to have shot the girl and her father at their home Saturday night when the girl refused to marry him. Don't think water will taks the place of thorough cultivation—it won't. Reserve Board Issues Warning Statement Says Continuance of Credit Demand W ill Lead to Heavy Borrowing. Washington, April 30.—The federal reserve hoard, in a formal statement last night, again calls attention to the rapid expansion of credit demand and industrial production and warns that "a continuance ot this credit demand ! must soon result in increased borrow ] ings by banks which are members of rite federal reserve system of the ! federal reserve banks.” While the statement was issued a a summary of April business, it deals exclusively with the erfedit and , production situation and threads I through it, a comparison with condi • tions in 1921. , In its discussion of the expanding production, the board declares "sub stantial’ increase in Ihe demand for c urrency is in prospect if the rapid growth of payroll amounts continue* as it has since the middle of 1122. Should more currency lie needed, the hoard adds, the banks will seek greater accommodation from the re j serve banks to secure the additional i currency issued. "The present lending capacity of the country's banking system In view of tlie great growth of the rserves at the reserve hanksj.' the state inert says, "is not far in excess of the credit needs of the country's produc tive capacity. In such a situation, it is the available supplies of labor and equipment and not the potential sup ply of credit that, in the end. | must fix the limit which may he at tained by iigg-recate national product I tion. As these limits are approached, credit policy must he increasingly in fluenced by careful consideration of : the continued effectiveness of further i additions to the total volume of creditor in contributing to increased productivity.” Ribbon Jabots. Jabots of pleated ribbon in printed effects and plain colors are a popular addition to the street frock this spring. The Better Bread Supplies Iron IRON! The mineral that gives the body its proper quantity-and quality of blood; that promotes the secretions necessary to life’s processes. We cannot live without it. Did you know' that BETSY ROSS bread contains 27% of the iron supply required daily? There * fore, good bread, eaten with your regular diet fills the need for this indispensable mineral. Bread also contains phosphorus, calcium and other mineral salts vital to health. Don’t forget that there are different grades of bread. BETSY ROSS is scientifically made, safe guarding and promoting health, while also taste ful, appetizing, delicious. Eat more BETSY ROSS bread. And, when you order, don’t just sav “bread"— lav BETSY ROSS. The Jay Burns Baking Company i Hutltand Kills ^ ifc. Two Children and Self Malta, Mont., April 3U.—Janies K. Hovey, his wife ami two small chil* (Iren are dead, tlieir bodies badly mutilated. In their ranch home 33 miles southeast of here, and n baby girt is believed fatally Injured, fol lowing an ax and rlub attack, alleged in have been made by Hovey on his family Sunday morning. Two boys, 0 and 11, made their escape and called neighbors to the scene. According to the story (old by the i'vo boys they were awakened by the cries of their mother. They sa il they made their way to the kitchen to find , their parents engaged in a struggle | In the center of the room. As the' boys entered the room their father, armed with an ax. struck tlieir mother In the head. They declared Hovey llien turned on the hoys and attempt ed to strike them and they ran into the yard. • A search of the premises revealed Hovey s body in the corner of a granary with a shotgun lying neaiby. Omaha Pair Routs Parson for Vi eliding Rites at 3 X. M. Charles Davis and Jane E. Herd ham, both of Omaha, were married at ■'! a. m. Monday at the home of the Rev. Charles W. Havidge. They had been engaged for two years. East night they decided to marry immediately. They called Thomas J. Conley, attorney in the of fice of the county judge, who went to the court house and made out a li cense. Then he called ltev. Mr. Sav ;igc and tIig entire* party rf'palrK the minister’s home*, where the *\ mony was performed. Mother Rescues Two Small Tots from Blazing Horn*. Mrs. George Hollander. 3815 Clark street. dn»he tuum Feodor Chaliapin 88665 12 15 Chr.naon indoue (ajmiw iad»i rrjm^r r-•». Aaelita Gaili-Curci 66136 II 12 The Lost Chord (Trwtor-lisILrvmm) John McCormack 74791 12 ITS Melodious Instrumental Slavonic Dance No. 1 r-cvw> rw»sa. Jascha Heifetz 66139 19 12 Joy Soldiers’ March a ^ Where the Sunset Turns the Ocean’s Blue to Gold Peerless Quartet 3 75 j No One Loves You Any Better than Your M-A-double M-Y Bill? Mmny-Ed Soak .,w,.Q Don’t Think You’ll Be Missed n.'.™—-> Aileen Stanley 19039 '• 75 Humorous Monologue I * Ne.w ?anl on War WiB Rogen [ 4534 I Timely Topics Will Rogen 45347 ’• **• Lullabies of Other Lands # j (Cradle Songs of Many Nations—PaM 1 Edna Brown „ Cradle Songs of Many Nations—Part 2 Edna Brown 19039 11j -7S Dance Records (’Way Down Yonder in New Orleans—Fox Trot ( Paid Whiteman _ I Denreat-Fox Trot 1 and His Orchestra 1S030 18, 5 (Stailight Bay—Fox Trot The Benson Orchestra of Chicago „ _ I Think of Me—Fox Trot or Shimmy One-Step The Benson Orchestra of Chicago 19031 3 J (Farewell Blues—Fox Trot The Virginians, 1 Apple Sauce—Fox Trot The Virginians 1903214 75 (Burning Sands—Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra 1on,, 'Falling—Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra 1903- >• 75 (Crying for You—Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Sunny Jim—Fox Trot Zei Confrey and His Orchestra 1903411 75 I Bambalina—Fox Trot n.uwnm. > Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra, I Lady Butterfly—Med. Fox Trot > Great White Way Orch. 19003 11 <5 {Caroline—Medley Fox Trot ‘CaroLme ' The Great White Way Orchestra, . 'Man in the Moon—Medley Waltz o— >»u, > The Troubadours 19030 11 75 {The Fuzzy Wuzzy Bird—Fox Trot Zei Confrey and His Orchestra 10___ I Some Little Someone—Fox Trot Ze* Confrey and Hi? Orchestra 1903717 *$ (Whoa, Tillie, Take Your Time!—Fox Trot The Virginians .arv I You Know You Belong to Somebody Else—fox Trot The Virginians 19040 10 7i (University Lancer*—Part 1 international Novelty Orchestra ’ 'University Lancer*—Part 2 International Novelty Orchestra ‘i5<23 ** •* —r-^— —f—— — !~r- - ■ ■■ . - .. - i : Look for these trade-marks Under the lid. On the label. Victor Talking Machine Company. Camden.n.j. ►••a* te* '*:» MCI?* TAhfclM. ACMtM . » K'«r» H v—’■ iTU.iil ... W, — > ,.dk -nSMKX