=“” The Omaha Corning Bee; awiWa„ . ___ uiuro: m lira „ VOL. 53—NO. 129. Eg R T'SlST£*"5 « FV.' ’ OMAHA. - WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1923. * ^1 hJW'VJTTWO Cl8Mh8 *• S•T* - » - ■ * |—I1 ■■ — ■ ■— 1 ' ' ' ' — ' ' ,, ■«■■■■- M ■ ■ ■ I I. !—I — Ludendorff to Be Tried for Treason Hiller, Fascist Leader, Also to Face Court With General for Staging Coup in Bavaria. New Power in “Vikings” By IniverNnl Service. Munich, Nov. 13. Adolph Hitler, Bavarian fascist! leader, once an Aus trian paper hanger, and General Er ich Ludendorff, greatest German mil itary genius of the world wyir. are to he tried together before a special "popular court" on a charge of trea son. ^^That was the announcement made ■■ to.lay in the offices of the Bavarian government. The special court will be organized under the provisions of the martial law. The penalty may be confinement in a fortress, imprisonment or death. General Ludendorff, now practical ly Interned in his villa, had his tele phone cut today. The general made a determined protest, declaring this action curtailing his freedom was a violation of the promises made him wiien he gave his word of honor. The general told the government that rather than submit to new indignities he would submit himself for arrest and confinement. This the govern ment refused to allow. Arrested in I’ajamas. Hitler, who had declared that he would "win or die," was arrested at the home of a friend. At the time of his arrest, according to govern ment information. Hitler was clad In pajamas. Another version, however, is that he gave himself up on tho advice of General Ludendorff. The government today issued a dental of reports that Hitler is to be executed. The ministerial council today ap proved of everything that Dictator Von Kahr lias done. The govern ment continues to bombard the pub lic with statements justifying the conduct of Dictator Von Kahr, Gen rial Von Lossow and Colonel Seis : r. Their conduct has been openly t r! I led. in many quarters, "treachery," in Hitler and Ludendorff. Looms as Successor, —aaptain Ehrhardt. commander of *h - "Vikings." today said: "I hope to assume the leadership of the nationalist movement." Unconditional adherence to Von Kahr is out ut the question." While Ehrhardt never approved of Hitler, whom he regarded as a dem agogue. he is now coming to the front .s a leader to succeed Hitler. "The personalities of Hitler, Von Kahr and Ludendorff, or how they are named, does not matter," said Uhrhardt. "The only thing that mat ters is the national movement. What we want Is a strong government that can take up negotiations with other powers an destroy the dominance of Marxism. "Whether these aims can he -achieved without force of arms Is doubtful, as the coqntry now stands before economic disaster." Convicted of Larceny Man Weeps in Court Oliver 1>. Daly moaned and wept aloud while being tried yeste. lay afternoon In District Judge Goss' court on a charge of grand larceny for the theft of $50 from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marshall, 3828 North Twentieth street, September 13. A Jury returned a verdict of guilty after being out 55 minutes. Once he rose from his seat and ex tending his hands, exclaimed, "Oh. I can’t stand this. I can’t stand it.” _Mrs. Marshall pursued him at the of the robbery and stopped hlnv seven blocks from her bqme, she tes tified yesterday. Dalv has a wife and three children in Meadow Grove, Neb. He said he was trying to sell Insurance to make enough to support them. The jury too kthe case at 5 last night. Churches at Humboldt Observe Armistice Day Humboldt, Neb., Nov. 13.—Armistice day was appropriately observed here by all of the churches. Three min utes of silence at 11 a. m., In honor of the war dead, and prominent men tion in addresses of their sacrifices and those of others who fought to victory for the allies, featured the programs. At the request of the American Region union services were held at the Methodist church at night, Rev. B. H. Dawson delivering the ad dress. The local legion post attend ed in a body. England, and especially London, has always been the favorite field for authors of mystery and detective parte. Louis Tracy has one which is alive, pul sating and aettive all through. The Pelham Affair opens in The Omaha Morn fjt ng Bee today, Wednesday. " It is a faint echo of half for gotten war days and concerns three spies, an army officer, .Scotland Yard and last hut not least, a beautiful girl. t __ Impossible to Buy Real Whisky Here, Writer Who Exposed Bootleggers Says A. R. Macdonald Offers $500 Reward to Anyone Able to Find Bottle of Pure Old Stuff • —Tells of Poison Put in Fake Liquor. A man offered to bet $500 yester day that a drink of whisky could not be bought in Omaha. "I will put the money in escrow in the hands of any reputable lmnker In Omaha, and if you will succeed in buying whisky here the money is yours,” he said. “Why,” exclaimed one of the men in the group who heard that state ment, “There are hundreds of joints here where it can he bought, and there are bootleggers in every block who will sell it. Better pull down that bet old man, you'll lose your money.” ♦ The man who offered to make that sensational bet was A. B. Macdonald, a staff writer for the The Ladies Home Journal and ^ The Country Centleman. He was here yesterday attending a convention of district agents of the Curtis Publishing com pany. Knows Where to Bet It. "I am willing to put up the money,” he insisted. "You go any where in Omaha, buy a bottle of the stuff they are selling here for whisky, submit it to any reputable firm of chemists, let them analyze it, and if it is found to be genuine whisky, the $500 is yours.” I^ast winter The Ladles Home Jour nal sent Macdonald out into ttie country with instructions to buy six or eight samples of bootleg whisky in ench of a score of towns and citks, /and then have those samples analyzed. He did that. He went first to Washington, D. C,, and there he bought eight quarts of whisky, in first class hotels, at reslaurane. cafes, of bootleggers, and at saloons. "Each bottle of it was apparently genuine." said Macdonald yesterday. "There was Old Taylor, Black and White Scotch. Canadian Club, Water fill A Frazier and several other well i-n< wn brands, all in regulation bot tles. with seemingly genuine labels and the corks were branded and the tin caps over the necks bore every indication that they were the real thing, but an analysis by one of the best firms of chemifts in the world disclosed that not one drop of the liquid in any of those bottles was whisky. Every drop of it was facti tious. It was fake stuff. The greater part of it was made from denatured alcohol, redistilled hy bootleggers. It was all poisonous, and yet it was be ing drunk in Washington at the best hotels by senators, congressmen and other leading citizens. One bottle I brought in from a bootlegger in the senate office building and, while It bore every outside evidence of heing genuine, it was so poisonous that a half pint of it, drank within an hour, would stop tlie heart of any man. No Heal Stuff to Be Had. "1 went to Boston. New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, St. Louis. Kan s is Pity '^AKJD MORE -MEWS \ /yA'dtm M0R3E RACES AND Something interesting? A HU WHAT HE WANTS IS LESS ABoirr the inconsequential^ OP LIFE AND f \ more Real fcw 4 ^ VJELLTUEY CAMlEAME OUT j --EVERYTHIN Concerned \ • WOMDE.R V/uo READS ALL THIS SiLfy Rcrr i ABOUT X Issia AMD VS MOVIE \ ACTRESSEvu ETC — Lmqtming Birr scandlE and KlU-RDERi AND HORRIBLE "v ACCIDENTS? U r IT'S PERFECTLY || j EVIDENT THAT THE. NEWSPAPERS ARE 'Becoming, a ■public menace 9 , • JtoT LIKE 'EM! PKIMT ALL I THE TOMMY *OT /H LETTERS'* l FOOT HIGH/ AMD SET th-E MARKET QUOTATIONS SO SMALL NOBODY CAN Read them without A MICRJOiCCT — (J • 5HET DON'T SAT A \AIOSt&C ABOUT /Ml tws Being ASIDE Al NATIONAL ART \NEEKy what DO people Find I NTERESyiM o nevnspape^ ANNWA.V1 fNAV Indict ments brought against Souder more than a score of them were based upon lax receipt exhibits. Judge Tewell overruled the demurrer as to the check forgery oases and all In dlctments charging forgery and larceny. Heads Meridian Highway Norfolk, Nov. 13 Or. F. A. l.oiu' "f Madlaon w.'tn «looted vice president <»f iho International Miidian iRhe.iy nasoc'lntion at, tho mooting at Salln.i. Kan., according to word receivtd fccrt Atlas Bank at Neligh ('loses Guaranty Fund Ma\ Lose $200.00(1 to $300,000 in l*a\ mg Depositors. Lincoln. Nov. 13.—The Atlas bank of Neilgh was closed today, according to an announcement of the state hanking department. The probable 1< is to the guarantee fund will ran between $200,000 and $300,000 The bank was tak»n over hy thej state hanking department May 21, i at which time It* deposits totaled $7SS,000. In the hope that u con siderable portion of the loss might be averted the hank was kept' in operatlhn and $233,000’front the new ly authorized hankers conservation fund was loaned it for the purpose. Attempts at sale or consolidation having failed, the banking commis sion decided it would l>e inrpoasihle to longer keep the bank In operation Hay Swanson, former vice president of the bank, has been in charge as a deputy of the Linking commission. The Atlas bank was one of the largest of the elate hanks and was one of the best equipped In the state. When taken over hy the hanking 1 i-onimlaslon its officers were: George N". Seymour, president. Hay Swanson, vice president R. S. Payne, vice president, and R. J Forsyth, cashier. At the time the hank was taken over It had a capital stock of $$0,000 and $12,000 surplus, and the hunk owed $418,000 for money borrowed. Denver Insurance Firm to l ake North Platte* Company Lincoln. Nov 13.—The Mountain States Life Insurance company of Denver will reinsure the business of the Fidelity Reserve Life Insurance company of North Platte. It h is been announced by the state insurance bu reau. Tlie step was approved hy 723 policyholder* of the Nebraska com pany who were represented either in person or by proxy at a meeting it North Platte. The Fidelity Reserve company stat ed as its reason fur turning over Its reinsurance to the Denver firm that It was operating In a restricted area that Imd suffered financial depression, and that It had been uni$)>le to place enough Insurance on It* books to Jus tIfV ll* continuing In business. Page Luther Ihirhank! I no abbages on ()nr Stalk Beaver City Nib. Nov. 13 C V Barber of Cambridge. Neb . has de veloped cabbage plants that raise two head* to the stalk in place of only one He proposes to double the production of cabbage patches but refuses to divulge the secret of rate Ing them until he hit* further de j veloped the plant** lie has been die j playing some fine up- « hmns showing i iwo heads on a »UU ' i Officers Raid W est Omaha Poker Party 9 jSiitton. \el>.. Man Complains of Losing Roll After In ^ itation to ‘Beer Party.” Poker parly tn an Omaha home it which liquor flowed, and In which Henry Fisher of Sutton, Neb., told police lie was swindled out of 173. caused a raid on the home Monday right amt a ride tn the jiatrol wogo.n. ■to police station, fo rfour or five per Isons found in the house. They were John .leptsen. 5825 North Thirtietli street. W. K. IJrouil letp>. 1811 Chicago street: Haiel I.lsholti, 14 maid at the house, and i Mrs Kthel p.ms a widow of* Fre mont, Nel> The home where the party was held is that of Mrs. C. F Barrows, at 4187 Cass street He Pidn't Remember. Ftslier told police he met Jensen and Brouillette in a downtown pool hall, and they invited him to go on a "beer party.'"w Arriving at the house, he said, he was given something to drink, and ho didn't remember what hecame of hit. money. In court Tuesday all the per sons arrested were released, and the court ordered Jensen and Brouillette to give back Fisher's money. They took me for a chump " de ■ laved Fishei "We all paid S7. for tlie liquoi 1 ni going Kick to Button." .Mrs Barrows, whose husKand is a traveling man. declared Monday night at police station that the men were all friends of Mrs Pavla, whom she has known for a long lime, she said Mrs Paris declined to say any thing at all Fisher said he had never seen either of the women Iwfore. Changed to Poker. Mrs. Barrows said the three men started playing pinochle, but that iter the game was changed to poker. She said she gave the men some beer. About Ibis gambling." she said. 1 can tell you 500 homes in Omaha where cards are played for money every night." She said that the I.lsholti (flrl. whose mother. Mrs Gertrude Apple I sum. operates a rooming house at Sixteenth and Jones streets, has bees with her for two yesrs. and that she Is as solicitous for her welfare as though the girl were her daughter. Madison Man New Head of Dental Association Norfolk Neb. Non 13 l>r. \Y. C. lltgfftnii of Mtdlwm NVH ?*electe\l prest •lent of the Noith NYbrankn l>entt! awvochitlnn nt the Annual convention here. Hr ,1 1* flrkllnc I* vice prenb •lent Mini Dr 11 !•' .Johnson of \\ nisi ft fotfliu y lrett*unM . 1 u\ Ikinakl Smith of S’- uv t’itn n\;ia principal: ^i oukt* iil Uiv Ll'llNCllUOU Wood Aims to Subdue Moro Strife Governor-General Back From Isle of Unrest, Plans to U se Peaceful Methods. Warns of U. S. Powei B> Amkm f’rpxs. Manila, Nov. 13.—While there is n« disorder at present among the Mon tribes the situation requires earefu handling, Governor-General Leonard Wood declared upon his return her* today after a three weeks' trip o' inspection to the island of Mindanao whee he investigated repoiued unre,; among the natives, Governor-General Wocel summoned Da to (Chief) Santiago, one of the lead crs in the Duke Lunao district, to come aboard his yacht at one port a! which he stopped, but the chief. l>ecoming alarmed at the rough sea. turned back and departed for hie liume among the island hills. The executive instructed tlic cei stabulary officers who accompanied him on his trip to bring in the chief and his followers from the hills, with out bloodshed, if possible. The governor xpreetc-i ror.fidence that the Moro situation would tie set tled peacefully. He announced that he had appointed a commission, con sisting, of three members of his staff who have long experience in the Phil ippines. to proceed to Mindano and invenigav the Moro grievances in detail. Governor General Wood also an nounced that he would make a cour tesy visit to the Java straits soon, at the request of the State depart ment. The greatest unrest now is merely local and is confined chiefly to Morn« in the vicinity of Lake Lanao, where :h« tribesmen are demanding larger representation in the governmental ac tivities. he declnred. The Moros. who are Mohammedans, "bjec- tn being governed by Christian Filipinos and are demanding the ar> i r intment of additional Moro officials. I the governor general declared. At a conferemre which he hehj with ! 'I'.ro chieftains who assembled from all part* of the territory. Govern Gen eral Wood informed them that Amer • an sovereignty still Is supreme in the Philippines and that if the United tat*** ever derides to relinquish con trol the Moros will be officially no tified before any change is made. One of the demands of the tribes n.-n, which Is causing unrest. ;s for Mnro teachers instead of Christian Filipino in the school for girls, the executive said. Man Who Shot Brother Asks Parole From Pen Lincoln. Nov. 13.—The application of Cyrus Deardorf. sentenced to the | pettetentiary for life following his I shooting of his brother. Jerry, for cui - i mutation of sentence, w as hit!erly_op I posed before the parole board todav | by the widow* of the murdered man. ! Mrs, Emma Jensen. She denied a statement that Dear | dorf had made to the parole board -that he did not know what he wa* doing when he shot his brother ar-J ! that he had any motive for the deed. Deardorf. who was sentenced in I 1316. told the board that hi* relations with his brother had always Ish happy, that he not only did net know whv he had shot him and had no re. < lie. Uon of the deed until a dav later, when he found himself In the county Jail. Deardorf told the board thai he had children that were dependent up on him and that he would tike to he released that he might aid in their support They are now being luokid after by his father-in-law. Now Kxpresr Rates Will He Announced in Pecenilter Lincoln, Nov 13.—A new tentative schedule of rates for express matte; , -'greed upon by five state raliw,i, commissions snd the interstate com merge commission, will be announeeu December 1. Commissioner Taylor «n nounced today, A number .f readjustment* neecs sarj* because numerous discrimina ti. i»- have developed since the irstltu Uon of the rone system I0 years ago 're included in the schedule. Although the schedule is not yet available, .t i' stated that a complaint that the west was hearing a greater burden of express expense than the east ha' lawn adjusted. R ol»ck ah Com ontion Pen; rice Neb. Nov 13—The Re Ijeknh district convention will be held ai Wymore Wednesday afternoon anvl evening Mrs Mar> Krush of Wahoev vice president of the assembly, and Mrs Harriet I'aln of Fremont past [ piesldent of the assembly, will be present and given Instruction*. I The Weather t'»'r 24 hour* *nvl . c r \\ in X»v Hivhfftt *1 . >wg»i «S .'2 rioi * m"' ♦ #in» e t l «* R#l«nxt hum ii n ? a * M t'*«i ll'll* i U'n. t«. hr* an.1 huv.vti r .it k« Total * TnUl *3*U'* 1. « \n'i» i M MoutIi Tcmarmiurwi