: the Oma; a Sunday Bee ~ ™ ' - Q-rtJk .«^ — SocratM. CITY EDITION ■ ■ - — \vOd3* ' — » - ' "■ =™ - -r 1 v_VOL 54—NO 21 a\lA\ Y<,V SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 2, 1924. * XX FIVE CENTS -✓ —----- . . . __ * __‘_ *_ .-V *-, ONE DYING, YEN HURT, IN KLAN RIOT ----- -- - - --- -— .- ■*> -—_ 2 May Die Following Gun Battle Official Wounds Prisoner Be ^ fore Falling Seriously Hurt; Was Investigating Threats Against Marshal. Shot Fired From Pocket By AshoriHtcri Press, North Platte, Nob., Nov. 1.—Miles Keller, sheriff of Perkins counly, is near death, and Alfred Motsinger is , wounded seriously ns (he result of a ,JP shooting fray last evening at 9:30 at Klsie, Neb., where the sheriff at tempted to arrest Motsinger, who, It is said, was intoxicated. The two are now in North Platte hospitals. Lit tle hope is held for the rovery of elt her. Shoots From Coat Porket. The sheriff of Perkins county had been called to Klsie by the city mar shal, Ttay Witt, who said he heard rumors that Motsinger and his gang were going to "get" him at a dance, which was scheduled for last evening. A» the sheriff entered Klsie front Grant last evening he heard four shots, but paid little attention to the shooting. Arriving at the dance hall he found Motsinger and started to arrest him, ordering him to put lip his hands. Motsingar replied by shooting with an automatic from his coat pocket, the bullet striking the officer in the pit of the stomach, piercing the k| stomach in two places and the In testines in six places. Motsinger was shot in the shoulder In the exchange of shots, the bullet taking a downward course. Ills lung was nicked. Keller Former County Clerk. Both men were immediately rushed to North Platte and given medical at tention. Miles Keller, the wounded officer, was formerly the county clerk of Perkins county and Is well known throughout western Nebraska. I Alfred Motsinger, who Is classed a transient by the police, arrived In Madrid this summer, and has become a wf'l known character In Perkins county the last few months. He Is under guard at the hospital. SUBSEA VOLCANO REPORTED BY SHIP Tokio, Nov. 1.—The steamer Miyaka Maru reported today by wireless that an undersea volcano is erupting be tween Formosa -and Nagasaki. The ship reported the waters in the vicinity of the undersea eruption were boiling ttirbulently. Many seismologists advanced the l theory afterjhe great Japanese earth 1 quake a year ago that the earth '• >1 rnblors were due to underocean changes !n the earth's surface off the Japanese coast. Recent Japanese soundings revealed the deepest known pot in the ocean in the general vicinity of which the Miyaka Maru today reported an undersea volbano in action. , Sail Juan, Delsur, Nicaragua. Nov. 1 \ strong earthquake occurred last night and Is believed to have lieen caused by the activity of the Ometepe island volcano, in Rake Nicaragua, ibout 20 utiles front here. The shock was felt also at Granada and San Jorge. .No damage was reported. LEGION TO HOLD v OPEN HOUSE WEEK South Omaha post of the American Region will hold open house at the legion quarters in the city hall every evening this week from 7 to 9 to rnahle every ex-service man who hasn’t applied for the soldier bonus to fill out his application. John Flynn, chairman of the com mittee, will ire assisted by Mlllis .Miller, N. J. Everett, Mark Rarkln and Georg'1 Schmidt. Ex-service men from any part of the city may regis ter during ttie week at the South Omaha, post. HALLOWE’EN JOKE COSTS TWO LIVES ■Waukegan. 111.. Nov. R—Herbert t'.illls, motorcycle officer, and Charles Felton, special officer, were killed ’ here early today when their motor C.w-le crashed into a heavy timber placed across a dark street as a hal loween prank. Two motorists In front of whose machine the policemen were hurled nnd whose machine also struck the timber, were severely cut Hitd bruised. Elevator and Storage Bin Being Built at Northport Iti'ldgepofl, Neb., Nov. 1.—Dunlap and Dove are building a inn,000 bush el elevator and four-ear storage bin r,t Northport, across the river from here. This firm bought 4.7 cat's (if wheat, three cals of barley and one ,,f I,,its at the elevator here, ilur lnv the last month, for which they have paid 'he farmers $75,000 cash. Jerry Fori*, HO, Dies. Jerry Fori*. so, 1414 Jefferson *tr«et, died In a hospital Friday riyvt He lived with his son, James, for the last 11 years. He is survived • Isotwo other sons, Homer of l,n» Angelo* and Elmer of Littleton, Colo. if “Poor Weak Woman” Routs Big Burglar Mrs. Anna Kelleher (above) weighs only 115 pounds, hut she routed a six foot burglar from her homo in Brook lyn. N. Y. Thirty-Four Hurt When Fast Train Jumps Off Track Glacier Park Limited Leaves Rails Near Gardner, S. D., at 50 Miles an Hour. By International News Service. Fargo, N. D.. Nov. 1.—Thirty-four persons were Injured, four seriously, when Great Northern Glacier Park Limited No. 4 Jumped the rails about one mile south, of Gardner late this afternoon. The train was running at nearly 50 miles an hour when the accident occurred, thnowing three coaches, loaded with more than 250 passengers, into the ditch and tearing up the roadbed for .nearly 600 feet. A broken rail is believed to have caused the accident, but rallroad'of flclals say a thorough Investigation will be made. The injured were brought ot Fargo for treatment. Still Explosion Sets House Afire Police Seek Occupant of Structure Following Blaze; Kitchen Destroyed. An exploding liquor still set fire to the kitchen of a residence at Thirty second and Clay streets late Saturday afternoon. Firemen found the kitch en destroyed by flames when they arrived. The exploded still was found on a gas stove in the kitchen. Another still was bubbling ; Hi men, Wheeler and Fit ;*iald for «li diet Judges nml Hi. \\ Faulk for i ha school boa i d. \\ uiiiiiu l)ri\cr in Kradi. Billy T’hllllpn, 11 11 ft, 11, 1707 Avenue F, Count-11 Tllvffr, was fatally injured when hr was struck by an automo bile driven by John fJ. AVadsworth, Council J>luffs investment banker, at Tenth street and Broadway at 2:15 p, m Saturday. The boy died half an hour later while physicians at the Clinic build ing were treating his Injuries. Walls worth at once surrendered to police and was pluced under 11,000 bond on an Investigation charge. According to AA'adsworth. the boy stepped from the curb directly Into the iath of the car. He said the boy apparently did not see the car, and that he was unable to stop his ma chine in time to avoid striking the lad. The hoy was unidentified for an hour after his death, and the parents were unaware of the tragedy until a friend of the boy’s father told him of seeing the accident. The friend described the young victim, and the father, recognizing his son’s descrip tion. at once went to the Clinic build ing. where he was told that the boy had oied. He then went to the Cutler mortuary, where the body had been taken, and identified his son. The father said that the bov was on his way uptown to help him when he was struck. AVadsworth lives at 233 Turley avenue. Burglars Rob Nine Stations lour < rote Branch I.ine in Stolen Track t nr. Nebraska City, Neb , Nov. 1.—Two men. who gave their names aa James king and Arthur Boyd, were arrest ed st Plattsmouth and brought to this city last night on a charge of nibbing several Missouri Parlftc sta lions on the Crete branch. They stole a Burlington railroad motor car at Crete after breaking in to the station there. Transferring the car to the Missouri Pacific tracks they proceeded down the line hy gas ollne power, stopping to rob the sta lions at Hickman. Panama, Kramer. Sargent, t’ook, Burr, Dougins ami Talmndge. At Brock they were frightened away and disappeared rapidly down the I t ack. When they were arrested, several dollars and more than 300 pennies were found in their possession. A small box. containing a red mack inaw found in their possession was Identified as the property of the sta tlon agent at Talniage. A hey abandoned the gasoline cat at Auburn and caught a freight for Plattsmouth. STILL IS FOUND IN FURNITURE Deputy sheriffs found a flvegallon still in a truck load of furniture stored In a Council Bluffs garage. The truck was enroute from Kllwtbethtown, N I , to Reno. Nev., driven by R. F. kelly and owned by David Kaufman. It was searched by the deputies when it had been left for several days be cause of lack of funds. Kaufman later demanded of Sheriff 1 atlnson why the truck had been searched. The sheriff advised hint to be glad nothing more had been done. Slayer Gets Life, laiswortl). Me. Oct. II Roland McDonald, l.’ivcitrold Amherst boy. convicted of the murder of his school teacher, Miss Ionise Gerrtah. last sptlng. was sentenced to life Im prisonment at hard labor at the state prison at Thonvaston. Drive Planned on Headlights of Automobiles! _ | Stations Selected here Mo torists M ay Secure < !ards That Lights Are Ad justed Properly. Police and citizen traffic officers will open a campaign this week to abolish glaring automobile head lights. All motorists driving with lights improperly adjusted will l>e summon ed to appear in police court, where they will receive orders to visit light testing stations to have the lights adjusted to conform with city reg ulations. Tour of City. Capf. fharles Payne of the police motorcycle squad and Capt. F. H. Hines of the citizen traffic squad under Bert Ia> Bron made a tour of the city Saturday and selected six stations where automobile lights will be given official tests These stations will be located in garages at Fortieth and Farnam streets. Thirty-sixth and Farnam! streets, Thirty-seventh and Heaven worth streets. Fortieth and Hamilton streets, and in Benson and Dundee Others win l-e named later. A nomi nal charge will he made for testing lights. Mu-t Show Card. Kaoh motorist called into court for j violation of the lighting ordinance will he ordered to have his car's lights tested in one of these stations, and will be released after he has ob mined a i*rd from the station man ager certifying that the lights have been adjusted properly. The ordinance requires that the lower rays of light must strike the' ground 4" feet from the car and thej highest ray must not he more than 42 inches above the ground at To | feet from the car. VETERAN COUNTY EMPLOYE DIES Samuel R. Spratlen, T. an audi tor in the office of the county clerk for many years, died Saturda> after noon at hi a home. ITlfi Dorcas street, after an illness of eight months. He | had lived in Omaha for ">0 > ear«. He is survived by his wife, his . mother. Mrs. Mary Spratlen. a sister. 1 Miss Adelaide Spratlen. and two | brothers. Ree \V. of Chicago nud | | Theodore of Seattle. Private funeral services will be held at 11 a. m. Monday at the Rurk- I hart funeral < ha pel. Burial will be j »n Forest l*in n cemetery . MAN UNCONSCIOUS FROM AUTO CRASH An automobile driven by 1>. \\\ Merrow. RV_J Kmmet stt of, an at 1 tornev, struck n car in which was! Frank C. Trouha of Irvington at Sev enteenth and Fuming streets. Trou-j ba a car was overturned and he was taken in an unconscious condition to St. Josephs brvpital. 2 PLEAD GUILTY IN BIG MAIL ROBBERY Chicago. Nov. R—Willie Newton and Willard Newton, pl«~ ied guilty today before Federal Judge Adam C Cliff to complicity in the Roundout1 $*.000,000 train robbery. The court J deterred sentence pending hearing of others Indicted In connection with t he robbery ! The Weather k_j For 14 hour* rtt,Hnt: ? p v \ov \ Hrlaflv* Humidity. P. • .nt.wy. T * m 10 noon. if. T i' m , Si Precipitation. Imhri amt li - tiedtht* Total, ni'tt?; total nn»-? January 1. S'i* iletklwny. 3.** Hourly T mm pent I urea * * m .. II to m . T 3 | • a in . . . f>1 ] p mi * r i T a m ...... .^S t » id “« i * * Mi 4 l- td • a in M •> y mi t s a ii' M He in 11 » m M t r m *-« : li noon .. t# Martial Law Declared in Ohio Town State Troops Turn Niles, <).$ Into Armed Camp Follow ing Skirmish of Klaus men and “Knights.” t Night Bombing Feared R.v S. 4. GORDON, International »x%* Serxlr. Staff < nrre* .pontlrnl. Niles, O., Nov. 1.—Niles was an arrn?d camp tonight. With three companies of the Ohio national guard, under Col. L. F. Con nelly maintaining martial law. the fires of religious and racial hatred which flared into open warfare to day, still burned sullenly, awaiting only a spark to rekindle the treacher ous flame. Business houses were closed to night and the homes of klan and anti-klari leaders who had been ac tively working f ** anti against the widely advertised tri state klan rally ami its attendant parade, were under military guard as a precautionary measure to prevent possible bomb ings. Persistent reports that such • I in circulation as darkness fell. Tonight the Niles police depart, ment Issued a revised casualty list, allowing one dying, and 10 seriously in ured in the many clashes which o urred throughout the afternoon. Included In the list are four mem bers of the klan and of that organi zation's sworn foe—the Knights of the Flaming Circle. Definite check up on the dead or wounded was made difficult because this city has no hospital and the injured were at once taken to Warren and Youngs town hospitals or to private homes here. Trouble Oxer Parade. Today's dash was precipitated by the attempt of the Knights of the Flaming Circle to carry out their an nounced determination to stop the klan parade through the Nilee streets, permission for which was granted by Mayor Harvey C. Kistler, klan supported chief executive, about n w-e»k ago A request for a similar permit which would hive allowed a Knicb*. of the Flaming Circle parade on the same day. xvas refused a few days 1. ter and this augmented the ill-feeling xxhlch was seething through the little towr. A few daye nfter the klan permit was issued, the mayor's home was bombed. First blood in today's rioting was drawn !>efnre daybreak and through out the day fist fights and attacks xxith clubs and other weapons was interspersed with the more deadly gun fire. More than 20ft alleged mem bers of the Knights of the Flaming Circle armed with sawed -off shotguns early thi« afternoon began stopping vehicles bound toward the klan rally ing place More bloodshed followed ibi«. some armed klan members open ing fire when they were challenged. The proclamation of martial law and the arrival of troons held in readiness at Warren. Youngstown and Cleveland followed Troops Cheered. Knights of the Flaming Circle who had taken up a strategic position »t Main and Federal streets—the main street Intersection greeted the ar rival of the troops with rheets. aa the.r mnounced purpose had been to stop the klan parade or falling in that to mar, lx at the same time through the city streets. The k'un held its parade but It did rot p ss over the streets of Niles as had 1 . -n planned nor was it on the pretentious scale that bad been ad vertised. Perh \ps 2.000 to 2.500 klars men marched from the meeting grounds outside the city over the paved road for about 1.000 feet snd then marched back and disbanded. OMAHA DOCTOR FREED OF CHARGE IV. George Gilbert of Omaha ««■ froiM of .a , barge • f the sale of nar cotic* by federal grand jury at Council Bluffs Friday. The com plaint agar *t him was filed setoral months ago by Jack Arnold and wife of Council Bluff*. The jury found thRt there was no foundation for the charge* and that Pr. G lla-rt w as innocent of selling nan to- so far as the jury could as certain after a thorough investigg tion. Parahzrd Professor Ncxt'r AIi('Id»»e# cuse \ Y . Nov J — Partial paralvsis of hi* leg*, which maksa nec«sary the helping hand of a friend e\en when he uses crutches, d>ses not prevent Pi tin Ji well, registrar of Syracuse university, from meeting hts classes every day. Kvery day he comes and goes to h - ilas* of Km 1 sh students in thg c uipe of can- of his under gradual* a ides. luo < olorctl Pa-tor* Vro School Hoard ( andidalca < motc.1 men an*! women nr# in*; for their * .»n*ii*!..«u-N for nwmN't of tin V \.’o'l tv Vk\ flu \ me two w«H knows’ - lo t'»1 jvi moss. Kee, John Albeit Will inn)* of th# Kpito#* p »1 fhtmh ^f St I'hilip th«* lV*rot\ K#' Taylor of 8t. I'tul a ITatbyttritii church, i