Collins Sentenced to 25 Years, Pal * to 20, for Robbery Mail Thieves to Serve Term# in Atlanta for $3,000,000 Council Bluffs Mail *. Theft. (Continued from rue On*). count of the indictment, thereby com plying with the circuit court ^|e , cision. "Theses defendants appeared before me in 1920," the judge said In read ing his decision, "and entered pleas of guilty to this crime. "The robbery was one of the great est ever committed in the state of Iowa and the sentences which I lm posed were justified. "Vet, because of a slight error, an error which had been made countless times before, they were released after serving but a portion of that sen tence. Refuses New Trial. “Sow they plead not guilty to oth k er charges arising from the same rob ,",*bery. If they were guilty the first time, they are certainly equally guilty this time. ' * “If they deserved the sentences which were originally imposed when they were first tried, they still de serve those same sentences. "Vou ask that the court grint a new trial in this case because of eer tain alleged irregularities. The court cannot see that there are any Irregu larities, nor is it in tiie power of this court to grant a new trial. "The state would have on opportu nity to demand an appeal should a new trialhSVgraiited, and then the de cision would come back and ti e case would stand right where It does now, eicept that there would have been a great loss of time. "This Is an Important ease. Impor tant to the public and to those who wish to see our laws enforced. It Is the duty of tills court to see that no further errors are made. “The decision of the case may be sent to R higher court, where It can be upheld or reversed on Its merits. "I overrule all pleas and motions which hive been made by the de fense and you, Keith Collins, I sen tence to five years at hard labor on each of the five counts included in . your Indictment. And ypu, Fred A. Poffenbarger, I sentence to five years at hard labor on each of the counts in the indictment against you.” w nen tne judge declared that the boys would have to serve their time , in Atlanta and not in the Leaven worth prison, the attorney* leaped to their feet and objected. "That prison Is outside the Juris diction of this court,’’ Eugene O'Sui i livan declared. "The men must be sentenced to Leavenworth.” "No,’’ the judge responded, ”1 have . here a telegram from the attorney general of the United States. In which he requests Jhat the defendants be -. sentenced to*Atlanta. Perhaps It is a better prison.” The attorneys filed mol ions for the arrest of judgment and the dismissal of the verdict In the case early In the —- day. These pleas were argued be fore the sentences were passed. •T. J. Hess, opening the argument In support of the motion, declared that the men had not been granted a "speedy trial,” as guaranteed under the constitution. He declared that the indictment under which the defend ants were convicted at this trial was returned in May 11, 1921, and cited authorities to prove that the statute of limitations barred prosecution more than three years after an offense Is committed. riea of Misnomer. He declared that no warrant was served on the defendants under the present indictment until December, 1923. more than two years after the Indictment wag returned. He assert ed that the fact‘that the men were in the penitentiary was no bar to prosecution. Hess also entered a plea of misnomer in the case of Poffenbarger. declaring that he was indicted under the name of "Fred A. Poffenbarger.” which is his father’s name. Frank TYIlson, assistant United States attorney, arguing against the mo tion, declared that the indictments against the men were returned In the federal court at Des Moines within the time limit of the statute of limitations and cited authorities to prove that _ the previous trial and conviction of • the men on another Indictment in ? connection with the mail robbery was * no bar to the present action. Man Injured in Fight Sues for $5,000’Damages Columbus. Feb. 6.—As a sequel to tli* flfflit In which he had his rl*ht leu ■ broken belotv the knee when be and his antagonist went down onto the curb In a clinch. Kd Launer, local business man, has filed suit In district court her* atfainst Charles Nlckollte, auto mechanic, for $5,h00 damages. Each man claims the other wss tho • grgreseor. Liberty School Head III. F.eatrice, Feb. <5. Superintendent Jlrake of the Liberty schools has h*»n seriously III the last week St his heme from a threatened attack of pneu monia . » New Officers of State Clothiers _ . . I Officer* of the Nebraska Clothier* association elected Til in- day at the Hotel Fontenelle are. left to right. Raymond Fahrqner, l.incnln. secretary and treasurer; John Sonin, Fremont, president, and lands Leppke, Omaha, vice president. ,.4 Wife Scoffs at Plea of Stokes Claim He Was “Misled” in Accusing Her Brings Burst of Indignation. Oy Intrrnalionnl Service. Chicago. Feb. 6.—"Misled! He mis led himself!" The above was the indignant slate ment today of .Mrs. Helen Elwood Stokes on her arrival in Chicago from Denier to press her suit against the aged aim eccentric Xew York million aire, on charges of conspiring to de fame her character. "I might have known he'd try to vest his defense on some such state ment as thftt.” she said when In formed that iier husband had indi cated he had been duped into believ ing some of tlie incidents with which lie charged his pretty, young titian haired wife. "However, he can't get away with that,” she continued. "I have the very picture album from which $ie stole the prints which he presented as evidence right here with me.” Really for Fight. Mrs. Stokes referred to the charge brought by her husband that she was onre an Inmate of a notorious Chi cago resort. "I've corns to Chicago to be on hand when the fight that means so much to me is going on. I Intend to stay hers until the last word is said on the subject and I hope it will be mine, too." Mrs. Stokes was accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Arthur Scott Miller, and her mother's close friend, Mrs. Albert Meservey. Mrs. Stokes wore a long clinging wrap of seal with mink collar and cuffs, a Mack dress and a tiny brimmed hat of Mack. Her slim ankles were clad In rheereet chif fon hosiery and she wore a choker necklace of baroque pearls. The flat fawn-coiored bag she carried was set with amber brilliants. Three Jurymen Chosen. Only three jurymen were in the box when the trial was resumed and the weary task or selecting the other nine men to hear the evidence con tinues. Mrs. Stokes probably will be unable to testify because of the law forbid ding her to testify for or against her husband. Mr*. Sarah A, itnah Dies; Lived in Clarinda 44 ^ ears Clarlnda, la.. Feb. 6— Mn. Sarah A. Whitnah. 77, died at her home here after an illness of one month. She came to Clarinda from Illinois, her native state, 44 years ago with her husband, Joseph C. Whitnah, who died 26 years ago. Four children survive, Mies Blanche Whitnah, Clarlnda; Mrs. F„ C. Bennett (Cordie), Roswell, X. M.; Fred J., Clay Center, Kan., and Harry A., Fulton, Mo. She was a member of the Presby terian church. Road Certificate* Issued. I’larinda, la., Keb. 6.—Anticipation certificate* for Pap© county road work, to th® amount, of $S3,(K*f>, have been sold to Polk, Corley and Whec look at Des Moine*. The certificate* will run until December 31, 1926, and will draw interest nt the rate of 4 per cent. 212 No. 16th St. 2408 Cuming St. 4903 So. 24th St. 634 W. Broadway (Council Bluffs) BUEHLER BROS. CASH MARKETS Money Saving Specials On Quality Meats and Provisions I * Fresh Lean Pork Shoulders, 10'c Chocieat Veal Roaat, lie e Choice Lean Pork Loin, Chocieat Beef Pot Roeat, 9c Freah Lean Spare Riba, 12‘c II FANCY MILK FED VEAL LEGS . 17* PRIME ROLLED BEEF /§ I (Vi or whole).. llC RIB ROAST.II C I CHOICEST BEEF lO1/** CHUCK ROAST. 1L C SPRING LAMB. Choicest Hindquarters.22^ Choicest Forequarters .... 121 -j C Choicest Lamb Chops.20C FANCY VEAL LOIN, for roasting .IOC PORK CUTS. Fresh Pork Neck Ribs.. . Fresh Pig Feet.8(* Fresh Pig Snouts.7^ Fresh Pig Hearts. fiC Fresh Pig Tails.12*/*^ t Choice Boston Butts.1 H(* Fresh Pig Liver. CHOICEST CUT ROUND STEAK. ll C BUTTERINE. Lucky Buy Oleo.. 18f Liberty Nut Oleo, 1 lb.21c4 Liberty Nut Oleo, 5 lbs.$1.05 Evergood Oleo, 2 lbs.48c4, Evergood Oleo, 5 lbs.$1.20 Pure Revered Lard.IS'sC^ BEEF CUTS. Fresh Hamburger.lie4 Choicest Beef Steak ...... 12' *C^ Choicest Boiling Beef.7c4 Choicest Corned Beef.I 1C4 Fresh Beef Tongue. 20C FRESH LEAF 1 £«/. LARD . 10 C SMOKED MEATS. Sugar Cured'Picnic Hams. . . . J4<* Skinned Hams .22<*\ Fancy Lean Bacon.27’iC \ Fancy Lean Breakfast Bacon .27* Fancy Bacon Backs.22<* Choice Lean Bacon.] Fancy Selected Eggs, do*. . . 42^ Fancy F.arly June Peas, 3 for 40<* Fancy Sweet Corn, 3 for 40<* \ Fewer Laws Is Urge of Thorpe Lditor Talks to C. of C. of Law-Making Machinery of Country, "It is high lime," declared Merle Thorpe of Washington, editor of the Nation's Business, at a pulillc affairs luncheon Friday at the Chamber of Commerce, "for us to discard the phrase, ‘There ought to be a law,’ In stead we Should substitute another one, ’There ought to he fewer laws.' ” His address was devoted to the ef fect of the law-making machinery of the country on business interests. He said: "Congress has been In session al most continuously for eight years, and 48 other state congresses have been grinding out laws, 90 per cent of which have had to do with govern ment and business, laws restricting and limiting and binding business and Industrial action. In one year alone —1921—soine 22,000 bills of that na ture were introduced in various legis lative bodies. “Our national well-being depends upon a wider understanding of busi ness. And that means, simply, the sum total of your understanding and mine. The great danger in the United States Is that popular understanding of business will not keep pace with the more and more Intricate and com plex phases of present-day Industry. The ’there ought-to be a law’ craze, with the laws consequently enacted, are only adding to the complexity of the situation.” Mr. Thorpe w as guest of honor Fri day morning at a breakfast given st the Omaha club by C. C. George, an old friend and prominently identified with the affairs of the national cham ber. After breakfast the Washington edi tor, who for many years was dean of the school of Journalism at Kansas university, took a five mile walk with Mr. George through the residential district of Omaha. Mr. Thorpe walks that, distance, or a greater distance, every day. It is his hobby, and he attributes his excellent health largely to these regular hikes. Store Robber Sentenced to State Reformatory Pawnee Cits', Feb. 6.—Robert D. Jones, 20, pleaded guilty in district court here l>efor# Judge Kaper on the 9harge of burglars' and was sin fenced to from one and oi,e half to three sears in the state reformatory at t.lncoln. Jones, whose home is at Kau Claire, AVIs., was caught after taking merchandise from the farmer* union store of Bookwalter, 12 miles southwest of here. Hubbell Needs Dtytor. Hubbell, Feb. 6.—Several cases of influenza and two cases of pneumonia are reported In Hubbell. three Hub bell residents are being cared for in the hospital at Hebron, for lack of local treatment, and one pioneer liv ing near here i» suffering with par alysis. There Is no doctor in Hubbell. the onls' physician here having died nearly one year ago. Medical aid here has to be secured from Chester. Narka and Ueshler, and Hubbell citizens feel this Is a good field for a resident dgfdor. Gen. Mitchell Raps Air Plan - of U. S. Army • Assistant Aviation Chief, in Letter to Weeks, J^sys De partment Hampers Prog ress of Service. Washington, Feb. 6.—Brig. Gen. ,Mitchell, assistant chief of the army air service, informed Secretary Weeks today that he believed ‘‘the present War department organization and Its administration quite Incapable of fre atlng, handling or administering air power in an efficient manner.” in the letter, replying to a request from the war secretary for all facts upon which the assistant army air chief based recent statements "seri ously reflecting” on the army’s air arm. General Mitchell said he was convinced the system of aircraft management in operation In the United States "is detrimental to the country's good and will seriously com promise our national defense should an emergency arise.” The general’s letter was placed be fore the house aircraft committee, which had met to hear both General Mitchell and Brigadier General Drum of the army general staff. "The general view of the War de partment.” General Mitchell wh-ote, "Is to limit the ability of aviation in a military way and in spit# of the findings of the joint army and navy board, in spite of the most con clusive evidence of every country in the world, the Navy department still appears before congress and still tes tifies Incorrectly and gives the Im pression that the aircraft are of limit ed power against battleships. Blocks Vnlflcation. "The resistance of the War depart ment to the organization of an Inde pendent aeronautical personnel is In sistent and constant. , t | FOR FAMILY USE- ra buy I TEN Fairy Crackers in the handy, economical re turnable can—fresh as when they were taken from the ovens at the Snow White n Bakeries. Delicious squares of goodness — they’ll please you and your family. 11 •/* *Easy to prepare in dozens of ways—or always ready without preparation—easy to yj J . eat, easy to digest, and satisfying all ways. I TEN Fairy Crackers also packed in various sizes of caddies and triple-sealed packages. FRESH at your Grocer’s. ,, / R.kMl m»4 OivuImJ by ] -Iten Biscuit Co. US A- y 8 -- SNOW WHITE BAKERIES -- rj _ • Im. mi; t. ,n,m—and mu; way. »r. iHcrtM la "Itaa'a Hand; H.lprf rarlp. baak. A paalal r»r4 raaaa.t la Itan Rlaralt Ta.. Omaha, Nab., will bria( a fraa rapy. General Mitchell said since the war f 133,000,000 "has heen put Into avia Hon," but that he did not believe “the appropriation* are economically ad ministered on account of the duplica tion of land bases between the army and navy.” He declared that Major General Patrick, chief of the army air service, had. like himself, en domed "a united air force." although such a move is opposed by Secretary weeks as well as Secretary Wilbur. 'The report of the joint army and navy department board In 1921, of which General Pershing was senior member, and which bore the appro val of Secretary Weeks and Acting Secretary of the Navy' Roosevelt, General Mitchell quoted as follows: “ ‘Aircraft carrying high capacity, high explosive bombs of sufficient size have adequate offensive power to sink or seriously damage any naval vessel at present constructed, pro vided such projectile can be placed In the water close alontlslde the ves sel.’ ” Praises Patrick. Despite opposition in otner quanei s. General Mitchell said, the reason the army air aervice had accomplished as much ns it has "is due very largely to the sympathetic attitude of the sec retary of war toward aviation,” and the "personal ability of the present chief of the air service.” General Mitchell took up in detail those statements of his congressional testimony objected to bil Secretary Weeks. Explaining his assertion that "all the organisation we have In this country now is for the protection of vested interests against aviation,” he declared the War, Navy, Postoffice and other departments concerned with aviation "resist any change which in any way curtails or modifies (heir authority, either over aviation, its development to a position of equality with these departments, or Its extension or development beyond Its being a mere auxiliary to their activities.” Discussing the bombing tests off the Virginia capes, in 1921, the gener al said the "whole performance, In Lite minds of the air officers partici pating, appeared to be a deliberate at tempt to handicap us in the accom plishment of our mission.” In the 1923 test, he said, the army aviators were ordered to liomb from I an excessive altitude. General Mitchell Is recognised throughout the world as one of the best Informed students of aviation, uccordlng to Maj. Iuiwrenc* Church Ill, chief of the air service of the Seventh corps area, "He is heart nnd soul for the Curry hill now' before congress," Major Churchill said. The bill would create a new depart ment In the cabinet devoted to.the air service of the nation. "We In the air service are endeav oring to have It placed In a separate department," Major Churchill said. Table Kwk —Funeral service* for Glen Herrick, 21, non of Mr. and Mrs. John Herrick, were held at the family residence, four miles northwest of Table Rock. The funeral sermon was preached by Rev, A. I,. Ogden, pastor of the Christian church of Table Rock. r N Iomui, 103. Receives Letter of Thanks From President Coolidge X - j (larinda. la.. Feb. fi.—Hugh Haw thorne, I A3, father of >1. If. S. Ilaw ihnrne of Clartnda. and Hr. R. A, Hawthorne of llradiljville, who walk to the poll* November 4, and cast hi* vote for Calvin t'oolldge, i* wearing a happ.v smile, having re reived a personal note from 1‘resldent < oolidge, expressing hi* appreciation of his Interest In the campaign, and stating "It is gratifying to luive the confidence of one who ha* reached the age of 103 year* anil who ha* seen so much of our national life in the making." Frank Ambrose, Pioneer in Matlison County. Hies Madison, Feb. 0.—Frank Ambrose, a pioneer resident of Madison couii tv, died nt hi* home In thl* city after illness tit three daj*. He was born October 7, 1804. In Bohemia, came to America in 1873 and lived In Iowa until 1880 when he came to Madi son county *nd settled with hie family on a farm In Schoolcraft pre cinct . Tie la survived hy three eons, Frank T. Fairfax, S. D.: John of Winner. S. D., and Joseph of School craft precinct, this county, and three dailsthters. Mrs. Mary Storek. Meadow •Grove: Mrs. Knima Holy, Lake Andes, 8. V., and Mrs. Mary Storek of this city.1 • Hoc Want Ads produce results. yes! B ■ f HANDY *'JifSiSf.S'r* H K IN QUALITY §§§ V 5TORL IN PRICE ■■ B 0 ^To Your Door BB fiFOR THE NAME OF YOUR NEAREST “AU I riOHIZED" OANLOf SERVICE GROCER—PHONE ATLANTIC 3405 K I SUGAR Pure Granulated, 10 Lbs. 69c I SOUP 'omato 10c I NAVY BEAMS chigan, 29c I RAISINS -oz. package, lor 25c Marslmallows c*MkF'r‘ Lb. 45c COCOA Each 21c SYRUP ' 5-Lb. Can 32c e MINCE MEAT »- Each49c HONEY 2 lor 45c SOAP p.»,i wkii., io Bars for 39c NEW CARROTS—Firm, small, OP j crisp Texas Carrots, 3 bunches . . XJv POTATOES—Red River, Early OQ NEW CABBAGE—Firm, solid A heads, pound .»v CAULIFLOWER—Smooth, firm, ID white, tender, per pound.lOv LETTUCE—Crisp, solid Arizona . OP Iceberg head lettuce, 2 for.«wv GRAPEFRUIT—Heavy juicy OP fruit, 3 for. £«Jv ORANGES—Sunkist California 0C« oranges, medium size, dozen. 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