Spillman Suffers Defeat in Senate; Coal Bill Beaten Solon* Vole Down Measure Allowing Lities lo Soil Furl; House Takes Up Child Labor. (fftfitiitutd From Pur* OmI in establishing municipal dry goods Stores, newspapers, groceries, bus lines and varolus other commodities mid necessities. The amendment was voted down. Intangible Itebalr Continues. Senator John McGowan ot Nor folk denied the bill had any polit ical significance. He states the at torney general asked hint liefore election to Introduce such a measure at l his session. "It is probable we would never have to put In a single station in tile state, but It would be a club that would keep down prices," Scott of McCook said. "It prices were foried down you wouldn't affect the. price at the re. fineries," Chambers asserted. "It would merely cut down profits of re tailers. To bo consistent we would have to make appropriations to pur chase an oil well and go Inio the business from the ground up." The entire morning was spent by the senate In further consideration of .the intangible late bill. Finally the measure was advanced, providing for a straight 4 mill levy and a 7(1 per cent assessment on bonks and building and loan associations. Whether I lie bouse will accept the amended hill is problematical. Hons* Vole* on Child Labor. The lower house was the scene of an uproar this morning when friend* of the fedora! child labor nmendmenl again forced the bill on the house for the confessed purpose of placing members "on record." The bill was killed by a vote of fifl to 21. Rodman, of Douglas, charged "cer tain members are rewards and afraid to go on record." laiter, he apolo gised. saying, "I doubt if any mem ber ha* a cowardly makeup." Following are those voting for the amendment: P^numor* Muir Klllfttt Munn ' ubailor John-on. Doucla** Pollock Jnhn«nn, FHtlpfl Slop Km «kn Tut hoy Lawson T»*’. i rf Adams Yowl* Mi M a si or \\ * •* Main Vi dnm n Prfct^nt, hut not \oiinc: pro wo. < * • r* Hsrrman Vittlrr Hunter Bryan Men Ml* Claim*. Poring th* last political campaign former Governor Charles W. Bryan marts much ado over the fact h* paid b(* secretaries several thousand* of dollar* less than th# previous admin istration. Today, memhers of the senate gasped when Senator H. E. Goodrich of Nelson stated that three Mryan code secretaries hsd filed claims against the state running Into thousands of dollars representing ihe difference between the amount paid Secretaries under the McKelvie ad ministration and the amount paid ear. ed after the shooting, might ho con aldered part of a dying declaration ! despite the fact that Burch did not die until almost 24 hours later. The fate of the prosecution rest entirely on admission in evidence of such statements, since in no other fashion may the crime be fastened on the Lawrence brothers. Babe Lawrence, heavily handcuffed, was removed from the court room to day following granting of separate trials to the two brothers. A pair of handcuffs, which the state will Haim belonged to the slain offi-i cer, may form the chief link In the evidence against the Lawrence Voth-i ers. The handcuffs were found in I possession of the brothers the dH\j ifter Burch was killed, it was claimed I by the state. Pawnee Roads to Be Improved Application Made for Funds for Graveling and Grad ing Project*. ' ‘ * | Pawnee t'itv. March 25.—The state engineers’ office at Lincoln will soon receive, a resolution from the Pawnee county tMtard making application for the graveling of 151* miles of federal stale highway east and west through this city. The resolution was drawn up at the commissioners’ meeting here this week. It is pointed out In the letter that Pawnee county’s share of the division of taxes receivable under the proposed gasoline tax law will he $80,000, and that the county now has to its credit in the state highway fund $29,250.58. State Engineer Cochran estimated the expense of ihe project at $48,000 to $50,000. In case the application is acceded to, the * ommissioners desire to use the remainder available, or some $60,000, to finish grading the federal highway through the county. Uncompleted portions of the toad are six* mlleW east of Table Hock to the Richardson county line, and a stretch of 18 miles from the Gage county line to eight miles west of here. The commissioners are making plans to proceed with the work in the event the*resolution Is favored by the state highway commission, and work would start In a few weeks if the ap plication is approved. Pawnee county has no graveled roads at present, ami the prominence of the l«HiiI hlghwav influenced its choice as the first road to he sur faced. The 15 12 mib« were raised to grade and built according to state and federal speel flea t ion f several yearn ago bv convict labor, and the surveying at that time of the rest of i he road would expedite the pro posed project. Local mad men indicated that the graveling would probably !►* handled on a contra* t. Birkenhead to Cowans’ Defense in Scandal Case Former Lord Chancellor De clares IS ar Leader Was In capable of Actions At tributed to Him. By ROBERT 4. PRKW. I ntversill Sen Ice staff f«PTMpnnili nt. . London, March 25. — "Human strength and human frailty must lie measured In the balance." Karl Birkenhead, secretary of stale for India, and one of the most bril liant intellects In the country, has lens to uttPr this aphorism today re garding l he Dennistoun case. The case |s pot yet terminated, the Jury' still considering, at the instance of Justice McCardie, a number of points in dispute, hut lyird Birkenhead is In dignant at the evidence tendered re garding Sir John Cowans, "Odlus stipulations and debasing in ducements have been placed in the mouth of Sir John Cowan." he says, referring to the allegations that the great quartermaster general pur i hased Mrs. Dorothy Dennistoun at the price of soft jobs for her hus band. "Those of us who were his friends I now that whatever his faults may ha\e been, he was simply incapable of using her. No one attended or could have attended the trial in his interest and none of the parties car ed * brass farthing about his reputa tion. My advice is to believe nothing of conversations which depend upon tiie *\idenee of n slngb- and deeply ^ interested witness, tbit duty is •‘•ll ‘ 1V*^^ to watch the Interests and safeguard 4the reputation of the soldier who is nowr dead and who greatly loved and greatly served his count r>.'' The fact that the former lord chan cellor, who heads the empire judi ciary, should rush to defend Sir John Cowan’s memory even before tits jury in the case is discharged, re* fleets the Intensity of feeling #which the Dennistoun case has aroused. The proceedings today were entire Jy of a legal character. Lead Instructor Win Mu-ic Composition Pri/c Lead. S. D., March 2.1.—George Me. * Kay. director of instrumental muGo^ of the Lead public s -bools, has re ceived word that he is one of six to be awarded a trip to Rochester, N. V . as a prize in the muric com position contest conducted by tho Kastman School of Music. Mr. McKax « production is a symphony to which he has given the title. 11 Krom the Black Hills." It was composed during his residence in Lead With five other prize winning productions, it will be played at a publi'- concert by the Rochester Sym phony orchestra, in April. Banner (minty Hogs Sold al Record Price at Denver Bridgeport. March 25.— Banner coun ty hogs established a high record price at Denver by the -ale of a carload for H. L. Wyatt at $13.85 per 100 pounds. There were 73 hogs in the shipment, raised on the Wyatt farm near Harris burg. Relief in every )0r 5oothinq And HeAlinq Don't be left out of thinqs because of a bad skin. The Resinol treatment makes poor complexions clearer-lovelier Ask the friend who has [ tried it is still cheap | We ai.l know that Coffee has gone up in price, just as almost everything else has done, but th£ important thing to remember is that Coffee—the best of drinks —still costs very, very little. ' * Even at present prices the average cost of Coffee for your / home is only l*/j cents a cup— ^ a trifling sum indeed when you consider the pleasure that is in it and the zest that it adds to your whole day. j i As a matter of fact, the price of Coffee has gone up less in the last ten or twelve years than ham, or lamh, or shoes, or rent, or some other staples. At l'/j cents a cup, the cost of Coffee is only 1 2ft or 1 4ft or even 1 SO of the total cost of your average meal at home. Where else can you buy as much genuine satisfaction for so very, very little? What else can you buy that means as much to your enjoyment of breakfast, luncheon and dinner? JOINT COFFEE TRADE PUBLICITY COMMITTEE 64 W«tcr Street, New York -.....1 % ! * Smart New Bow Pumps I This fashion of wearing step-in street pumps with a grosgrain ribbon bow to make them the more feminine is developed with medium round toe, block heel, and light sole. Tan naco, brown kid, and black kid. ji 9.00 - Maidn Don Out—H’. f. A Fond Sale ^/.ornpsori Ed hr, Presenting an Important Collection Of New Fur Jackets for Spring ’95'"J195 The new furs, the new modes, the new shades, all of which have created a_*udden widespread vogue for the fur jacket to be worn this spring season. Golden Susliki (sand weasel) jacket, with beige fox collar 195.00 Cocoa American Broadtail jacket, tuxedo effect, with stand ing collar of beige squirrel ..195.00 Baron duki (Russian Hamster) jacket with red fox collar 195.00 Cocoa caracul jacket with blond fox collar 125.00 Brown caracul-paw jacket with matching fox collar 95.00 Silver rat jacket, rosewood wolf collar.. 95.00 Chokers 15.00 to b5.00 * % Stone martpn, baum marten, squirrel, and fox in all the newer shades offering a comprehensive assortment. ■ ■ “ Where. One Buys Furs With Assurance'' fEXCHANGES _ 1 . . i .. — Owners of All Kinds of Property Find At tractive Exchange Offerings Everv Day in THE OMAHA BEE " Want Ad Pages —Phone \Tlnntic 1000 i-, .iT~T77r.Tii-~- —J t