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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1902)
THE OMAHA DAILY HEE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1002. AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA Wait lid School Baid.d by Band of Unidtifid Vindale. MUCH PROPERTY WANTONLY DESTROYED Bonks Torn and Thrown Into the Maddy Yard and Floe Piano Totally Hnlnrd by the Iloodlanis. Not to ba outdone by tbe Lowell school la the matter of trouble, the West Side school Is now catering a complaint against mischievous parties. Th trouble at Lowell does not appear to be a circumstance, as compared with the trouble now reported at - tbe West Side. i For some time the Janitors of that srhcol have been continually annoyed by minor ' depredations, but have been unable to cap ture tbe guilty parties. On Sunday some " time the school wss broken Into and for . pure, unadulterated criminal Intent this ct seems to stand alone. . Hooka, of no value but to the school district, were , either carried away or destroyed la the school room. A number were found out doors, where the rain had accomplished whatever ruin waa left undone. The win dows In the front door were broken In pieces, while tbe piano of tbe school was simply ruined. Apparently the parties had taken their deliberate time to accomplish their purpose, for It Is probable that the piano cannot even be repaired. To make the matter more distressing to those who ' are In charge of the school, no clue what ever seems to be obtainable which will lead to the arrest of the guilty parties. What action will be taken by the school board to stop these continual raids on the schools Is unknown. Borne of the directors atated yesterday that It seemed to them that the Board of Education Is powerless In the matter. Well-deflned rumors are afloat that the Board 'of Education has made no move whatever to put a stop to these different outrages, and really In tends to suspend the teachers In tbe Lowell school for defending themselves from per- ( sonal violence at the bands of boys. The police department of the city says . that It will ' take the matter In charge. Ignoring the promisee of tbe Board of Edu cation to look after the matter, If any more trouble arises. The police of the city say that they were censured by the board for tbe steps they took In the re ,tl cent Lowell school row, where, they claim, but for their Interference, serious' trouble would have resulted. Line I'p for Mergrer. It was stated last evening In packing house circles that everything waa in readl . ness for a merger of all the different pack - ing plants, to take place at the end of thla week. All the week, and for some time prior, the different houses are said to have been busily engaged In taking In ventories of their respective plants, to gether with supplies and other property on hand, and that these lists have now been about completed and will be forwarded to the Chicago offices for Inspection and ap , proval. There la considerable uneasiness manifest around tbe plants by employes, who are said to fear that the effect of the merger may be a wholesale reduction of the number of hands now employed. While the officials of the different compa nies at this place claim Ignorance of the coming combination, they atate that If the merger doea come It will not have the ef fect of a material reduction In the num ber of people employed at the different plants. Full forces are now at work. Trouble In the Park. A great amount of trouble Is being ex perienced by residents of the northern part of the city with a certain element of young men who are aatd to Infest the city park. According to their stories the ntght air Is generally made hideous up to a late hour by discordant yells, together 'with oatha and other language well calculated to disturb ths peace of that vicinity. On " Sunday evening a special policeman In that "locality attempted to put a stop to this . disturbance and arrested two of the of- ' fendera. Complaints against them have '1 been filed and they will have a bearing lu the police court within a few days. If either Board Meets. ' Neither the Board of Education nor the city council met last night. It seemed a foregone conclusion that there would bo so meeting of the city council, but It waa whispered around that the Board of Edu cation would meet and attempt to adjust some of the trouble In the different schools. . For soma unexplained reason the members saw fit to allow this matter to drift along tor anothar week. Saloon Men I'ader Arrest. John and Swan Larson were yesterday arraigned la the police court, charged with a violation of the atate liquor laws. In that they kept their aaloons open on Sunday and dlspensed"of "malt, spirltous and vinous liquors." Their caaea hate been Mt down for October 1. Maklasr Milk Teats. Sanitary Inspector Frank E. Jonea was locked In his rooma almost all of yester day, busily engaged In making out bis monthly milk test report Mr. Jones stated Llofhcr'G Girff. There exists often a very beautiful companionship between the mother and her daughter. The intimacy ia frank, free and aympathctic, But some day the mother fcela aa if something had chilled this intimacy. The child is ? silent and sad, aud seems to shun her 1 mother instead of 2 seeking her. This change very often occura when tbe young girl is i crossing The bor ' der Hue of woman hood. She is mor bid, nervous, fear ful, as ahe enters upon thla new ex perience. The use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription at such a time will L-. do more than re store the normal balance of mind and body. It will f establish the wom anly function upon ( a basis of sound health, as well as improve the appe tite, nourish the nerves, an the sreneral physical health. promote V d Two years sgo my daughter's health begna ; to tall, wnies Mrs. Dan Wall, of Brodheud, Gran Co.. Wis. Ewvthmg that could b , thought of wu done to help her but it was of no . Whil ahe besia la cuapUtn she was Suit stout: weighed 170 h v-turs of foud health, aatil about the age of fourteen; then in I sia aiaatnj sh waa aw rus daws her weight t but iso. I felt I could not give her uu ss li J wss ths only child I had. sod I suat say. Itoc ' tor, that only lor veur ' Favonls Prescnpuoa my daughter would have beea ia her grave 10 4ay. yVhes ahe had taken one-half buttle ths atursl function ws established and we Ixxight aaothef oat. making ouly two buttle is all. and she completely reoumcti bines then ab ia aa Wells. ts be." The Common Sense Medical Adviser, ; 1008 papee, in paper covers, ia sent rt 'on receipt of 31 one-cent atampa to pay e 1 pens of mailing only. Address lit. R. V. fierce, fiiiHaio, N, Y. that while the tests would not yet be com pleted last evening, that several milk dealers would find their product far be low the average required by the law, and would be required to either Increase their ;-ade or go out of the milk business In South Omaha. Some tests of choice milk waa made and the butter product obtained, as shown by the ch-mlcal test pat to it, was highly satisfactory. raring Takes Tumble. A hesvy beer wsgon came rumbling down Twentieth street yesterday morning, and aa It parsed tbe corner of Twentieth and N streets the driver gave a frightened yell and leaped from the wagon. When he alighted ha found that while the wagon bad passed In safety a hole about eight feet deep represented the place where the paving had been a few seconds before, The sewer under N street seems to have broken loose In some manner and washed away the earth. The hravy wagon pass- ing completed the damage. The place waa barricaded and will be repaired at once. Chrl.tla. Knde.vor t alon. The annual meeting of the Omaha Chrls-i tlan Endesvor union will be held at the First Presbyterian church, Twenty-Affix and J streets, this evening at g o clock. The program will be as follows: Song of (ne pregtnt struggle against the Intro service, scripture reading, prayer. Rev. ductlon of piecework by the Union Faclfic; nconara lysne; song, quariei. xnus miiq r B Kerr o( Mollne, III., general secre Dennis, Miss Nora Smith. Wilbur E. Sha- taVy-treasurer of the International Brother- fer and James D. Nethery. Reading of the secretarye report for the past year, to- gather with the treasurer's. Solo, "At the Old Cathedral Door," Miss Haxel Cslgler. installation services, conducted oy nev. nooeri L neeirr. Aaaress, ins 1 Parcall. to Come," Arthur Chase. Quartet, "Rocked ' The meetlna was entirely devoid of any In the Cradle of the Deep," Miss Myrtle B. nearer, miss Anna uerquist, james uun- canson and Dr. W. H. Slabaugh. After the awarding of the banner to the auccessful union and a Mlzpah benediction the meet- Ing will adjourn. Another Independent Company. Another Independent telephone company has been formed in South Omaha. Tho present association calls Itself the Inter state Independent Telephone company. A communication, with the necessary formal I ties provided by law for the granting of I such concessions, has been filed with the I clerk ssklng that a franchise be granted I to the new company. The ordinances pro- I vide for a royalty of 11,500, to be paid to the city at the rate of $100 a year for the first five years and $200 a year for tbo I last five yeara. It further provides that no I toll shall be charged between the Omaha I and South Omaha exchange and agrees to lessen the present telephone rate at least 25 per cent. Magic City Gossip. I Scott Kin after a brief Illness. Is ealn up and around. I The receipts at the stock yards yesterday fell below the general average for the last few we"ks. I who has been III for a time. Is again able to be out and at work. ! Miss Bertha C. Mason, a missionary from Mexico win speaK this evening at the rirai viiriBimii I nun: II. I Memorial services were held last evening for Paul Vandervort by Phil Kearney Dost ino. z, urand Army or. tne itepuDilc. . Lumber to be used In the construction of 1 the new elevator at the stock yards Is ar- 1 riving and the work w(ll be commenced at onco. No further arrests have aa yet been made In connection with the holdup of the saloon I at imrty-second ana u streets on eaturoay V veiling, Fmiinrl T frViaa VAtinintst bah if ILf v an A Mrs. Jeremiah Mahonov. died yesterday afternoon, after a brief Illness. The funeral I w,-.-.l2!1ihs 'ir.h0f?iA?hCL'It:-;rom Tk- j... f .k- . .k. mi..in.. society of the Presbyterian church has I been cnanaea to tnia arternoon. at tne speak of her experiences in Persia Put your stomach, liver and blood In healthy condition and you can defy dla ease. Prickly Ash Bitters Is a auccessful system regulator. Amusements. At Boyd's Theater. "Alphonse and Gaston," those ultra po lite and most of the time foolish charac- ters, stepped out of the comic supplements onto the stage of Boyd's last night, and with the assistance of about twenty-five characters not 01 upper s peculiar crc- tlon. aucceeaea in amusing a large sum presumaoiy intelligent audience, xu cn- ousness. it must ds saia mat wnoever cum tne iarce ior tne stags iroia 111. tlon of the Opper cartoons haa by no meana failed In hla work, for while the piece doea not depart from the conventional, outside of the antica of the original Alphonse anu Oaston, It provides a conveyance for a number of good specialties, and that is 11 there Is to farce comedy, after -all The company la well up to the average ,ot farce comedy aggregations, having In lta makeup a doxen or more pretty gtrla. who are given opportunity to "cut In" every ao often, or oftcner, with new and catchy singing and dancing numbers. Bobby Mat thews, Herbert Ashley, Eugene Rogers, Helen Darling, Minnie Burroughs and Pearl Sanford carry the principal characters through tbe action of the piece with credit to themselves and fun to tba people in front. The engagement la for three nights and matinee Wednesday. Tonight, on the Invitation of Manager Burgess ana MSU' ager Rice, the members of the Omaha base ball club will occupy boxes at tbe theater. o eaom ta 'Km. No polaonous purgatlvea enter into Dr. Klng'a New Life Pills. Easy, but prompt. they cure or no pay. Only 25c. LEFT FREE TO FIGHT IT OUT Rival Biardlagf Htsnse Keepers May Settle D Sen pees Oat of Coart. After a trial which continued nearly all of yeaterday afternoon Justice Fester re- fused to put Mrs. Hill, 1310 Chicago street. under bond to keep tha peace, aa requested occupied discussing street fair arrange and urged by Mrs. Anna Drost of Fifteenth ments. Word will probably be received and Chicago streets, who had Mrs. Hill ar- fr0m Secretary Cortclyou today giving rested. The loss of a boarder by Mrs. Drost and the loss of a hsndful of blsck hair by Mrs. Hill was the cause of the trouble. At the house of Mrs. Drost there boarded Marlon E. Hunysn, employed by tha Union Paclflc. He left there and went to room at ths borne of Mrs. Hill. And it waa said by Mrs. Drost that Ruuyan owed her room rent. Recently she went to Mrs. HlU's house to collect from Runyan. During a conversation between Mrs. Hill and Mrs. Drost the former accused Mrs. Droat of telling Runyan that she (Mrs. Hill) waa "trash." Mre. Hill ordered Mra. Drost to leave tbe premises and when she refused she pushed her off the porch. Whereupon Mra. Drost proceeded to get famlller with Mrs. Hill's hair and succeeded In pulling out a handful. Mrs. Hill wouldn t stand (or that and smsshed Mrs. Drost with a ruler, so the prosecution testified, but ths defense said It was her fist. Whatever it waa. Mrs. Drost said It left marks rn her fare for many daya, to say nothing of the pain It caused at the time. Marriage Llrenaea. IJreneev to wed were Issued yesterday to the following: Name and Residence. Age John Bherretvek, Omaha W Mary Mendrlrkson. Omha If Frank J. Kotera, Omaha.,... -.. tl Mary Furs I. umaha 21 fWar 1 Gray. Omaha H CelU Klcuaci. Omaha It ANTI-INJUNCTION MEETING Largs Andienca at Vaihimtai Hall Listing to Union Labor Leadtra, NO SENSATIONAL UTTERANCES ARE MADE peakert t rie Strikers to Avoid Vio lent Action and I.ansraaste In Their Contest with t nlon raclllc Railroad Company. Manv hundred people attended the "antl- Injunctlcn" maea meeting in Washington hall under the auspices of the Vnlon Fa- ctfle strikers last night. In the audience, which was composed largely of strikers and their sympathisers, were numerous bust oess men, not a few women, and at least one representative of the Vnlon I acin railroad company. The chairman was Marry uve nronirirnt of the Central Labor , ,nrt ,hB .D,.i(ers were P. J. Conlon n(J GeorgB Mulbery, first and third vice Bre.ldentB respectively of the International Association of Machinists, who are leaders bood of Blacksmiths; A. A. Wursley of Rac,., ft-Ia., a labor leader of considerable Lji.ttnetlon and ability, and Rev. George Blgelow of Lincoln, socialist candidate for goVernor of Nebraska, who responded to a tnlng Beniatonal or exciting and Messrs. conlon. Mulberv and Kerr, the speakers who represented crafts Involved In the strike, persistently counselled their fellows cainst radical action or extreme speech at all times. "Keep within the law," said Mr. Kerr, "and by so doing you will merit the respect and sympathy of the public and win thl" fl8ht " Conlon Dlaensses Injunction P. J. Conlon, the first speaker, devoted more time than any of the others to the Injunction question. He declared that he was at the time precluded from saying what he would like, because of the restraining order Issued by the federal court at the be beBt of the Union Pacific. He said that this as well as other such injunctions, deprived men of the right of free speech and free pres such as the constitution guaranteed them In the Judgment of Vice President Mulbery unscrupulous Judges, who were the pliant toola of domineering corporations Issued these Injunctions In defiance of the law and the constitution, and the only way to pre- vent these outrages and encroachmenta upon the rights of the laboring class was for the latter to break away from blind i. . A , . - ,v- only solution of the problems confronting the laboring classes. In the estimation of Mr. MulDery, rested in the hands of a united and educated mass of worklngmen A Ul-1. HM. l . "L " " """"T - cnancea to De m me city ana was at tne mwiing oy apeciai invitation, spcae. in gen era! uuuu Uie lsbur uueallun. Mi. VVuiaVt U a typical orator. Hla delivery Is free and n . , , , " graceful, hia manner of speech pleasing, bis utterances clear and forceful and well sea soned with logic, while to cap the climax he hss a deep, rich voice which becomes magnetic In some of hla loftier heights of oratory. The speaker devoted but few remarks to th local difficulty, dealing with the labor i""""" uu urvaa oasis, ne urgea me P'nt that organised labor had brought to tne united Btatea tne maximum nf nnlittiai that It was therefore the fundamental and moat essential principle of all goverpments Socialism as a. Remedy. Rev. George Blgelow, the last speaker, rot In some good licks for bis theories and his party. Insisting that the present strike and all other kindred labor and Industrial diffi culties were due to divisions among the men involved and that the only remedy for these Industrial Ills was union and harmony upon the one platform of socialism. All the speakers who represented the gtrlIcers denounced piecework as a principle ,nd plecework , tne Unlon Paclflc gnops , particular. It was held to be an unjust and unequai method and one that would never prove satisfactory. In theory alone wag u acceptable. It tended to place the imfa m the ahops adopting It on an unfair competition with the men In other ahops. it inculcated prlnclnlea of dishonesty worked Insuperable hardships upon the men subjected to It and In the end waa not as good as the old dally waae system. Tt bn. eflted the employer at the expense of the employe and widened the breach between thru. FOR KING AK-SAR-BEN'S ENTRY Final Preparations for the Grand Display Are Now Being; Made. The first rehearsal of the men who will be on the floats and who will -be the guard of honor for the king and queen of Qui vera on tbe night of tbe coronation ball brought out a larger crowd than any first night since tbe society was organised There will be two mora nights of drill Thursday and Monday evenings. O. A. Lund and W. R. Adair acted aa drlllmasters, assistanta to Gould Dletx, chairman of the committee. Several Inno- vatlons were made in the march which met wlth hearty approval from members of tba order and of ths board. The floats are nearly completed, but a fnrea ta worklnsr niffht and riav t n t,aWA "n "rely In shape for Saturdsy even- mg. a new noor nas Deen laid in tbe den and dancers will find it more satisfactory for dancing on tbe night of the grand ball than It baa ever been. Gus Renze has begun to decorate the building and the decorations will be on a mora ntmi iCale than formerly. At tbe meeting of the board of governors I prevlous to the rehearsal the time was final Instructions to the committee re gardlng the president's trip, and the com mittee will then make its final atatemeat to the public. YOUNG WOMAN BADLY BRUISED Miss Haskoe of Brass Falls front Mov las; Street Car and Safters Severely, Miss Emma Hcekoe of Bruno, Butler county, is confined to her room at the real aenre or ner uncle, Tony Francl, 1914 South Thirteenth atreet, as a result of a fall from a street car at Thirteenth and Dodge streets at 8 o'clock last night Miss Hoskoe, who was on a northbound Walnut Hill car, stepped from the car before It came to a atop and waa thrown to the pave ment, striking on her face. Her Jaw waa dislocated and she was otherwise bruised but none of her Injuries are considered serious. She was picked up by Mrs1. Altrs Push of Twelfth and Pierce streets, who, was a passenger on the ear, and assisted to a nearby drug atore. She was later takeu to the home of Mr. Francl. Mlaa Hoskoa came to Omaha yesterday afternoon and expected to go to Millard this morning to attend the funeral of an uncle. She was stopping at tbe home of Mr. Francl and had come to town to do some shopping. - I- EIGHTEEN TEMPORARY POLICE laldwin-Broatch loard Falls Shart 01 Promise t Appoiit Thirty. MANY APrLICANTS ARE DISAPPOINTED Selections Are Made In Secret Session svnd Appointees Are Called Into Star Chamber One at . a Time.' When the Board of Fire and Police Com missioners got together; last evening the large audience room .-used for the formal functions of that body was crowded with eager and expectant candidates for the thirty positions on the" Ak-Sar-Ben tem- porary police force, which had been pro- vtded for In the resolution adopted by tne He wa8 ,ummarur discharged by Man board at Its afternoon meeting of last week. ager Lothn aD(j forcibly ejected from About fifty new applications naa oeen men within the week and a number of those who bad previously made application for positions on the regular torce naa x- pressed a willingness to accept appointment for thla brief aeason while awaiting some- thing better. Nearly all of these candl- dates were present In person and there was plalnly apparent a feeling on tne pari o a number of them, that they had particular claims to preferment and Intended to urge those clalma to the utmost. They pressed forward In a determined manner iu lu rail which divides the private enclosure from the public portion of the room and beset the clerk with numerous questions and messages to be delivered to the dltrer- ent members of tbe board. The members arrived all togetner an.i Immediately retired into tbe prlvato omce tn rnnalder the applications In executive seeslon. After an hour had been thus con- aumed the clerk, wno naa not. u- mltted to the aecret conierence, w. u"""" a list of the favored ones admitted, one at a time, to the presence of the board. Each of these men as Ms name wss called entered the my'"l0" Inner chamber and almost immediately came forth smilingly to make room lor the next in order. Only three or four of those wboae namea were uu " respond to roll call. , Brief rabllo Fanlbltlon. After the entire list had been called the board came out into the main room r keen so placed in the saddle as to ae public exhibition, which lasted only about. twenty minutes I of its sitting the board showed great team I work, and in that respect decided improve I ..l,An it v. ment over Vn""";mt"-erlto. although the horse was nervous and been necessary to hold secret conference ,-hmit th. entire ecena in the course of the public ceremony. Tne ooara suuin-v - . . j t A m innv snuiiinn. whirr, after setting forth the necessity for .rtditlonal men for police duty, provided that, whereas, the Board of Governors of tne AK-osr-oeu uau v- k- . . at a -eaarl s natf Tflr Slain men, th. following P " !6B?" f Omiha h. length of service to be determined by tlon was made without placing the r.spon the "engtn 01 servu. s slblllty on anyone, although rather .trong the chief of police, and to be at ' BU.plcl0D1 were entertained aa to the tden- ublect to ordera of the chief of police riMirra Hurst. George H. Jones, O. v Rarnes. C. B. Davis, James M. macain, John Cualck. A. C. Taylor, J. N. McCoy. W. W. Hurd, Thomas F. Boyle, Oscar Wood, F. J. Fitch, Joslah Thomas, 8. u. jouy, A. T. Slarwart. John O'Netl. Stephen D. Bryant. After another aecret conierence Frits Bloemer waa added to the list, man- Ins eighteen in all. Commissioner Thomaa ahowed aome lack of rehearsal w hen the application of V . tt Rhoon for leave of absence of thirty aaya without nay waa presented In the publlo proceedings, and entered an oojection, so ths document waa laid over until tne secona executive session, and was finally grantea In the case of Police Officer Anton inaa. who waa accused of having failed to rtport for quarantine a case of smallpox which existed in his family, the board announcea the decision that tha officer should b. .us pended without pay for the period of eight weeks, dating from the time of hla suspen- alon. July 29. which will permit the re instatement of Inda within a day or two, Tha name of J. J. Miller was atrlcken from the list of aubatttute firemen PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. J. A. Reppard of New York ia at the Mil lard. H. W. Campbell of Holdrege is at tha Millard. Rev. P. P. Tester of Nebraska City was at ths Millard yeatera.y. F. 8. Johnson and wlfs and W. E. John son of Odtiolt, la., are guests at tbe MU- Jim Dumps gazed out on sidewalks hot And looked In vain for one cool spoti And vowed he ne'er again would eat A lunch of heat-producing meat Once more has "Force" restored his vim, Although 'tis hot, he's "Sunny Jim." Ths Baadj kilans Canal: m&Kes comfort possible on a sweltering day. CLOSE CALL FOR MISS KENNARK Actress Narrowly Escapes Injury Through Malicious Work of Dis charged Stage Hand. Miss Jane Kenntrlt,' who appears aa Cigarette In "Under Two Flags" at Boyd a next week under the management of Vvwd ward &N Burgess, has Just had an experi ence which severely Jostled her nerves and all but had a serious result. .The produc tion In which Miss Kennark la starred this season wrs playing an engagement at Des Molnea. The week before In St. Louis It had become necessary to serve two weeks' notice of release of services to one of tbe mechanical start carried with the production whose usually valuable services had become impaired by overindulgence In intoxicants. The two weeks' notice was curtailed when the production reached Des Moines and the man ahowed up for the evening performance In a condition that 1 dl1 nat promi,e satisfactory aervice. the Btage- Later the fellow returned and managei io egCape notice In the general confugon 0f getting the scenes. Shortly after ne wa aetecte( busying himself Bbout ,nt ,iectrica apparfttua. This ap- paratug ts very valuable, as it produces th aan(jgtorm inU8ion, a rippling of water un(ler mo0nllght effect and other Iropor- tant a(1juncti to the scenic equipment of the attractlon. He was again thrown out of he theater and a man piaced on guard t0 prevent nls return. In tha BCCond acen8 of tne fourtn act M,sg Kennark makM ner entrance on norieback and iater ride, at a gallop up a gteep mountaln alde thirty feet above the gUg)) ,eve, when u CBm() t)me for her t0 mount the horse she was assisted the jadde Md J(jit M th- Bfgna, ,0 ralge th) curtan w gTen th9 noriei or .... v..i,.j t. ,.u of traln,ng began t0 plunge ab(Jut th() w,ngg The curtaln waB caught and lowered and a number of the membera 1 ,w k m. k st.s-o t .UBfced tQ M,g Kennark.B uslst- VeHe ,he fct tnat ,he not Bn experienced horsewoman she retained aUhough eonBlder. thoroughly frightened, mounted thB horla aftcr the Bnlmal had become quieted with the result that tbe horae again attempted bucking tactics. An in vestigation was then made and resulted in the discovery of a large needle which had removed and Miss Kennark made her en- trance and successfully accomplished the ,v. ..i. -i.k ,. tw mi.. . . . nark would have ridden Into view of the audience before the horse became restive and she would have been thrown oft or at ... , ,ha sntlre acena ruined The trick might well have been attended by serious result. d a thorough Inve.tlga- susplclc tity of the culprit. I j THE MAN WITH THE BIO HEAO ' ' THE MAN WITH THE LEVEL Hr.AD-Ah. you old ainnerl No reat for the wlckedl Tou wUl 90 en a bat while you wife's tn the country, will you.) You ouabt to suiter! But why didn't you do as I told you when I left you last oLght, and as X did myself: take a CASCARET Candy Cathartic before (join a to bed? You'd feel good like I do. They work whlld you sleep, tlx up your stomach and bowels, cool your feverish liver, aod make you teel floe aod dandy the mornlnj after. ffl - 'To.lV Swstt, erU f wkt i4 tmlt-atts e14. - Helps Him to Keep CmL - . r . ToreVls a Mesalm to hot humanity. I flndtlnoe eating lfc-nd I want It erery mornlng-that I am able to go through a hot day with much more comfort than wheat X used to -t heart, meat breakfast. It has taIJ ' EMPLOYER MEETS EMPLOYE Tbty Held Oommoi Oonvantisa Upoi Invitatian f Hineapslii. LABOR CCmmiSSiCriLn WRiGKT SPEAKS Declares that the Whole Iabor Qae. Hon Mast Be Placwd on an Altm- Istlc Baals and that He lls;! on Shows How. MINNEAPOLIS. Sept. 22. The Brst aea- alon of the first national convention of employers and employea waa opened thla evening at tbe Exposition building in this city before an audience of 1,000 people. This conference pf employers and employea, economists and others Interested In tha labor problem waa arranged for by tha cltiiena of Minneapolis for tba purpose of establishing better relatione between em ployer and employe and was called to or der by David P. Jonea, acting mayor of thla city. A short address of welcome waa made by Governor Van Bant, after which the election of officers for the convention- took place. President Cyrus Northrup of the State university waa made temporary pres ident. Tbe election of permanent officers for the ensuing year and the perfection of a permanent organisation will be at the last session on Thursday evening. The address of the evening waa made by President Northrup, who apoka in part aa follows: "Capital and labor are both in demand are both abundant and for the present are both in no condition of distress. No doubt capital haa a right to combine and no doubt, also, lsbor has a right to combine. But might never yet made right and It never can. No man has any right to live exclusively for himself and no aggregation of men haa any right to live exclusively for themselves. Capital ewea a duty to labor and labor owes a duty to capital. Suspected Caases. "I cannot put my finger on the absolute cauae of contention. I suspect that tha watering of stocks, the multiplication of the millions of capital by arbitrary arith metic, without adding a dollar to tha value, haa something to do with the trouble, and that the unrest of labor la In a large degree occaaloned by tbe necessity of earning a reaaonable profit, not on ac tual capital, but on Inflated and watered capital. "Another cause of unrest among labor ers, aa It aeema to me, ia this: The Intro duction of machinery, while It haa dimin ished tbe demand for labor, haa In no way tended to throw workmen out of employ ment, as was at first feared, but haa re sulted in such a tremendous Increase in th. amount of production from a given amount of labor that the revenue derived la Immensely in excess of what was for merly derived from the application of th. aame amount of labor. "The world la making progress. Tbe watchword of the age is or ahould be broth erhood. And tt abould be a brotherhood not merely of men who are engaged in the - Gt) 'wayl Oit out! Tin sick! I want to die! same kind of work, but a brotherhood of all men, rich and poor, employer and employe, all recognising the fact that they are chil dren of the common Father and brothers by birth and by community of Interests." At the close of his address President Northrup Introduced the speaker of the evening, Carroll D. Wright. United States cessm!Bs!nr of lahnr, who took aa his subjecf the question: "la There Any Solu tion of the Labor Froblom?" He said in part: Commissioner Wright's Idea. The question is not to kill or remove the cause, but to aoften the struggle. If any effort has proved fallible it ia the at tempt to secure gooi, pure, Individual char acter by statutory enactment Laws for ths betterment of sanitary conditions have wrought many reforms, but tbey have not touched the heart of the problem. Lessen ing tbe hours of labor haa proved beneficial, but to a very limited extent. As to arbitration, while I am favorable to tbe system In adjusting differences be tween nations or between employers and employes, yet I csnnot see in it a solution. Arbitration almply meana ths Interference of the public in the relations of the em ployer and employe. But law has always failed to adjust wages, and lta efforts in that direction have done more harm than good. The Decalogiio is as good a labor plat form aa any. In religion we find the high est form of solution yet offered. ' Next to religion comes constructive evolution that evolution which believes in tbe potency of effort. The economic man Is growing into the co-ordinate man. We are to belteve a new law of wagea, grown out of religious thought. The old struggle waa tor exist ence; the new struggle Is for a wider spir itual margin. The application of thla re ligious Idea la the true solution of tba tabor problem. The whole question must be placed on an altrulstlo basis. Man's average conduct la not better than hla char acter. Hla treatment of hla fellows Is con sistent with his sense of justloe. - "Out of this new struggle la growing a new political economy which looks largely to tbe care and comfort of the men. Re ligion forecaata the aocial destiny of man. The remedy may effect a relief, 1 but not a cure. Thla position reaches Into the com ing revival of religion which ahall hold In lta power the church. Industry, commerce and the whole aocial fabric." MURDERER OLSEN'S REMAINS Will Probably Be Tarned Over to home Medical Society for Dissection. The remains of Peter Olsen, the Omaha murderer, shot at Bancroft, Neb., last Sat urday night, arrived In Omaha at 10 o'clock Monday night by order of Secretary of State Marsh and are at tbe undertaking rooma of the Maul-Davis company. It la not known whether or not Olsen had any relatives or frienda here. If none such appear, the re mains will be given over to a medical society to he designated by the secretary of state. The body waa unaccompanied from Bancroft. "Garland" Stoves and Raasjss , Awarded first prise, Paris, 1900; Buffalo, 1ML set