THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, FENKtTAUY 7, 1010. AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA Busbt3i Men Discuss City Problems at Smoker. SCHOOL SUE 10 ISSUE L.. fc. Harrison Aaaaelted anil Suffers ever fonrnaalon Which May Prntr . Fatal Afrlrna t'harrb' (o ItrbalM. The smoker of thn South Omaha Com rnerrlal rlub Saturday win attended by about forty of the members. The session aa held at tho new rlub rooms, where th evening was fpnt In a serious dlscus lon of Important topics of public Interest. The paving of Mortor boulevnrd with creo soted wood htork paving was Klvfn a tho rough discussion. It waa agreed that this kind of paving whs especially wnI, but some argument was hoard agalnxt the extra cost. More criticism waa lodged against the extra charge for grading and thn extra cement than the other Items. The club took no formal action on tho matter last evening. On the question for a site for the manu.il training department there was much diver sity of opinion. Some favored the pur chase of ' additional property and others thought the building should be erec ted on the present high school site. The extra cost of a site could then be applied t provide a better building. Aa to the style of building It. was thought a bulldlnff could be erected whlrh would supplement the present one and even add artistic features to the school campus. The members of the Hoard of Education were present and anxious to have the com mercial club assist in the solution of the problem. The cluh Was asked to appoint a committee to work In conjunction with the board! Bids for tho sites will be re ceived at. Uie regular meeting of the board Monday night. If they appear unreasonable It Is proposed that the committee of the commercial club use Its Influence to se cure more reasonable offer. Nearly , every guest present expressed his opinion on one point or another of the lengthy discussion. At thi close seviral committees were appointed to take up the matters under discussion. I., II. Harrison lnau;rl. t.. n. Harrison waa Mugged about 7 p.m. last night in a street fight on Twen:y fourth street In front of I.ewon & Stroeh's saloon. Tho affair was ovtr so si on that no one aeemed to ktiovv exactly what hid happened. It was said that a quarrel started among several men who appeared more or less Intoxicated. In the midst of It they came to blows and someone hit Harrison In , the face and knocked him down. He fell heavily on ths walk, striking his head, and was rendered unconscious at once. Dr. -A. 11 Koenlg attended him and ordered him taken to the Scuth Omaha hospital. Up to a late hour he had not recovered conyclousnefis and It Is fenred he will die. The participants In the quar rel disappeared at once and the city de tectives are now trying to find out who was guilty of the assault. No one has yet been found who will divulge the in formation. ' John Dunn Arrested. John Dunn, flremun for tho Cudahy racking company, living at Twentieth and II streets, was arrested yesterday morning for alleged lnault offered to Mrs. James White, Twenty-sixth and P street. Mrs. Tninn said ho followed her Friday night for several blocks before she could rc.ich home and made repeated advancts. Sat urday morning she swore out a complaint. African Church to Rebuild. The first work In remodeling tho African Methodist Episcopal church was begun Saturday. The site of the church la Twenty-fifth and It streets. A crew of men from the beef gangs at the packing houses volunteered their services anj basement was cleared during the after- Now just fancy Quiet Miss Nancy, Campbell's Soups Alake her springy and dancey. A real luxury Our To'mito Soup could not be more , truly a luxury if it cost ten , times the price. There could be no better ingredients; or greatencare and skill than go to the mak ing of Tomato Soup , Yet because cf the economical methods made possible by our extremely larpe production, the price of this luxurious delicacy is so low that not only can every one afford it, but no thrifty housewife can afford to be without it. And this Is true of all Campbell's Soups. 21 kinds 1 0c a can Just add hot water, bring to a boil, and scne. Csmpbell't useful Menu llouk it free to you, on request. Journ Caufiill Com fa n v Camden N J Look for the red-and-white label mm mm. The land of perpetual June and Roses. I .ess than 3 days from New York; 12 hours from Flori da. Temperature 68 to 78 de crees during winter months. Tho famous Colonial Hotel is here. full particular! la rnrard o this molt dr'tghtful tf wtlitrv rMMrtatm n iwliMnt. AtfclreM. lurl.lft LU l oan HUw. M L'lll At.., or Xrw V.rk mi.4 CWw Mll ltuiiilv ('.. 1W It. tut HJ.rr. Nrff wrli ur LM'l HrAUCtt OfUn 4 ll noon. The church women served dinner at noon. Cash donation have been irntdt during the fall and lummrr for thin work to the amount of about tW). whlrh amount has hfvi deposited In the Packer's bank. Tho subscription which in considered reliable add about $.1St more. A further ram pnicn fur funds will bruin noon. The work of rain na- and enlarging the building Is expected to be completed early In the summer. Wrrntle Postponed. The wrestling male between Louis flchwawpr of Fort Calhoun and Oan Uoi tra 1 1 of South Omaha at the South Omaha Ltihor temple has been postponed until Fttmiary 17. Manic VHr Ooaalp. THKOIKP.K KAl.Z haa Just received his full line of spring (foods. Mr. and Mrs. J. I!, Harris returned yes teiday from a trip In Missouri. Miss Mabel Henry left Friday evening for a visit of two weeks' at Kansas City. .Inter's Uold Top rteer delivered to nny part of city. Fred Heffllngei". Tel. Houth 1G-W Mystic Workers, lodge No. 173, will give a masquerade ball Tuesday even nig, February 8. at Odd Fellow's hall. The I'resbyterian Ladles' Aid society will hold a kensinglon tea at the home of Mrs. C. K. Kiarr Wednesday afternoon, Feb ruary 9. The funeral of Mrs. Oncar Winkler will be held at 2 p. m. today from the residence, Thirty-first ml X streets, , to St. Mary's rnurcn instead or M. Agnes. The Shnmrock club Is preparing a dia mond ring contest to be begin In about one wenk, hi which a diamond ring will be olfered for the most popular young woman. Joshua Carlson, who tiled Friday evening. will be burled today at 2 p. m. from the Swedinh Lutheran church, at Twenty-third and K tttreets. The Interment Is at Laurel 11 ill cemetery. The Ladles' auxiliary to the Ancient Order of Hibernians will give a card party Ti'PHday evening at Danish Brotherhood hall. Fine prizes for ladles and gentle men will be offpred and refreshments will be served. Mr. and Mrs. George Tarks report the oirtn or twins, a ooy and girl. Friday evening a number of friends called to In spect them and wish much Joy. ThiB gift makes fourteen children In the family. George Parks said It la the only way to avoiu ino uniurKy tnirteen. LIVE STOCK MEN FIGHT TAX ON OLEOMARGARINE 4rfrnment Set Forth In Pamphlet Sent to President, the Senate find the Ilonae. . The National Live Stock exchange, repre h. ciUiiR all the beef producers of the coun try, is making a move against the, tax on oleomargarine and has set forth Its argu ments In a pamphlet form addressed to the president, tho senate and the house. A re capitulation of the arguments against the tax of 10 cents a pound on colored oleo margarine and Vt cent on uncolored oleo shows: Oleomargarine products are almost Inden tion 1 in chemical consUtuency, In digesti bility, In palatnblllty and wholesomeness with butter products. The basis of both la the butter fat. The discovery of a new food product Rhould not be discouraged by excenivo taxation or onerous restrictions. All regulaUve laws should be dliecttd soldy tow nnl the guaranty of the purity of the food product and the prevention of fraud In Its distribution and sale. The perfection of the manufacture of oleomargarine placed within the reach of the great masses of the people a cheap and wholesome food product and found a new outlet for an important part of the uteer supply of the live stock producing sec tions oi tne united Ktatem and made the product of the cattle raisers more valuable. The Imposition of the tax struck down a new Industry and made a monooolv of an old. it lessened the food supply of the masses simply that the butter makers might get higher prices and establish a substantial monopoly. It made conditions such, that later, when monopoly had made nign prices, bo mat tne manufacture of the new food product became possible, fraud and deception grew so prevalent that but ter eaters are all walking by faith and live In Ignorance of the substance they spread upon their bread. , Unjust taxes breed fraud and contempt of law. The taxing of oleomargarine 10 cents per pound for coloring It with the Identical vcKetable product that all butter makers use. Is a rank discrimination lUDTrOrted bv no reason whatever. If there be any reason for taxing the - coloring matter jn Olao. margarine, the same reason e.:;lHt fpf tax ing the coloring matter in butter, Treat both products alike. The plaolng of tn tax upon the coloring matter doea not teni to decrease the amount of fraud, but adds Incentive to fraud by Increasing the profit to be made through successful fraud and misrepresentation. MORRISON INSANE, SAYS JURY Verdict of Snlelde Returned In Case of Letter Carrier Who Shot tVlfe, Father-ln-l,niv and ' Self. That Sandle Morrison died by a gunshot wound, self-inflicted, while In a state ' of temporary Insanity, , was the . verdict ' the ccrcncr's Jury returned after hearing the evidence In' rotation to the tragedy at the Monndnock hotel Thursday. Morrleon'? body was burled at Springfield, Neb., the home of his father, Saturday ufternoon. RKI'ORTS FltON CORPORATIONS Ketnrna Required liy New Tax I.nvr Mnut Be Mnde Thla Month. WASHINGTON. Feb. 6 -Corporations and other business organizations liable to a tax of 1 per cent on their net Incomes are required by law tq make their returns to the Internal revenue officers for the calendar year. 1909, on or before March 1 next, under penalty of a' fine of from $100 to $10,000. Apparently from Inquiries which have come to hand a good deal of mlsapprehenion exlita in the public mind on thi! point, the opinion being that these returns may be made within any reasonable time before the tax must be paid. Corporations must see to It that they obtain the blank form for making the re quired returns. A failure to receive them and to furnish the Information within the prescribed time, will not give relief from the penal ties Imposed for a failure to give It. The forms will be furnished on application by collectors of internal . revenue. In order that, there may bo no dispute aa to the time when the returns come In, collectors have been Instructed that when they are received atttr March the envelope bear ing postmarks allowing the time of mail ing shall be preserved, and forwarded with the returns to Washington. The Bobuslr I'laaae dt'Htroys fewer lives than stomach, liver and kidney diseattea, for .which. Electric Hitters Is the guaranteed remedy. 50c. For sale by lUaton Drue; Co PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Harvey J. Grove, of Hen son spent the Ion week In Chkago. John C. Wharton has returned from Washington, D. C. Mrs. W. Coffey of Portland. Ore.. Is the truest of Mrs. A. C. l Farrell for a few (lays. K. K. Wilcox, assistant mnnntrer for Urownlng. King & Vo., leaves for Now York tonight. F. P. Klrkemlall, who lias been In Bos ton, for the lat few week. U expected ho-iTe Tvit-xluy. W. J. Harrlman of Dunbar, Mr. and Mr. W. A. Kcnaston of Wewela. i. D., arid C. IS. Clurk of Denver are at the Merchants. Mr. and Mrs. John P. 'Wharton have re turned from a two weeks' vtalt in the ant. Tiny stopped at Washington and New Vcrk. Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Murphy of Rapid City. Cajitnln J. W. Hrrshey of the Kieventh l:nlted Slates infantry, and R. b. Wil llama of Kansas City are at the tlen- John M. .Ituxan of Hxstmgs, W. Nash. Mr. and Mr. Charl Clayton of Denver. F. O. Arnold of Fullerton, L. H. Burt of Orand Inland, E. O. Gallagher of O'Neill. Willi Isben. A. Aggergaard of Viborg, B. V., are at the Paxtou. Some Things You Want to Know Delicate Scientific Instruments. 'Mankind owes a great debt to the men whose Ingenuity has produced Instruments which permit the fcictitlat to go far "be yond the ordinary range of his senses. Through the modern telescope the scien tist looks far into space and beholds mil lions of suns outshining our own, objects of such Immensity that our minds cannot grasp them, and of such distance that the unaided eye cannot see them. Through the microscope he discovers billions of little creaturea of whose existence he was un aware. With his measuring Instruments the scientist la able to measure distance and quantity a million times more accu rately than with the eye; heat a thou sand times more accurately than with the sense of feeling; and time a thousand times more accurately than with the unaided mind. The bolometer, devised by the late Prof. Langley to nVasuro the heat of the stars, Is a marvelous Instrument. The heat of the average star Is no greater to us thsjn the heat of a candle placed three miles away, yet this delicate Instrument will measure the varying degrees of heat glvn off by different stars. A spider's web, a thread of spun glass, the gause of a fly's wing and a mirror as small as a pin head, are some of the things that enter Into Its construction. It Is so sensitive to heat that the - Image of a man's face thrown upon it at a distance of a halt mile will be registered sharply. The dividing engine, used by scientists to make spectroscope gratings for analys ing rays of light. Is perhaps the next moat delicate machine man has contrived. The Rowland dividing engine will rule 120,000 parallel lines on a single Inch of surface. Another will draw fourteen lines on the edge of the finest tissue paper. It was almost an Insuperable task to get the wheels perfect enough to do the work, but a little electroplating brush of the' most Ingenious construction finally served the purpose. When the machine Is In opera tion It must be let alone, as even the prox imity of a human being will interfere with the trueneea of its lines. It goea on Inces santly drawing Its diamond point across the hardened feted, and when the grating is finished It sells for aa much as 150 per square Inch. , Another very perfect . machine Is the White worth measuring machine, which will determine thickness down to the millionth part of an inch. When one deilres such a degree of accuracy it Is an easy matter to set the machine a shade too tight. To over come this the Inventor placed a pair of "feelers" on It, enabling the operator to tell when It Is exactly right. The ma chine Is so accurate that If a man place his finger nail against a bar of Iron thirty six Inches long, It will register the ex pansion caused by the communicated heat. The 8haw, measuring machine will de termine length down to the hundred-millionth part pf an Inch., Aa the series of wheels on a watch multiply the motion of a . single turn -of the mainspring Into thousands of revolutions by the balance wheel, so there Is a series of little levers In the Shaw machine which reduce the movement of an Inch on the lever operated by the hand to the hundredth-millionth part of an inch on the one at the other end of the series. One well may wonder how such an Instrument can be turned to human use, yet It was this machine which discovered that the vibration of: the diaphragm In a telephone receiver In regis tering the faintest audible sound, moves through the one-flfty-mllllonth part of an Inch. This' machine Is so delicate that un aided human perception cannot interpret Its registrations, therefore a small micro phonic telephone has been attached to It" (or this purpose. These measuring ma chines were used to determine the length el th tuberculosis germ. Ope of the greatest aids to human knowledge Is the spectroscope. In Its simplest form this instrument Is a tri angular prism through wtilch the sun shines, revealing the colors of the rainbow. In Its complex form It takes the shape of a telescope broken in two, with the two parU placed at about the. angle of the two marks of the letter V, except tha they do not Join at the apex. Instead there are a number of prisms placed between them, which bend the ray of light going into one barrel until the eye can behold It while looking in the corresponding end of the other barrel. The powers of this Instrument seem al most miraculous. It will discover the pres ence of one-eighteen-milllonth of a grain of sodium, while, the human taste can perceive only the presence of one part of salt In a few hundred parts of water. It can take tho thousandth part of a grain of dried human blood, which has been ex posed to the air for fifty years, and Bhow by the characteristic lines that It Is blood Train Robbed by Three Men Near Cornell,'. Kansas Paisengen Are Forced to Deposit Their Purses, Watches and Eings in Gunny Sack. PITTSBURG, Kan., Feb. (.-Three un identified men held up 'and robbed the paa sergers on an eastbound Mtrinourl Pacific passenger train five miles east of here last night. They were unmasked. About J 00 and a small amount of Jewelry was taken from the passengers. The robbers boarded trie train on the out skirts of Pittsburg. They took seats In the chair car and rode quietly along until the train was near Cornell, Kan. There they leaped from (heir seats, backed con ductor Garrlty Into a corner and drawing revolvers, warned him not to call for as sistance.. One of the robbers then covered the passengers with two large revolvers. "You will now prepare to give up your valuables," he said. "My partner here will pass among you. Please be quiet," The "partner" thereupon produced a gunny rack and started on his collecting tour. From each passenger he took everything of value. Money, watches, diamonds and rings all went Into the sack., One woman screamed and fainted. The collector calmly lifted a ring from her finger, picked her purse up off the floor, to which It had fallen, and passed on to the next victim. Passengers revived the woman after the robbers left the coach. Throughout the progress of the robbery the train hurried ahead. Not one of the crew, with the exception of the conductor, knew a robbery was being perpetrated. When the lights In the town of - Cornell loomed into view, several of the pas sengers at the rear of the coach who had not been reached by the robbers, hoped they would escape with their valuables, and they began placing them back In their pockets. But they were doomed to dis appointment. Just because the train stopped at the station, the robbers did not hurry away. The robber with the gunny sack stripped the last passenger In the car of bis goods and than the three dropped and human blood at that. It can take a ray of light coming from a star so dis tant that the riy has been years In reaching here and divide It up In such a way as to discover the kinds of matter In the star from whence the beam comes. In ihls way the spectroscope found helium In the sun, ninety million miles distant, be fore the chemist discovered It hard by his own doorstpp. The spectroscope has hundreds of uses, some of them very prosaic. In the Bes semer process tf making steel the object la to burn a certain percentage of the carbon out of the ore. It usually takes sb ut twenty minutes to omrd. te the procesa, but 'if It Is poured out twenty secunds too scon or twenty seconds too late the whole Is ruined. The spectroscope tells the txoct Instant when the proper amount of carbon has bten burned out. A remurkable Instance of precision In big things Is the care of the great Yerkes telescope. A t star of the seventh magni tude appears to be one-twenty-flve-hun-dredth of an Inch In diameter. There Is a spider web across the object glass which Is one-six-thousandth of an Inch In diam eter. The problem Is to move this twenty-two-ton telescope with auch precision that the star disc of one-twenty-flve-hundredth of an Inch can "be threaded upon the spider web of one-Blx-thousandth of an Inch at all times, and to keen, it moving In oppo sition to the motion of thn earth. This Is accomplished by electrical attachments of wonderful accuracy. The strength, testing machines now In ue represent a high type of exact mecha nism, possessing as they do the strength of a thousand lants and at the same time the delicacy of the hair spring of a wstch They register 'at one effort the tensile strength of a bar of Iron requiring a mil lion pounds to pull It apart, and at the next effort tell to the fraction of an ounce how much pressure It required to crush an egg shell. They will test the strength qf a hore hair or that of a gigan tic! cable with eq'tal exactness. This ma chine operates., cn the principle of the hydraulic preas-200 grains of weight on one platform lifting; 50 000 prtunris nn the other. . " " The microtome Is' another remarkable In strument of the laboratory. The person who has seen the breakfast bacon sheer In a grocery store will understand 'some thing of Its principles. When the scientist wants to examine tho cross section of a little nnrpsule too small to be picked up with the hand he encloses it In a coating of hard paraffin and that in another coat ing of softer consistency. Then he puts it Into his little slicing machine and Is able to make slices so thin that It would require 26,000 of them piled on top of one another to make' a stack an Inch high. Then he melts, the paraffin away and places the almost ' Invisible slice on the object glass of his microscope. Time measuring instruments of precision were the forerunners of all the delicate machines of selehee.' '- Ever since man has navigated the" seas beyond the sight of land he has needed the most accurate measures of time) in ord,r that he might tell his longitude-with reasonable correct ness. In 1714 the- English government of fered 20,000 to the man who would 'devlae a chronometer so accurate that longitude could be told within thirty miles and de scending reward dottfa to half as much for the person whd-Jb'nld tell it within sixty miles. In 1765 John Harrison, son of a Yorkshire carpenter1; claimed and was glveq the higherflaward. Now chronom eters are hiade"wlilch are so accurate that fhey will vary only a few seconds In weeks. The yUl battleship carries three chro nornitsri, and the mean time of the three Is taken actual time. There are machines in common use today which make screws so small that they appear to be but little particles of dust, 100,000 of them being required to fill an ordinary thimble;1 Yet each of them must have a perfect head and a perfect thread. They are used as screws for the fourth 'jewel wheel of a watch. All the operations with them are done more by the sense of I touch than of sight and It Is marvelous how acute the human sense of touch may become. Some time ago a bicycle manufac turer brought some balls intended for ball bearings to watchmaker to show what per fect specimens he had produced. The watchmaker said they were not round and wagered he could point out three depres sions on each ball. A micrometer was ap plied and It showed that on each ball at the exact spots pointed out there were de pressions of less than the thousandth part of an Inch. BT rmXDEBJtO 3. KASXXoT. Tomorrow . Governmental Investiga tions. ' ' ' off the train and disappeared down an alley Into the town. ' No attempt wes made to rob the express car. Sheriff Merriweather and a score of deputies soon began searching for the men. They are believed to be hangers on of the mining camps ' in the north part of ttw county. Lincoln Friends Honor By ram Dinner Given Newly Appointed Second ' Yice ' President of . Buflingtoh Boad. (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Feb. . (Special Telegram.) A sumptuous banquet was given in honor of H. E. Byram last night at the Lincoln hotel by representatives of Lincoln end railroad associates of the newly chosen second vice president of the Burlington. Mr. Byram Is an old-time Lincoln resident, where he was for several years general superintendent of the Burlington for the lines west of the Missouri river. Being here On business, his friends gave the ban quet' as a token of their regard end their appreciation of his rapid rise In the railroad world. The place cards were In the nature cf a pass. On the one side were the wordr "competency, brains, qualification carried Byram quickly." The C, B and Q were large letters, and the words formed two lines. " - ' ' Among the railroad men here from Omaha weia General Manager Holdrege, General Counsel James E. Kelby, . Freight Agent C. E. SpenS and Lee Bpratlen. Governor Shallenberger, Mayor Love, C. O. Whedon, C. C. Flansburg, W. O. Jones, Frank Wil liams and many prominent citizens were alto present. Hhort Calks were made by Governor Shal lenberger, C. O. Whedon, C. C. Qu'ggle, W. O. Jones and James Kelby. Galleakanip for limrsr, WASHINGTON, Feb. . The president today sent the following nomination to the senate: Surveyor of customs, Charles F. Gallenkamp of Missouri, for port of 81 Louis, Ma. FUTURE STATUS OF PEERS Probable Coarse of Premier Aiqaith Topio of Diiouision Throughout Great Britain. MODERATES UEGE CAUTION They laalst that Badet heald Be Disposed af first Goverament Will Oatllae Its Plam This Week. LONDON, Feb. . Of even greater Inter. est than the possible changes in the cabl net Is the course the government Is likely to pursue upon the reassembling of Pari I a ment. Premier Asqulth has kept his own counsels and the views of the liberals vary aocordlng to their shade of radicalism. Extreme liberals strongly favor an Im mediate attack upon the veto power of the House of Lords, leaving the 'budget and all other legislation until the party has settled Its account with the peers. The Irish members, too, are believed to sup port this view. The more moderate liberals, seelner the possibility of the disorganization of the finances of the country by this course of action are urging the government first to Introduce the budget, which the lords, accepting the result of the election aa an endorsement of the government's financial policy, are already pledeged to pass. Fa to re Status of Lords. On the question of the future status of the House of Lords, opinions differ almost as widely. The laborltes and extremist radicals are for the absolute abolition of the upper chamber which hardly come w-lthln the purview of practical politics. Another section of the ministerialists de mands the abolition of the lords' right of veto on- financial legislation and the cur tailment of their veto In other legislation. The views of the moderates are expressed by Sir Edward Grey, the foreign secretary, who said: "No reform of the House of Lords can bo a real reform unless It provides for the aDoiltlon of the hereditary principle and the substitution of popular election." The Spectator follows up this with the suggestion that the upper house be modeled after the American ente the house to consist of 209 members chosen under a' system of proportionate representation from equal electorate areas. In the meantime the unionists, with the exception of a few peers, who, under no circumstances would find a place In the reformed chamber, are practically unani mous for a change In the constitution of the House of Lords. Many schemes are being put forward, the most popular probably being that em bodied in the report of the Rosebery committee, which provides for the elec tion of the hereditary peers of 100 of their own number, together with 130 peers qualified by service to the nation, ten bishops, five Judges and forty life peers. Some imperialists among the . unionists favor the suggestion made by Horton Griffiths, who has had great experience In the colonies, and some here. He pro posed, when the moment Is opportune, to establish a senate of the empire to Include representatives of the colonies. Position of Nationalists. Premier Asqulth can count on a majority for the curtailment of the House of Lords veto, trr In time the nationalists and doubtless the independent nationalists too, will be with the government. On the budget the attitude of the nationalists Is still uncertain. Mr. Redmond has not committed him-' self beyond giving out'-his cable ' corres pondence with M. J. Ryan, national presi dent of the United Irish League of America, but many members of the party strongly oppose the clauses Imposing whisky duties, and If they .do not vote against them Would, In their own political Interests have to abstain from voting. William O'Brien, who heads the Inde pendent Irish members, has made his In tended attitude quite clear, In a letter In which he says: 'There Is no doubt that the Irish party contemplates the blackest treason perpe trated against Ireland since the action of the union. The nationalists propose to as sist the government In passing the budget, which will Impose on Ireland S10,000,000 in taxation per annum." Action This Week. The coming. week will see a clearing of the atmosphere. Premier Asqulth and Chancellor Lloyd George, who have been resting on the continent and the other members of the cabinet who went to the country after the campaign are now on their way back at London. The first formal meeting of the ministry will fake place February 10, and the changes In the cabinet, the wording of the king's speech for the opening of Parlla-, ment and the course of business for the commons will then be decided. The king will be absent from London at that time, the plan being that he shall spend a week at the Brighton course In order to prevent the suggestion that he la taking any side In the controversy. At the same time his majesty will be near at hand when the premier desires to acquaint him with the decisions of the government. DES MOINES CLUB WOMEN FIGHT SEXOLOGY FOR GIRLS Up In Arms Asralnst Movement to Force BUI to This End Through Learlalatare. (From a Staff Correspondent. DES MOINES, Feb. 6. (Special Tele gram.) Club women are organising In Des Moines to oppose Introducing the. study of sexology In the schools, as has been pro posed. Plans have been laid to force through the legislature a bill making such study compulsory and . providing special teechers for young girls. The Des Moines wrmen are In protest over the same, and say they will organize and prevent the further loading of schools with fads, i Persistent Advertising Is the load to Big Returns. Drink I-Iobit Cured in Three Days The moderate, occasional and habit ual drinker, the excessive drinker and the nervous man who hag to drink to keep from becoming more nervous, are all cured lu three days, without Kills Germs Nothing in medicine is known which accomp lishes such vast good in so short a time with weak, broken-down, worn-out, diseased stom achs and sluggish, torpid, lazy livers, as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery a standard remedy for germ-laden, impure blood. When you feel dull and sickish, the bile is not flow ing right, and the whole system suffers. The organs lack power to convert food into energy. Bacterial germs thrive at the ex pense of the blood corpuscles. To escape worrisome stomach trouble and liver com plaint, go to the aid of the blood corpuscles and kill off the germs that would otherwise bvade your system. Every day's delay means getting- further stfray from health. Don't blunder. Use the Intensely, effective, non-alooholio -non-secret Golden Medical Discov erythe standard stomach, liver and blood medicine for more than 40 years. Get the genuine bearing . , Dr. Pieroe'a fao-aimile Signature as thom' In out. Gravest diseases spring from bowel neglect. When the bowels quit working, the liver, sympathetically, goes on strike; the stomach gets out of order and the blood impure. The first aid and the best is Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They move and strengthen the bowels and make them regular curing constipa tion with its long train of resultant disorders. Insurgents Win Victory in Fight at Las Garitas Forces of Nicaragua Government Are Defeated by Revolutionists Under General Mena. BLUFIELD, NIC, Feb. S.-DesDatchea revolved here describe the enaaicement which took place between the provisional roroes under General Mena and the gov ernment troops. In an official dispatch General Mena says that he defeated Mo of the enemy, commanded by General Gar- rlda, a Guatemalan, at Las Garitas. which is midway between La Llbertad and Gui galpa. Mena completely routed the enemy, can- turing many prisoners and rifles. The losses to the Madrix forces were heavv while the provisionals suffered but slightly. General Mena Is pushing forward to 1nin General Chamorro at' Comoapa, which Is well along the way to Managua. Cham orro in the - last- few days in his ad vance upon the capital executed a flank movement, thus evading the Madrlt troops, who expected to engage him at Acovaoa. Comoapa 'is one. and one half daVs from Testepeln Managua province, with a clear road from, there to Gyanada. If you have anything to sell or txch,h. advertise It In '. The Bee "Want ; Ad col umns. ' 1 RV5TAI, K if inter .1 J1 Jjjl : I -, 1 Trip Complete arrangements for delightful trips to Florida Cuba, Porto Rico, Nassau, Bermuda Islands,' South America, or to the sunny shores of the Mediterranean and Adriatic Seas, can be made through the , Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Sleeping car and steamship reservations made through , to destination. Tickets via all Trans-Atlantic Steamship lines. Folders, rates and complete information on applica tion. Three trains daily from Union Station Omaha to Union Station Chicago. Leaving 7.57 A. M., G:00 P. M. and 11:43 P. M. F. A. NASH, General Western Agent hypodermic Injection, and a plain contract la given each, whether tho treatment la taken at the Institute or la the home. Call or write the Neal IBS - 'fit- Uli:"vp1 1 sls Heike Alone Claims Immunity Other Defendants Will Stand on PleaV of Not Guilty in Sugar Scandal Case. NEW YORK, Feb. 6. -Whether or not Charles R. Helke, secretary of the Ameri can Sugar Refining Company, Is entitled to liniiiuiiliy fiuiii pronecutlon for alleged con spiracy 'in connection with the sugar under-, weighing frauds will . b argued tn the United States circuit court here,' it is be lieved. The other defendants In the sugar Indict ments, including former General Superin tendent Gerberelcht and former Cashier James F. Bendernagel, today withdrew their special pleas, leaving Helke as the only one who persisted In it. The other defendants entered, pleas, of not guilty, with motions to quash the Indictments. Foley's Kidney Itemed? -w aure case of kidney or bladder trouble tha jaVi not beyond the rench of medicine. It In. vlgorates the entire system and strengthens the kidneys so they eliminate the Impuri ties from the blood. Backache, rheuma tism, kidney and bladder troubles are all cured by this great, medicine. Sold by all druggUts. Yale Wins from Pen nay. . PHILADELPHIA; Feb.-. 6.-VaIe defeafW the University of Pennsylvania In a gym nastic meet here last niKht, 29 points to 26. filrAmS'J'SEAlEDEaHS! BEST SUGAR FOR TEA AND COFFEE! BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE! ': inwwiii isjwin jiJWiiawiiL.iiiiLMi. i m mwmmm in in sf urn-1 ti i J- j" - 1 1 T-mlTr r J s iO it-.'-t--;jttct!!-'" i..iH-.,ii., m. M srsf Afar Tl ummer Lands TICKETS: 1524 Farnam St., Omaha Institute, 1502 Bouth Tenth Street, Omaha, Nebraska, for a copy of kon .. . Everf rfng Dank refdrouce tract and free . book. strictly confidential. Bank furnished. Mil S