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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1910)
TIIE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, FEBRUAKY 2?. 1SU0. Car siiiAiio in iowa Jlailroad Commission Making Efforts to Have Traffic Move. TROUBLE EAST OF CHICAGO Railroads Hare Not Safflcleat Car orl'onrer to Mot tlnslneas Offered Iowa Ratters I.em Than Other Mates. (From a Start Correspondent.) DES MOINI3. Feb. T. iSp-cll.)-Th car situation In low remains pract'ca.Iy I unchand. ' Tlie corr.ir.ljsl ners rxu.'.e un- ! trer trip to (Till-ago to em'eavor to com pel more prompt movement of grain anl live stock, but report that tho oon1ltlon;i a t of Chicago are still so 'bad ths.t,1' le-at-.ca the effoits of reilroad officiate, it Is Impossible to move grain ar.1 live stock with the promptness that they shouM. With tho acquisition of the now !coir.o Uvea that are now arriving it la not bs Ueved the atrine:icy can Ions continue. There has bean soma disposition to Mama tho railroad cummlralonom for conditions aa they axlat, but could the oritir-a se tho oar reports from ail over tha Unitjd Btatea they would find that Iowa Is nH suffering so tnuoh aa many other looill Uea. Tho board cannot ooraptl the Un- i poaalbJe, and If railway oo.npanlea. no I mailer for what reason, do not possess tlie motive power or cars sufficient to move the business, that must end It for tha tlm being. Railroad companies oan, and will, be compelled, however, to provide equip ment for their needs, but this must of neoesntty require time, 'as cars cannot be bought In the market like coffee and eufar, but mu.il be ordered months In adve.no f the time for delivery. No one can fore see conditions aa they have. arisen this trtnter and, despite criticisms, tha beard ailevee it has done and la dolus every thing within Its power to aid the Iowa shipper. Pat Off Eiireu Hearing;. Upon request of the Iowa State Manu facturers' association and others tho ex press healing solieduled for March 1 has been postponed until March 15, at 10 o'clock a. m.. In the office of the board. Twenty-three new complaints were filed curing tne uui weea. i waive were ror failure and delay In furnishing cars for grain, hay and stock shipments. Four con cerned delay to ooal shlpiaenta. Two are applications for changta in rates, one a petition for a better depot at Valley Junc tion, one complaint on aooouot oT oonfJa oatlon of coal by a railway company, one complaint In regard to delay In express shipments, one complaint referring to stop ping of intururban car at a certain s tac tion and an application of A. Sykea of J-oa afolnett for an order requiring rail way to move live stock at oertaln apead WlUifia this state. n luy ta Old Barn. dead body uas found la the loft of a barn at the l-jaideno of I IT, Andrews In Xea Moines yeattKlay. The body had r Mostly lain there all winter. Investiga tion shewed It t be the body of Dennis Forbes, who Was wall known to tha polios as tramp and atUftloM stroller, who often Went to jail tor druukenneas, All Ihdloa tlaua point to ruloida. f saalesNMa aa a, Delearate. The Iowa Woman's Suffrage association has designated W, 0. Jatnieson. demo- ratio' oongressmlui from Iowa, as 'one of their deionates to atf and the hatlonal son veutlbn nf auffraglats at Washington - in April. Just before' JtunUaon resigned as a atate senator to become a member of congress he Introduced a woman , suffrage amendment lu the Iowa legislature and save J 41 biiio looking to that and. Want At or for Colleges. rrof. a F. Curtis of Amos went to Washington this week to attend an exeou Uve meeting of the Association of Agrlcul tural colleges, where plans are to be laid t tot Induoiug oongrees to make larger pro vision for the support of the land grant colleges of the ooui:;ry. It Is represented that the Support from tho federal govern lueti has bon Ht ,ltUe Increased, while w necau or tnese colleaas has become much grcat'ii'. They also oppose the giv ing of ftdfat-al ala to a private college In the Diatrlut of Columbia, on th ground Uiat .lt will' detract from the gov.rnmcm Uilci-LSl In tha bUtu colleges. IrresniRr la:iiifuuct Business. State Audliur licAly has discovered that under the guise oX .oryttiiirlng "Owl clubs" In ilils sluto ionio persons In Indiana are really violating (he state laws as to In surance business. The clubs are being or ganised mid th-n -when tne correspondence Is taken up with tho organizer at the home office It dctelops taut there are "funeral benefits" connected therewith and similar . schemes if iNdttini.'lIy Insurance cliarac Ater. The statu auditor Ims as yet discovered T'io way to stiHi ibe violation of the Insur ance Una, in tlila nianncr as tho Buiicit.na la oatensibl) Uoi.e on a Uiffertnt bas:s titan the buslntsj. N'w Couuty Saperlatf ndent. Hehr 1 HinltU i.ab 'tii appointed county suiednteiuiciil of schools for Lu buuuo. ootiiity to .succeed T. H. Shradtr, who reslKned to go into business In Wis ctiKln. The state superintendent received nfllioe of the chungo today. Nomination flunks were sent out today for Kepresentativta lde of Union and Daw son of giierokee, who desire re-election as members of the Iowa bouse; also for Karl Fsrguson of Shenandoah who will run for railroad commissioner. . . ., . v l)airy Lecture Train ou Hurling tou. The luoat (successful of many special train schemes fot interesting farmers in new Victor March Records Out Today. . Call and hear them. Including the Great Forest I'rltmn Scene by Caruso. Karrar and Journet. Just think what the Victor must be when the Kroatext Hitigers on eurth will sins for It and It only. Ihs Victor only gives the natural tone. t . Victor. 810 to 900, I viotToias, aias to aoo. Easy payments if deHlred. Selection From March Z,lat. .t.12 peary'a Korth Pole Dis covery. Il.TTI "Anilna." Rousa's Hand. . 81,75 (Jems. Hello of Krlttany. 11.770 Hallelujah Chorus, vocal. b.009 I've Ioved Her Mince eihe ' was A IJahy, Harry Louder. Au4 Polio wing Doable Vara. 18.4IS I'd Rather Hoy Hello, etc The FJresnan fens;. Hi iX i l"ir Low Mweet Chariot. (lUa Cither IMia. K F'iiwuimeiwn. t Expert. jrrx-e ef a Oe-u.U. Ui4ty Ldlt of Silver Moon. ' Vur pit tie Sugar Pie ma CatL f.a MT.'wTlta ' i fizzo Phyer Co, CU atsseeai tfckeee, 4 ITUeev "SK M work or bettering farm conditions Is the dairy special which 1 bring run through Southern Iowa this year. It was dicovered tlist of the M,0"0.000 worth of dairy prod ucts marketed each year In Iowa, two thirds gies out of the north half of the state. There was deMro to arouse interest In the south half and the Burllnfton road put a special train at the service of the .State Dairy association. A special sleeping cars and a car for. live stock, wi:h another car given over to dairy machinery, is used. Hugh Van Fell, formerly of the atate col li e. la In charge and directs the lecturos, and he la assisted by Ir. tarld Itoberts. A stop Is made each day at a town and iho farmers are Invited 'to listen to aJ direina and to receive Information about dairying. The plan is to encourage mort) farm dairying, nut new creameries, as it Is ri ond (,at tho concentrator coinpanlea have monopolized the creamery but. noun. It Is reported that there has been excellent aundence at the various meetings. The train will continue for several weeks and will Visit practically every town on the Buillr.gtuu ayatem lu southern Iowa. Danis, Looks nal Heeerrolrs, The state waterway convention held at Ottumwa considered what Is necessary to Improve the Des Moines river and make It navigable, and It was reported that the engineers would plan for over thirty lochs to be built. There nil! also be a lnrso number of reservoirs on the river and there are thirty-one ,brldga that will have to bo taken down and rebuilt so that steamboats can pass through. The first work, ao the engineer reports, will be to locate the dams and lacks and to investigate the character tofXhe soli so that the oost of these dams may be known. Tkere la a fall of X feet In the river that Is to be made navigable. . WiM Haild Iowa Moada. Judge I'routy, who Is a candidate for con gress, while fully pledging hlmJ to the survey of the Des Moines river, gave cut a new scheme for aiding transportation In Iowa. He figured that while ft would probably be easy enough to secure the ap propriation for malting the river navigable to Keokuk, still there would be some doubt as to connections there for the fur ther handling of freight, as It Is known that the railroads control the down-river traffic He suggests that with the money that It would take to make the river nav igable the government could build 100 miles of macadam road in each and every county of the atate, and this work would receive the aid and encouragement of the railroads and not their hostility. - .i Oei oa Peanioa List. Unless soma unforseen event occurs' to spoil plans now being formed, the pro fessors of the state university and state eduoatlonal Institutions will soon be on the pension list of Andrew Carnegie. This question will be discussed at the meeting of tho State Education board to be held in Cedar Rapids March I. At that time Dr. Pritohett, president of the Carnegie foundation of Pittsburg, will confer with the board la referenoe to making the pro fessors of Iowa eduoatlonal institutions eligible fot this pension. Prisons Are Sow rilled. The State Board of Control is In trouble because the stats prison and the state re formatory are filling up and there seems to be no way to keep down the population. At the same Urns these Institutions are among the most expensive to the stale. They now have more than 100 more prison ers than they had a year ago. This is due to the fact that the parole law operates to lengthen the terms of the prisoners and Wie number of commitments Is about the same. The board will have to ask the legislature for appropriations to pro vide temporary quarters for more prisoners untir the congestion can be relieved in some way. ' TABOR'S LAST PIONEER GOES THE WAY OF EARTH Deacon Samuel H. Adams', Who Helped Locate Iowa Town, Dies After Lose Life. TAROJl, la., Feb. 3T. (Special.) Deacon Samuel H. Adams died Saturday morning at the home of his granddaughter, Mrs. Carrie Nichols In Tabor after a long Ill ness of paralysis. In the passing of Samuel H. Adams, Ta bor loses her last resident pioneer settler, one of the company of ten Immigrants "from Oberlln, O., who came by the way of Cin cinnati and the Ohio and Missouri rivers In the fall of the year IMS to start a settle ment and establish an institution of higher education In southwest Iowa Finding the first location on the Missouri river bottom near the presrnt town of Perclval unsuitable, they moved to this lo cality in 18T, Mr. Adams and Deacon George B. Gaston, the. leader of the colon ists, building the first two houses erected In Lincoln. The house that Wa Mr. 'Adams' homo for many years still stands at the southwest corner of the public park and Is now the Starrett home. Mr. Adams was a charter member of a county Washlngtonlan Temperance society, organized at Sidney In Juno 18i2, alio a charter member of the Tcbor Congrega tional rhurch, organized Ocljbcr 12, 1ST2 In a little cabin then the home of th: pio neer pastor, Rrv. John Tot'd. This waa situated on the east side of Plum creek and about two miles southwest of the present Tabor. Mr. Adams was a close friend of John Brown, and often co-operated with Brown In helping runaway slaves escape to free- d m, on the "underground railway" throng i Tabor. As a carpenter, cabinet maker and furni ture dealer he lived a most simple and un assuming llfo wholly devoted to the welfare of Tabor college and all those higher in terests which make for the betterment of mankind. The earnings of his lifetime were practically donated to Tabor college and the church, and to his honor now stands Adams hall, the finest and most modern of the college buildings, a moat fitting monument to "The-vlrand Old Man uf Ta bor." Samuel H. Adams was bora December 29, 1S23 at Newbralntree, Mans. He was mar ried at Oberlln, O., September 13, 1S48 to Miss Caroline C. Matthews, who died Aug ust 12, 1875 at Tabor. He was married at Tabor January v 20, 1878. to Mrs Anna Watson, who died July, 14. 1008. He was the fathf r of three daught ers and one son by his first wife, all of whom are dead. Farmers for Isterarlisa Line. I.OOAN, la.; Feb. S7.-lSueclal-nepre-scntatlve business men of Magnolia. Logan, Ueebeetown and adjoining territory are ap parently favorable to the proposed lnter urban line between Omaha,. Bvebcetown, Logan and Little bloux in route to bioux City. According to tlioae preaent at yesterday's meeting, Mr. Miller, the Des Moines pro moter, said that' 85 per eent of the neces sary funds to construct and equip the road are now avallablei thai th company de alt ed 10 secure In subscriptions te stock a tvtal of $230,009 along the proposed line between Omaha and rJUua City, or SI the rats ft $1, W0 pus inllai that the route was (.raetleally enald, and thai there would be M aaaltloeel ameunta expended In I re limlnary surreys, , Another snaadns will be heid'al Mairrintia aectsraes - - t f kS M "f If Hen""" serlvwrlr U TaauiaWhi' fchragfe tVips t lift ---4..., Administration Will Insist Upon Courtof Commerce Attorney General Wickersham Makei Extended Statement to House Committee. TVAglHS'OTON. Feb. 27.-I'resldent Taft and Attorney Oeneral Wlokersham Insist that the Townsend administration Interstate Comment bill shall be enacted Into law substantially as framed and Introduced, In cluding tho provision creating an interstate commerce court. Mr. Wickersham for ntarly three hours today was piled with questions by tlie hoitso committee on inter state commerce and will uppear before that body analn next Monday to testify as to the adnilnl-Unitio.i's portion. The b.ll preb ably will be reported the latter part of next week in virtually the same form aa Introduced. AJter the adjournment of the committee a report was circulated that Chairman Mann and Attorney General Wickersham had had a serious disagreement and a warm exchange of words, but several mem bers of the committee promptly denied the story, and Chairman Mann declared It was wholly false. Mr. Wlckershnm Indicated the administra te n's attitude aa to the essentiality of tho commerce court feature. As to this Chair man Mann takes Issue and said that only four members of the committee now favor establishing the court, though they may yield. Chairman Mann contends that suoli a tribunal Is not absolutelyncceanary, 'hat the dutlea propoaed to be assigned to It could be attended to by the Interstate Com merce commission and the circuit courts. There Is a disposition to yield to the president's views, however. , . , Provisionals Win Fight y Mairia Forces Are Defeated in Battle Near Morreto and Much Booty Taken. BLUE FIELDS. Nicaragua, Feb. 27.-Oen-eral Pedro Romero, a government officer, has been killed in a fight with a force of provisionals. The recent silence of Oeneral Mena was broken today with a report of the vlotory of the provisionals. The engagement was fought at Morrttto, a small to.wn about midway on the cost shore of Lake Nica ragua. Mena surprised tha government forces, who numbered 180. Besides Oeneral Pedro Romero, one government soldier was killed and several of Romero's men were wounded. Only one of Mena's men was wounded. Blxty prisoners were captured, Including two telegraphers, and the provisionals also took booty which Included eighty-six rifles, 16,000 cartridges, 100 sacks of biscuit, 1,500 pounds of rice, 1,400 pounds of beans, 1,000 pounds of sugar, 200 pounds of meat, a large quantity of cheepe, 100 pairs of shoes and sixty horses , with equipment. Letters found in the government camp showed that General Rpmero, who appar ently was on his way to Join Oeneral Vasquez, had been warned to look out fur Mena. GOVERNMENT BEHIND ISSUE Bill 'for 830,000,000 Certificates for Completion of Irrigation Projects Will Be Amended. WASHINGTON, Feb. 27. In accordance with recommendations by the senate com mittee on finance the bill providing for the Issuance of $30,000,000 of certificates of In debtedness for the benefit of the Irrigation reclamation service will be so amended as to make the government directly responsi ble for the payment of tho certificates. As the bill stands now the certlflaotes are made payable from the reclamation fund. The proposed amendment will authorise the secretary to transfer from time to time from the general to the reclamation fund such amount as may be necessary to complete the projects, provided the aggre gate shall not exceed $30,000,000. The sec retary Is to be authorized to Issue cer tificates bearing not to exceed 8 per cent The proceeds are to be used to reimburse the treasury for the advances made. The funds thus obtained are to bo used for the completion of projects already begun. Ultimately the government Is to be re imbursed from the reclamation fund. UNION LABOR "REVIVAL" PLANNED IN IOWA TOWNS Ten Days Borly In April Will 'Devoted to Speakers frosa All Crafts. Be BOONE, la., Feb. 27. (Special Telegram.) The Trades assembly of Boone, with assemblies in nearly every large city of Iowa, will hold a great union labor revival In Iowa, March 30 to April 9, lasting ten days. Two speakers are assigned to each town each nlRht, some from all of the various crafts and trades having been secured. All meetings are under the aus pices of the State Federation of Labor. This is planned to be the greatest revival In union labor ever held In the west. More definite plans wfll be announced at a later date. BRYCE TAKES UP KELLY'S CASE Arreat of Aliened Smnsjrwler for Beat ing Customs llonae Officers Be comes International Affair, WOOPSTOCK. N. B., Feb. 27. The recent arrest of William Kelly of Richmond, N. 1!., and his subsequent conviction In a United States court at Portland, MA, fol lowing which he was sentenced to a fourteen-year term In the federal penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga., for an assault on an American customs officer, has become an International affair. James liryee, British ambassador to the United States, has made representations to Secretary of State Knox about Kelly's case and requested his Immediate release. Kelly, It Is alleged, la a notorious smuggler. Farmers FlaMlnar Mntnal Fhofca. IDA GROVE, la., Feb. 27.-(Speclal.)-At the annual meeting of the Farmers Tele phone company of Ida county, Robert Todd was niirelected president; Ivan Hess, vice president; V. 8. Young, secretary, and Frank Rauch, treasurer. It was determined In the near future to call upon all the busl ners men of Ida Grove to put In the Farm ers 'phone, which la operated by the Bell oompany, and tit case they do not put In the 'phones the Intimation Is that those who are behind the Farmers 'phone will put In a farmers' co-operative store at Ids Grove. The Ida Grove Telephone company, a mu tual and home-owned conoern, drove the Bell eut of th eoanly some years ago and It la new trying ta regain a feotheld. An Ants Ostilslw means many bad bn!ss, whleh Buckuxi' Arn'e Ralve heals quUkly, aa It dee sorM and barns, Ma, F sals by Beaton Dsvg Cm. llAYANACUODTONEBRASEAaiS Hug-o Brandeii Finds Them Popular in Cuba's Capital MARK POLLACK DOES BIO TRADE Omaha Hoy Ilea lie me Thief To bacco Wholesaler la Cnbs Nome Feo teres of a Wlatrr Visit. ITavana a city cf wealth, beauty and natural commercial advantage's, offers, a splendid field for enterprising young busi ness men, ' That Is tho way the Cuban metropolis is characterized by H. Hugo Ilrandcls. who has Just n tinned from a pleasure trip to that city, which twelve years ago was th3 most Interesting spot In the western hemi sphere. "America offers such great advantages to the enterprising young business man to day that It s'ems needless to look else where for spots that might offer a field for young men of energy and business ability, but the longer one stays in Hav ana the more one sees how great the op portunities are there," -said Mr. Brand. Is. ( "It Is noteworthy, too, that Nebraska men are held In particularly high esteem be cause of the achievements of Nebraska men In the past Flnre Oovernor Charles Magoon carried out Ma policies that ware of suoli benefit to Cuba, men from this atate have been looked upon with much popular" favor. "One of the largest businesses In Havana is oonducted by an Omaha man, Mark Pollock. Both Mark Pollock and his brother, Edgar, who Is with him' In Hav ana, were" born and reared in Omaha Their mother and slater reside in Omaha and the Pollook brothers always regard Omaha, aa their home. Mark Pollock now conducts what Is probably the largest wholesale tobacco leaf business In Havsna. Ho took me through his warehouse, which hs spoke of as 'empty' at the time of my visit, in spite of the fact that tt then had 8,000 bales of tobacco stored in it. This warehouse Is protablr four times aa large aa the Brandela building and often stores as much as 60,000 bales of tobacco. Mr Poilook exports tobacco to every country on the globe. Charier Magrooa's Railroad In speaking of other notable achieve ments of Nebraskana in Cuba, Mr. Bran dela mentioned the road from Havana to Matanias, a distance of fifty miles, which was built by Charles Magoon. This road la smooth aa a floor and makes an ideal automobile run. "Americans are very popular In Havana, although, when compared with other na tionalities, there are only a few actively engaged In business in that city," said Mr. Brandels. "One unfortunate circumstance tends to mar the otherwise cordial regard of Cubans for this country, and that Is the unsightly and dangerous wreck of the bat tleshlp Maine, which still remains unmo lested In the beautiful harbor. Americans who live In Havana apeak of It as 'the national disgrace.' Cubans generally regard It as an open act of dlsoourtesy on the part of the United States, bearing with tt the Insinuation that Havana Itself was respon- alble for th demolition of th war vessel, The sooner this wreckage Is removed the better the relations of Cuba and the United States.1 Mr. Brandels visited the. Hots de Mont erey. cigar factory,., which turns out ; the highest grade olgars made on the Island. He watched one operator whose sole work Is rolling the cigars-for the personal use of King Edward ,of Great Britain. Tho crartsman who has the distinction: of mln isterlng to the king's enjoyment takea his task very seriously and consumes nearly three-quarters of an hour In the making of each cigar and Is as careful as if he were setting a diamond. King Edward's cigars, by the way, are the large banquet else, very heavy and dark. One a day pwould make the ordinary-smoker dlsxy. They say that nine-tenths of th fin cigars In the world cbme from Havana," said Mr. Brandels, "and many men come (here to make their personal selection. saw one Englishman pay $2,000 tqr 1.000 cigars for his own use. Every one of the better cigar factories In Havana Is scrup ulously clean and appears as wall scrubbed and sanitary as a hospital. A skilled cigar- maker gets about $3 a day. In each factory Is a readerwhp reads srtoud all day from books and magaslnes rb the silent men at work. Many of the olgarmaker are Illiter ate. "The Cuban climate la mild the year around. In Havana It Is like June all winter and the hotels and dwelling houaea have no such a thing aa window gloat. Ev erythlng Is open. Many bousea are modern. but do not appear so because of their lack of windows. Hotels are first class, notably the new Plasa and Sevllla, which are thor oughly modern. The prices In Havana ho tels are higher than In hotels of similar das In the United States. Improvements Are Many "My first trip to Havana waa made eleven years ago and I was arnased at the changes that have bean brought about In the intervening time. Eleven years ago the city was simply filthy Now th city 13 clean and well kept The Prado la the principal street and It reminds one of the boulevards of Paris. It la beautifully parked, with the street car tracks In the center and asphalt on each side. The street car system is one of the best any where In the world. The Bank of Havana Is the finest bank building I have ever seen. It is built on a magnificent scale and the bronses and marble were fur nished by Tiffany in New Tork. There are no flowers about Havana, no aong birds, no snakes and no wild beasts on the Island. I was much interested In visiting the Provlncia Sugar mill, which turns out 2,000 barrels of sugar a tay." Mr. Brandela speaks of the scarcity of American manufactured articles In Cuba and is at a loes to understand 1t. He says that in Europe one la constantly seeing American sewing machines, cash registers and, other articles, but In Cuba they are rare, even the foreign automobiles being much more extensively usd thart the American product. "The trip to Havana Is very interesting in that It goes' over the new Flagler rail road, which runs 100 miles over the ocean. The road now extends as far as Knights Key, where one takes an eight-hour boat to Havana, but the road will soon bo ex tended another fifty miles to Key West. The construction Is made possible by the ocean bed, which Is very hard and the water is quite shallow. The railroad Is built to profit by the advantages In loading and unloading boats after the completion of the Panama conaj. The road la said to have cost as much .as $1,000,000 a mile In some places." While Mr, Brandels regards Havana as a good field for ont?rprlIng Americans, he says that he considers the aucceea of Ne braskana In Havana to be due not so much to the fact that they went to Havana as that they came from' Nebraska, More people are taking Foley's Kidney Remedy every year. It Is considered the most effective remedy for alt kidney and bladder troubles that medical science ran devise, Foley Kidney Remedy corrects Irregularities, builds up the system, and restores last vitality. Odd by ail druggists. A Complete Act of Faust cop,-t mio Af.-.tfAJX The sung by Caruso, Farrar and Journet The short final act of Faust is truly one of the grandest of operatic compositions. ... And no more impressive performance of Gounod's uplifting music could imagined than the magnificent rendition of this tremendous dramatic scene by these three great artists. '' The great Prison Scene, in three parts Part First Geraldine Farrar and Enrico Caruso "TCIon coeur est penetr6 depouvante!" (My Heart is Torn with Grief) 89033 $4.00 Part Second: Geraldine Farrar and Enrico Caruso "Attends i voici la rue" (This is the Fair) 89034 $4.00 Part Third Geraldine Farrar, Enrico Caruso and Marcel Journet ' Trio, "Alerte! ou vous etes perdus" (Then Leave Her!) 95203 $5.00 , . Any Victor dealer will gladly play these records ;or you. A"nd as you listen you will hear trrand opera at .ts best, and realize as you can in no other .way the wonderful progress recently made in the art of Victor recording;. ' --& o lit today of Ask any Victor dealer for ot each, record. To get best resuTts, tirr1"'''--'asuiri-'Tlf 'li i i - :' ni m ii M'insv'as-a-' M r i in I inmaamii fminaMsiiiM in. ii ii i m i w wmiie imwii n. iip.iwii,miiii iiiiuip i m w mini nniiiiiiiyiini i m im ...j yrn.MMmum Sato m OUT TODAY v March List of New Victor Records ; The complete list for March Will be found at our store and we will gladly play thoKe records for you. N - ' i ... Victor Music and Fun Arc Always New They embrace everything that is newest and best in the world of amusement. No matfer what kind of .entertainment you want, you get the best and hear it at its best only pn'tlie 'Victor. t "f A Victor for every purse A.. Wholesale and AUGUST BELMONT AND MISS ELEANOR ROBSON MARRIED Ceremony la Performed at Home of Ilrlde la New York In I rear nee of Family Parly. NEW TOItK, Feb. .-Ausust Belmont, sr.; the millionaire banker and rare horse owner, and Miss Eleanor Robson, who re cently left the stage, were unexpectedly married at I o'clock Saturday afternoon in Mlea Robson's house here. It had been announced that the marriage would not take place until some time In March. Mr, Belmont and Miss Robson iookbut lit 1 ( o 1 T si Great Prison Jl with the a March suDDlement which civet a detailed use only Victor Needles on Victor Records. - $10.00 to $250.00. Easy IPE Retail 1513-15 a marriage license at the city hall last night, avoiding- by the lateness of the hour the scrutiny of the curious. There were no bridesmaids or ushers and the guests were the Immediate fam ily and Intimate friends. The bride waa given away by her couelrt, Charles Rob inson Smith, and Arthur Llttigow Uevens of Boston, Mr. Belmont's classmate at Harvard, acted as best man. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mra. Uelmont left for a trip through the south. In March they will sail for the Mediterran ean. Mr. Belmont is IT years old. His first wife died In Paris In 1801. Ha lias three sons. Mlsa Itobaon gave her age In taking out tha marriage license a II. lupts Scene March list new Victor Records deicriotii payments if desired. CO X Douglas Street , ii.r",tfi: '.'iffl,'.iiisflT,sxi "I, ng.x 'jauefflwsa-r;',!i..,tLV.i '. sxru VERDICT IN IDAHO LAND CASE Three Men on Trial at lloine' on Charge of Conspiracy Are Acquitted. ' ' BOISE, Idaho, Feb. Zi.-William V. Ket tenbach, George H. Kaster, and William lnler, whose trial on a riyirgt of con spiracy to defraud the government of valu able timber lands was concluded this after noon, were found not guilty by the Jury, niaarraperul ( oan net f ot liver and bowel. In refund ti act, la quickly remedied with Ir. King's Nw Life 'Ills. Sc. For sale by Beaton Xrug C r