Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1910)
TTIR OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 20, 1910. C5 rjf4ruPrtfr.jfk4Sjrrff VVuVV5i JTS'0 I it h Easter but a week away the daily 3 . .11... 7 7 T . v flvhvpQ iq 1 ii'jD am er t h n I nt pqI 1 q fir mar u?nn 7e nun l?ppfama niir 2 displays replenished with assortments sufficient to afford each buyer the widest latitude in her selections. ! Small women's tailored suits in styles of surpass ing newness and beauty A very attractive new style in small women's tailored suits is the new blouse suit, made of fine im ported serge in blue and blacks with long collars of moire silk. The skirt is one of the popular new plaited models Wc are also showing this blouse suit in diagonals and other fancy imported fab rics, in beautiful designs, $35, $39.50, $45 New Display of MISSES' HATS, 151S-1520 Farnam Street Small women's plain tailored suits with the latest semi-fitted 34 inch coats especially admired owing to its beautiful lines. Plaited skirt, peau de cygne lined coats with fancy matched or longreveie collars. The materials are handsome mixtures in tans, blues and checks, plain French serges and diagonals $19I? $25, $35, $39!? Small women's sizes 32, 34, 36, 38 bust measure Illustrated Spring Catalogue on Request. $ HPHE exacting requirements of the correct dresser have been critically studied in the development of our exclusive styles. The lines of the coats, especially, embody the newest of this sea son's features. Ours are ready-to-wear clothes of superiority. The utmost care regarding detail is used in the mak ing of this satisfactory apparel for men. Every yard of goods is chemically tested and fully shrunk before it is cut,and even the silk thread used in the construction of these garments must stand severe tests. Quality high quality marks every pro cess, and that means your entire satisfaction on your investment in good wear and the comfort which the wearing of perfect fit ting garments of graceful lines gives. Our offerings of Suits and Overcoats at twenty-five dollars are very attrac tive. We would like to sell you your clothes this season. Drop in and talk it over. L Have you seen our $3.00 hats t They're the real thing. , New Location, 318 South 15 th Street MABRAY AND PALS WAIT THEIR FATE (Continued from First Pago.) .rclered read and recorded as read to the cry by Judgt McPhcrsun. Thou to De Sentenced. ' Georga N. Marsh, Bert 11. Shores and Wen S. HarrU, big utore men from Seattle, who pleaded guilty when the trial opened, will some up (or aentence after the verdict of the Jury Is returned. Th maximum penalty la two years in prison and $10,000 !ine. ' Ths blanket indictment returned by the federal grand Jury at Council Uluffs, cov ered elghty-flva defendants. Muny of Dies probably will be tried In Omaha In April. Principal among those Indicted, but yet untried are Ed C. Moore, K. B. Herri man and Frank Brown, now In Jail at San Francisco and fighting extradition. The Jury Is to determine whethtr or not the men on trial, any or all of them, are (tn Illy of a conspiracy to use the mails to defraud. The defense has In its extremity admitted the fraudulent nature of the operations of the gang, leaving little for tbs Jury to decide, but the question of use uf the malls and general conspiracy. - The result of this trial Is In no way final for many of the men -whose liberty now lie looked up the Jury room. John C. iilabray aeea before htm -ten Indictments In he Iowa state courts, conviction on any 'one of Which means a term In the peniten tiary. Other Indictments In other states wherever ths gang operated are possible arrd probable. Several members of the u'ng falling Into the meahca of state law efore their arresi by the federal authori ties, are now In prison, y . XePsrrios Delivers Ills Char. " Judge Mcpherson. In delivering his charxe. commended the Jurors to the same caution that marked hlB admonition on the night before. He set forth In positive terms the issue of the case. In closing he said: "Gentlemen of the Jury. This concludes this Important case, except your delibera tions and the return of your verdict. In a criminal case like this the caso cannot be tried except by a 'Jury of twelve men and your verdict must be unanimous. The court has no power to determine the facts. The defendant can not waive a jury. These facts must be determined by . you and by you alone. Since the year 1214, now nearly TOO years, all English spoaklm? people have bfigreed that criminal cases like this must be determined by a Jury of twelve men and by no other method'. The position you now occupy is all important. Tour duties and responsibilities are very great. To abolish the trial by Jury Is something that no parliament and no congress and no leg islature has dared to abolish or Interfere with. The attempt to abolish the trial by Jury would be followed by a revolution and the government would be overturned and the days of the French revolution would be repeated. It Is for you gentlemen to see (o It that the trial by Jury Is maintained In all of its dignity and vigor and honesty. You will not determine this case by any mock sympathy for and on behalf of any of the defendants or any of their families. Nor will you determine this case by reason of prejudice nor bias. Neither you nor I can have the slightest concern wherein popular favor and clamor would lead us. Mast Ilegnrd Evidence Only. If your verdict In this case Is In the slightest degree founded on anything said or read or heard elsewhere than on the chairs you now occupy, then such a verdict Is founded upon perjury, upon your part, because you took an oath- to hear and de termine this case upon the evidence here adduced and unci, r the law aa I have given you m charge. "You will keep your minds on the case Spring Opening Easter Hats .....Monday and Tuesday..... AVe are noted for both style and quality and we cer tainly have made more of an effort than ever before to please our customers and the public in general. Give us a call. - " Our aim, high quality' at lowest . prices. Headquarters for pure hair. fA 't?J-& S -"wl Switches for everybody, straight and J, fvV- rr JT wavy. Headquarters for natural grey rr --v, r - ,',:, 4T. . hair 5 rvVrTi''J ' Our 40-inch Coronet Bralda. abso lutely pure hair $18.00 Our 22-Inch Hwltchns, pure hair, 90.00 Our 28 to 10-inch Swttrhes, pure hair, from 18 to tas.00 Our . 36-lnch .Corooet Braids, second quality, at 93.00 Our 20-Inch Switch 60 Our Ci-lnch Switch Moo Mail wniers solicited. We match, any shade of hair under the sun. M. SCUADELL & CO. 1st Douglas. yVv-r-vs ."'S3, and determine It under the evidence and the law. Neither you nor I, except by com mitting perjury, can determine this case on any other standard. This case la not the work of a day. When you have re turned a verdict your conscience hereafter will remain with you and will approve or condemn accordingly as you ' have done your work. "This case la of Importance to defend ants, because. If convicted they will be deprived of their liberty. On the other hand If they are acquitted wrongfully then this great postal system of ours will not have the encouragement that It should have from alt honestly disposed persons. Our postal system costs the government the stupendous sum of in round numbers, $200,000,000 per annum. This great system that reaches every home and Is for the benefit of every business concerned, and of every man and woman and of every boy and girl must he maintained in its Integrity. Not Garbaare Ra)slaa. "This system Is not organized and kept going for tbe carrying of filth by the pre payment of postage, nor for the carrying of mall In the furtherance of fraudulent schemes. It Is for business and for social business and for social purposes and for carrying Intelligence that the system is organized and kept going. The line of de marcation between the lawful and unlawful is reasonably plain. If the evidence war rants It, you will convict such of the de fendants who have thus unlawfully been In a conspiracy to use the mails for fraudu lent purposes. But It the evidence does not warrant then acquit. "But whatever you do, do It like men with moral courage to do that which is right and honorable, and, regardless of what may be said by others, regarding only what your Judgment and consciences ap prove when returning your verdict and what your Judgment and conscience will hereafter approve when your minds recur to this day." , DEATH RECORD. Olof P. Aulatrom. IIOLDREOE, Neb.. March 19-(Special.) The funeral of Olof P. Ahlstrom, who died thla week just one day before attaining the age of 66 years, occurred Thursday after noon. The deceased had long been a suf ferer from a complication of troubles. He was born In Sweden. In 1844 and came to this country In 1K72, settling at Rushvllle, 111. Soon afterward he married Miss Kotsetta Wllburn at that place and who now survives him. In 181)3 they moved to a farm near Atlanta where they lived un til six years ago, when they moved to this city. Four of the eight children born to the couple are living, Oscar, who la em ployed as a clerk In this city; Clara, wiio teaches In the Atlanta schools; Augusta, who works In Denver, and Eva, who lives at home. The deceased was a member of the Woodmen. The funeral was held at the home and was conducted by Rev. E. C. Nswland of the Methodist church. Mrs. K. W. ltarastm. NEBRASKA CITY. Neb., March (Special.) Mrs. E. W. Barnum, one of tbe pioneers of this part of the state, died at the home of Mrs. James Reynold), ten milea north of thla city, yesterday, where she went to visit for a few days, and waa taken 111 with pneumonia. The deceased was born in Otsego county, New York, February 28, 1832, and married February 23, 1880. Mr. Barnum had come to this state and secured a farm In 1807 and went back to his old home and was married, returning with his wife they made their home on their homestead up to the time of his death oeveral years ago, They had but one son, Thomas, and he was killed by a Missouri Pacific wreck at Union a little over a year ago. (.The runeral will take place Monday. , Joseph Schmidt. Joseph Schmidt, a pioneer of Omaha who lived here since 18W, died Friday evening at his home, 2811 Fort Omaha avenue. Mr, Schmidt, who was 68 years old, had been ailing for some time and did not recover from the shock caused by the death of his wife four weeks to a day before. They had been married forty-three years and came direct to Omaha from Germany In 18G7. Mr. Schmidt leaves three daughters, all living in Omaha, Mrs. C. O. Anderson, Miss Helena A. Schmidt and Miss Ursula Schmidt. The funeral services will be read Monday afternoon at 8 o'clock at St. Mary Magdalene church at Nineteenth and Dodge streets, and the body will be placed In a vault at Forest Lawn ecemtery. Auaraat Hartwlai. SEWARD, Neb.. March 1 (Special.) August Hartwlg, aged 7 years, died at his home here Friday. He was born In Germany and had lived In this county for many years and had large farming Inter ests. He was unmarried. His funeral will be held on Sunday. Don't Forget Monday, March aiat, tho Big RUG SALE HAYDEN'S IMMENSE SUM FORMISSIONS , (Continued from First Page.) DON'T KXOW HOW To Select rood to Bebulld On. ''To find that a lack of knowledge of how to properly feed oneself caused mo to serve ten long years as a miserable dyspeptic, is rather humiliating. I was a sufferer for that length of time and had become a shadow of my natural self. 'I was taking medicine all the time and dieting the best I knew how. "One day I heard of Grape-Nuts food. In which the starch was predlgested by natural processes and that the food re built the brain and nerve centres. I knew that If my nervous system could be made strong and perfect, I could digest food all right, so I started In on Grape-Nuts, with very little confidence, for I had been disheartened for a long time. "To my surprise and delight, I found I was Improving after living on Urape Nuta a little while, and in three months I had gained 12 pounds and was feeling like a new person. For the past two years I have not had the slightest symptom of indigestion, and am now perfectly well. "I made a discovery that will be of Im portance to many mothers. When my in fant was two months old It was being fed on the bottle and was not doing well. I began to feed Grape-Nuts at first, only the water poured over later on. the soft ened food. The child began to Improve rapidly, and la now a year old and very fat and healthy and has never been sick. Is unusually bright has been saying words ever since It was six months old. "I know from my experience that there is something in Grape-Nuts that bright en up any one, Infant or adult, both physically and mentally." , "There'a a Reason." Read ''The Road to Wellvllle." In pkgs. Xt.1 read the above letter? A aew oae appear from time to time. They are g olae, true, aac full of hojnaa Interest. I the canvass are received from all church committees of Greater Omaha and Council Bluffs. The men signing the report were W. H. Russell, chairman; Robert Dempster, J. F. Wilhelmy. F. W. Foster, M. T. Sears, Rev. J. W. Jones, Rev. Charles Hanley and Dr. A. C. Brown. Reports from all the churches in the Omaha-CoUncll Bluffs district will be re ceived at a mass meeting fixed for April 10 at the Young Men's Christian associa tion, Omaha Opened with Prayer. Yesterday morning's conference on stewardship at the First Methodist church waa opened with prayer and song. Then Rev. W. B. Anderson, who serves In the Punjab, India, spoke on the topic, "Prayer Our Most Effective Method." He laid down the premise that It takes more than men, and more than money, and more than the power of both combined, to evangelize the hosts of non-Christian peoples. Prayer he considered the great essential behind It all, and he proceeded to give Instances of power following prayer In the Infant church In India. Persistent, long continued prayer, "with face in the earth," had ener gized the Christian workers In India in a most remarkable way. In some Instances 2,000 people had attended great prayer meetings which had continued over a day and a night, and another day and a night; and the missionary pictured mighty results for Christianity. Dr. E. H. Richards took the place on the prcgram of C. W. Allen of Cincinnati, talk ing of "The Principles of Stewardship." Dr. Richards has had thirty years' ex perience in Africa, and he said it was hardly fair to Inflict a wild man from that savage land on such an audience at short notice. But the audience liked him, dis tinctly. Rhode and Livingston. He started off by saying ha had met In Omaha, at some recent affair, the smallest man he had ever run up against, but he passed the Incident oft without bitterness. Contrasting the Uvea of Cecil Rhodes and Dr. David Livingston, this African mis sionary gave the empire builders all the credit fairly his due because of his great giving and his philanthropic bequests. "It was great giving," said Dr. Richards, "but it was not Christian giving. Rhodea was too big. In his own view, to go to church. Then conalder the story of Dr. Livingston, whose life went out in a spirit of prayer. He gave all he had to God's service, and he had much to give. His body was burled In Westminster Abbey, among the greatest of his nation. But his real burial place Is not there; he is burled In the love and affection, in the undying remembranoe of thousands of people In that dark continent where he took the mes sage of the gospel." Dr. Richards pictured a recent visit he paid to a woman In Iowa who had been contributing 0 a year to support a mis sionary In Africa. He had found her alone, an old lady of 80, reading her bible on one end of the table where her meal had been Set. "When I told her who I was, and she had asked about the fellow she was supporting, and what he was doing, she asked me to pray with her. She was so sweetly Christian, so unconscious of the great sacrifice she had been making from her slender means, that 1 felt hardly worthy to kneel in prayer beside her. Her s was Christian giving, the Influence of which must reach the throne of God him self." Zeal af Native Christians. Dr. Richards also told many instances of native Christians giving absolutely everything they possessed in the world to help their charges in the mission schools, and of how they would even trade their own clothes to get cloth to make clothes for their pupils. In his field are 1,00 chil dren receiving Christian Instruction on seventy-one stations. Rev. 8. 8. Hough of Dayton. O , discus sing "The Practice of Stewardship," re cited In impressive manner a personal ex perience In bringing a debt-ridden church at Altoona, Pa., Into partnership with God, so that from a mission church of tbe poor- You Will Enjoy S I Z Z with Chafing Dish Specialties Call for It at fountain or bars la bottle from your druggist or your gTooer. Made In Orange. Lemon and Root Doer Flavors Sizz is a powder, two teaspoonsful of which in a glass of cold water makes a nice, cool, refreshing, pure and healthful drink. S 1 z z purifies water and prevents disease It Is wholesome and gunran teed harmless under the Pur Food Law by its manufacturer ers the Leo Grotte Manufg Co. Bottled in three sizes 25c, 50c, $1.00. BSo is make la drink. $1.00 slae make 70 drink. VOEGLE & DINNING CO. Wholesale Distributers Omaha, Nrb. est kind In four years It became a great missionary church, helping others In this land and contributing largely to the upkeep of foreign missionaries. "Go Into real partnership with God," he advised. "Prove God. It will work out gloriously." Dr. Charles K. Bradt of Chicago voiced "A Call to Stewardship" most eloquently and impressively. He said most of the millionaires are In the churches, so it Is not a question of paucity of riches and re sources. "We must not eat our banquet alone," he said. "Aa yo receive, give. The call to stewardship is not a call to go out and make money, nor to give our Uvea over to money getting. We must distribute the great resources God has placed In our hands to a lost people. The church ia ap pointed to this task, to do the will of God In the distribution of his bounty, as stewards." 3 1 ' Director Newell Takes the Stand Evidence in Ealling-er-Pinchot Con troversy is Heard by Subcom mittee of Senators. WASHINGTON, March 19.-Tho Ballln-ger-Plnchot Investigation was resumed this morning with F. II. Newell, director of the reclamation service on the stand. Mr. Newell's testimony was expected to be largely corroborative of that given by his subordinate. Chief Engineer Davis, who was before the committee for two days last week. Mr. Davis took Issue with Becrctary Balllnger as to the accuracy of several statements he made In letters and public utterances. Mr. Davis denied that certain public lands withdrawn from entry under the Garfield administration had been restored on the recommenda tion of the reclamation service as claimed by Mr. Balllnger. He said the bureau "recommended" that the restorations be made only after Secretary Balllnger had ordered Director Newell to make such a recommendation. It was expected that Mr. Newell would occupy the stand during the whole of to day's session. After a short executive session the com mittee was called to order by Chairman Nelson. The chairman announced that, owing to the unusual conditions prevail ing In the house and the ImposHlbllity of house members of the committee to be present this afternoon, evidence would be heard after the luncheon recess by a sub committee of five. Mr. Newell then took the stand and At torney Pepper began the examination of the witness. 1 J foods Sarsaparilla Leads all other medicines in the cure of all spring ailments, humors, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, paleness and nerv ousness. Take it Get It today la usual liquid fevm r tablet called Sarsataba. lit Doae IV. That's the point We watch which accounts for oui rremTiilniif aunnama Note the Tie Space allowing tie pef teci action, me same as in a new col lar. Let ub show you our way. mopdfeff) Douglas 1812. H aJOa.He!He! That' the way to feel EVBRY ONB does that takes a CASCARBT night BEFORE, when be look at the fellow who didn't. For OVER-EATING and DRINKING nothing on Earth clean you out a a CASCARBT, naturally easily, without that upset sick feeling. Don't negleot at bed time 9 P.M. or 4 A.M. no difference you'll need it. (31 CASCAKRTS loc a boa for a week's treatment, all druggists. Biggmt seller In the world. Million boxes a month. OEE THE Invincible Ron o vat or Demonstrated By The Volfo Electric Co. NO VALVK8 NO AIR PUMP8 NO PISTON NO NOISE CaU On Us 110 raraaaa -. Tti. T. 1414. A-14H PITS morn o oust no - vUM.ll i.r wort, joa k iH uur sftll professions until aurad atid Mtbtflad. a- fii" ". eee ra ox. . TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Tfca Best LIt Stock Pares-,