The Omaha Daily Beb NEWS SECTION PAGES OXE TO ETC ITT WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska-Snow; colder. I"or Iowa-- Snow; warmer. l"or weather report aoo rate 2. YUL, .L-XO. Kis. OMAHA SATURDAY M)KN1N(J, DKCKMRKK. 'M, 1M0-K1XTKKN PAG MS. KIN(5LH COI'V TWO . CENTS. J. G. K0I51X SEEKS TO ( ! H K A T I , A W Indicted Banker Scornfully Facei Accusert Alter Swallowing Doie of Hyoscin. NEVER REACHES COURT ROOM liici in rrison ward in Serious Con-1. dition Now. QUESTION AS TO HIS RECOVERY - Forty-Five Minutei Elapse Before He Collapses. I CASE HURRIEDLY POSTPONED Alleged Snlndler Attempt to Knd l.tfe vrlth Same llrn hy Which Crlppen filled Uelle F.l more. NEW YORK-Dee. TO. Joseph ri. Robin, five minute before hi arraignment on an I lirllet mf.n t rt eratirl liirr-nv In nnnniwllnti with the failure of the Northern bank, j took one-tenth of a train of hyoacln. a drug with which I 'r. Hawiey Harvey Crip pen killed hla w fe. Ut ile Klmore, In Lon don. Ir. Mctlulre, the Tomb phvalclan. raid It Would be a .nilrucle if the indicted hanker recovered. Surgeoni worked over Robin for some tune and thin succeeded In reviving hint sufficiently to have him taken to the hos pital ward of the Tombs. J ue tic Peage In the nupreme court today sUncd an order turning over the asset a of the Rochester Title Guarantee company, one of Rubin's companies, to State Super intendent of Insurance Hotchls.'ss for the put post of winding up the concern. Addicted tat lr- Habit. Dr Roblnovltch said thai her brother as In the habit of taking loscln In small doses to counteract th effects of mor phine, which wan used to deaden the stab bing pains by frliicli gall stones make themselves knovin. She kept the drug In her house and she thought her brother swallowed twelve tablets. At liellevue to night, the. examining surgeon estimated that Kobln had taken about one-tenth of a grain. ' Kobln seemed In good health this morn Iiik, better than at any time since hla troubles began, and he made no effort to rrrecn his face from the cameras as hith erto. The first Hlgn of Illness was when be ataggered, stepping from hie automobile, to the criminal court building. In the elevator he weakened so rapidly that thn detectives had to lift him to a couch. There lie sank Into unconciousness and waa not revived until the stomach pump had been worked vigorously. Its prompt use undoubtedly saved his life. Outside the corridors of the criminal court" building fairly hummed with ex I'ltcmont, but In the court of general sea shma Itself Judge Craln waa transacting trt(flnejnv. ucusj when Iriom ai-pped liipldly down the aisle. "Your honor," he began hurriedly. "I am here In the Robin case. It appears that TTie defendant has taken a drug. Ha can not be stimulated. An ambulance has been summoned and surgeons are now pumping his stomach. The circumstances are un avoidable." Ir. Austin Flint, Retained by Jerome, nai called. The assistant district attorney aKked litm what Kobln bad aald. "He said." answered Ir. Flint, " 'I'm a lrad man; I've taken poison tablets.' I i found hla face fit the pupils of his eyes dilated, his pulse 1X and feeble, lie told me be had swallowed the poison three-quarters of an hour previously." Ilyescla Fatal I'olMn. Hyoicln Is described In the text books as an alkaloid or hehane, and In Its action a cerebral atul spinal sedative. Cases are lecorded In which a dose of une-twenty-flfth of n, grain applied to the membranes nf the eye haa produced aevere general toxic symptoms. In large doses It Is a uan gernus depressive of the respiration. On Information that the prisoner could not Possibly be arruUned the rase was post poned lintl 1th receipts of further advices us to Robin's condition. llobln'a frustrated attempt today leaves the question of Ills sanity still open. Dr. William Mabon, for the atate, and Dr. Austin Flint, for hla counsel, examined him l.tnlnht and found him physically able to appear In court today, but they did not pass on his mental atate. Just how hta act today will bear on that decision when It conies does not appear. In lh affidavit submiCed by his sister, when ah applied for his committment to i an asylum, she ewor he attempted auklsa j last Saturday and gave that a one of the evidence of hla alleged Insanity. Thr were no further developments to- day In connection with either the Bank of Northern New York, or the Washington ; halngs bank, both of which ax In the hands of the slat banking department, but th state department of Insurance took ovr th affairs of th Title and Guaranty Co., of Rochester. N. Y., and a large force of accountants Is at work on th ledger of th many Interwoven com panlea wlrwh Rohln promoted. ALL IS QUIET IN HONDURAS Iteaurt from Teaartaalpa Says There la No Kl of I prla la. TKrjcciCAKPA. Honduras. Dec. . Humors of political disturbances, real and Impending, continue to reach tl. capital from outside oints. hut t.o far as the gov ernment and the public hero are aware they are baseless hit the future holds in store is a mai ler of doubt. Up to today, however, there lis been no revolution in the country and there are no signs of an uprising. Th re have rxen no assassinations and n lailiticul Imprisonments. So far aa known here the g.iubcat Ta t imha has not sailed from Puerto i ortca to ;lv battle to the steamer Hornet, reporttd to have h.-en converted Into a revolution ary warship. Congress will meet for Its regular ses sion on ,unilay. The preliminary organi sation was effected last Saturdav. accord ing to custom. Nothing out of the ordi nary de eloped. The city la quiet and business Is progres sing as usual. UnokMaltr Itropa lea). I'HAM IM'O. C., Dec. :t . -Joeoh ! .! It-e. wi.lelv I.S..AU ,.n Hi,- r.ece tricks1 f il ls couiurv and Cannula a a book-I leaver, dropped oead her Vday a he was' walking along th street Heart dtaeaa la ! llv4 t have etuaed hla teat. j 'Tabor Collego Gets I BiS Fund to Save it from Failure: Iowa Town Goes Wild Rejoicing Over -' Completion of Forty Thousand Dollar Fund. TABOR, U . eDc. Jil.-i Special Teie- i gram.) ThlK little rltv Is the scene of .general rejoicing with the ringing of bells !nd blowing of horns, over the comple tion of the Stn.wrt endowment fund fnr the I Tabor rollre. For some time supilbrt ' era of the college, which Is fifty yearn old. 'have fared the pinbleir- of raising the f,in1 r 'eein, the institution go to the. wall. More than thin the fund was undertaken , for the purpose of complying with stlpil- latlons male by Andrew CarnegJIe. jwrereby he agree to subscribe 125.000 If I the college tnlse S7S.(X) from other source. At a mass metetlng held last night the final pledges were made for the subscription of JH.onn which was all fhat was needed to complete the required !. 000 to save the college. H. R. flrd pledged himself to give ll.ono. The fret of the money was quickly pledned In smaller amount,. All will be In the hand of the ,..,! I... a -..in ... I coUrK l'v -""""""V ' The fund will be '0"'Iletd.-I aler to meet Carneg1e'? offer. Legal Meaning of "I'll Get Your Goat'te' Chicago Court Rules that Expression May Be Construed at a Threat. CHICAGO. Dec. 30 Is "I'll get your goat" a threat as contemplated under the law? Municipal Judge Heitler today held that It might bo so construed, but he added the following restriction: "It would depend entirely on the aubject matter of Immediate previous conversation and the apparent state of mind of the goat-getter." John J. G. Dykes, a rubber goods manu facturer, asked Judge Reltler to atand be tween him and John K. Corns, head of a realty company, who. he charged, had threatened him. The men are brother-in-law. and Dykes averred that Corns had threatened to "knock his block off." Later It was mutually agreed that the specific promise of Corns was. "I'll get "your" goat," accent on the "your." "I've never read It In my Shakespeare," confessed Judge Beltler. "but pending de cision of the courts on the actual physical proceas of getting one'a 'goat.' I think I will have to hold It a threat." Mrs. Augusta Stetson's Statement is Ignored i in ,.''. I .-Xe'cofniked as a Christian' . K 4 f A rrT llarl A a A f H ti at 4"! a aa. " ' J Scientist. BOSTON. Dec. 30.-The statement of Mrs. Augusta K. Stetson of New York that. In her belief. -Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of the Christian Selene de nomination, would mcnlfest herself after death occasioned very little comment among the leaders of the denomination here today. Alfred Farlow of the Christian Science Publishing company said: "I do not see any reason why I should give attention to these various statements concerning the 'reaurrectlon' of Mra. Eddy, coming from persons who are not recog nised nor representative Christian Sci entists." Two Men and Boy Locked in Ice Box Masked Robber Holds Up Three Per sons in Grocery in Kansas City and Rifles the Till. KANSAS CITY. Mo., Dec. SO.-After b- Inir -nKtvsu4 IS V aa IliauV CrtVlVtAB In am a- . .... ! Charles Forsberg, owner of the grocery; i James Svglebauin, driver of a bake. j 'T f u a 0.1 rt a. William tlnhlnBAn It t a nM Ultl, 1 were locked In a large refrigerator In the rear of the store. A customer rescued the! . , prisoners from their freeing eel soma I ', . , . ' " tlm later when they were numb with cold. Through a glass door In the refrigerator! th three Imprisoned victim watched the robber aa he took the money from th ash drawer and sweets from the candy case. II secured about J0 and leisurely departed. U baa not been arrest ad. Biggest Special Feature of the Year The Bee's Junior Birthday Book Begins January 1st "Whose birthday today! During the year just closing wo have answered that interesting questiou with information about notables and near notables for whom it was the natal day. During the coming year we shall auswer that same interesting question with the names of the rising genera tion of boys and girls who will be the future notables. "This Is the Day We Celebrate" Under this heading The Hee will tell what youngsters are having birthday jinniversaries each day of the year. Whose youngsters! Why, your youngsters and your neighbors' all the children in Omaha old enough to go to school twenty thousand of them. Our 1911 Birthday Book Will Be Unique Look for It. Every Day In The Bee JAIL SENTENCES j i'Olt BATHTDBMEN j Attorneys Seeking Clemency for ! Clients Get Small Consolation j of T)narfmnf rf Tiiafin.t 1 PLEA OF GUILTY NO OBJECT Combination Believed Already Good at Dissolved by Government. COMPROMISE WELL BE REJECTED Clients Must Each Give Five Thou sand Dollar Bond. DISCUSSION ASSERTED USELESS Kenyon Maya Position of Department of J oat lee la Already Well Knoira Fatare Poller to, II I nehanared. WASHINGTON. Dee. 90 Attorneys for the Individuals lnriirtit m mmhr tt th pn.caed ..mth tllD tru(lt.. for , d vlo. latlon of the Sherman act came to the De partment of Justice today n the Interest of their cllenta. These, In the event of their conviction and of the court's accept ance of the declared policy of Attorney Ickershum to "stand for no more threatened with Jail sentences. The trio of lawyers was headed by Hush Taggart of New York and Included Wil liam L.. Carpenter tnd Lo Hutzel of De troit. After an hour's conference with W. 8. Kenyon, Mr. Wlckersham's assistant and special "trust buster" to whom the attorney general has delegated the whole matter with power to act, the lawyers re fused to say a word as to the purpose or result of the conference. To Insist I pun Jail Sentences. It was said at the department that they had been given no reason to believe that the attorney general would consent to the acceptance of a plea of guilty and the Im position of fines lather than Imprisonment. They were given to understand. It was sa'.d, that Jail sentenoes would be Insisted upon and were Informed, it la said, that their clients would be expected In the United States circuit court at Detroit January 4 to give $5,000 bonds each. The attorneys for the indicted men Indicated they would not make it necessary for the government to star; fifty removal auits to gej the fifty defendants together on that day. The offer of eon-promise cald to have been tendered was that' should the Standard Sanitary Manufacturing company and other defend ants In the civil action appear before Xbe United States circuit court at Baltimore and consent to the permanent Injunction the government asks. If the government would b aatisfied with fines and no Jail sentences In the criminal action. It was pointed out that an effectual dissolution of the offensive combination the govern- mt'.t charge would be effected If he !n- t'omblant ton Dissolved. The Department of Justice, however, thinks the combination 1 as good aa dis solved. .This week It learned that four concerns In the combine sent out notices to the trade that they wet .no longer par ties to the alleged price-fixing agreement. The recent dclaratlon of Attorney General Wlekersham, following the window glass trust case In Pittsburg, that he would In sist on prison sentences In all futuie con victions in anti-trust cases was the answer to the second proposition. Frank H- Watson, United States district attorney at Detroit, referred tjuestlonera to Mr. Kenyon, who declared the position of the Department of Justice was well known and admitted of no discussion. I SAYS DOG CAN SPEAK GERMAN tommlnloi of Scientists from Berlin I ntveralty In vest IsratlnB Dtorr from Hanbart. BBRJJN. Dec. SO. The claim of the gamekeeper near Hamburg that his dog can speak German and has an understand ing of the language sufficient to answer questions Intelligently has been taken ao aerlously by German scientists that Prof. I Ifungst of Berlin university headed a com- misaion of Investigation. It la stated that they found the animal nosaesBcd of a vocabulary of seven words, ivhlch were clearly articulated. Of the ii'iitiuci iuui "tin num. I n ' J Dfiauirt It Is asserted that the dog understands! i- ..a i-i 1 1 .. . i mini la ooiti iw rum im replies io me in- I . , . . .... ... ... " iulrlcs of strangers within the limits of his knowledge of the language without aid ' or suggestion from hla owner. I Peoo Deatow Title. TORT DO DOE, la.. Dee. SO Pope Plus has bestowed the title of mnnslgnor upon Rev. James Saunders of Fort Dodge, vicar general of th Catholic see of Sioux City. From th St. Louis Globe-Democrat. BATTLES MADMAN FOR LIFE I Councilman McGovern Near to Death from "Last Cartridge." ASSAILANT CRAZED BY WORK K& press Tracer Driven Insane by Por alt of ChrUtma Fas-eel Make I'nnrovoWed Attempt at Harder. Four time., o madman snapped ' a re volver 1n tTi fn of-Ooinc11rio jrettiv-McJ Govern In a audden and unprovoked strug gle at the east front of the federal build ing this afternoon. One notch at a time the only loaded chamber In the cylinder approached the hammer. McGovern reached time and again for the upraised hand hold ing the gun. Each time the hand evaded his grasp. One more pull of the trigger and a bul let would have been fired point blank Into McOovern's face. Then he exerted hla last ounce of strength In overthrowing hla aa railant. A crowd of persons who gathered when the "locoed" man appeared In the I'nlted States restaurant flashing a revolver, closed in on the struggling pair on the atepe of the federal building and held Mc Oovern's assailant until the police arrived. The man with the gun waa Identified by H. A. Sampaon of the Wells Fargo Express company aa a tracer employed by the Omaha office of that concern. At the police station AlcClure relapsed Into a coniatone slate. Hla condition Is serious, but his life Is not in danger ac cording to the - police uui'Koona, He Is suffering from a nervous affection. McClure entered the restaurant at 1612 Dodge street and drew his revolver without provocation. He was chased out of the dining room and pusued up the street by bystanders. At the entrance to the federal building, McGovern grappled wiih the fugi tive and the fight ensued. N Cnrelenting worry through the Jays and far Into the night of the holiday season at Ilia tedious work of tracing loat gift pack ages. Is held responsible for the unbal anced condition of McClure. He Is aald to have de'voted hla time to work with pain ful care until he was at the point of -haurtllu:i. ' McClure, ays Mr. Sampaon, his em ployer, ha -never before shown Indications of mental aberallon. He la unmarried and rooms tit the company' offlcea- BALTIMORE TRIPLE TRAGEDY William C. Slrlekler Mardera Wife and Daughter and Commits Salt-Id. BAIVTIMOrtF., Md.. Dec. William C. Strlekler. shot and killer his wife and l!t-year-old stepdaughter, Beulah Kile, In their home In East Iifayette avenue this city today. Strlekler then fired a bullet Into hla own body. Iximestlc troubles aa given as the cause of the tragedy. Strlekler waa employed as a fireman In a power house. Call Tyler 1000 and tell ihe cheer ful staff your troub les. It is wailing for you and will pre pare your ad bo that It will get you just about what you wish. Everybody reads these little treas ures. They are valuable to you If you want a job If jou want a servant -If you have un Idle room A useless article One of these Utile ads will put you in touch with the very one who wishes it, no doubt. Don't hesitate. Getting 'Em Acquainted ' 1 1 1 : a n Deputy Sheriff Saves His Prisoner from Armed Mob Mississippi Officer Standi Off Would Be Lynchers with Revolver and Lands Aooused Man in Jail. OCLFrORT. Mls., Dec. JO. -After res cuing his prisoner from a mob bent ' oh lynching him, Deputy Sheriff J. M. Wil liam arrived here today with Jesse Odom, charged . with' murder t 'Bon', Mls's.Vand placed him in th county Jail for safe keeping. The prisoner bear two gunshot wounds Inflicted by the mob before Wil liams, assisted by other officers, dragged him Into a building and stood off the wouldbe lynchers with drawn revolvers. The lynching waa attempted at Bond last night while Williams was on his way to the train with his prisoner. Odom'a wounds are not serious. Good Chance for Modern Pirates Supply Ship Celtic on Way to Cuba with Million and Half in Gold to Pay Sailors. BOSTON'. Mas.. Dec. 30. If there are any twentieth century Kidds or other buccaneer scouring the Bpanlsh main with piratical dreadnought, they will have a chance nxt week of tackling a treasure ship laden with gold and modem "pieces of eight" when the I'nlted Htstea supply ship Celtic steam Into the Caribbe m pay off the fleet. The Celtic .. a about tl.MO.000 of gold eagles and double eaglea, In addition to aide of beef, bacon and other "grub" which the tars of the Atlantic fleet will want when they arrive from Huropean waters. The Celtic will land It gold and stores at Guantanamo and It will be pay day for the fleet aa soon as the ships arrive. Municipal Strike in City of New York Firemen on Ferryboats Quit Work Be cause of Reduction in Force and Commuters Are Delayed. NEW TORK. Dec. SO. New York City experienced today Its first municipal strike when th firemen on the city' ferry boat, which play between Manhattan and South Brooklyn, and Staten Island went on I atrlk. because the municipal government reduced the number of firemen on each ! boat' from aeven to six In order to cut down expenses. Hundreds of comcutera on l Staten Island were unable to reach Man- liattan. except by making a wide detour Into New Jersey. Th city officials have hired l'X) longshoremen to take th places of the strikers. Seventy-Four Vessels Lost, but Only Fifty-Three Drowned WASHINGTON, Inc. .-Out of a total of 6M persuns Involved in 1.46J disasters to vessels of all classes within the hlatory of tht United Stales life saving service inly fifty-three llm were lot and only teventy-lour eesaels were completely de stru;tii. according to the annual report of '1. K.mball, general superintendent of the service, f...r Hie fiscal year wlucn ended June M lost. The greatest number of casualties re-loit-U Mere In connection with craft wltli o H u euments, such an-sailboats, launches and I o boats, 1.140 accident having oc curred to such craft with S.013 persons aboard and a total of fourteen lives hav ing been lost. Theie were 3.t4& persons aboard 117 documented vessels reported In ditr'; by keepers of live saving stations lid the total number lust a thlrty-nlue. TIME OF HEARING WASTED Testimony in Donahue Case May All Be Thrown Out. MULLEN GETS ON HIS HIGH HORSE Attoraer General Insist on Havtna; Sick Man Brought Into Coart, and Alao that All Wltneeaee Rrmila Close. Referee Evans, who Is hearing the Don ahue bdsrW." Case, ' Iia-S-lndlcated ' OVe' ftke llhood of, the court" exclusion of the greater part of the testimony so far of fered In support of the charge. If he shall rule, when the hearing la ended, that the case shall be confined to the scope of"the complaint against the Omaha chief of po lice, then almost all of the testimony taken will b excluded. This matter was argued extenalvely before the referee yes terday. Attorney General Mullen contend ing that It was not required that the state prove the specif lo acts of negligence charged against the chief, but that if It were established that he were guilty ot negligence at any time It was sufficient for the purposes of the complaint. Attor- ey Connell contends that the action la In the nature of a criminal proceeding, and that It I necessary for the prosecution to establish beyond question the specific acts of negligence complained of. As many times aa Mr. Connell made his formal objections. Referee Evans stated plainly that all such testimony as has been and Is objected to by Mr. Connell shall be thrown out If the ruling, which will be made at the conclusion of the hear ing, sustains the contention of the de. fense. Mullen After Mrk Man. Attorney General Mullen wound up hi day In court by Insisting that a witness who Is known to be sick be brought Into court, by force If need be. No amount of assurance on the part of reputable men, one of them the bailiff of the court, couid satisfy Mr. Mullen that the witness he deelres Is not able to come Into court. He demands a bench warrant for the missing man. Friday afternoon Mr. Mullen placed on the witness stand D. I.. Totter, who said ha witnessed Illegal liquor sales In a saloon last summer. 11. C. Johnson, who said he visited the red-light" dlatrlct with Frank Erdman last spring, and with II. T. Braes and others this fall, and purchased liquor which waa Bold Illegally.' Rev. J. M. Keyea of Herman, Neb., aald that while In Omaha to attend an Epworth league meeting last November, he accompanied H. C. Johnson on a tour of the chop suey restaurants to secure evidence of Illegal rales, which he said he found; and K. II. Andrews, who said he made several trlpi through the resort district In search of evidence of IlleKal selling, said he found It Floyd Fllnn, formerly a chauffeur foi the police department, placed on Ihe stan ' by the state, swore that he saw many drunken men on the streets In the resort (Continued on Second Page.) Of the 1.4C3 vessels of all kinds which met with accidents, th- life savers rendered as sistance to 1.407, valued with their cargoes at &io.1T.23i. Other s tccor rendered by the lite saving service Included the rescue of 117 pei son from drowning, surgical aid t.i Ixly persjiin suffering from gunshot wound, broken limbs or brulnc, and the lecovery of liio bodies of pei-nona who had met death by Jumping or falling from piers and Yrldge. breaking through the Ice or In other was. Nine of this number were suicides. The net expenditure' for maintaining- the tervlce for Ihe year were l.',iM.J:s.6i. The enactment of the bill passed at the last scs-lou of congress by the senate providing retirement pay lor members of the life saving service and others of the field serv ice Incapacitated for duty Is urged In the report OMAHA HOLDS ITS GREATESTD1NNEU Wonderful Feast for Trayeling Men is Attended by Eleven Hun dred Persons. HOST DEAFENS WITH ITS SONG Bigrgest Banquet in Attendance City Has Ever Known. WALTER MOODY MAKES SPEECH Manager of Great Chicago Organisa- tion Talks to Throng. EDGAR ALLEN IS T0ASTMASTER While Battalion of Walter nerve Colossal Repast Throns hakea . Andltorlom with I.nsty Cheer and Jons. Eleven hundred and two men sat rimer. to the wonderful feast ltendeied by the Omaha Commercial club to the traveling men at the Auditorium last night. It waa the most prodigious affair the city has ever known. For In physical else alone th dinner was the biggest ever held In Omaha. More people may have been fed at soma barbe cue or other held in the vicinity of Omaha, but never befoie In the history of this olty did one thousand one hundred and two men dine together under one loof. In what tlx? musical critics call "tonal mass" last night's dinner surpassed the crash of brass band playing the great climax of "Gottrrdamerung." When the eleven hundred sang, the trusses of th Auditorium roof quivered In deep sympa thetic diapason; when th hundreda laughed It was like the Olympian roar of Zeus mirth which the ancients deemed the . . thunder; when they cheered the mighty building shook to Its foundation. As th eleven hundred and two entered the main floor of the Auditorium they were first "lolled In a barrel." Emerging fiom this plight, the hogshead, by th way, being In fittingly heroic proportion, they beheld the long reaches of the Auditorium filled with tables which stretched north and south, row on row on row. At the south end and at right angles sat a higher, longer table. Built high enough to look like an exaggerated bar of Justice, the front ot this table seemed In physical harmony, but aa to length and height with the enormoua proportions of j th reat of the dinner. Everything waa measured on such a scale. The eleven hundred aeated themselves and ate twenty-five gallons ot oysters swimming in thirty-five gallons of oyster ,, ' cocktail dressing. The eleven hundred were being waited on by 136 waiter, the re hearsal of whom In the afternoon looked . , at first like a convention of th Afio--Amerlcan church. Seven head waiters dl- Oneat Honor Kdsar Allea. When the eleven hundred had got down to the consumption of fifteen hundred stuffed eggs and ten thousand sandwiches the first song of the evening came. ; It was In honor of Edgar Allen, president of the Commercial club. It ran: Has anybody her seen Allen? A-l.-I.-E-N Allen with his "A-B-CT" Haa anybody her seen Alltn, Allen with his "A-H-C?" He tried to leatn th alphabet. Hut has not learned four letters yet. Has anybody here sesn Allen, Allen wltn his "A-B-CV" After which the diner, . eleven hundred of them, fell to and ate up fifteen hundred Nesslerode puddings, smoked one thousand cigarettes soma did not get any of the nor wished them and Immediately After ward the smoke aros to heaven from eleven hundred and two cigars. Bo far aa could be seen through th has every man present smojeed. After this President Allen Introduced the speaker of the evening, Walter Moody of Chicago, who 1 general manager of the Chamber of Commerce of Chicago, th .argest commercial organisation In th world. Moodr tiet Ureetlagt. Mr. Moody was greeted with the "Ain't got no style, style all thn while," song and then under Clement Chase's yell-master leadership the Commercial club yell spilt the smoky air. It runs: Hoost! boost! Boost! Who shall? We shall, Commercial Club t'lub club, Omaha. Other aongs and other yells further deafened guests and ahattered ear drums during the courae of th evening. The parody of the best known song In Madame ".Sherry" made a big hit. It was sung aa follow: Kery little business haa a booster of Us own All It sterling qualities too gladly will be shown. But every good word you can say for this old town Will bring you a part of it renown. And buaiiieaa you never could pull down liy efforts all alone. The dinner wa not merely a physically large affair. It was Immense In a mental way. Though quantitative measures can not be applied to things of mental nature, it may be said that the amount of Omaha enthusiasm engendered among the gueKtu of honor by the dinner is unparalleled In ihe history of Omaha or any other western lty. Kxpreshlons proving tilts fell from (he lips of every traveling man present and out of the eleven hundred and two full-.- nine hundred were knight of tho grip. Mr. .Moody's Address. II:. Moody In his uddress sope In part as follow: Mr. President, fellow commercial m jasnadors and citizens of Omaha: 1 would like to take the stand tins evening, aa a young man cominK from tli thick of hai Jn for succeHH who leaves the battlefield Ji.St for a few moments to talk with iu oomrades lo strlko the keynote of aucrets .a the relatlonnhlp of the traveling mail inward his city. -To those In the audience ft ho have Die dinting ulshi u privilege of jclni; it' lively Identified cult in greatest I,.......-..-., . . ...... .... tiuir,.n)ti ui si.irn man ship the kenote ot success is "boost. boort, boost for winar.a." 1 deslie to einphaHme some things about Ciralia that every Omaha traveling man should know: Twelve miles of loaded freight cars enter and leave Omaha each diy. Omaha is a great railway center. I.lka Chicago, that is the secret of its resources and posalbhlty for expansion. The growth, advancement and permanency of a city Is told in Its iali transportation facilities. 1 he railway uialutlon nf Omaha totals about lo WO. There as In Omaha nfflelaU and employes of great and little transar'.a ti'.n lines In one capacity and another of ,4isl people. on. aha is a great pat-senger route to all points In the l ulled i-itates One hundred and thirty possenger train bring In or cany away people from onaha each dev. Omaha Is tuu third primary 11 vo slock 1