Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 01, 1911, NEWS SECTION, Image 1

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    -J
The Omaha" Daily Bee
I-
NEWS SECTION
WT.ATIIER FORECAST.
For Nebraska Cloudy.
Fur Iowa I'nupt tlett.
PAGES OXE TO TEN.
VOU XL-NO. -J4f,.
OMAHA, SATURDAY MOUXlXfl, APRIL 1, 11)11 TWENTY PA(JKS.
!SlN(3LFi COPY TWO CKNTS.
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ATHLETES COME
TO W1NJ10N0RS
Kcarly Two Hundred Skilled Track
Men Ready to Compete at Audi
torium Tonight.
SPEEDY MEN OF MIDDLE WEST
Crack from Michigan to Kansas
Meet on Same Floor.
CHICAGO STARS TAKE HIGH RANK
Michigan Team Will Share in Race
for Points.
MANY SCHOLASTIC AND "Y" MEN
Brawa and gpeed of Missouri Valley
Will Compete and Itarrs ! Impe
rially Promise Some Rare)
Com petit Ion.
All Is In readiness for the tap of the
gong tonight when 190 of the collegiate,
association and scholastic athletes of the
middle west will meet to contest for hon
ors and medals In Omaha's second annual
Indoor track meet. The meet will be man
aged upon the same plan a last year and
will be fully aa brilliant an affair s the
lnltil event.
Kvery class of amateur athletes Is rep
resented In the entry list. College men
from Nebraska, Michigan, Kansas, Chi
cago, Drake, Coe, Tai'klo, South Dakota.
Bellevne, Wesleyan, Mornlngside, On aha
and Tabor all have their best runners
trained to the topnotch and ready for the
etarter's gun. Athletic awsoctalions, the
two big clubs Chicago Athletic association
and Kansas City Atlantic association and
Lincoln, Kansas City and Omaha Young
Men's Christian associations will be here
with many former college athletes in their
lineups. The Kansas City Young Men's
Christian association, one of the strongest
track teams In the country, will be here to
run against Omaha "Y." Omaha, H'oux
City and York will have one relay race,:.
South Omaha and Council llluffs another,
and there will he Individual entrants from
all of the high schaais and others in Ne
braska and Iowa.
Grade school lads from the Omaha
schools will b entered for a relay race,
the winning team holding the championship
(if the city until the grade school meet In
May.
Variety of Feat a res.
Soldiers from Fort Crook arid Fort
omaha liave teams entered for a special
equipment race, and the Pohemlan Turn
ers, another Omaha organization, wir? have
a team entered for parllel bar work. The
Omaha Athletic association Is entering the
tern which won first place In the race at
Kansas City last Saturday,
Saturdar morning the last of the outside
teama will como, and the big athletic fig
vies of the various contestants are to he
eeen filling fha corridors of all the hotels
of the city.
iih hlgan waa the first to arrive, getting
In yesterday and stealing a march upon
the other fcilows with a little preliminary
practice upon the floor, but the others will
have a chance to get used to the track this
morning.
Society will attend the event this even
ing. The boxes, many of them, have been
taken by the stewards of the evening and
a number will be filled with the women of
the city who take an Interest In sports.
The east end of the section of boxes has
been taken by the Omaha Ad club mem
bers. Youths Real Rooters.
Hundreds of enthusiastic supporters of
the youths exerting themselves In the arena
will be found seated together In the balcony
yelling themselves hoarse for their
favorites.
The Omaha High school delegation will
fill a large part of the went section of the
bali-ony with rootera and Its cadet band
will furnish niui.ii) during the evening. In
the east end of the building another band
will be stationed. The cadet band will
niurch to the varloua headquai ters of the
Melting teams early In the evening and
serenade ta h in turn.
Although the opening hour of the meet
tonight Is 8 o'clock, entertainment for llw
l"ver. of track events will He f urn.shed.
this afternoon and earlier In the evening
The grade school of Omaha, twenty-three
In number, will meet at the Auditorium In
the afternoon ami run oir the preliminaries JF.FFF.RBON. Mo., March 31. The au
la their reluy event to determine the two j prune court of Missouri sustained the
teams which soul! run in ine unai in the
.(Continued on Second Page )
THE WEATHER
For Nebraska Cloudy.
For Iowa I'naettled.
Shippers Bulletin Ti e' are forty-eiht-hour
shipments noith, t a--t and west for
temperatures sllgh'ly Ulnw fieesint;; ship
ments south run i'i made with safety.
Temper.. I u : e til oinnua leaterila).
I l.vir.
Highest today :;,' t;
Lowest today ."1
Mean teinpriatuie M , V
j're Ipltation uT .o
Temliei toi e uiiU piaK'ipitatk.;!
Itres from til noruu.1:
Normal teuiver.utre
1 ief icien.-y lor the iia
Total ex'e3 mmc M.j!v!i 1
Normal vre-iHi.i Kn
Kxcef a f ir the ii..y
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Total raiiitu'l slu e ..l.u.h 1
lieticleni- Mm- iiaan ,1 ...
liefli lemy for -u k i .on l:i
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lieflclency lor ci . pt i u.i
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1 oit;e I'll v. clear . .
1-en.ter. pi i-Utudy
North flatte. pt tloudy,
(ln.ahu, pt. cloudy
J'uetiKi, clear
Hkptd CIO. unow
r-.it Lake City. clr
l-ania r'e, clear
fheridan. cloudy
hi. nix City. pi. cloudy...
aleiiline cloudy
T Initi ates trate nf pi
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1- A. tlwBII. Lc-cal Fuici.iiler.
Sweeping Changes
in the Railway Mail
Service Are Made
General Superintendent Reduced" to
Division and Theodore Ingalli of
Kentucky Get Job.
WASHINGTON, March 31. Drastic ac
tion was taken tonight by Postmaster flen
eral Hitchcock In effecting a reorganisa
tion of the railway mall service.
A dosen changes of the most Important
officer were made by Mr. Hitchcock as a
result of careful Investigation and consid
eration. Theodore Ingalls of Kentucky, supertn
tenrtent of the division of rural mails, was
apiHiinted general superintendent of the
railway mall service at $4.00 a year In suc
cession to Alexander (.rant, who was trans
ferred to St. I'aul as a dlvlHlon superin
tendent, a reduction to 13,000 a year.
Norman Perkins, division superintendent
at St. Paul, becomes superintendent of the
Washington division, succeeding Charles
W. Vlckery, who Is appointed chief clerk
of the Cincinnati division vice A. J. ball,
reduced to railway postal clerk.
Clyde M. Reed, division superintendent
at Cleveland, was appointed superintendent
of the Cincinnati division to succeed
Charles Kager, who was reduced and ap
pointed chief clerk of 'the Atlanta division
in place of John F. Blorigett, removed.
John C. Koons, postofflce Inspector In
the Washington division waa appointed
railway mail superintendent in charge of
th Cleveland dlvlHlon.
George G. Thompson, formerly superin
tendent division of supplies. Postofflce de
partment, and now Inspector In charge at
Austin, Tex., waa appointed superintendent
of the division of rural malls In succession
to Mr. Ingalls.
Charles H. Anderson, Inspector In charge
at St. Louis, will succeed Mr. Thomson as
Inspector in charge at Austin, and in
spector George Daniel of the New York
dlvlHlon was appointed Inspector In charge
at at. Louis.
Chicago Black Hand
Artist Confesses
Former Commission Merchant Admits
Writing Twenty-Five Threat
ening Letters.
CHICAGO. March iL Philip Purpurpa
a former commission merchant of South
Chicago, today confessed to the police that
lie had written twenty-five letters to people
of the suburb demanding money and sign
ing the epistles "The Black Hand." Some
of these were successful, he said.
Purpurpa was arrested yesterday when he
Went to a designated spot and took a
dummy package which had been placed
there by the recipient of a black hand
letter. I
The police do not believe Purpurea's let
ters were Inspired by his Individual needs
and are endeavoring- to connect htm with
the senders of other missives of similar
import which h,ve been mailed to residents
of Chicago, one of them to Federal' Juuge
K. M. Land is and to the members of a jury
In hla court which waa trying a black hand
case.
Body of Abbott Found
in Debris of Capitol
Remains of Watchman Recovered
from Corner Where Flames
Raged Fiercest.
ALBANY. N. T March 3..-The body of
Samuel J. Abbott, the one victim of the
state capltol fire, was found today on the
fourth floor In the southwest corner or
the building, where the flames raged the
fiercest. A volunteer salvage cjrps, In
cluding officers of the state library and
headed by Library Director James L.
Wyer, Jr., and N. It. Stokes-Phelps of New
York, continued today the search of the
debris for valuable manuscripts.
Three Millions for '
St. Louis Hospital
.. tt t. i j
! Supreme CoWt of MlSSOUH Upholds
validity oi me wui 01 tne .Late
.Robert A. Barns.
1 1
validity of the will of the late Robert A.
Bams of Kt. l.ouls today. He bequeathed
approximately 13.000,000 of his estate for
the erection and endowment of a hospital,
under the rules and regulations of the
Methodist Episcopal church, south. His
heirs attacked the will.
Reichstag Rejects
Socialist Motion
German lawmakers Vote Down Prop
ortion Looking Toward Limita- ;
tion of Armament. I
PKP.LIN. March 31. The Helchstag. by a i
IiiiKrt majority today rejected the sociaiist
i. (lion calling on the government to take
imnecKaie steps cladlng to an International
a ..rcement concerning universal limita
tion of aruiHinent and the abulit'on of the
il'.ht of capture at sea.
r.EGR0 HANGhU AT TULSA. OKLj
i
Murderer r Ili-p.il y sheriff Makes!
Kl e l 1 n u le Speech frum 1
the l.nlIova. I
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1" 1 -i i-iiuil t .i:-rnl
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FACTORY BURKED AT DANVILLE 1
Otrrall I'lant l.nili lna lleadrrd
and tiflj IVr.oai I lr.
. ktroyrd. j
liANVll.LK. III.. yUi:h 31.-Fire which
l.ioke out thm nioinlng and for several'
hours threatened the letal! dlMrtct of tne
cli ilifiniifd the Stahl-l'rhan Overall fuc
torv on North liaxel street.' valued at
1175 tui. The factory Is the luigrsi In the
rlty and employs lit) men and girls The 1
'oks Is pai-tlslly covered by Insurance.
Mi:ci:
the M'if.
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.1 UDGE O'GORMAN
EMPIRESENATOR
State Supreme Justice Receives One
Hundred and Twelve Votes
in Assembly.
DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS CHOC
Depew Gets Eighty Ballots as
publican Candidate.
BEARS TAMMANY WATERMARK
Successful Candidate Aligned with
Bosses Many Years.
SIXTY-FOURTH JOINT
Deadlock Lasting: Since January Sixth
Is H roll en by Eleetlon of Man
Mho la Satisfactory to
Mnrphr.
ALBANY, N. Y., March SI. Supreme
Court Justice James A. O'Gorman of New
York, a democrat, was elected I'nlted
States senator by the legislature tonight on
the alxty-fourth Joint ballot, after a dead
lock lasting since January 8.
Justice O'Gorman received 112 votes out
of 1H2 votes cast. Chauncey M. Depew, his
republican opponent, received eighty votes.
The total vote cost was 192. Ninety-seven
votes were necessary for a choice.
O'tterninn Tammany Leader.
James A. O'Gorman has long been on.'
of the leading members of Tammany Hall i
and one of Its foremost orators for thirty !
years. He established his reputation as n I
public speaker In Its Interests when 21
years old, when his eloquence was credited
with having saved a doubtful assembly
district.
Mr. O'Gorman was born on the lower
West Side. of New York City on May K,
VM. He is the son of Thomos and Kllen
O'Gorman and married' Anne M. Leslie on
January 2, ISM. They have nine children,
seven daughters and two sons, After
finishing a course In the public schools
Mr. O'Gorman. as a lad of 17, entered the
New York City college, and later attended
the University of New York law school,
and was graduated and entered at the bar
In 1W2.
From the time he cast his first vote he
aligned himself with Tammany Hall, which
favored him generously. In 1893 he was
elected a Justice-of the municipal court
and In 1R99 was elected a Justice of thel
supreme court for a term of fourteen years,
from January 1. WOO. His salary hHS beet
$17,500, or almost three times what he wll:
receive as I'nited- States senator. He had
almost three years to serve.
The new senator Is a member of the Ua'-v
Institute, the Medlco-Iegal society, Caiho
lie club, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, New
York Athletic club, Shamplaln club, Royal
Arcanum and other organizations. Ho b is
received the honary degree of doctor of
laws from the college of St. Thomas of
Vlllancwa In 1904, Fordham university In
191 and New York university In IW. .
DIEHL AND BEACH RETIRE
FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS
Assistant !Hanaer and Superinten
dent of Organisation Hay Paper
at San Antonio.
NEW YORK, March 31. Colonel Charles
S. Dlehl and Harry L. Beach have pur
chased the Ban Antonio Light at r'an An
tonio, Tex., and will retire from ttjelr po
sitions in the Associated Press, thel.'1 resig
nations to be effective at the convenience
of the service.
Colonel IMehl has been connected with
the Associated Press for the last twenty
eight years, during eighteen years of which
he has beeu assistant general manager.
Mr. Beach's relation to the Associated
Press has covered a period of twe lty years,
and for the last two years he has been
superintendent of the central division.
DEMOCRATS WILL
ORGANIZE
Majority Members to Hold t'anens to
Get Ready for Domination of
llonse.
WASHINGTON. March SI. To organise
for domination of the first - democratic
house of representatives since 15, demo
cratic members of the Slxty-aecond con
gress, which convenes In extraordinary
session next Tuesday, will hold their cau
cus tomorrow.
The reports of the new ways and means
committee on the h-use committees and
legislative program and th report of the
l.t-w rules committee will be considered
and officers of the house determined upon.
With relation to the legislative program
dlscuKsion will be confine.! chiefly to the
Canadian reciprocity agrei ment, the tariff
boaid bill and tariff revlsi ns.
Old Mission Church Now a Fort
CHURCH OF rAN
All
... 'V V-fcv
From th Palt Lake
Tribune.
SOLDIERS SUCCEED PRIESTS
Church at Juarez Becomes a Fortress
for Diaz' Troops.
SOME SIDE LIGHTS ON THE WAR
Ilee Correspondent Writes of the Con
dltlons Found at the Border at
j the Present Time Stories
of the War. ,
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
JUAREZ. Mexico, March 27. (Special
Correspondence.) Masses which have been
said by robed priests, for more than three
centuries In the picturesque mission of
Guadalupe, here, are now silent, and un
kempt soldiers swarm Its historic walls.
Instead of the muBical Spanish chime,
which sounded out against the mountains
at di..k. now the honrse "Jul vlvs''r la
heard all through the night. On the roof
sand bags are piled as breast works, and
rifle holes are punched through the sa
cred wal'a.
Kor the first time In more than 880
years, the old pile, known to thousands
of tourists, Is closed and from the top
soldiers in dirty blue uniforms edged with
red, keep a lookout over the surrounding
plains.
The possession of the ancient church by
military authorities modernises a bit of
Mexican history, an intended; reform of
Benito Juares. Among the laws made by
Juares were many referring to churches
and clergy. One was that all church prop
erty then existing should be turned over
to the federal government. The old mis
sion founded by no one knows whom,
but found by the Franciscan friars, re
mained In use by the thumb, but the
ground on which it stood and Its walla
were of the federal government. With
the first warning of an attack upon Jua
res the church was slezed by the sol
diers on account of its thick walls and
the priesthood which for more than three
centuries employed It. are temporarily
outcasts from Its portals.
Train Service C'nt Off.
No trains are running either out of or
Into Juarez and Chihuahua, a distance of
2ti0 miles. Twenty-four bridges have been
burned. The last connecting link, even for
short distances, was lost Monday, when
the telegraph wires on the Mexico North
western railroad were cut, and officials
refused to send out trains. An insurrecto
tapped In on the wire a few minutes be
fore It was cut and. after a few Insulting
words toward the government. Invited the
federals to send (leneral Navarro out after
them. The lnsurrectos ore especially bit
ter towards CJencral Navarro, because he
ordered his troops to take no prisoners at
the battle of Malpaso. The general was
,
(Continued on Fourth Pa;e.)
GCAlALL'l'i:. Jl A ULZ. OCVl'PlfcD LV
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Eyes Turn to the West
Xtof.' J- 7l MPS
"What the "Western Development Association
NEW PREMIER OF THE MEXICAN
REPUBLIC.
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Photo copyright, 1911, by D. & M. Syndicate.
FRANCISCO LEON DR LA BAHRA.
, Secretary of State.-
Cannon Will Not
Be Floor Leader
Former Speaker Says Honor Should Be
Given to Younger Member of
the House.
WASHINGTON, March 31. Speaker Can.
non today definitely announced his In
tention not to seek the republican leader
ship In the next house of representatives,
stating that he would not be a candidate
for the minority nomination for the
speakership.
Remarking on the fact that he had held
the office of speaker for a longer consecu
tive term than It ever had been held by
any other person, -the speaker said In
reply to a question:
"Of this singular favor of my associates
In the republican party I am deeply ap
preciative. Hut as I said at the adjourn
ment of the recent congress, I do not In-
i tend to seek the speakership again I
, shall, therefore, ask my colleagues to give
to some other member of proper worth
; and ability the compliment of their noml
I nation for speaker. To that man. who
ever ne m"y "' 1 "na" ",,n l"ca"l,re
tne assistance and co-operation that I have
learned are so Indispensable for the leader
I on whom rests responsibility."
i
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Till: i'KI'KI'.AL TIUHJl'S.
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11 a V "N .
JW6 3MCU 'CM r
MTeikM NRtE
is Going to Do.
CASADY PUT UNDER ARREST
Defaulting Clerk of Council Bluffs
Held on Embezzlement Charge.
RELATIVES FAIL TO MAKE GOOD
Mhortasre Continued for Year, Headl
ine att.OOO and (lty Makes D.
maud, Bonding; Company
Flllnsr Charge.
Former City Clerk Albert W. Casady of
Counoil Bluffs was placed under arrest
yesterday, charged with the embezzlement
of $8,000 belonging to the city. The In
formation was filed by John L. McKenna.
representing the Illinois Surety company of
Chicago, the bonding oompany which fur
nished tha- llR.onO bond required by the
city clerk' r.nd his deputy, Th arrest
followed the fallute of the relatives nf
Casady to make good the shortage which
v us revealed about a month ago and con
iiird on March 8, when the books were
checked by M. F. Cox, state municipal
accountant, sent here by State Auditor
Bleakley at the request of Uie city.
It was known two weeks ago that there
was little hope of the shortage being made
good by the relatives. Every consideration
possible was shown Mr. Casady's relatives
and the fullest possible opportunity given
them. His older brother, Thomas Casady,
now at the head of a large manufacturing
business at Mollne, 111., met his brother at
Pes Moines, and In the presence of Mayor
Maloney of Council Bluffs and Chief of
Police Froom declared that the shortage
should be made good. Mr. Casady also
came to Council Hluffs and spent several
days looking over the situation.
Simon taandy Refuses.
It developed later that the best the
Mollne relatives could do was to make up
one-half the amount, and the hope then
lay in the uncle, Hlmon Casady, one of
the wealthiest men in Des Moines, making
up the other. Simon Casady, however,
resolutely refused. Although suffering a
degree uf almost complete prostration,
Mrs. Casady, wife of the former city cler!.
arose from her bed and went to both I' -Moines
and Mollne and made appeal ,
help to save her husband. She renin
ten days ago completely crushed at the
failure of her mission.
Since then various propositions have
been made to the bonding company for a
compromise settlement. Although theie
was no Fpeclflc promise of accepting any
thing short of the full amount of the dis
closed shortage, it is understood the com
pany considered for a while the various
propositions that were made. One of these
was to pay about fi.0(0 with a guaranty
... ...
(Continued on Second I'age )
A. 1. ST A SB.
The
W SHOE
y "For the Mao Who Caret
Omaha Bee Publishing Co..
Omaha,
Gentlemen :
We are very glad indeed
of The Bee a an advertising
a;;o must needs be our heartiest endorsement specifically,
The Bee haa always paid us r.nd we believe It always will.
It U our oldest newspaper and its influence Is very great and
we as advertisers have been benefited by its Influence.
Of course our goods must measure up to standard and
must also be as represented, but even then the constantly shift
ing and growing population makes it necessary for t. s to
rench new people at all times and we have found The Bee
vtry, very valuable in iMs i otmection.
Kespettf ully,
FAVOR MILL LEVY
FOR UN1CAMPUS
Nebraska House Backs Up Removal
to Farm by Agreeing to Ap
propriation. VOTE OF 43 to 43 RECORDED
Day of Debate Takes Place Beftre Re
sult is Reached.
REGARD FINAL PASSAGE CERTAIN
Senate Believed to Be Favorable
When Bill Reaches It
CARNEGIE PENSIONS AGREED TO
Resolution Passes llonse u4 la lew
Heady for the UoTeruor Final
Adjournment lxth
of April.
(From a Staff Correspondent
LINCOLN. March 81. (Special.) The re
moval of the I'nlversity of Nebraska from
Its present campus to the state farm was
approved by the house this afternoon after
an all day debate.
The measure tip for consideration vM H.
R. KM. by Kirk of Boyd, providing for a
levy of 1 mill to be expended In beginning
the removal. It Is expected that the pres
ent buildings will not be all converted nor
the new buildings at the state farm ready
to take, rare of all the students in less time
than ten years and possibly longer.
It Is expected that the 1-mlll levy bill
will go through the senate, as the friends
of removal won a preliminary skirmish
there on the adoption of the special com
mittee report.
New Home In Suburbs..
The new situation for the university will
be commodious and within a short ride nf
the center of the city. The buildings ar
to be erected all In the same style accord
ing to a definite architectural scheme and
agricultural and academic departments will
not have to duplicate any classes.
The debate on the question brought out.
only the arguments that have been ad
vanced In the committee meetings. Several
members argued against the proposition
and advocated the adoption of the com
mittee's alternative, a H-mlll levy to be
expended on the pdresent campus.- When
It was evident, however, that the' H-mlll
levy was not favored they voted for the
bill.
By agreement a roll call was taken In
the committee of the whole merely as a
test, although the question waa settled by
a viva voce vote.
How Members Stand.
The result was aa follows:
For removal:
Anneal Hfllltr MrOn'.
Btrrlar Herr.n M.'IHIi..i
RaMott lioapshkr M.-Krlvl,-
Bolanil Jnhn Kelr
Hiinh Johnaoa Neisc'i
BuKae Kent N'WtJai
t"lark Kltk N'utrmii,
riir.n Kot'Hie PMa
Potezal Iwrn- Klha
lkrt Llvr KiMVr'.K
Pill? Matrau fcanhorn
Gallagher Mnrkett Smith
OenJea Moody sibhlna
Rroanman Moon Taylor llt.i
VUllr Mortany Tayl.s- (M I
UliaUfaon MiArdle Wanei-48
Against removal:
Allen Gait MrKIlk
. Anrienon flnnflf Norton
PalUy Orueber Ptln.-
t baker llanlln Tula
; Kartela Mai-rlngton Wuarl'tnbuab
Brerht Haalk Hrmn
1 Clayton Hatfield Sfheel
i twlHl Mnlmra Shuelh
J Eager Howard shoemaker
j Baatman Joi.ea Hlrdelar
I Kintmbei-ger Undaejr Sink
I Rllta Maal Skeen
I Evani Metiiter Walle V.
Frlea Meyer
Fuller Murphy
.ot voting;
i' Bnnham Hotiah 6ai-
Bulla l.n.linli 6un-
Ckonln Minor
Opposition Dies Hard.
The opposition to the removal bill died
hard and a vote was taken on a motion
by Fuller not to concur as soon aa the
committee rose to report. It waa defeated,
however, 49 to 33. as was also a motion by
Paker to recommit the bill for amend
ment so that the alternative one-half mill
lev) could be accepted.
Approve Carnegie Pensions.
Tire house decided this morning to
l.c advantage of the Carnegie pension
.;nd for college professors and passed tha
joint resolution Instructing the regeTSakof
t lie University of Nebraska to make"vie
necessary application. ThM question at the
lest session was the subject of one of the.
bitterest and most unpleasant debates that
took place in the house, but as a contrast
this year It went through with little spoken
opposition, although the vote, fifty-three to
fi rty, was close.
The senate has already passed the resolu-
j tlr,n and 11 row go Into effect with
the governors approval.
April 6 has been agreed upon aa the date
tav. . aoaantaa. I
Starr-Kinraaii
Shoe Co. (i
315 So. Uth St
Omaha, Nebr.,
N u.
to say a
vcr.i aj to li e i-arits
medium;
our (oiiiinued patron-
It
i