unday Bee, NEWS SECTION WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska rtnrll fair. For Ioa -Generally fair. PAGES ONE TO EIGHT. VOL. XLNO. 52. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 18, 1911 SKVEN SECTIONS-SIXTY PAGES. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. i X The . Omaha SUFFRAGISTS IN LONDONPAUADE Forty to Sixty Thousand Women in a Procession that it Fire Miles Long. tLTLTTANT AND NONMILTTAHT All Questions of Cute Art Thrown to the Winds. MANY CHARACTERS PORTRAYED Females Garbed es Queens and Scrub Women Rub Shoulders. LANCES A5D EARNERS EJ LINE Described mm thr tire test Drmnitffc tlM In flnppitrt of Woman Snf fragr that the World Una . ICver Seen. I-OVT'ON. June J" -Tli procession of mffrazl:' w!irti traversed th streets of Coming and Going in Omha ICE MEN DEFEND FIXED SOIIEDULE Small Peddler Sells Product for Less Than Scale Exacted by Big Companies. ( sgltzd EVERY 'cwz. zzmr) OTHER CITIES SELL CHEAPER Omaha Distributors Put Blame on Short Harvest Season. PRICES FIXED EARLY IN YEAR r Lord .i this evenlnir. prior to th mwllm I at Albert bull. was rrobanlv justly ne st r:b';rt by "General" Mm. Drummond th "f rtt prorepslon of women In support of th suffrage mjvmr.t th world has arm seen." From l't.'KV to on.MO women, according to th va-v'ne. fsMmr.a. marched In th five mile proves -'.(in. which started at tha Vic toria f.n h.iii1miit. whlnh leads aairt from Weetmlii-ter br!lg . ard proceeded along th coronation n -i'o to Kennirtor. Militant and turn militant auffrsgettea combined tn Hits rci-arlon; all ourstti'n of c : tttb vr P'it -'de. and queens, op thow garbed to rprennt such characters as ltnadlcaa. Catherine of Arniron. Mary. Queen of 9- t?. end Omi-n Victoria, rubb-d I shoulders with fellow workers In the suf fro ci::-i frrn th swat shop of Whlt chaiel. t.: ndreds of hlwto-le oharactsra from tho errly arris down to fimnt Vlotorlana Ilka Charlotte Frinta. Oiace Darling, Jenny Lind a. V!. TrownlnfT wr portrayed. Povcn hundred, women who had bon 1m irlsoned for the caus formed a striking fe.ituie or the . Pageant. 'They carried lancee with brtnnern and the suffragette colors. There -were many Americans tit the rankd. Miss Inea Mulholland rode at the head of the brigade. Gertrude Elliott, th American actrs. was another parader. Mia Uryce. a daughter of John A. Hryce, a member of the House of Com mons, and a n!ee of the British' ambassa dor at Washington, was at the head of on contingent. Other prominent women In cluded Ann) Beaant; president of tb Thvosophlual society; Sarah Grand, th novelist; Princess Phuleep Singh, Mrs. Wil liam a. Cavendish Bentlnck. Lady Frances Balfour. sister-in-law ' of tha unionist trader; Mrs. MHHcent . O. Fawcett, Mrs. Kmmelloe Pankhurst and Mlaa Sylvia Pankhurst - One ' brtgad) waa made up of women plpera In highland costume, who played a Stirring march, white scores of banda led different contingent. . ', ' MORMON BAPTISM AT SEA Holiday Makers at Sdrlad, Kmm laaid, tee Two Yui( Waiasem Immrraed. LONDON", Jur IT. (8peclal Teletram.) Thouianda of hohiay makers on Roker llnach, Sunderland, witnessed a Mormon baptism at sea. After addressing a great crowd, tha Mormon missionary, who wore aelther coat nor veat, suddenly walked Into tha aea, leading by tha hand two pretty young women, attired in white summer cos tumes. When tha water was on a level with their, shoulders, they slipped and th . missionary made a number of ges tures, put his arms around th waists of tha damsela and Immersed them. Th dripping trio then marched back to th ' beach, singing joyful hallelujahs. Before ha left th Mormon addressed a few words to th crowd on th virtues of baptism. ROBINSON BEHIND THE BARS 'Two) Venra la Minnesota Penitentiary tot Franaalent l's of the Malls. ST. PAUL, June 17. Tonight Herbert F. Robinson will be behind th bars of th Minnesota penitentiary to begin serving a senteno of two years for fraudulent us of th mails. In connection with a broker age business. Hoblnson was sentenced by Judge Pag Morris in th United States district court at Minneapolis, three years ago, but while out on S1U.0C0 ball, .fled. He was brought to Bt. Paul today front Montreal in charge of special agents of th Department of Justice, STEAMSHIF STEWARDS QUIT Men In Maria Depart af Soata- era Paelflo Threat t Take a sea and Steker Alans;. NBW YORK. June lT.-Flfty stewards of tb steamship Momua, plying between New York and New Orleans in the marine de partment of the Southern Pacific railroad truck today. They said they would take forty others with them and that 190 sea men, stokers and coal pasars would fol low. The men quit work without disorder. The Weather , Temp rat are at Oataha Yesterday Hour. Deg. ... M ... 7 ... 6 - t.wi4rl Local Raoard. lU. Via, lso UM. Highest yeaterday T7 tl 7t Tl I...KMI yeeterd&y US t 4 Mean temperature 71 fto 71 M PrvcipitaUun ti T . .11 Temperature and precipitation departures from uif uuiina,: Normal temperature 7J li.-riiieney for in nay 1 Total excess since March 1 toe isurmai precipitation it Inch Exrees for the day tm-h Precipitation sine March 1 70S Inches Dt'ficlenc) since March 1 1.7! inches Iirflclency fur eor. period In 9Y ! Inches Ih ticiem y fvr cnr. rld In 14.3 6 Inchee T indicate trace of precipitation. L. A. W KLalL Lucal Forocaalar. MS'--: BEADY ? GENERAL DIAZ FEELS GRIEVED Former President of Mexico Gives Out a Statement. OLD MAN PHYSICALLY ENFEEBLED Forvettlaa; tfc Merits of His Admin istration, People Allrwd Them erlv to Re Draciced 1st si nvolatlonarr Move. , CORUNNA. Spain June 17. Physically enfeebled and sick at heart. General Por flrto llas. an xile from the republic of which he waa the chief builder, at laat has yielded to an impulse of self-defense. In a formal statement he justified his adminis tration as president of Mexico and re proached his countrymen for what ha de scribes as their Ingratitude. The expression, the first of a personal nature since ha was forced from ' office, waa made on board tha steamer Tplranga during .th .brief stop. In .this harbor last night, Dlas had received the governor of Corunna and the commandant of the port, who, with their staffs, had boarded tha Vessel at the' direction 'at he ' government to present th greetings of Spain and tha Mexican consul. When Dlas waa approached by news paper reporters, at flrsj. he asked to be exoused. pleading . indisposition, and ex plaining that " though tha troublesome tooth had been extracted, he still suf fered from an abscess of the lower Jaw, However, after some dtsousslon with his party, th following statement was given to the Frabra Agenlca, tha official press association of Spain: General Dlas is saddened by th recent event In Mexico and th ingratitude of his countrymen. "He voluntarily sacrificed his ambition in th hop of obtaining tranquillity for th nation, foreseeing that If be continued to defend his cause .fea-might efford a pretext for Intervention. "Th bitterness and deep disappointment whleh he felt waa mitigated by the warmth of the manifestation of sympathy on big departure from Vera Cms, 'Much baa been said about a military dictatorship, but can on thus define a regime which rested on an army reduced to' M.9U0 men? "General Dlas, when ha assumed power, bad to deal with conditions requiring nergy, but afterwards th nation ripened and was more able to direct itself consti tutionally. Gencal Dlax's later poll lies were Interpreted by his adversaries aa a sign of weakness. "General Dlas, confident of the good sense of th people, thought that the agita tion would disappear, but the people, easily forgetting the merits of the Dlas admin lstratlon, allowed themselves to be dragged Into a revolutionary movement." During th night tha Tplranga departed for Santander and Havre. Aocordlng to tha present plana Dlas will land at Havre and go with his family to Switserland. King and Queen Are Now Back in London Coronation . Festivities Now in Full Swing- and Are to Continue . Until July. - LONDON. June 17. The coronation festi vities were fully Inaugurated with th re turn today of tha king and queen to Buck ingham palao from Windsor, and th func tions oonnected with th central event of next Thursday will crowd upon on an other . until July 1. when th court will again leave London. Samltat marked tha arrival of their majesties In th metro- polls, th procession from Paddlngton ata tlon to Buckingham palace consisting of landaus drawn by four bays with postll lions and escorted by th Royal Horse Guarda' Large crowds every where welcomed. th king and queen with hearty cheering. John Haya Hammond, special ambassa dor from th United States, will make his official entry into tha city Monday noon. arriving from tha country, where he is spending the-week end. No More Men Are Wanted for Harvest Director Karris Warns Men Not to Come to Kansas Looking for Work. TOPEKA, Kan., June 17.-Cbarlea Harris, director of the state fre employment bu reau, has issued a warning today to men who are planning to com to Kansas to work In the harvest fields. Mr. Harris says th demand baa been supplied and that hundreds of men for whom there is no work are flocking to th stat. RAILROADS GET AN INJUNCTION i Plfty raataaale la Ohla Caart la Ef. fart t Prevent Car Dsaar rnst Order. COLUMBUS, O. Jun 17-Judg E. B. Dillon of th common pleaa court, today granted the temporary injunction asked for by fifty railroads of tha stat. preventing the State Railroad commission from en forcing Its recently promulgated orders concerning car demurrage and making them apply to Interstate as wall as stats business. EOOKLOYEF&' WITNESSES TO BE SUMMONED Entire Illinois Legislature to Appear in Lorimer Investigation. TO HEAR M'CORMICK AND YATES laforaaatloa ' t Be gongnt Relative ta Colleetlea and Disposition of Maadrwd Thoasand-Dollar lash Fnad. WASHINGTON, June 17. The Lorimer Investigating committee of th senate to day practically decided to summon as wit ne'3S in the Inquiry tha entire member ship of the Illinois legislature which elected Senator Lorimer. Cyrus H. MoCormlck, president of the International Harvester' company, and former Governor Richard Yatea of Illinois, will be heard by tha committee Tuesday. Mr. McCormlck will be .Questioned aa to his knowledge of the collection and dis position of the 1100.000 fund, alleged to have been used in procuring th election of Mr. Lorimer. Mr. . Yates will be Interrogated concerning his knowledge of the so-oalled 'Jackpot" fund In the Illinois legislature. The decision to summon - as witnesses practically all the Illinois legislature In dicate tha committee proposes to examine every on having the slightest knowledge of the facts surrounding tb election of Mr. Lorimer. ' ' Burns and Hossick ; Are Both Indicted Indianapolis Grand Jury Returns . , True Bills in MoNamara Kid 1 , ; ntpiajt Case. INDIANAJOLIS. Jun 17. Dotectlv W. J. Bums and James Hoesick, a detective of Los Angeles, wer Indicted on charges of kidnaping John J. McNamara, secretary of tb International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers from this city and McNamara was indicted on charges of conspiracy to dynamite by tha Marion county grand Jury today. In all tha grand Jury returned eight in dictments, but named only the three men In the charges. Three of tha indictments ar against McNamara, who la in Jail In Los Angeles, where he waa taken after be ing arrested In this city April" 22. On In dictment charges him with conspiracy to dynamite Industrial work on' the Peoria 4 Pekin Union railroad at Peoria, 111., and th other two are said to be for storing dynamite In this city. . Tha other five Indictments are against Detective Bums, who Is . under $10,000 ball to the local grand Jury, and Detective Hos sick of Los Angeles, who haa not been ar rested. Governor Marshall, who honored tha requisition for McNamara, "acted clearly within the law and did in tha premises what he should have done," according to th grand Jury's report. Fatal Shooting on Oregon Short Line Idaho Sheriff Fatally Wounded and Conductor Killed by an Un known Man. SALT LA KB CITY, June 17.-An Idaho county sheriff, whose nam has not yet been learned, waa shot and fatally wounded today and Conductor Kldd waa shot and killed on a southbound Oregon Short Line train at Spencer, Idaho, by an unknown man. Only meager particulars have been received her of th tragedy. ' Tn sheriff boarded th train at 'High Bridge and arrested two . man. Whan th train reached Spanoar, the sheriff put his prisoners In th smoking car and began to search them. He took two pistols from on of than and while he was) reaching out for handouffa, one of th mea grabbed up a pistol and shot tha sheriff through th abdomen. Th eonductor seised th man, who turned th platol on th con ductor and killed him. Th prisoners then pulled the bell cord and when th train stopped sufficiently. Jumped off and fled. A poaa is in pur suit. Conduct of Burdge Keeps Him from Bar State Bar Commission' Sustains Find ings of Doug-las Bar Committee in Hit Case. Charles C. Durdge. collection agent, will be denied the privilege of practicing law in Nebraska, aocordlng to the State Bar commission's findings Saturday on testi mony against the character of Burdga Cbsrgaa against him were filed by Har rison H. Bowes, an Omaha attorney, and a committee from the Douglas County Bar association confirmed him. Burdge's peti tion for admission to the bar will be re ported upon adversely to th supreme court, according to the findings of the com mission. Burdg was accused of lack of preparation and other faults, and ths com mission found that he had kept blank summonses from ths court of P. C. Cald well, South Omaha, Justice of the peace, and had sent them out ts frighten creditors lot paying debts, ,,v CONTEST Z3TDS ROBBERS LOOT THE MAIL CAR Shasta Limited on Southern Pacific ia Held Up. I jaaaea.aa PtWeX WORK AND NO SHOT FIRED Stacks of Letters Cat Oaea aad Vnm- teate Raswekes, After Which Mea Dtaasiaear Dowa Streets af Yoaealla. DRAIN, Ore.. June 17. The south bound Shasta limited train on th Southern Pa cific, which left Portland at o'clock last night was held up and the mall car robbed by two highwaymen at 11:15 p. m., between Drain and Yoncalla. The robbers entered the car, held up the olerks and looted the mail. They atopped the train at Yoncalla and mad their escape. Posses are search ing for them west of Yoncalla this morn ing. Although the two robbers brandished their revolvers, not a shot was fired. Tha mall clerks found themselves helpless be fore the weapons of the highwaymen. One robber held them covered while the other ripped open the mall sacks and ransacked their contents. It Is not known how much booty was secured. As the train neared Yoncalla one of the highwaymen pulled the emergency . signal and the train was stopped. Tha robbers then leaped from the mall car and disap peared down the village street. The first intimation the mail clerka had of the attack waa when th door of th car swung open and they found themselves faced by the highwaymen. None attarnnted resistance aa the intruders pr' - -t the looting or tne saexs. , Officers and Bherlff Georgi at Roseburg were' notified an', . .es wer Immediately started in pursW of th rob bers. Premier Laurier Sees . .No Cause for Alarm Canada Would Trade with Mother Country, but Not with Her Alone. LONDON, June 17. At a luncheon presided over by A. J. Balfour, today, Sir Wfifred Laurier, premier of Canada, told the big gathering of British statesmen and over seas premiers that the reciprocity agree ment between the United States and Canada need cause no alarm to any one. Canada, he said, wished to trade with the mother country in preference to other lands, but that did not mean that it should treat with her alone. Whatever privileges were granted to other countries would be given equally to England. "In Canada," he added, "the policy of British preference has been hoisted to the top of the mast and there It will stay whatever Great Britain does or does not do." President Smith is Not Able to Attend Head of Mormon Church Not Anxious to Appear as Witness in Sugar Trust Investigation. SALT LAKE CITY. Utah, June 17.-JO-seph F. Smith, president of the Mormon church, has telegraphed tha chairman of the house sugar investigating committee that his obligations here make It difficult for him to appear aa a witness before the committee by Jun 22. In addition he was not In health to go to Washington, being a sufferer from rheumatism. Tha men In the managaement of tha Utah-Idaho sugar Industry could, ha said, give all the in formation ha could and more in detail. Mr. Smith's messag was tn reepons to one from Chairman Hard wick of tha com mittee asking If Mr. Smith were willing to go to Washington without subpoena. Two of Seven Bird Men Given Places Lindpinter and Bueohner In at Fin ish in the Air Race from Hamburg. c KIFTIa Qermaay. June 17. Seven aviators arrived here today from Hamburg, cover ing th fourth stag of th national avia tion circuit race course, Llndpalnter and Buerhner, however, are tha only competi tor who have made the flight from Ber lin to this place within the prescribed time set for the various stages. - The aviators will remain hers on week, taking part in dally contests, which will be a feature of th program for tha en tertainment of ths American warship crews. Boy Falls Dead on Horns of Angry Bull t . Spanish Shepherd Climbs Electrio Standard to Escape Animal and , Grasps Live Wire. MADRID. Jun J7 (Special Cable gram.) Francises Pradlllo, a 16-year-old shepherd, running from an angry bull near Seville, climbed an electric standard to escape. He touched a live wire and fall dead on th horns of th bulL GEORGE KNOTT FOUND GUILTY In Returning- Verdict Jury Recom mends Judicial Clemency. PRISONER TO DEMAND RETRIAL Aewnaed af Ft rat Denrc Mardrr la Kllllas Wlfa Poll aw I a Daaee, bat Verdict Is far Maa slaaaSiter. George Knott was foTjnd guilty of man slaughter by a ' Jury which had ben out since noon Friday, In a verdict returned at 6:30 o'clock last evening. The Jury recom mended "the lightest possible sentence at the discretion of the court." A new trial will be asked for by Knott's attorney, A. S. Rltchl. Knott was on trial charged with first degree murder for the shooting of his wife, which occurred on the Burlington tracks near Fifth and Williams streets on the evening of April 10. George Graham, en gineer on a late pas;enger, saw a man an swering Knott's description fire a number of times with a shotgun at a woman and testified that he heard her groans aa he went by. When he arrived at the station he notified the police. The authorities found Mrs. Knott dying, her body riddled with 196 shota, aa afterward counted. Knott was found beside her with their little girl. On the witness stand the pris oner testified that the shooting was acci dental. According to his story he asked his wlfa to come home win htm from "Granny" Brown'a, across the tracks near tha river. Th Knotts lived at Fifth and Williams streets. . She refused, but fol lowed later. Ha got home first and re turned with a gun. They met In the dark ness. Knott assarted that there was a man with her, who ' opened fir on him first. ' He shot but hit his 'wife because of th darkness. His story waa slightly confused and die agreed In soma Important details with a statement he signed - shortly after' th crime. . ' ' ." : . James P. English, county attorney, In his closing speech, ridiculed Knott's story as ridiculous and the unknown man with his wife as a mythical personage. ' Knott waa a switchman. House Continues to Discuss Wool Bill Chairman Underwood Expects a Vote Will Be Taken Next Tuesday or Wednesday. WASHINGTON. Jun 17. With a view to clearing the atmosphere of speeches on the wool tariff revision bill, the house to day resumed general debate on the meas ure. with the probability that . another night session will be- held. While the house is , facing the problem of ahuttlng off sugar orators, the senate was forced to remain Idle today because senators had not prepared speeches on the Cankdlan reciprocity bill. This condition will be remedied by Monday, however, for a half dosen 1 speeches, practically all against the agreement are In course; of preparation and some senator even will devote several hours tomorrow to round tng of periods and polishing the rough places In their arguments. Ther were no committees of Importance In session today at either end of ' the capital, th house committees Investigat ing th Industries of steer and sugar hav ing adjourned until Monday. Representative Stephens of Mississippi was th first speaker . for , tb wool MIL A vota on th measure, according to Chairman Underwood of th ways and means oommlttee, probably will be reached by Next Tuesday or Wednesday. Diaz Has No Feeling Against Uncle Sam United States is in No Way Re sponsible for Resignation of Office. PARIS, Junl?. A dlaatch to the Temps from St Bebastln says that General Dlas declared at Vigo that his resignation of th presidency of Mexico was his final service to his fatherland, as he had been con vinced by his friends that only through his wtthdrawsl could peace be restored. Never theless he believed that he could have re mained and won over the revolutionists. When he left Mexico th treasury reserve totaled about 131,000.000. whloh he believed would now be squandered by th revolu tionists. In conclusion, General Diss Insisted that the United Statea was in no way responsi ble for his resignation. ' ONE CENT POSTAGE POSSIBLE Itateaneett by Cewles, Whe Appears Before Committee an Poetof. flee aad Poet Bead. WASHINGTON, Jun 17. Efficient ad ministration of modern transportation is all that la necessary Unmake possible 1 cent postage at once, according to tha testimony of Jsmes L. Cowles, secretary of th Postal Progress lesgue, who ap peared before th committee on postofflc and post roada He urged tha passage of a parrels post and aald that practically 'all tha people of the country are In favor nf it with the exception of th express companies. ' SILYER WEDDING AT CAPITOL Presient and Mrs. Taft Receive Many Messages of Good Will. HEARTFELT TRIBUTE OF NATION Thirty-Three Years Agra Mrs. Taft, Tkea a Yeaaa- Olrl, Attended Sil ver Jubilee of President and Mrs. Hayes. (BY MRS. JOHN A. LOGAN. WASHINGTON June 17. (Special Tele gram.) While the ceremonlea attending the coronation of King George and Queen Mary next week will be on a scale of far greater magnitude and magnificence than the silver wedding anniversary of President and Mrs. William H. Taft, it will In no sense be a mora spontaneous and heartfult tribute of a great nation's affection for those who have been called to rule over Its destinies. It haa been my fortune to observe closely many Important functions snd I can recall none where ther has been heartier desire on the part of ths whole people, of all con ditions, to show the Interest and good wishes for the continued welfare and hap piness df this typical American family. This Is evidenced not alone by the great number of presents received, but by the thousands of letters that have swelled the White House malls offering congratulations. They ar from th great, and from the humble, the rich and the poor, but all breathe the same spirit of good will. President and Mrs. Taft have every rea son to feel proud and happy at these ac cumulated evidences of the high esteem In which they are held by their country 'peo ple. The splendid reception which will for mally mark the sliver jubilee of the Tafta held on Monday will emphasis th mes sage of th presents and the lettera. Only once before, If I am correct In my. hiatory, has a silver .wedding been celebrated In the White House,- That 'Was on December, SO, 1877, when President and Mrs. Hayes celebrated the twenty-fifth an niversary of their wedding. . It is a curious coincidence that Mrs. Taft-then Miss Helen N, Herron. daughter of President Hayes' law partner, a beautl fui young girl was a guest at th Hayes reception. It Is reported that Miss Herron on that occasion poklngly remarked to the president that she would never marry a man who would not become president of the United States. The whole nation Is glad that aha has fulfilled her girlish ambition. Princely Presents Given to a Bride One Hundred Thousand Check to . Miss Sheedy When She Weds Burden. DENVER, June 17. Misa Florence Sheedy bf Denver and I Townsend Burden of New York, were married at noon today at the residence of Dennis Sheedy, father of the bride, In this city. Never In the history of Denver haa a bride received such princely presents. Den nis Sheedy gave his daughter a check for 100,000, with which to furnish her New York home and other expensive presents In alillnn t T Piu.n nt Vow Ynrk father of the groom presented the young oouple with a 136.000 silver table service. The wedding ceremony was performed by Bishop M. T. Burke of St. Joseph, Mo. Tobacco Company is Willing to Be Good Inst-ad of Asking for Rehearing it Will Submit a Plan for Re organization. WASHINGTON, June 17. It Is under stood at the Department of Justice that the American Tobacco company will not file application for a rehearing In the supreme court, aa it haa permission to do any time before June 29, according to the court's order. Lelancy Nlcoll and W. W. Fuller, the company's attorneya, will soon have an other' conference with Attorney Oeneral Wtckeraham, at which they will probably submit some plsn for a reorganisation. TAFT INVITED TO MITCHELL oath Daketans Hope to Get Presi dent te Visit State Despite Declination of Haroa Bid. (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, June 17 (Special ,Tele gram.) Following the receipt of President Taft's declination of tha invitation ex tended to him to visit th Huron, 8. D.. Stat fair, Penators Gamble and Crawford and Representative Burke today presented the president with an Invitation to visit ths Mitchell. S. D., Corn exposition, which will be held September IS to SO. The pre-1-dent said he would take the invitation un der consideration and the South Dakota members arc hopeful that because of his Kansas trip, September 18 to 28, he will be able to accept The Invitation to Mitchell, though given several days ago to th South Dakota members for pre sentation to th president, arrived later than ths Invitation te Huron, and thsy waited accordingly for tha president's d rlslon on tha Huron invitation before pre-a commute appointed by Governor Croth sentlng ths Mitchell Corn exposition bid. I erg for th purpose. Local Consumers Pay More Than Anyone in Middle West KANSAS CITY HAS LOW FIGURE l.oval Dealers Give Explanation that Mlsaonrl City lee Men Ar I.nalac Money on Prodnet They Offer for "ale. rues or ion to covstmma Omaha BO cents . AA MMltl jhrvuvvr ,,,,....... v - Dee Moines. Topeka St. Joseph . . . .40 eerta 40 cents 40 cents .30 So 40 eeatsj Kansas City . At Topeka a rebate of a pr cent Is al lowed purchasers who pay in advance foe eonpon hooks. Ice dealers explain to The Be why that commodity costs more In Omaha than In othr cltis of th middle went. The con sumer pays from 20 to 27 pr cant more for Ice in Omaha then he does in Kan sas City, Pes Moines, Sioux City, St. Jo soph or Denver. Weather condition of last winter wer responsible, say dalrs, for th xlstlnf shortage, which maks It necessary t ship Ice from Clear Lake and other fields. The larger companlss, for In-, stanc the Omaha Ire and Cold Storage, i and the People's Ice and Cold Storage companies, charge 15.00 a thousand to th domestic ronsumr, whereas last year a half-ton book could have ben bought for tl. Penptte this price charged by th larger companies, the small peddlers who buy their stock from the larger eompa nls thn sell It to the consumer for,! cents a hundred pounds. This situation 1 acknowledged by msnarr. ' H. A. Colvln, general manager for the Omaha Ice snd Cold Storag company, ex plained It thualy: "The one-price system to all consum ers, In our opinion. Is fairer than the graduated scale. The man who has room for 100 pounds in his ics chest gets tha supply cheaper than the man whq has twenty-five pounda We pride ourselves In the fact that our wagons supply our customers at any time of the day or night at any time of the year. So when wa saw that there was going to be a marked shortage In the store houses this year, one price waa fixed early in th season, so that ther would be no necessity of making two or three - Increases as . th season progresses. These peddlers com here and buy of us, and they, perhsps, will deliver H Jh.elr customers for a month j or su. cue men mey win quit, wneress I our customers have ths sssuranc .that they will be supplied at any time they need Ice." . "Just Why Is It that every other city , reiated , 8,e to Omaha haa cheap lc this summer, while it haa increased In price hereT" Mr. Colvln was asked. , Open Winter Blamed. "Because of the open winter," he replied. "For a radius of 260 miles from Omaha I there was no ice harvest. There were only ! fourteen harvest days In the last seaaon. when, to assure a full crop, there shoiild be at least two cuttings of that length of time. "Added to the fact that ther waa only one freese to assurs a aupply. Carter lake was five and one-half feet lower than usual, thereby depreciating tha cutting sur face. The normal lea crop for Omaha, J should estimate, would be about 428,000 tons. It Is at leaat 10 per cent short this year. Ws now are shipping In from ths outside to supply our trade. On one ship ment received yesterday ther was shrinkage of 38 per cent on one car. That means an addition to the price to the con sumer. Then the packing housea tak up a big amount of lue, and th railroads. Th situation here Is not unusual, for every five or six years we have a failure. In 1908 the price went to 60 cents a hundred." The fiO cent scalu was put Into effect by all Ice dealers on May 1, Mr. Colvln said. He declared, however, that this price wa bY the initiative of each company to- dlvldually, as far hs he was aware. "Wa figured what our supply would be and set a price whloh would obtain throughout ' th season, sven though w were forced to ship in," he added. "Is there an association or organisation, of ice dealera in Omaha, where th Inter ests of th trad ar discussed T' Mr. Col vln was asked. Organisation Is Dealed. "No, absolutely no," hs cried. William R. Wood, secretary and gen eral manager of the People's Ice and Cold Storage company, said that conditions in other cities were not comparable to those In Omaha. "Why la it that they sell lc so much cheaper in Kansas City thau you do here?" he was asked. "I see The Bee printed an article giving the prices there. But you did not learn of the real conditions. There Is not an Ice plant in Kansas City that la making money. Many of them are on the verge of bankruptcy. There are too many ther.. The public should expect a company to get a reasonable return on the capital and effort Invested. "Artificial Ice plants are a losing propo sition if they are depended upon entirely. Four or flv successive good lc crops would put a 500,000 plant out of business. "W advanced the price to 60 cents a hundred on May 1. I can assurs you that that will ba th only Increase this year. "No, there was, no agreement between the dealera when ths price was Increased. Ws hear through our drivers and other source what other companies ar charging and act accordingly." '. SILVER PUNCH BOWL FOR TAFT Maryland Selects Its Present for th Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of tha President. BALTIMORE, June 17. An embossed Sti ver waiter, a silver punch bowl and a handsome silver ladle are th gifts of ths people of Maryland to President and Mrs. Tsft on th silver anniversary of their marriage. Tha gift wss selected today by i