Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 26, 1911, NEWS SECTION, Page 4, Image 4

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TIIB BEE: OMAIIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1011.
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MURDERERS WERE BROTHERS
Sliyeri tt Marshal Batcher of Mil
owi Valley Identified.
CABJ) nCTUBJE OF PAIR FOUND
" Mlmul Teller for Pr-
ef IeWatlMsUIa ( mrmr fraa
KmwiM Itwi Famllr
tk Tafe4 Dnri,
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Tha murderers af Marshal Butcher of
Mtoaoarl Valley, ena of whom, Ernest
ParaWw. waa found dead lo tha Missouri
river near Ftorenoa Sunday, are brothers,
aocorslng to evidence which has been
gathered by Sheriff Reek of Igan,
Tb sheriff also believes that the other
Brother, Charlie Parslow, met a similar
fata In escaping from the posse on the
Mlaaoarl river sandbar, even though no
trans af tha body has been found.
aoatoard picture of tha step-grandparents
af tha pair, found In a notebook
dropped br them near tha scene of the
shoot! nr. d to this discovery br the
sheriff.
Both man aee ortmhuUs and have served
time in tha panttentiary for burglary.
They served six and a half years In the
penttentJarr at Tort Madison for burglaries
eonmtttad In ratrfteld. Ia., and only re
oentty were raleaaed. The burglaries were
mail, bat the sentences were added to be
oacne af an assault on a sheriff.
ttwvnm Barlars Kit Made.
BherUf Rook bsUemea ths brothers killed
Marshall Butcher because the marshal found
a kit of newtytnaAe burglar tools In their
passes si on. -
A letter was fxmnd In a rultea.se left tn
storage at Dasnport, la., which had been
wTlttea by Charlie at Davenport to Emest
at Clinton, la. The latter, written June
SO, teld that Charlie was having a special
outfit of burglar's tools made at Daven
port. Ha asked his brother "to hurry up
and come to Davenport;" that ha "had
soma Jobs be wanted to pull off," and
that If Ernest did not coma right away
"ha weald get another partner."
Aa envelope of a letter found In the
suitcase snowed that Charlie Parslow had
lived at Wl Rip ley street, Davenport A
box whleh had eontatned fifty cartridges
waa also found In the suitcase.
A posteard picture of the two brothers,
found In the suitcase, was taken by
Sheriff Bock to the tramps who were with
the brothers at the time of the killing to
see if they oan Identify it as pictures 0f
the murderers.
F5rn est Parslow was years old and
his brother m two years older. They be
long to a respectable family in an Iowa
town. a
The brothers learned gold wire work
while in the penitentiary, but did not keep
up their occupation after their release.
FORTUNES FOR POST STAMPS
Millions af Dollars larested la the
toess lm Nsrtable Col.
lections.
t.4
A million and a half dollars for a collec
tion of rare objects small, perishable, not
always beautiful, sometimes with little his
toric interest 4t is a pretty sum to pay.
Btz hundred thousand dollars that Is an
other expenditure that might very well
make ordinary folk open thler eyes. Fifty
thousand dollars a year to gratify a hobby
that ! not yachting or buying old masters
that again would make most persons
think a great many more times than twice.
But these are the sums men pay for
stamps, postage stamps, some new and
some black with the Ink of the canceling
machine, but worth often hundreds or even
thosuands of dollars apiece.
The twenty-fifth anniversary of the
founding of the American Philatelic socjety
la to be celebrated this year In Chicago by
a great exhibition of stamps of many fa
mous collectors. At the same time there
will be an International exhibition In
Vienna.
People who do not collect stamps or who
resrard that passion as one of the passing
phases of boyhood may be somewhat sur
prised to know that two large exhibitions
can be successfully carried on at one time.
They will receive a further shock when
they learn that there are now millions of
dollars literally millions. It Is no figure of
speech Invested In the stamp business.
In Paris Is a. gentleman who calls him
self M. La Renotiere. "Calls himself la
a proper turn of phrase In this connection,
because he really Is a Marquis de Ferrari,
' but he' has come to dielike titles and all
the attributes of greatnees. and lives as a
simple gentleman. This Is the man whv
haa paid for the beet collection of stamps
In the world not less, they say, than a
million and a half dollars.
He comes of an old and very wealthy
family of Oenoa, and the taste for collect
ing la In the blood. His mother gave Parle
a museum, and to this Institution M. La
Renotiere win leave his wonderful collec
tion, that tt may be a delight and a marvel
to his fellow enthusiasts as long aa stamps
pass through tha postage office and adorn
the albums of collectors.
Next In value to the collection of M. Ta
Renotiere comes that of an American, Mr.
a. H. Worthlngton of Cleveland. He Is a
wealthy business man whose one great
recreation Is the collecting of stamps, lie
keeps a secretary who does nothing but
attend to thin hobby of his. He has some
stamps that are worth a fortune and many
that sell for mors than the average pro
fessional man can earn In a month. Pome
time ago the collection was valued at
1500,000, and tt is probable that today a
valuation of fmo.OPO would fall short of
the price his albums would bring.
The British Museum has perhaps the
third finest collection, thru of the late
Mr. Tapllng. a member of Parliament, who
bequeathed his stamps to the museum In
1890. At thst time they were said to be
worth $300,000. but they would bring today
muoh more than that sum.
King George has a remarkable collection
and Is honorary president of the Royal
Phllatello society, but he has seclaltzed
closely. Most collectors nowadays special
ise, because there are so many stamps la
the world that It ts Impossible to schleve
real distinction as a collector unless some
comparatively sma'l field Is chosen. Men
Ilka M. La Renotiere, who have collected
for many years and have spent fortunes
on their stamps, have good general collec
tions, but usually even the rich collectors
have their specialties. King George's ts.
Very properly, the British empire.
Although his collection Is outranked in
value by five or six others of different
kinds, he has the distinction of having
paid the record price for a stamp. Over
7,io was given at auction f ir a t-penny
blue Mauritius stamp of the year 1147 a
thing certainly of no beauty, but one of
the rarest stamps In the world. Not more
than eleven are known to exist.
The specialty of Henry Crocker of San
Francisco has been Hawaiian stamps, and
he has a collection that Is being sent over
to Vleuna to set a pace for collectors there.
He la not looking for prises, for he haa
already won all that can be competed for.
Jn Itndon soma years ago his Hawaiian
tamps won the gold championship medal.
which meana that It was not only the
heat exhibition of Hawaiian stamps, but
the best exhibit shown at all.
There la muoh that la sctereadaf to any-
Most Seiasatiomia
I frljiarJnJ 1
?j EVEHY MAN9
ale We Eveir EleM
7
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22S IV
(LIGHT OR IMRDIUiVI WDIGHT)
IN BKANDEIS STOKES WILL BE SOLD SATURDAY
When Brandeis advertise a big sale every man in Omaha knows it will be a genuine big sale, full of extraordinary bargains. This '
is positively the most wonderful clothing bargain event in Omaha's history. Every suit in stock must be sold in one day.
IX WILL PAY YOU XO BUY YOUR. NEXT SEASON'S SUIT MOW
ALL THE 5N ALL THE -a AI T. TUP
- - . sli a a
MEN'S
$10 - $12.50
SUITS
1? I
MEN'S
25, $30
and $35
SUIT
AT
0 .
MEN'S
$15, $18
and $20
SUIT;
Included In this great lot aro all our
famous Rogers-Peet, Hirsh-Wlckwlre and
Fashion Clothes for men pure blue
serges, fancy worsteds, etc Think what
a saving this means!
SEE THAT YOUR BOY IS ALL READY FOR SCHOOL
A. Great Advance ale Saturday of
Boys9 and Children's School Suits
.These suits are all samples from some of the best makers a "1 AQ
of juvenile clothes. Unusually wide varieties of boys' and) I Jjj Q
children's suitsl double breasted, Russian and Buster Brown I ,
styles. New patterns and wool materials. m
v , Boys' Suits, worth up to $5.00, at
Boys' fine Cheviot and Tweed Suits with extra pair knickerbocker pants
to match; double breasted coat. A splendid value in our boys' &( Afl
section, at . . . ; VUV0
Boys' and Young Men's Lions Pants Suit Broken lots of all our summer
suits in worsteds and fane cheviots, also medium weights; worth up
to 17.00, In basement, at .'
-AT-
$1.98
Men8 Fine Worsted and Cheviot
ODD PANTS
Wrth up to $3.00, at-
98c-$l-$250
New Fall Hats for Men and Young Men
Buy a Stetson hat. It is the very acme of hat perfection and
insures style correctness and best service. All the newest fall
styles in soft and stiff hats are here in the
prevailing new colors and the always cor-
rect plain blacks. Any style for
Wilson's Hats, made in Denton, England, are sold frf Cj A
exclusively in Omaha by Brandeis Stores, at VsiVsU V
The Health Hat at $3 and the Brandeis Special hat at 2 are both
right. Either one will please In quality and price.
Newest Soft'and Stiff Hats, In the 1 Genuine Beaver Hats In brown.
correct shades, will go r A black, gray and
at v v j ian, ai a
JS1 MM
v lit jit a irz
Stores
r iJEzzry
body In ths Crocker collection of Hawaiian J
stamps. They have a "human Interest'
that few stamps can boast. Tha rarest
of them are the "missionary stamps,"
familiarly known aa the "missionaries."
These were stamps Issued when the mis
sionaries first went to Hawaii, records of
the days when the natives danced and
sang and wore wreaths of flowers around
their necks and knew not the atrocities of
modern frsrb. Tha first pae of his exhibit
is devoted to the rarest stamp of tha col
lection and one of tha rarest In the world,
the 2-cent "missionary," a copy of which
sold In Paris not Ions ago for over $5,000.
It Is a rouirh stamp, crudely made, as
miRht be supposed, though Mr. Crocker's
Is the best copy known. You will find It
pictured, but unpriced. In the catalogues,
together with the 13-oent stamp Issued at
the same time. The higher value Is nire
and costly, but nowhere near as oostly as
the blue 3-cent stamp, of which not a dozen
Fpecimens could be mustered In the whole
world. The 11-cent stamp was used on
letters (5 cents postage in Hawaii and 8
cents to this country), but the 2-cent stamp
was for newspapers, and as newspaper
wrappers are not so generally kept as let
ters the stamp Is naturally rarer. In Mr.
Crocker's collection It la mounted like a
picture. New York Times.
SIZE AND FORCE OF WAVES
Tremendous Tower of Ooean Bil
lows on Shore and
Ships.
Measurements of the size of waves have
now been made systematically for many
years, but they relate chiefly to the waves
of the open sea, where the depth of the
water Is so great that the friction of the
sua bottom exercises no modifying effect.
A few months ago the North German
IJoyd liner Brandenburg came into New
York harbor with its crow's nest, fifty
feet above the water line, stove In, and
bearing many other marks of the damage
wrought by a monster wave that broke
over its bows about l.OOn miles east of
Sandy Hook. The officers estimated the
height of the wave at sixty-five feet. This
height is exceptional, but not unprece
dented, for it must be remembered that the
breaking of a wave against an obstacle
throws the water to a far greater height
than the unbroken wave could attain.
Unbroken waves due to the wind may in
extreme cases reach a height from trough
to crest of forty to fifty feet. Mucu
higher waves occasionally occur as a result
of earthquakes or Beaquakes. "Solitary"
waves of this character have sometimes
been ercountered in otherwise tranquil
weather, taking vessels by surprise and
not infrequently sending them to ths bot
tom. According to Vaughan Cornish, who has
probably devoted more attention to this
subject than any other contemporary man
of science, the average height of the waves
encountered In a severe storm at sea is
twenty feet, but the ordinary maximum
height of the waves In the same storm
will attain thirty feet In a storm of very
exceptional violence the average height
may reach thirty feet, and the maximum
height forty-five feet. This Is regarded as
about the limit of the height of waves due
to wind only. Cornish finds that in the
open Bea the height of a wave in feet Is
about one-half the velocity of the wind In
miles per hour.
Tho force of a great wave breaking
against a sea wall or other construction is
so terrific as to tax the strength of the
best planned work of the engineer. A
marine dynamometer for measuring the
i i
Mitt .L
4'
' -
'eaxaa
Beth Hamedrosh Hagodoll Synagogue
I II I I I I II i WIP I w I. ' I ill m 1 I mtmmm I I I I I I I I li i II I
- - ' v ' , ( s -: - .
M ' ' '" ' - - ' v " .
force of impact of such waves was devised
by Stevenson over half a century ago, and
modifications of this Instrument have since
been Introduced by several Investigators.
According to Stevenson the maximum force
of an Atlantic wave Is three tons per
square foot. French engineers find that
the force of the waves on the breakwater
at Cherbourg may attain three and a halt
tons per square foot.
Soma Interesting examples of the height
to which breaking waves may be thrown
and the work they may do In moving
heavy objects are given by Wheeler In
his "Practical Manual of Tides and
Waves."
Stevenson records a case in Which water
was thrown to a height of 106 feet at the
Bell Rock light. At the Alderncy break
water it is said that water has been thrown
upward 200 feet. At Peterhead, where the
"fetch" is 300 miles, waves of thirty feet
in height and from GOO to 6(10 feet in length
have been recorded; the water has struck
tha breakwater with such force as to be
thrown upward 120 feet, and blocks of
concrete weighing forty tons have been
displaced atMevels of seventeen to thirty
six feet below low water.
At Wick two stones weighing eight and
ten tons each were thrown over the para
pet of the breakwater, the top of which
was twenty-one feet above high water;
while blocks of concrete weighing respec
tively 1,350' and 2,600 tons were displaced,
though there Is some doubt whether the
latter movement was due entirely to wave
action.
At the Bishop Rock lighthouse, which is
exposed to the full force of the Atlantic
waves, an Iron column weighing over three
tons waa thrown up twenty feet and landed
on top of the rock.
At the harbor woj ks of nil boa In 1 SIM, u
solid block of the breakwater weighing
1.700 tons, was overturned from its place
and dropped Into the water.
At Ymulden breakwater a block of con
crete weighing twenty tons, placed outside
the harbor walls, was lifted by a wave to
a height of twelve feet vertically and
landed on top of the pier, which was five
feet ( bove high water. .
The above cases illustrates the shert ,
force of the individual wave as an engUK.
of destruction. Scientific American. i
A Total Ecllpsei
of the function of stomach, liver, kidneys
and bowels Is quickly disposed of with
Klectric Bitters. 26c. For sale by Beaton
Drug Co.
The Booklovers' Contest Is on!
'"Just Say"
HORLICft'S
It Msans
Original and Genuina
MALTED MILK
Th Food-drink for All Agis.
, More healthful than Tea or Coffee.
Agrees with the weakest digestion.
Delicious, invigorating and nutritious.
Rich milk, malted. Rrain powder form.
A quick lunch prepared in a minnte.
Take no bu! dilute. AskforKCRLICK'S.
Others are imitations,
NOTICE
On account of the Special Klextion to ba
held on Saturday, September 2, 1311, I will
make no Bottled Beer deliveries that day.
Therefore, kindly get your orders In be
fore that date.
WM. J. BOKKHOFF, Retail Dealer.
MKTZ BKER.
Phones Douglas 119; Ind. A-2119.
Dedicatory exercises will be conducted
Sunday afternoon at tha Beth Hamedrosh
Hagodoll synagogue, which waa raoently
completed at a lart coat. An appropriate
program for the occasion has been pre
pared and speeches and songs, followed by
a banquet, will mark tha opening of one
of ths moat beautiful plates of worship In
tha city. Tha new yuagoa'ua la located at
Burt and Nineteenth streets, and was
erected by the Orthodox Jews of Omaha
The program to ba given Sunday will be
followed by regular services every Satur
day and Sunday.
Chicago
Nebraska Limited
Leaves
6:08 Every Evening
For
Chicago
Arrives at
jiiiii. "irntmi iww in rarjiiMiiMa)iw'sri)wsjsrajsiss!sjiiiiissiiiiswiaiaa
' " ' J i in y I T1 III T ! II ' " "' I "i,
L. XtUig!, .i m v i ii i ..I - i. mi
La Salle
Station
In the Heart of
the City
Carnes drawing-room and observation
sleeping cars and free reclining chair.
Steel equipment; electric lighted
throughout. Superb dining car service.
Provides all comforts and conveniences
of modern railway travel. j
Tickets, reservations, etc., at city v . .
1. S. MtNAlXV. litii;i l asiie;- Agent
TICKET OFFICE: 1823 Farnaru Street
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