Looking Backward This Day in Omaha CMrty Tweaty Tea Ttu Ag -See BaJtoruu hit at Mtk km The Omaha Daily Bee WEATHER FORECAST. Fair; Warmer VOL. XLI-XO. 226. OXAHA, THURSDAY MORXIXO, MAKCII 7, 1912-TWELVE PAGES. SINGLE COPi" TWO CENTS. TART ANSWER TO The National Capital STIMSON SPEECH Booseyelt Says He Supported Secre tary for Gorernor Because Be- lieTed for People's Interests. ACTED FBOK SEKSI OF DUTY Wu Assailed Tim. with Same Argu ments as How. THDfKS PEOPLE BEHIND HM Says He Wants Primaries to De velop Extent of Support. DIX05 EEPLTE3 TO - M'KDILEY II Smra II lUnreaente tm Csitnon Whom Reeeevelt jUIimh iutliMt that H Weald Accept Kemtuatlen. MINEOLA. 1 I.. March (-Secretary Btimson's speech In Chicago last 1h supporting President Taft for the repub lican nomination brought from Colonel Jiooscvelt today a tart reply. "In regard to (Mr. Stimaon's etatement that agalnet my original Intention I am being forced by certain persona Into the arena this year, I need merely nay," de clared Colonel Roosevelt, "that the state ment la correct, only In the sense that It would be correct to make the same 'latement as to my advocacy of . Mr. Stlmson for governor tn WO, In that conteat, as In this, I was exceedingly re luctant to be drawn into the contest. In hat contest, as In this. I acted only from sense of duty to the people ss a whole, and In that contest I was aesslled with precisely the same arguments by the great majority of those who are now as sailing me. "if I had considered only my own per. sonal Interests and personal preference 1 should of course have kept out of the J9 campaign, hare let the machine re main In control at Saratoga and seen the state go democratic by 3Q0.0M majority, ha under those circumstances It certainly would have gone. I went In because t conscientiously felt that It was my duty to take my pat In the fight for honest government, for genuine self-government by the people, without regard to the con sequences to myself, and I am InMMs right on precisely the same basis and for practically the same reasons. Stlmeoa owes Hla Kethlag. "Let me add, in view of the question of certain friends, that neither Mr. Stlm on nor any other man whom I have supported for public office owes me any gratitude for doing so; support a man, not to get bis gratitude, but because I believe he will render good service to the people, and I ask nothing from any man In return except that be render such service to the people, and I judge him accordingly. "As for the question, concerning "who re forcing me Into the arena,' the an swer Is easy, . ."Which side is making the demand for rpen prlmamlee, and which side la stifling hla demand wherever possible, refusing to accede te it save under compulsion and trusting to the use of patronage, to audi tnethoda as those tried In the recent con gressional convention at Excelsior iprings. Mo., and to those machine lend rns who have turned a complete aomer tault as r-garde the "president during the (aet four years? "These leaders are managing the cm beign against me, and if they were de liberating trying to wreek the republican party they would follow precisely Jh' lactic they hare been following taJricS Which make It seem that they wf tad rather aea the republican party deflated Ihan see It restored to what It was un er Lincoln, and see It become again the genuine party of the people, the party (hat stands for real popular rule, and for the highest Ideals of social and Indus trial Justice, to be achieved through popular rule. Waste Primaries Everywhere. "We stand for direct presidential prefer nlial primaries everywhere, in Massachu- letts. in minors, in rcw zone, tor in rvew i"ork the present primary law. peered by (he machines of the two parties la x pressely designed to prevent either party from escaping the control of the pro fessional politicians and from falling un der the control of the people). If our op ponents wish the people to have their lay, let them support real primary bills. "It In ooea primaries without coercion er fraud, without pressure brought by the nes of patronaga or by the promise or by With the withholding of patronage the aula people of the rupbllcan party de clare that they did not wish ma to be dominated, then most certainly I do not wish the nomination. If they declare that they do wlaa me, not In my Interest, but la the Interest of the people as a whole, Ihetv as I hare already said. I will ac cept, and will strive to serve the people with all of whatever powers 1 jwmesa " Meeereelt Datas Jary Daly. For the first time In his Ufa Colonel ttooeevelt served today as a Juror and at the county court house here he Is earning SI a day. A crowd greeted Colonel Roosevelt when he reached Mlneola from Oyster Bay. A case Continued from yesterday, It was an nounced! would take up most of today's session, so it was unlikely that Colonel Roosevelt would be railed to sit in a ease today, but el see the present case might be completed In time to neces sitate the selectioa of another Jury today, th Jurors were aot excused. Colonel Rooeevelt accordingly put in the time in Wednesday, Jtareh , ISIS. The Senate. hi eesaion at 1:M p. in. Resumed final debate on British and FTench arbitration treaties, which msy be voted ua before adjournment. Game preservation societies advocate federal protection of migratory asm birda before forest reservation committee. Finance committee concluded ita bear ings on steel tariff revision bill. The House. Met at noon. With Mrs. Taft stain oreeent. Law rence strike hearing wee continued before rules committee with city officials testi fying. Governor Gilchrist of Florida at ever glades Investigation told committee he desired Repreaentatlve (Mark's posi tion in controverv be broucht out. Boston and San Francisco chambers of commerce delegations urged govern mental recognlsauon and tou.WKt appro priation for international congress of chamhbers of commerce in Boston next September. Representative Kent protested against "fraud and misrepresentation" of liquor Intereata at hearing on bill prohibiting liquor shipment from wet into dry etatea. Interstate commerce committee prac tically completed Its bill providing legal machinery for Panama canal and will vote on Ita report Thursday. V Secretary Nagel urged enactrnent of eal protection bill before foreign rela tions committee. V FREE SUGAR AIDS BIG TRUST ALONE Votes of Women Big Factor in Defeat of Gill at Seattle SEATTLE. March (.-Couplet returns from yesterday's election for mayor glva George F. Cottertll. S1.SK; Hiram C. UUI, Jl.sie. a majority for Cottertll of M. Air socialist candidates for office) were defeated. James E. Bradford was elected corporation counsel. The mayor-elect tstng committee. widely known ss the national head of the Independent Order of Good Templars and as a prohibition speaker, , ' Practical politicians here at first thought Cottertll had no chance to win, Bepnbliean Minority Beport on Underwood Bill ' Charges Demo crats Allied with Monopoly. WOULD KILL BEET INDUSTRY Measure Designed to Catch Totes of Unwary Consumer. TUBNS OVER FIELD TO BEITNEXS Home Growers' Only Effective Check on High Prices. FOLLOWS AS OTHER CONCESSION Desaerratle Chemical svkrdale Adds ta Pre List, leae Black, I erd entirely by Refiners of V Imparted Raw Material. WASHINGTON, March (.-Proposing to rename the democratic free sugar bill "an act to surrender revenur. destroy com petition and create monopoly," the re publicans of the waya and means com mittee of the house today submitted a minority report on the Underwood bill which will be the next of the tariff bills to be considered by the house. The port was aubmlttcd by Representative Fordney of Michigan. It charges that there Is a union between the 8ugar trust snd the democratic party, and that the free sugar measure Is designed to catch the votes of the consumer, and will tn time deliver the consumer to the mercy of ths Sugar trust. ' The report reviews In the mala the dU- eentlng views of the republican members of the Hard wick Sugar trust Invest Igai- It gives credit to the TM Sugar Season beet sugar industry for holding down ths price of sugar during the advance of last yesr. and predicts that such a safe guard would bo destroyed It the beet sugar men were driven out of business. because he favored slnglo tax. municipal T ne report aeserta that tha Underwood ownership and prohibition. In the last U, uu tt boldest attempt In the week, however, the women and the history of our republic to surrender an churches began to take an active part In important and growing Industry to for me campaign asserting tnat urn s eiec- itgn importers," and that It la -against tlon would mean tha restoration of i,h. donva(lo producers and solely gambling and a vice district. lnlmM ot u,, refiners of Im- The visit of Wllllsm J. Bryan to Seattle ' , tutUi commercially knowa as the also was used to advantage by tha Cot' terlll forces. . Tha single tax amendment to the charter seems have been beaten deci sively. The women voters organised snd car- Olll. On. of th.tr n.mber was a-lgned " ,w .hk. om. to each city square to aid In getting out --- --. . th. Cottertll vote. Special meetings wi P" "'"ZTL held In th. churchea last Sunday for the ,h" M",uc" same purpose and many women appointed Sugar trust.' Beet ladastry Threatened. Tha report assarts that tha' sugar best Industry would bo killed if the beet re fineries were forced to suipend by tariff legislation. There are 112,000 farmers en- to different tasks, all calculated to bring about Ulll'a defeat. Editors Who Adyised. DynamitlflgKnor'" 1 Are Under Arrest (Continued on 6econd Page.) The Weather For Nebraska Unsettled weather and robably snow Curries; slowly rising teaa erature. For Iowa Fair; slowly rising tenipcrav are. rratperateara at MANAGUA, Nicaragua. March. i -An extraordinary outburst of antl-Amsilcan feeling led to the arrest last night of fifty of ths mora prominent ringleaders, who are being held In detention until Secretary of State Knox has departed. This Is the first Indication publicly sx- pressed of oppostllon to tha Central Amer ican tniTof the' secretary of state. The Jr- rafas" arrested include the whole or thjT edTtoalal staffs of ths Dlarlo do H icaragoa- and ot the Diarto Modemo. wnicn naa puoueuea a numuw v. and placed headllnea over them sug gesting thst dynamite should be used against the secretary of state. All dlspatehea leaving this city are sub jected to keen censorship. The program of official visits was car. rled out this afternoon. The friendliest feeling appears to pre vail among the crowds on th. streets. BAN JUAM DEL SUR NIK. March .- Secretary of State Philander c. Knox was present at a special session of the congress today when th. chairman, Senor Suares, delivered an eulogutlo speech. Division of Diocese Revives Talk Omaha to Be Made Province DAVENPORT, la.. March S.-TI1. an-. nouneeoeat that a new Roman Catholic diocese has Just been created tn No- bnmslta and with Kearney as the See city.' revived rumors In Catholic church circles here today that Omaha will soon be created a new province with Ita bishop as srehbishop. Tnta plan was discussed when the blahopa of th. province of Du buque met prior to tha creation of ths w diocese ot Des Moines and It was d that tha latter action was merely a step toward the ereatron ot a new archdiocese. Tba new province would Include the three dioceses In Nebraska and those of Montana and Wyoming, leaving the archdiocese of Dubuque with the four Iowa dioceses as a province. Miss Christobel Pankhnrst Missing LONDON, March (.-Miss Chrlstsbel Pankhurst, the auffragtUe leader, who was arroneously reported to have been arrested on a charge of inciting to ma licious destruction ot property last night, baa disappeared and thus tar has baffled all attempts of the police to trace her whereabouts. , Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Pethlck Law rence, Joint editors ot Votes -for Women, who were arrested last night, and Mrs. Emmeune Pankhurst and Mra. Tube, who were brought from Holloway Jail, wars arraigned at Bow street ponce court this afternoon on a charge of con spiracy and mcirjng to commit maik-ious damage to property. The four prisoner were remanded by the magistrate for a week, bail being Yesterday. Hour. Deg. a. m 11 a. aa 12 7 a. m.. U S a. m 13 a. m. 14 M a. m .7. K II a. m 1 U m. n 1 p. m.... a 1 w. m Xi S p. m Archibald Henry Bodkin, counsel for the a- m W treasury, prosecuted on behalf of the S ti nallllin". S "vernment. Formal evidence was given T p. m.7T."V.'J.'.'. m aa ta tn. arrest ot tbe prisoner and ths S p. m......... 27 jeasa was adjourned. . . tion In th. tariff on augar.1 Predicting dir. days for th. sugar con sumer, th. report saya: "Nut in the palmiest days of the trust when Ma, Kavemyer ruled Its fortunes with a rod ot Iron and an ambition bounded only by the confines of this rountry,' did" th. American Sugar Refin ing company ever monopolis such a por tion of th. sugar oonsumed In th. United stales as this bill would deliver Into It keeping." ' " Th. srsertion that the Underwood bill will help' the sugar refiners and destroy the beet Industry is followed by the In sinuation that there haa been collusion between th. democratic majority and the Sugar trust. In charging that the bene flrlariea of the tariff removal will bo th. sugar refiners, the report Diekcs thle specification: .leather lever ta Traat. "Another evWence of the cloeeneea of the union between the democratic party and the Sugar trust la found In the chem ical schedule recently passed by the unanimous vote of tha democratic rep resentatives and opposed by the unanl moua vote of th. republican represents Uvea. 'The Faync-Aldrlrb bill places an ad valorem duty of S per cent on bone black. In the democratic chemical srhed ule the duty on all Items In this section except bone Mack is reduced from 3 per cent to IS per cent. Bon. black Is taken out of the section and placed on ths free list Who uses bono black? Practically m on. except th. sugar refineries.. It Is one ot th. principal Items ot exponas In refining eugar. "Nut a pound Is used in th. domestic sugar Industry. 'The man who uses lamp black In painting hie barn must pay a IS per cent duty on the rams, but tbe Sugar trust that Uses millions of pounds of hone black aliall have-4ba duty removed en tirely bo that it can Import the most ex pensive material used' In its business without paying any revenue Into the national treasury. "Now, lees than a month after the pas sage of the chemical schedule, the same democratic party Introduces a bill plac ing eugar on thefree list, relieving these earn, refiners of the burden ot IjIIOO.SM on their rajr sugar. Thus the union has been conaummated." lwawsv. - " . ita w- , I 1- m a 'Syi V M aW From th Clereland P UJn I it tor. Stimson Inspects Drainage Canal CHICAGO. March (.-To the dry ot Chicago the Stoat Important feature of the vlilt of Secretary of War 8tlmsoo win be his Inspection today ot the drain age canal. The trip was planned De cause of the request of the city and sani tary district to take M.N cubic feet of aster a second from Lake Michigan. It la claimed thta much la necessary to property dilute the aewage ot the munici pality. The district now has the right to lake 4,N feet a second. 'T'nlese the request Is granted ft is claimed all ths fish In the Illinois river wUI be kila-d. Approximately et.000,e pounds ot fish annually are sold from the atream. 1 It la maintained by Chief Engineer George M. Wiener of the sanitary district that Chicago 1 will be compelled to ex pend between M.(oa.M and .. tor adequate facilities to dispose ot aewage unless the request Is granted. CONGRESS PASSES BILL TO MAKE MIDSHIPMEN ENSIGNS WASHINGTON. March passed today tba bill authorising that a eonunlsslon of ensign be given to mid shipmen epos graduating from the naval academy. The senaio agreed to the house and senate mra rare to that effect OFFICERS TELL OF RIOTS Lawrence City Officials Before the House Committee . WOVEN LEAD THE CROWDS Car. Wore gtaaed aad several Per sons Hart-e-Thlef galllTsn Says Hev Kaoeta Maa Wha Killed Wemea. WASHINGTON. March (.-Mis. Taft. wife of the president of the United States, sealed behind Representative Henry of Texas, chairman ot the rules committee ot the houee, and braid. Victor Berger, sodallet member of congress, listened at tentively for three hours today to testi mony relating to th. strike of mill work era at Lawrence, Mass, Several tlmea she aad Mr. Berger convened. This w as th. eeoand day en which Mrs,. Taft bad appeared at tha hearing. Attired In a modest dsrk blue street dress and brown plumed hat, Mrs. Taft entered tba crowded room, accompanied by hen niece. Miss Anderson. They walked unasstsled around tha crowded roam surrounding tha witness chaia. and. passed tha psuplolluad against th wall. Aa th. testimony progreMed she ap peared very much Interested and defied tha cigar and cigarette amok that filled the room. It was reamed today that another visitor at ths hearing yesterday was Mine Anne Morgan of New York, daughter ot J, P. Morgan. She stood In the crowd surrounding the witness room for soni. time and left unannounced. , C. K. Lynch, commissioner ot public safely of Lawrence, resumed the stand. He first told ot lending personal financial assistance to some parents who ware par. suaded not to send their children from Lawrence. "Did tbe city authorities and cltlsana make any effort to settle" the striker' asked Representative Hardwlck, "Yea, air; tba city government commla al oners met with the etrlke 00m ml t tee and tried to arrange a meeting with the mill owners. The mill owners Refused to deal with tha organisation, but would with their own men." 1 The easamlasloaar said b psmnally saw on. riot about th. mills "I saw a crowd hurling rock, at the mills," Leaked I the Law, "What section ot the statute authorised yon te order the police to prevent cltlsana leaving Lewrencer aaked Representative Stanley. "It was looked up st the time the statute I think was that preventing child ren a departure without parenta' con sent." "Did you Instruct tbe police to get writ ten consent ot their parentar' "Tea" "What if the parents Was present st the depot r r "Well, that would be different it we knew tUey were tbe parents." "Did you read that law you say you have on the atatute books of Massachu setts on which you acted la this matter?" -1 did not." "Did you order th police to Jail tba children r "I left that to the maa who had police experience." Captain John J. Sullivan, acting chief marshal of Lawrence, was aaked about tha stabbing ot aa Italian boy. "Soldiers were going across a trestle bridge," he said, "when this boy rushed at one of them. A second soldier prodded him with a bayonet. No report ever was made t tha poll:, ot true cam. , "No one knew what was In the boy a mind, but tbe supposition Is-he Intended to push the soldier through through the trestle. The boy was taken to a hospital and recovered." J Sullivan said one morning the strikers planned to form an endless, chain parade, locking arms to prevent persona who wished to go to work from reach ing the mills. "Although they did not do this, he continued, "they did OH several of the streets leading to tbe mills I am sure there were S.WS people in those rsoba "Lata la the day the strikers began pulling the trolleys off cars all along the Una. The cars were atoned and people driven out. I aaw one man pick up twe chunks of Ice and hurl them. I arrested him aad was pelted with lea Aa Americaut who struct me In the head, a particularly hard blow, was the only maa I hit. I saw there also a carpenter wounded, assaulted by strikers, after they had dragged tela front the car." Selllvaa Telia at Blele. The crowds war. usually led by wo men and children. They were always In the front rank and soma times women J. T. Sneed Killed by Tenant, Who Then Commits Suicide GhORUETOWN. Tex.. March l-Johfi T. Sneed was killed her. today by one of his tenants, K. O. Illllard. Th. assassin killed ' himself. He said he allot for revenge. John fi Kneed waa the father ot John Real Sneed. The latter recently aaa on trial for the killing of Captain A. (J. Boyre. Tbe first tragedy waa the sequel to the elopement of Captain Buyce's ton with Kneed e wife. The Kneed trial waa not derisive, the Jury falling to agree. Illllard met Sneed In front of the post office and he opened firs Immediately, killing Sneed inetanlly. ' Then ha killed hlniael". lie left a note saying Sneed had treated him badly, and that he first had Intended to kill and then ta feign Insanity. At first it was erroneously stats that Al Boyoe, whose elopement wltb John Real Sneed'a wife started th. feud, had dene the shouting. It la believed young Boye remalna In Manitoba, WINNlPKtJ. Man., March l.-A. O. Boyre, yr , whose father was knot and killed by John B Sneed, la said to have left here nut ThurMay for 11 adjoins Hat, Alberta, where he Intended to pur chase a fnrm. CALHOUN CALLSJQR TROOPS Sereral Hundred Hen at Manila Will Go to Tien Tsin at Onee. BRITISH KISSIOSAKY IS KILLED Rev. r. Bar at Iks Inarch ef K.ag laad la At larked by M aliases Soldiers Near ' Pfie Tlag, Pa. WASHINGTON. March (-American iMInlKter Calhoun haa called on Major General Bell at Manila for more Ameri can trope tor China service. General Bell lias Informed ths War department, and It la expected that he will dlapatch the re maining battalion ot tha Fifteenth Infan try, numbering about' TOO men, to Tien Teln at once. Minister Calhoun reported that British missionaries In ChlhU province have been attacked and that native .Chrte tlans In the province of Shantung have been maaaarred. Republican troops are reported to be leaving Chefoe today fur Tien Teln. The minuter adda that while en Imme diate danger threatena Peking, eddlltOBel troopeare needed at Tien Tain, Hastings Camp Says Talbot's Circular Nothing But Bluff HASTINGS. Neb.. March l.-8ieclal Telegram.) Denying that the head consul or other executive officers have the right to cancel certificates of member so long as they per their duet, Walter dJvlnga ton, head of insurgent yueen City camp. today declared the alata meeting called for March W here will be held regard leae k)f the threat of Head Consul Talbot to auapend the members who participate. ' The head consul's official communica tion la a bluff, a system of coercion, a desperate attempt to whip th. members in line." he aaid. "The Woodmen of the stste have a legal right to meet and ac cording to the reports we hsve received we believe the state convention here will be Ihe biggest ever litld by the order In Nebraska." livery member of Queen City canip has received from Head Consul Talbot a com muniratlon asserting thst th. camp Is guilty of willful and malicious Inaubonlt- natkia In calling the etate convention. John Mitchell Refuses to Make Promise to Court WASHINGTON, March (.-John Mit chell, vies provident ot the- American Federation of Labor, today declined to give to Judge Wright ef the district su preme court any assurance that he ex pected "hereafter te lend adherence to the decrees ot the judicial tribunals of the land." To do so he declared would be an ad m ttxl on that be had heretofore failed to comply with lawful " decrees. Mitchell said be had rather be convicted of con tempt then be acquitted on any other ground than the facts In tbe case. Taft Secures First , Delegates in Iowa OSKALOOSA. Ia., March (.-President Taft today secured the first delegates chosen in Iowa to the national republican c nventlon when the Sixth district con- Iventlon named J. A. Devitt of Oakaloosa, and Harry G. Brown, Slgouroey and In structed them for Taft Resolution. In st acting the deLgaei to "vote fiisL last snd sll the time for the re-nomination of William H-.Tait," were adopted. (Continued aa Second Page.) WOMAN SENTENCED TO DIE IN ELECTRIC CHAIR PLTMODTK. Man." March (-For the first time tn Massachusetts criminal pro cedure a woman. Mrs. Lena Cuaumano of Hull was today sentenced to death in the electric chair by Judge Qulnn in the Plymouth superior court here. Enrico Masdcll. whose name has been Angli cised Into "Harry Marshall' and who was convicted Jointly with Mra. Cuaumano for the murder of the woman's husband, Frank Cuaumano In September, in(, also was sentenced to do foreign troops are aaalaUng Ihe Chines Offlolalt In preserving order. - rltlKlMlaaleaaey la Killed. PKKINO-yareu. S.-A " tmaaionaiy' named F. DsjT belonging to th. Church of England mission snd attached to th district of l'ao Ting FA, was killed to day by mutinous Chineae soldiers. Sir. Day, Biahop Charles P. Scott, ot ths North China dloces and another mis slonsiy, F, S. Hughes, were making a regular tour of the mleelon stations In the vicinity of Pso Ting F11. Arriving st Tien Chwank ring. Bishop dcett sent Day and Hughes to Chin Chow to Ictch letters. The two. mlsloneriee found mutlnoua soldiers sacking ths tewn. Thess commandeered the mte alonarlea carta and on the mlaaionarlea attempting to recover them, Mr. Day was killed. Mr. Hughes took refuge In ths town hall, where he atlll remain. , A British attache from the legation here, accompanied by a detachment of eight Brttlah aoldlers, left this morning jfor Chin Chow te rescue Mr. Hughes. General IJ Yuen Heng. the vice presi dent ot ths Chines, republic la leav ing Wu Chang for Nanking. ;here he will take the oath aa proxy tor Yuan Shi KaL Ihe president elect of the republic. Tang Sho Yal also la proceeding from Peking to Nanking to take the oath aa premier. When these formalities hare been com pleted th. entire republican cabinet will oome to Peking at once. Tree pa WHJ ball Friday. I MANILA, March (-In reaponae to th request of United States Minister Calhoun at Peking, Major General J. Franklin Bell, commanding the Philippine divis ion. Is sending: another battalion of tb. Fifteenth Infantry from her to North China. The battalion will be under com mand of Lieutenant Colonel Edwin A. Root and Its compauks will be brought up to VJD men each, making the battalion MO strong. Additional men alao will be sent to th. battalion already In North China under the command of Major James M. Arra amlth, bringing lis companies alao up to ISO each. Th atrenglh of tb Fifteenth Infantry la Northern China will thus be Lara. The tranaporta Seward and Li scum, which will convey the troop to China, will depart on Friday. Senate Fixes Time to Vote on Treaties WASHINGTON, March (-The senate today agreed te vote at 4:W o'clock to morrow afternoon on the ratification ot the arbitration treaties with England and France. KILLING OF WOMAN BY BOMB BAFFLES CORONER'S JURY NEW YORK, March (-The mystery Involved in tjie killing of Slra. Helen Walker by weans of sn infernal machine in her apartment on the west aide early last month, bids fair to remain unsolved. A coroner's jury completed 'ita official inquiry Into the case today and returned a verdict that the woman "came to her death from hemorrhage, lacerated wound ot the heart, inflicted by the explosion of a bomb aent to the deceased by some per son or persons unknown to the Jury." Charles f. Dickinson, who waa arrested the night Mrs. Walker waa killed and later released, was today discharged as a material witness, ss wss Edna La Marre, a chorus girl friend of the dead 4 WIFE IS ACCUSED BY WOUNDED MAN Death Expected to Follow Shootinf of Atlanta Building Contractor as He Lies ia Bed, SHE THREATENS DfJTJEED XAI Will Take Away Use of Her Wealth from Husband. MBS. GRACE PUT TOTDEjI AB&EST Woman Hakes Attempt to Pretest Doctor Seeing Spouse. XAEEUD LEES THAH OHE TEAS Peltee D I Braver Ore Recently Had Life laeered for Twenty-Five raeaaaad, with Wife as Beneficiary. ATLANTA, Oa March (-"Ood knows I am Innocent," exclaimed Mrs. Daisy I'.rich-Ople Grace thl afternoao ofter her release on bail, pending a hearing on the charge of asratiU with attempt te murder hr young husband, Eugene H. Gtaee, prominent building contractor. w ho waa mysteriously shot at their home yesterday. Tonight physician said Grace has out slight chsnces tor recovery. The ballet penetrated the left aide, going througn the lung aad lodging, near the spinal cord. Pneumonia already ha set In. they say. Development have followed fast since arses telephoned the police to rush a doctor to hi house. DM lour wife shoot you!" ssked a policeman, after breaking down the door of Glare 1 room and finding Grace on the bed. " "It begins to look that way," th. wounded maa replied. . Aerneea Wife at Pheetlag. Mrs. Grace waa located at Nawnan. Oa., at the home ot her mother-in-law, who accompanied her back to the city. On her arrival Mrs.. Grace was arrested snd taken at once en her own reiueet to th hospital to which her husband had bee removed. Seeing her. be said : "lie lay, you are the one who ahot ma" "Why. ho' can your ah protested, "you are trying to make me out a mur. derer and they will take me to Jail to night." . 1 "You arc th one wbo tried to kill me." rGac repeated. "If you parent In tliat t will take the power ef attorney which yon exerela away from yow," aaid Mrs. Grace, who wa formerly the wife ot a wealthy Phil adelphia pulp manufacturer, Grace then relented. "I don't know who did It." lie i-aid. Her ta th story told by Mr, (trace: "I left th heue at II: IS ta go to New, man, where I wa to stay while Un H''v.'.iai--jL''t ''rilM'P..-r-M ( neon tral. When t left him. my hus band wa about ready te get up I knew that, he a not feeling well, but did' not think he wa very sick. He said he would meet m at tha depot, but when he failed to do ee I went on to Newman, thinking he had been detained pa bust nesa The next thing I heard was when I reached th horn of his mother. They said there that Gene bed been ahot. sly arrest and the aeousatlon ot my kin bend I all a horrible mletake." Abaadaard by Weauaa. Grace told the police when they first reached him that ha that discovered he was shot at ( o'clock In the morning, when he awoke with a burning ena- tlon In hi aids. - ... 'I told my wife,' be aaid. "and asked her to get a doctor. Sh left the room and came back later, saying she waa unable to reach on over th. telephone." Grace aays ha than became unoonscious and when he next awoke he worked his way to the telephone and called the police. Much importance la attached by tba police to the corroborative testimony of J. C. Rulfla and hla wife, aegro serv ant. The woman aays she . made a fir la Crete's room about I o'clock at Mrs. Grace' request. .While ah waa in th room, she says, Grace groanec aeveral tlmea and Mrs. Grace aaid; You are not sick. Gene. Tou art sleeping." Ruffla eys Mrs. Grace told hlrata aha was leasing the house that me' husband waa sick and I that be ha4 wanted a doctor, but bad changed hit mind and If tba doctor came ha wa. to be ent away. Mrs. Grace denial glv Ing any. auch instructions . . rintnl'wllb Ksapir Shell. A 22-callber pistol waa found en a win ' dow sill In the hall, on the floor below Gf ace' 1 room. It had en empty. etaoU ' (Continued on Second Page.) Adrertisinf Men are agreed that one paper in tne Home is worth more than two on the street. Frank C Builta, publicity man ager for the Nebraska Telephone company and for the Omaha Ad Club, has emphasized this fact. The Daily Bee is the paper that goes into far the greatest number of Omaha homes. It Is tbe paper that advertiser use for reaching; people- with purchasing ability. Small Advertisers use Bee want ads when they wish their message to eater the home and sell goods. A Bee want ad costs but a few cent. It bring wonderful returns. Telephone Tyler 1000