Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 04, 1912, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST 4, W12.
8-A
MURDER IN RAILROAD CAMP
Austrian Kills Father and Fatally
.-. Wounds Son at Weston, la.
RIVAL CAMPS ENGAGE IN MOT
Peter Beygovlc,' In right with
"visitor from Other Camp, Palla
Revolver to Commit
Deed.
One man was instantly killed by a
bullet through the heart, another fatally
waunded by a bullet that penetrated his
bo3y just above the heart and a third
nn received a stab wound in the
slajulder during the progress of a fight
thSt took place about 7:30 last night at
Weston, ten miles east of Council Bluffs.
T6 man who did the shooting escaped.
AlJ ara Austrian railroad laborers.
A force of about 150 men Is camped
atJ;Weston, engaged In laying new steel
rails for the Milwaukee railroad com
pany. The men, all of whom are
Aoririans, are quartered In two camps
iyiis close together Just outside the vil
lage. There has been considerable rivalry
b3Dveen the camps since their establish
iutt and recently this rivalry has grown
iiJ bitter enmity and numerous fights
haje resulted.
Xfcsterday both camps knocked off
wSrk to celebrate an old country holl
iax Kegs and cases of beer were on
t;ip in both camps but no serious trouble
occurred until M. Bygovic, (6 years old,
accompanied by his son, about 25 years
ol visited the rival camp. Their pres
ence there was objected to by Peter
Beygovlc, a youth of gigantic size and
19 or 20 years old.
Aged Mast Shot.
The younger Bygovlo became Involved
In a fight with him and was getting the
worst of it when the father Interfered.
The son's assailant then drew a .38
callber revolver and shot the father,
killing him Instantly. The son grappled
with the murderer and received a. shot
In the left breast' Members of both
camps then Joined In the fray and the
fight became general. '
The village has no officers and a call
was sent to ; Council Bluffs. Sheriff
McCaffery and Deputies Leuch, GHlaspy,
Wadding and Coroner Cutler left Im
mediately in one automobile and Night
Police Captain Shafer, Detective Lane
and ' Constable Humphrey started . In
another. Thoy disregarded all speed laws
and reached the village in. twenty mln
uttes: but the ' fight .was over and the
murderer had fled 'from the camp' when
they -arrived. . . . i , . ; . .. ". j
The body of the elder Bygovlo was sent
to town on the Rock Island .and the
wounded son was brought to Mercy hos
pital in an automobile ' driven, by Dr.
O'Keefe. who responded to. the call- for
surgical aid. The wound Is about half
an Inch above the heart and It was said
last night that he would probably die.
The man who received the stab wound
was not badly hurt and was cared for
In the camp.
Bygovic, who did the shooting, was
sided to escape by his comrades and left
after reloading his revolver and getting
an extra box of shells. The officers did
not attempt to follow him last night but
threw out a net which they believe he
will be unable to evade.
Competition Keen
For Winnebago Land
WINNEBAGO. N.b. Aug. 3.-Special.)
Bids for leasing Indian land on this
reservation were opened today and much
interest was displayed by all parties con
cerned. A list of lands to b? leased was
posted at this place and at all the banks
in this county early In June. Bidders
were Instructed to send in sealed bids
equal to. or above the appraisement on
each piece. The number of acres to be
leased and the price per acre were stated
in this notice, bids to be opened on
August 1.
All holders of expiring leases on this
land are permitted to meet whatever
price may be bid for the land on which
they now hold lease. In case this price
is met, the one holding the expiring lease
is preferred.
Three hundred and sixty pieces of land
were up for lease and 600 bids were re
ceived. The highest bid per acre on any
piece was 5 and the lowest bid per acre
was 26 cents. This is a noticeable increase
over the former lease price of Indian
lands. The average price bid per acre
was 12.75.
Farming and graslng leases are divided
into three classes. Leases of the first
class are made by Indians who are
pronounced competent to transact all of
their own business affairs and are made
exactly as any other lease between two
citizens, the office of the agent taking
no part in the transaction. No leases of
this class are made on the Winnebago
reservation, the leases made at this office
being of class two and, class three. In
dians who have proven themselves com
petent to, do so are permitted to make
leases of the second class. The , Indian
renting his land and having the lease
drawn up In proper form submits it to
the agent for approval. If approved the
Indian is permitted to make his own
collection of rental. Leases of the third
class are handled in every , particular
through the agent's office.
All ' land up for lease will be leased
sooner or later, but owing to errors in
many of the bids, there were not enough
bids accepted to clean up .the list Many
bidders submitted bids on class (2) two
land, which Is not leased through the
office, and consequently lost their bid.
Competition is keen among the bidders for
this reservation comprises land that is
unusually : fertile and ' drouth causing
complete failure is almost unknown.
Special Examiner Q. N. Tunnlson,. who
Is employed by the Indian office to de
termine heirship to contested land titles,
left here today for-Wind River, Wyo.,
where he will take up. the work,. of. de
termining heirs to estates on that reserva
tion. Mr. Tunnlson has been working on
the Omaha and Winnebago titles for
about one year and after completing
something like a year's work In Wyo
ming expects to return to take up the
unfinished work here. Mr. Cross, his
stenographer, accompanied him to Wyo
ming.
1
Central Labor Union
?. Passes Resolutions
Resolutions of regret for the death of
the Tate II. Hugo Brandels and sympathy
for the bereaved members of the family
were adopted at the meeting of the Cen
tral Labor union last night- The reso
lutions were prepared by H.i F. Sarman,
7. It Btockwell and Rev. D. E. Jenkins,
A committee was , appointed to draw
up resolutions condemning the aotlon of
Justice D. T. Wright of the District of
Columbia in sentencing John Mitchell,
Samuel Gompers and Frank Morrison to
Imprisonment, and asking that he 'be lm
, peached, to be sent to Speaker Champ
Clark and Woodrow Wilson. '' -
The delegates to the meeting discussed
at length the advanced price of meat
Suggestions were made by several that
an export duty be placed on the meat
. and a law passed prohibiting the killing
of female cattle for a certain length of
time in order to reduce the price. Others
thought a meat boycott would have the
desired effect No action was taken in
the matter.
J. W. Light and J; II. Btockwell were
appointed as a committee to go with the
Board of County Commissioners to Lin
coln to enter a protest with the Board
of Equalisation against the increased
tax fate of Douglas county.
OLlV
E BRANCH SLASHED
IN FIGHT WITH WOMAN
Just, as Olive Branch, colored, other
wise! known as Olive Lucky, stepped out
of a doorway near the Midway saloon
at Twelfth and Dodge streets last night
at 13 o'clock. May Hogan, also colored.
leaped upon her with a sharp pocket
knife and slashed her across the face.
The: knife entered above the left eye
and arely graxed the eyeball. Drs. Harris
and ; Vanderhoof attended her and she
washable to go to her home alone. A
charge of disturbing the peace by fight
ing y?as lodge against both women.
Three weeks ago a similar cutting af-
frayjwlth the same women as principals
leversed was given attention by ths
police. Olive Branch says she is not ths
Cltve Branch that Is commonly spoken of
as a' token of peace, even though she Is
charged with disturbing it
BOY STRUCK BY BASE BALL
1DIES WITHIN TWO HOURS
KANSAS CITY, Aug. I William Brown,
Jr., M years old, was struck in the temple
! a, base ball during a practice cam
Kansas City, Kan., today and died two
l.omv later of hemorrhage of the brain.
Young Brown was catching behind the
bat When a foul tip hit him. The youth
fiii taU-uer fell to the ground, but re
sumed play. Thirty minutes' later he went
to the' home of his father, William Brown,
marshal of the south side court, where
died, o ' - -.
BABY GIRL IS THROWN
FROM TRAIN AT LINCOLN
LINCOLN, Neb., July 8.-A baby girl
less than a week Old, apparently placed
In a valise and thrown from a Burling-
ton train, was found en the outskirts of
Lincoln today by a laborer, who carried
the mite to his home, wnere his wife
revived and cared for It until the au
thorities were notified. The infant seem
ingiy, had lain several hours beside the
track, hot is little worse for Its exposure
! and Is expected to Kve. There is no clue
to Its parentage. '
Ringling's Steward
On Cost of Living
Albert L. Webb, steward of Rlngllng
Brothers' circus and formerly an Omaha
boy, throws some Interesting light on thj
present high cost of living. A talk with
him would do much to open the eyes of
the housekeepers, as well as the voters,
to the true conditions in this country.
Mr. Webb has been steward of the big
circus for fifteen years and has the
reputation of keeping the best cook tent
In the show business. Almost every circus
chef has been trained under him. Further
more, . what . he does not know about
marketing and market conditions Is not
worth knowing.
"It costs me only 1 cent more per meal
for each person, than, it .did, fourteen
years ago," says Webb.. "I know from
the running expenses of my home that
the cost of living, has increased about
GO per cent In the last ten years. But
you see the circus escapes because we
have cut out the middleman; there you
have the whole trouble the middleman.
He is the one who Is making the hard
ship In this country, likewise all the
money. By middleman I mean those who
stand between the consumer and the
producer commission merchants, cold
storage firms, particularly the men who
speculate in the necessities of lite, the
stock gambler and the Jobber.
'Food (s cheap enough In this country
for anybody; it Is not properly distributed,
that's a.i. The law will have to help
out out the middleman, but the house
keeper can do much. How is the mar
keting done for the average family T By
telephone; the delivery man brings the
foou, the hired girl receives it and the
housekeeper does not know its weight
or its condition. It the women who run
homes would go to market as I do and
study prices and foods they would find
their bills greatly reduoed. They should
not go to Just one market but to sev
eral, so they would have a line on prices.
Prices fluctuate and I buy accordingly.
When pork goes up I buy veal. When
veal goes up I drop to mutton. The
market basket Is a money saver, but yoi
seldom see it any more."
SURETIES MAKE ADMISSIONS
Bondsmen of South Omaha Saloonists
Have Little or No Property.
SOME OF THEM HARD TO LOCATE
Assistant Attorney General Ay res
and Ed P. Smith DIwsm the
Vie of Large English
Words.
Difficulty in finding sureties on the al
leged worthless bonds accepted by the
South Omaha Board of Fire and Police
commissioners made progress slow yes
terday In the state ouster suit against
Fire and Police Commissioners John J.
Ryan and Joseph Pivonka. Only a half
dozen sureties were found with sub
poenas during the day. They admitted
that when they signed the bonds they
did not have sufficient property to qual
ify as sureties in the sum of 16,000.
The same situation existed today. Sev
eral men whose names are Identical with
tiiose of men who signed the bonds camp
into court in response to subpoenas and
were sent away as soon as it was discov
ered that they were not the men wanted.
Joe Davoiinsky. who signed the bond of
John Hlnowsky, for whom he was tend
ing bar at the time, said he owned a lot
in Ralston and one in South Omaha. The
Rulston lot was worth $3,000, he said, but
when tn-aichlngly examined by the as
sistant attorney general he admitted be
paid only $225 for It He bought it on the
Installment plan and had no deed to it at
the time the bond was Blgned.
A Polish witness stared blankly when
questioned in elegant English by the as
sistant attorney general. Ed P. Smith
of counsel for the defense made the wit
ness understand by using the commoner
English words.
"Avoid the use of a little technical
nomenclature of your scholastic profes
sion," advised Smith, smiling at the as
sistant attorney general.
Sharp Reply Made to
Secretary Stimson
WASHINGTON, Aug. 3. War was de
clared today . between the house of rep
resentatives and the War department on
the question of granting individuals the
right to take up water power sites, when
Chairman Adamson of tne house Inter
state commerce committee wrote a sharp
letter to Secretary of War Stimson con
cerning the problem. Mr. Stimson previ
ously had' written to Mr. ' Adamson pro
testing against an omnibus water power
site measure reported favorably by his
committee and in which were several
bills that had been subject to attack. In
answering the secretary Mr. Adamson
did not mince words.
''Your letter presents a singular ad
mixture of statements well known, un
warranted' conclusions and erroneous
opinions of both law and the fact," he
wrote. ..:...'.'",'..;.
Mr. Adamson declared the government
could not undertake to develop all the
projects that he held were necessary to
the advancement of the country and that
private enterprises, with strict limita
tions, should be allowed to Invest its
capital and energy In that development
He scouted the idea of a water power
"trust" and asserted that the seoretary
of war, "If he had done his duty," had
legal means and authority to safeguard
the government in all such leases. Mr.
Adamson condemned the 'existing law
which prevents capital from undertaking
water power development work. He said
hundreds of water power, sites, which
might be , adapted ( to the publio ' good,
were undeveloped. . " ' '
Kalleren Expires
Result of Accident
Andy Kalleren died at St. Joseph's hos
pital yesterday afternoon from the effects
of an accident at the Hoagland Lumber
company's yards, Sixth and Douglas
street, Monday morning. ,
Kalleren, who was employed as a team
ster by the company, was unloading lum
ber in front of the saw house when a
piece of board flew out of the rip saw
and struck him in the head. A fractured
skull and concussion of the brain made
it impossible tor him to recover.
COLONEL MATHER WILL HAVE
CHARGE MANY ENCAMPMENTS
Colonel C L. Mather of Omaha, In
charge of the uniform rank. Woodmen ef
the World, encampment at Krug park a
week ago, leaves today for a series of
similar encampments. He will have charge
of seven different encampments before re
turning to Omaha the latter part of Sep
tember. From here he goes to Bingham
ton, N. T., and from there he will pro
ceed to Put-In-Bay, O. ,
After the close of the encampment at
Put-In-Bay be goes to Michigan City,
Ind.; to Lyons, la.; to Hendersonville,
N. C; to Hopklnsville, Ky and to Musko
gee, Old.,' where he will finish his
Itinerary.
Major General Yates of the uniform
rank. Woodmen of the World, Is unable
to attend the encampments on account of
business and Colonel Mather, as adjutant
general, takes his plac
Suicide, on Saturn
Said to Be' a Fake
- .. T. ' t. , :
KANSAS CITY, i Mo., .. Aug. 3.-(Speclal
Telegram.) Circumstances which have
come to light within the last few days
tend to show that Raymond Lyons, who
Jumped from the deck of the steamboat
Saturn the afternoon of July 1, and was
supposed to have drowned, is alive and
In hiding.
Lee Clement, steward of the Kansas
City Yacht club, at the foot of Main
street, and a friend of Booth Baughman,
one of the owners of the Saturn, who is
under indictment charged with violating
the gambling laws, which indictment fol
loyed Lyons' act, told Baughman that a
third person had come to him and offered
to produce Lyons for W00. Baughman
Pryor, owners of the Saturn, are in
Omaha with the vessel.
A prominent liquor dealer Is said to
have overheard a conversation In a down
town saloon regarding Lyons' leap to the
river. He says he heard one of the men
who talked as If they were familiar with
the supposed suicide, say:
. "Lyons had sur put one over on the
public. Lyons is in St Louis now alive
and well."
Money for Refugees
Provided by Senate
WASHINGTON, . Aug. S.-The destitu
tion of American refugees from Mexico,
now quartered at El Paso, resulted in
the passage by the senate today of a
resolution authorising the War depart
ment to spend $100,000 in transporting
them to such points In the United States
as they wish to reach. .
The measure was presented by Senator
Bailey and passed after a brief debate.
It will need the approval of the house
and the president before the appropria
tion becomes available. Senator Bailey
declared the refugees were in dire need,
and in most cases were unable to pro
ceed beyond ' that city. Transportation
would be provided under the resolution
only for those who are receiving some
aid in "shelter or sustenance" from the
government at El Paso.
MEXICO CITY, Aug. S.-Hlgh claims
of Americans against the Mexican gov
ernment for damages sustained during
the Madero revolution will be further
Investigated by Mexican consuls accord
ing to the statement of Pedro Lascuraln,
minister of foreign affairs.
FARMER LOSES MONEY
IN DODGE STREET HOLDUP
Joe Put-line r, a farmer livlmr at Raxt.r
;Ia.. was tiuKged and robbed last nitrht
j while standing on the corner of Tenth
and Dodge streets waiting lor a street
car. . He lost $40 and sustained painful
bruise about the face. V
When he reported his loss to the police
headquarters, detectives were nut in
work on the case and although a good
aescnption was given of the robbers, ne
arrests have been made. '
Danish-Americans
Gather to See Park
Given Government
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Aug. 3.
Thousands of Danish-Americans have
arrived here to participate In the in
auguration ceremonies on Monday of the
Danish-American national park to be
presented on - that day to the Danish
government by the Danish citizens of
the United States,
King Christian nas oeclded to waive the
court mourning in order to attend, the
ceremonies. He will receive the mem
bers of the American committee In
audience and will also deliver an ad
dress at the park.
Count Carl Von Moltke, Danish min
ister at Washington, has arrived here
for-the celebration.
Calling in Funds
to Build Interurban
SilESTON, la., Aug. 3. (Special.) A
for the first payment on the Creston,
Wlnterset & Des Moines Interurban rail
way bonds was Issued yesterday by the
hoard of directors after the bond issue
was subscribed in full. Yesterday was
the date set for the subscription for stock
to be completed. When the directors met
It was found that they still lacked $8,000
of having the required sum due from
Creston.
The farmers along the right-of-way had
met their share, but the problem con
fronting the promoters was right here in
the city. A number of enthusiastic sup
porters of the road came to the rescue
and saved the day, who had already
subscribed heavily to the fund. The call
for the first assessment of 5 per cent on
the stock subscription. When this Is paid
over the work Is expected to begin.
Alice Drexel Thrown
From Car in Collision
NEWPORT, B, I., Aug. 3.-Miss Alice
Drexel daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
R, Drexel of Philadelphia, well known
In society circles in i this city, had a
narrow escape from serious injury today
when her automobile was' struck by an
automobile delivery wagon.- Miss Drexel
was thrown from the machine to a lawn
and suffered nothing worse than a shak
ing up. Her maid, Marie Laglene, re
ceived a' slight concussion of the brain
and her chauffeur, George Koschny, had
a leg broken besides sustaining other in
juries. - , .
Mrs. Styvesant Fish, who was nearby,
called doctors and an ambulance and the
maid and chauffeur were removed to the
Newport hospital. Miss Drexel was able
to go home.
CONGRESSMAN ASKS WILSON
TO SAY WHAT IS REAL BEER
WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.-"What Is
beer? And if so why?" are the .two ques
tions Representative Anderson of Min
nesota wants Secretary Wilson to answer.
Mr. Anderson asked the house committee
on agriculture today for the answers and
later Introduced an amended resolution
calling on the Department of Agriculture
for them.
Mr, Anderson's only curiosity is to
know what beer Is not beer, His consti
tuents raise barley which they believe is
the only grain which should go to make up
beer and that other concoctions are a
snare. '
Mr. Anderson recently, with credentials
from the National Consumers' league, got
from the Agricultural department a
definition of beer signed by Dr. Harvey
Wiley. The definition was not given the
force of law by Secretary Wilson, Mr.
Anderson says, and he wants to know
why. ... . .
The Wiley definition of beer as set forth
In Mr. Anderson's resolution is a "fer
mented product made from a mash com
posed of barley malt and hops with or
without a small quantity of unmalted
cereals not exceeding 30 per cent of the
weight of the barley malt used."
ATTORNEYS WRANGLE OVER
DARROW'S CONVERSATIONS
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 3.-The much
discussed secretly procured stenographic
report of conversations between Clarence
S. Darrow and John R. Harrington again
proved a source of delay in the bribery
trial today of Clarence S. Darrow and
brought to a temporary halt the cross
examination of the defendant.
Asserting that he could show that Dar
row did tell Harrington last September
that he had $10,000 in currency for the
purpose of "reaching" Jurors In the Mc
Namara case, District Attorney Ford
asked Darrow if he had not admitted to
Harrington oh February 14 last In a local
hotel that he did make the statement and
had asked Harrington not to tell of it to
the grand Jury.
The conversation in question was one
of those said to have been heard by
stenographers through a telephonic device
and the defense raised the contention that
the question could not be asked Darrow
because It had not been mentioned when
Harrington was on the witness stand. It
was held that as a part of the state's
main case It could not now be Introduced
In rebuttal of Darrow's testimony.
Oil Part of Booty
Taken by Burglars
Thieves entered the store of S. Muro
at 1004 South Thirteenth street last night
and stole three boxes of cigars and twelve
gallons of oil. Entrance was gained by
unlocking the front door with a skeleton
key.
TRAMPS SET FIRE
TO HARNEY STREET HOUSE
Tramps sleeping In the basement of a
vacant house at 2SM Harney street set
fire to the structure at 11 o'clock last
night. Quick response to the fire alarm
by the fire department saved the building
from destruction. The loss was about $50.
News Notes f Glenwood,
GLEN WOOD, la., Aug. S.-(Special.)-The
3-year-old daughters of Mrs. ' Bertha
Myers-Eulitt died at the home of William
F. Myers in Glenwood yesterday from
the effects of burns received from cloth
ing catching fire while the little one was
playing with matches In the front yard
of Its grandparents home. She lived
fourteen hours.
The Mills. County Teachers' . Institute
will be held at Malvern, August 26 to SL
3. H. Beveridge of Council Bluffs will
deliver nine lectures. The faculty as
announced is Miss Jeannette King, Cin
cinnati, literature; Prof. A. B. Cromwell,
A Nebraska Financial Institution
One Year Old
Have Loaned Cv:r a Million Dollars
Fir Trust Company
of Omaha
CAPITAL $200,000.00 PAID UP
The First Trust Company offers its services many of its several departments.
Kesults are the test of business character. Your business entrusted to us will re
ceive the same careful attention that characterizes our own. The First Trust Com
pany is the natural result and evolution of Nebraska needs. We are in a position to
extend every courtesy consistent with business prudence and moral responsi
bility. We cover every phase of the trust field; assume all its functions and oper
ate all its, machinery. We respectfully solicit your consideration.
TRUST DEPARTMENT
Qualified to act as Executor, Administrator, Guardian, Receiver, Trustee,.
Registrar and Agent; assume all responsibilities. and confer all advantages under
the trust laws; draft wills and probate estates.
BOND DEPARTMENT
Buys and sells municipal and industrial bonds; legality investigated; interest
collected and remitted. " -
INVESTMENT DEPARTMENT
Farm and City Loans a specialty. Warrants bought and sold. High grade se
curities for sale. We offer subjest to prior sale a choice line of personally inspected
first mortgages on improved farms, interest 5 and 5V2, annually or semi-annually,
exempt from taxation. All investors are invited to call and inspect our
securities; list mailed upon request. A good farm mortgage is a SAFE and UN
QUESTIONABLE investment.
, REAL ESTATE, RENTAL AND
INSURANCE DEPT.
Property listed with us brings results. This department is fully equipped and
in the hands of experienced men. If you desire to buy or sell, call on us.
Property cared for, rented and collections promptly remitted. Vacant prop
erty is a liability; we can make it a resource. Repairs made "by skilled mechanics.
We can save you time, inconvenience and money; charges reasonable.
We represent a number of the best insurance companies. Policies looked after
without charge. Insurance is an important factor in business affairs and should
be entrusted in the hands of only reliable and responsible persons.
STATEMENT OF RESOURCES AND LIABILITIES JUNE 29, 1912.
First mortgages' (Eastern Ne
braska) $247,400.00
Bills receivabe 1,805.00
Warrants 1,156.51
Furniture and fixtures 2,376.53
Cash in bank 6,924.39
Cash on hand ; 212.12
$259,874.55
Capital stock $200,000.00
Undivided profits 10,104.58
Farm loans 29,907.47
Bills payable 17,000.00
Sundry account 294.00
Trust funds 2,568.50
$259,874.55
F. H. Davis, Pres. E. B. Stephenson, Vice-Pres. C. T. Kountze, Vice Pres.
L..L. Kountze, Vice Pres. T. L. Davis, Treas.
M. W. Dimery, Sec. C. A. Gimmel, Ass't Sec.
First National Bank Bldg.
Telephone Douglas 1151. Location: 13th and Farnam Sts.
Mayaguez, Porto Rico, agriculture; Miss
Ellen J. Wing. Tipton, la., industrial
work; Miss Mabel Harrison, Lake Mills,
music and primary teaching; Prof. F.
E. Green Malvern, arithmetic and civics;
County Superintendent Masters, conductor.
WOULD ALLOW CONGRESS TO
DEPOSE INFERIOR JUDGES
WASHINGTON. Aug. 3.-A congres
sional "recall" of Judges of the inferior
courts of the United States is proposed
In a constitutional amendment which
Representative Hull of Tennessee offered
in the house today' and . which was re
ferred to In the committee.
The amendment wiheh. would be known
as article xvlli, proposes:
"That for reasonable cause Judges of
the Inferior courts of the United States
may be removed from office by concur
rent reso'.ution of both houses of congress
If two-thirds of the members present con
cur therein. . Such Judge shall have rea
sonable notice and shall have an oppor
tunity to be heard In person or by coun
sel." The change in the constitution proposed
by Mr. Hun requires a two-thirds' vote
of congress and ratification by three
fourths of the states in the union.
Iowa News Notes.
ELDORA-Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Hess of
Conrad, an old and highly respected
couple, have issued Invitations for the
celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of "
their wedding on August 12.
AMES Albert M. Ball, an electrical
worker, was Instantly killed last night
when he came In contact with a high
voltage wire while doing repair work.
Forty-four hundred volts entered - his
body. His widow and a baby son survive
him.
MARSHALLTOWN-Y. E. Mulr, Minne
apolis & St. Louis special agent, with
headquarters In Minneapolis, Is under ar
rest at Three Forks, Mont, for having
killed a man whom he caught robbing a
freight car. Muir left the Minneapolis St
St. Louis tbout two years ago. Since then
he has been in the employ of the Chicago,
Milwaukee St. Paul In the northwest.
BEIEF CITY NEWS
Kftvs Soot Prlat Xv
Electric fans Borgess-Grandsn C
Btaek-ralooasr Co, 24 th and Harney,
undertakers, em hairnet s. Douglas Nff.
O. 2536.
Omaha Pitting Co. Established 1S8S.
Union. Paolflo Announces Bates The
Union Pacific lias announced the col
onists' rates, effective September 25 and
&ood until October 10, inclusive.
Sirs. Sswman'a Tuners! Today The
funeral of Mrs. Barbara Newman,
who died from the effects of a fall down
a flight of steps at the home of her
son, Jacob Newman, at Sioux City, la.,
will be held Sunday morning at 10 o'clock
from the residence of Jacob Klein, 137
South Thirty-fifth street, to Pleasant
Hill cemetery. Services will be conducted
by Rabbi Frederick Cohn.
Slllck Talks at Chicago Frank I. El
lick will talk on "The Results a Cost Sys
tem Should Bring" at the National Ty
pothetae convention in Chicago Septem
ber 3. The fourth International Cost
congress will meet in Chicago September
5 and 6.
xany Would See Omaha Pictures
Moving pictures of Omaha will be shown
in Florence Wednesday. Shortly there
after the pictures will be started on a
tour of the state. Many requests have
come in from managers of motion pic
ture shows In the small towns for the
use of the film.
Key to the Situation Bee Advertising.
i if. ir.'.'. ..'...'. i 1 -i-i-i-ii,i,-r TiftiniuuuuLu.TTm 0
Movement of Oraan Steamers.
Port. Fisaknirt.... 611.4.
ROTTERDAM Noordun
ROTTERDAM
QUBEKBTOWN... ZMltadU.... CklUo.
AUCKLAND tatos
MONTIVITO K. F. Jowf
ST. MICHAELS.. Luilttals.... , -
SOUTHAMPTON.. Arrived. i
NEW YORK...... Olympic....
Sard and Soft Comas
Bunions and
"Xnob-Joint"
Trench. Heel Cramp
Remarkable Home Treatment
For All Foot Troubles
Compound "
OallouMs'
WBATT
omirsxrB
TBZT
xns information win be welcomed by
the thousands of victims of daily foot tor
ture. Don't waste time. Get it at once
No matter how many patent medicines
you have tried In vain this treatment.
" which was formerly known only to doc
J tors, will do the work. "Dissolve two ta
blespoonfuls of Caloclde compound in a
- -basin of warm water. Soak the feet for
full fifteen minutes, gently rubbing the
sore parts." The effects are marvelous
- All pain goes Instantly and the feet feel
simply delghtful. Corns and callouses can
be peeled right off; bunions, aching feet
sweaty, smelling feet, get immediate re
lief. Use this treatment a week and your
foot troubles will be a thing of the past
Caloclde works through the pores and re
moves the cause. Get a twenty-five cent
box from any druggist, usually enough to
" cure the worst feet.
fcjgrowa
Balls
TXBDBB
ACBXBO
MIT
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