THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JULY lfi, 1013. Nebraska RECALL GASEJN HIGH COURT First Session in September Time, Set for Hearing. WILL ENFORCE 0REAMERY LAW rood t'omnilftnloiier llnrmnn Shjn DntiHrlnn Count)' OrfcnnUntlnii Will tlet Into Trouble ! Lowfr Inic flutter Trnnt. (From a Staff Correspondent.) Lincoln. July i5.-speciai.)-Tho Nebraska City recall case had an InnlnK In the supreme court this morning be-font- Judges Kawcett, name, Sodgwlck and Hamcr. The esse Is one In which tho people or a cerlHln portion of them at 'Nebraska City desire to recall Mayoi J. O. Houston, who. they claim, has not run the city according to their way ot thinking. They set forth that he Is af flicted with an "lncompatablllty of tem perament to hold office" and therefor, should be recalled. Nebraska. City Is operating under the commission form of government for cities of over 6,000 population, which has a provision for the recall. That provision also sets forth that In the recall tin name of some man must bo submitted to tnko the place of.tno official ip eass the recall Is made. In the case of th recall of Mayor Houston the name ol Nebraska Nebraska j tlay of being the hottest place In the country, the thermometer ranging all the way from 104 to 111. ,At tho government kiosk at Tenth and O tho needle which registers the amount of heat ran off ot ! tho paper at lit ana reiusea 10 ao ousi ness any farther. The night was pronounced by many to bo the most Intolerable In the history ol the city, but there were only two 01 Stehr's Sentence Reduced by Order of Supreme Court Nebraska. Hearing Delayed on Insurance Battle 0 tVmn: a Stuff CoirespoiuUnt) UNCOI.N. July .-(SpoctHl.-No hearing was hud this morning In tho J suit brought bv the Royal Highlanders MADISON, ib., July 15.-(Speclal.-At an .ullnurned session of the district " . .. , . . - court yesterday nttcrnoon, jntige tveicn. "- i,,,.,,.... three prostrations from the heat and ant t0 ft mnm,,c ot thc 8llpreme 1 Join tho board from putting the new In- none of those of ii serious natur6. c re-sentenced Henry Stehr, charged surance code law Into operation, a ihu- Trouble for tronmrr.v Men. ..... . , ... . vm. tual agreement being made to carry thc ! Food Commissioner Harman says that! January. m. to two years In the matter over for a few days until Attor- the action of thc Douglas county organl- . , Lincoln, thc sentenre ! my "moral Martin could be present, zatlon of creamery men. or those , , h NovcmMr 27, 1911. at Wlillo the matter Is being held up II Final Clearance of MILLINERY Thursday Soo Wednesday Evening Papers for Particulars bJI Li I IT. .. I .. I.. -I.... uiHIlliii'ih rl ,J c.: I r . '"i1 which time Henry Stehr began to serve ,k up er em m ""lnn ,ndctcr.lnate sentence of one to ten county Is going to get somebody Into trouble. The law, says plainly that the test must be IS per cent, and he says that any effort to make a test short of the law requirements cannot mean anything but trouble between the lAiro food department and the people who attempt to break the law. "Tho law 1 shall enforce as far as It Is In my power," said Mr. Harman, "I can't let one man or set of men breaK the law and cxpest that the work of the department will be a success. I am horo to enforce the pure food law of the state and I propose to cWorco It In every com munity where there Is an effort to break It." I nlon Stntlnn Still PmmlhlrV While an agreement has been reached Is understood that several other com panics aro preparing to take n hand In ! the flsht and tho controversy promises j to be a hard-fought one. Auditor Howard Is taking no part In j tho matter and has kept his hands oft hax'tnr hv tlm nrl.on authorities, he nl- ",B " nri'v... really has served .tho full two years' sen-!1 n Interested, party, other than as a . i t,i, .,. nnrt with, member of tho new board. While he win out doubt he will be released within a Ell "lV0 11 av tfte wmXa.'t of tin years passed upon him by Judge Wclcli In the November, 1911, term of the dis trict court. If Stehr Is allowed tho cus tomary two months per year for good be Tin i -l .1.1 I . ...1 few days. His wife and baby reside nt I "'i'""1"1' ""l,u ,u" Madison. constitutional, as a member of the In- V4tiim w.lmn whn nUdort triilltv In surance ooBru, wnicn comprises inr Kin the charge of forgery and wns sentenced to an. Indeterminate sentonco of from ono j to ten years In tho state prison by Judgi. I Welch nt thc March, 1913, term, upon showing mode by Counsel W. U Dowllng for the defendant and with the consent of County Attorney Kocnlgstcln was per mitted to withdraw his pleading of guilty between the people of Plalnvlew and tho nf foPCprv nti .ntf.r - i.. f mlsde Paul S. Topping has been placed In thc J Northwestern, Railway company, by meanor (n obtaining thc sum of $.15 under nnlltlnn 1 tvhlfti tho Inttpr will reliulM the deiot ! - . petition. Those opposed to the recall attempted to secure from the district court of Otoe county a supersedeas order preventing the 'calling of a recall election, but were unsuccessful. They appeared before thc supremo court for the purpos of delay ing action. Their pica was granted by the court and n hearing set for tho first session of the court In September, Lincoln enjoyed the flisitnctlon yester- Orchard & Wiliielm Go. DINING CHAIR. Full' box frame construction, heavy mission design, upholstered in genuine Spanish leather slip i seat;, art exceptional value $3.00 SPECIAL PIECES AT SPECIAL PRICES. Just & few of the many throughout our store. $21.00 Arm Chair or Itpckor, fifmed, uun, opuuiaii jod-iiicr seal "j -j 1 1 VI and cushion back., 4uiUU $30.0-) Arm Chair, fumed oak, Span ish leather seat cushion, j2Q QQ $17,50 Settee, fumed oak, G fl f) fift leather seat I UiUU $15.00. Library Table, fumed oak , $10.00 $17.00 Rocker, mahogany O I ft Ct finish, wood seat........ 9 1 UiOU $24.00 Library Table, golden oak, very large. . $38.00 Bookcase, golden oak, colonial scroll design, $27iQ0 $19.00 The Persistent and Judicious Use ot Newspaper Advertising Is (lie Road to Business Success. Men's Furnishings Reduced 50c SILK HOSE AT 25c Men's pure thread silk hose, double heels and toes and spliced sole; black, navy, tan and pearl. July price. . . 25d 50c Neckwear 25c Hundreds of rich silk and washable neckwear; our . regular 50c neckwear, In July Clearance sale, special at 25i MEN'S 50c BELTS AT 2io Fine leather belts, in black and tan, calf, seal grain and plnseal leathers, re g u 1 ar 50c be 1 1 s, July Clearance. 25 o 50c Sosptnden 25c Lisle web suspend ers from beet makers. Oucrogu lar 50c grade, July Clearance Sale, special at 25d remain In Jail ten days and pay the costs of tho action. It was shown that Walton had cntereVl a plea of guilty of forgery after receiving assurance that ho would bo paroled. Owing to this misapprehen sion the court reconsidered the matter. Charles TSustecd, a farmer residing northwest of Madison, was arraigned be foro County Judge McDuffee charged with disorderly conduct and released upon bis giving the required bond to keep the peace. wnicn tne lauer win reouim me ue(oi fa,Re nretenses. SentencoX was tben there, the complaint against tho Burling-1 pagsed by ufc court requiring Walton to ion anil ino orinwesicni iue uie triuu tion of a union station has not been dis missed, according to Commissioner Halt of the railway commission, who hnd charge of the hearing at Plalnvlew. We want to be suro that the North western company carries out Its agree ment with the citizens of Plalnvlew be fore we dismiss the complaint against tho Burlington," said Mr. Hall this morn ing. "If the Northwestern does not carry out tts part of the agreement It may be necessary tp push the matter of a union depot." " AnNrHinirntM Ileported. Three counties, Butler, Cedar and Jef ferson, reported to tho secretary of the State Board of Assessment this morn ing. Two Of these, Butler and Jefferson, show a decrease, the latter of over $003,000 Following aro tho amounts ns reported: 1913. 1912. Butler $7,917,320 $7,930,701 CVdnr ;.. S.911.0S9 , K.C61.930 Jefferson 5.997.2J0 6,913,754 Aldrlch Seen ItlK Crops. "I am trying to keev cool this' weather," said former Governor Aldrlch this morn ing, "and every evening we take out the auto and take a trip of forty or fifty miles around the country." "You ought to see tho wheat," continued the ex-governor. "I never saw anything like It. Last night We drove out cast of Lincoln and tfiere Is a wheat field of about 300 acre's about a ,rnlle or so out that Is simply wonderfuli Tho shocks cover Just about one-half of the ground and the yield from that field Is going to bo cnor.mous. Take it all around In our ride last night, we saw the same condi tions. The farmers are beginning- to thresh and about the time we were out they were Just coming In from the ma chines. In every Instance I slowed up and nsked them how the wheat was yield tug and In no case did I get a reply of less than forty-two bushels to the acre nnd some of them reported . as high as forty-eight Htato Superintendent Uelrell returned ficm Salt Lako City this morning where he attended thc national meeting of .ho teachers of the country. Mr. Deliell says that tllft attendance was the smallest In the history of tho National Teachers' as sociatlon for several years, there being Ices than 2,000 present outside of Utah. Nearly 1(0 of these were from Nebraska. Alliance Man Has Skull Fractured ALLIANCE, Neb., July 15.-(Spcc!al.)- Returnlng from a country danco at an early hour Sunday morning, Bruce Mai lry with two friends In an automobile ran Into a buggy containing threo young men also returning from the same danc. Tho automobile and bu;y were wrecked and the team ran away. Will J. Hill Is In St. Joseph's hospital with a fractured skull. Thc accident occurred on a baJ 1 leco ot road and was nlmost unavoid able. That more of the party wero not Injured semis almost a miracle. The Burlington fire department was called out twice today to extinguish fires in boxcars In their yards. Thc continued ?ry weather and a hot wind made the slurtln of fires dangerous. . I ernor, tho nildltbr and the attorney gen eral, ho will to a certain extent bo forced to give way to tho Ideas of the othei two members should they combine against, him. Thc nudltor Is an old In surnfice man. At present It looks like the big fight i wll bo over the selection of an Insur ance commissioner to fill the place now occupied by Charlie Clancyr Clancy Is a candidate for the place nnd has thc backing of Mr. Howard. U O. Brian, who xwa deposed from tho Job of Insur ance deputy by Mr. Howard. Is also n candtdatifor the Job nnd It Is said has tho backing of Attorney General Mar tin. Where Governor lorcheatl standi Is not known. FIFTY-ONE BUSHELS OF 'WHEAT TO THE ACRE ArUCn.N, Neb.. July lS.-(Spcclal.-Thrcshlng of wheat Is liow In full owing. The yield Is exceptionally good, John Burger Saturday threshed twelve acres that nveraged fifty-one bushels per ncrs. This Is the best yield reported, although several farmers report fo'ty bushels and better. The dry weather Is affecting tho corn and unless rain. Is received soon It will bo badly hurt. Illght In this part wo havo not had nny rain sufficient" to More than lay' the dust since Muy, The apple crop Is showing the effects of the drouth. Prom the' besUrcports obtainable thero will bo about one-third pt the crop of last year, Tho thermometer showed . 110 In tho shade Sunday and It .was up to 108 Mon day. . HlfC Unrn Ilurnrd nt Fnlrflelil. FAIRFIELD. Neb., July lB.-(SpeclaI.)-The fire department mode a quick run to C. I Hoovet's restdenco In cast Fair field yesterday at 3 p. Vi. in answer to an alarm that his barn was on fire. Owing to thc great distance and the head way made by the flames, no effort was mado to save tho barn, but all efforts were made' In saving the house and sur rounding buildings. The fire Is supposed to have started in tho hay mow from spontaneous combustion In the new al falfa stored theret The barn nnd flvo head of horses, a cattle shed, machine shed and silo and all contents of the dif ferent buildings wero destroyed. The loss winch was partly covered oy insurance, will exceed $3,000. LEG MANGLED IN THRESHING MACHINE SHRLBT, Neb., Jmr 15.-(Spcclal.)-E. It. Gllmore, who was working on top of a threshlnir mochlno' yesterday, had one leg drawn Into the cylinder nnd shredded nearly to the knee. He wns rushed to a David City hospital and tho leg ampu tated abovo the kneo. His family Is needy. Greater Grow the Values in This July Clearance Sale of Women's (Si Misses' DRESSES, SUITS, COATS, ETC. nplIU price on every garment litis been flipped to the lowest possible notch to in- X suro an inunedinlo clearance. Tho following as an example: 119.50 Whito Llngorio DreBscs" $1!),G0 Fancy Vollo Dresses. $10. 50 Fancy Linen Dresses. $19.50 Fancy 811k Drosses.. $1.00 Lawn Dresses, special.."! $4.00 Oliambray Drossoa, cholco $4,00 Gingham DrcaseB.oholco. $4.00 Cloth Skirts, special.... $3.50 Lingerie Waists, cholco. $3.50 Wnshable Skirts, choice. $1.45 $1.00 Whito Not Drosses...." $9.75 Colored Hntlno Drcsaos. $10.00 l'uro Linen Drosses... $10.00 Lingerie Dresses, special $10,00 Cloth Skirts, spoclul.. $15.00 Cloth ConU, special.... $13,50 Whito Llngerlo Drosses' $12.50 Striped Vollo Dresses.. $13.50 Fancy Linen Dresaoa.. $15.00 Cloth Skirts, special..-. $13.50 Colored Rntlno Drossos $13.50 White Net Drosses.... 4.95 6.75 $20.00 to $25.00 Cloth Coats. . $19.50 Colored Hntlno Drcssos, $25.00 White Lingerie Dresses' $25.00 Fancy Silk Drosses. . . . $25.00 Fancy Linen Drosses. . $20.00 Cloth Coats, special... $25,00 Fancy VoUo Drossos... $25.00 Colored Kntlne Dresses, i " '$29.50 "Whito Not Drosses. . . . $29,50 Whito Lingorlo Dresses $29.50 Fancy Silk Drosses... $29.50 Fancy Ratine Drosses.. $29.60 Fanoy.Vollo Drosses... $35.00 Cloth CoatB, special... J 9.75 $12" $1475 Announcing in Advance for Thursday Our Annual Choiceo-theM ouse Sale of PUMPS, OXFORDS i SLIPPERS i . Women's Regular $3.Si, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 Values for $1.95 Men's $3 50, $4.99 and $4.50 Oxfords Uf $2.45 ;Orkin Bros. Your Homo Store.; 1H BT nntllrr Killed In Wjinorr, WTMOItB, Nob., - July 15. (Special.) Ed Yost killed a largo rattlesnake In tho hack yard ot his home yesterday after noon. A commotion among his chickens called Mr. Yost's attention to te snake and he lost no time In killing It with a club. The snake had seven rattles and a button. It Is the first rattler killed this vicinity In a number ot years. In niir .Shipment from Fnlrfleld. FAinFIETD, Nob;, 'July 16.-(Speclal.). Threshing has been In' full sivlng here lately and most fields going from eighteen to twenty-flvo bushels an acre. The Clay County Grain company at this place took In 52,763 .bushels of wheat during the week ending July 12, and.' shipped thirty si cars out.' ' JOHN A.SVHOH.. CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN. - ' - ,.(Ur. Cool White Footwear At Prices to Suit Every Pocketbook Hundreds of Stylish Lasts are here for your inspection. White rootwear always feels and looks right. Boots, Pumps and Oxfords in both White Nubuck and White Linen stunning models In eTery style, size and width, priced up from $3.50 'SHOE- OR 1ES 3e.X)OUGL'tA3. VK w You Oue-ht to Be In Fry's Shoes. Ilrrnn nt I'mrnre Cll-. PAWNEE CITY, Neb., July 15.-(8pe- clal.) As a special attraction for tho Paw nee City Chautauqua It was announced here today that William Jennings Bryan has been secured to give a lecture and will appear here on the evening of Au gust 14. ' 7 Wrmnro Clinutnutian Oitrnn, WYMORE, Neb., July 15.-(Speclal.) Wymoro's first annual Chautauqua opened today In Arbor State park. The 'Village Singers and Players" occupied the afternoon and. evening. Good pro. grams will be heard each day. The meet Ing will close Friday York Knrmer Dies of Ilrnt. YORK, Neb.. July 15.-(Special.)-Charles I .ark In dropped dead yesterday while helping to stack wheat on the farm ot Henry Zwlg, southeast of this city. Death was due to heart failure, brought on by the excesilve heat, n was 21 years of age. He came to tbU county last spring from I.lnnvlllc, la. Panr Pro.irntliuiB nt I.tnroln, MNCOliN, Nob., July 15. Four people were prostrated here yesterday when the heat reached the official, high point fur the year 106 degrees. The. government thermometer, on the street registered 110 degrees. Kllv-r Cr''' . nvlRi-rrl. SIL.VER CREEK, Nob.,' July 15.-(Spe- clal.) Word was received- by Dyo F. Davis, village clerk, that the J12.000 water bends and $i.O0O electric light bonds voted by tho village April IB had been ap proved nnd registered by tho stale. The bends arc now' on salo and rh soon as proper arrangements can be mado work of Installing tho plants will begin, sil ver Creek confidently expects to haVe as good a syatim of waterworks and eloctrlo lights as any town In tho state, munici pally owned and fully equipped. A Life I'roblein Solved by that great health tonic, Electric Bit ters, Is tho enrichment of poor, thin blood and strengthening the weak. 50c. Fpr ale by Beaton Drug Co. Advertisement. NEVER FAILS TO STOP THE ACHE USED BY MILLIONS FOR 25 YEARS GET DENTS ALL DRUGGISTS '15 STACK AND MACHINE COVERS Prices from 2y2o to 8c per square foot. Special Water-Proof and Mildew-Proof Cover, 4Va0 per sq. ft. For Covering Hay, Binders, Etc., Etc. Omaha Tent & Awning Cq., 11th and Harney WYMOIIE, Neb,, July 16 (Special.) j Wymore will bid , for the national dog r&CCB (HID jrcai. Win ...uunniw uw.ihib ; was pledged yesterday to go toward mak ing a guarantee. Another 11.000 will be i raised. VVAV ) I LOOK! Prefer 7 VXOLSU WAT CI. 13 AW WAY DR. TODD, 403 Brandeis Building. Slntbrr ot Klnrliti cn Children. 'I am the mother of eighteen chldren and have the praise of doing more work than any young woman In my town," writes Mrs. C. J. Martin, Boone Mill, Va. "I suffered for five years with stomach trouble and could not eat as much as a biscuit without suffering. I have taken three bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets and am now a -well woman and weigh ICS rounds. I can eat anything J want to, and as much as I want and feel better than I have at any tjma in ten years, t refer to any one In Boone Hill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say." For sale by all druggists. Advertisement. Uadt IA World The Hop Growers of old Bohemia know that Anheuser-Busch are by far the worlds largest buyers of Saazer Hops, It's the exclusive Hop flavor which makes Budweiser Popular Everywhere Its high reputation is not die result of acci dent but the product of brewing and aging from only the best materials grown. Bottled only at the home plant in St.Louis Anhcuser-BuschBrewery St. Louis ANHEUSER-BUSCH CO. of NEBR., Dhtrilnlen OntLi, Ntlraikt ' JOS. E. KOSENFI&D, IHjftriburor, Council BUitf la.