THE BEEt OMAHA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1913. 13 UP TO THE WEATHER MAN , , . All Needed to Make Army-Navy Game Notable is Fine Day FLAYERS ARE IN CONDITION oth Tentnn Vlull lolo (irouniln for Final Prnctlct? In Order to He come Fnmlllnr irtth Llnht nmt Field. week of silly "freedom" : SHELLENBERGER ON STAND Girl TofrKed ln nay Clothe Get j lllUtered Tnxle of Mnn'a j Work. State Gets Permission to Reopen Case Against Alleged Murderer. I berser on the tand. and he ataled that the hope of the government thnt Houdln, j ho waa 43 or 45 years old and came by hi mtrtcs. could demonstrate thai I this state when n boy with hi parents, the white conqueror'a magic waa aupcrlor. 1 that he had lived ln Kemeha county 1 And lloudln did It" I NEW YORK. Nov. 21 With the rival teams and tho advance guards of. spec tatora already here for the Army-Navy foot ball game tomorrow, this city has taken on th'o unfamiliar aspect of a col lege town on the evo of a big athlctlo contest- The transformation began with the arrival of the Naval and Military academy elevens. votr succeeding, train brought a fresh quota of brilliantly uniformed and gowned humanity to add another tint to the color picture and to night even the most blase New Yorker was aware that something unusual was nbout to happen. The sailors and soldiers have met upon the gridiron seventeen times since 1S90, but New York never has been the scene f the game. All that Is neded to make tho eight eenth game betwen the two elevens nota ble Is favorable weather. The local weather man's prediction calla for cloudy ahd unsettled atmospheric conditions. A thick coating of straw protects the grid Iron tonight and will not be removed until noon tomorrow. All ln Condition. Both teams visited the Polo grounds to day for final practice In order to bocomc, familiar with the light and the field. The workout was secret ln both cases. The coaches stated that all the players were In condition for a hard game, but refused to express, any opinion on the outcome. Wagering on the result of the game among tho nonaffiliated followers of foot ball finds the Navy team a 7 to 10 fa vorite, but ln accordance with the usual custom among the cadets And middles, all beta made directly between the mem-, hers of the academies are at even money. The probable lineup for the game follows: AI1MY. Mark IaB. Wlnne ,...UT. Huston L.G. MoEwan C Jones ,,...n.Oi weyand R.T. MerriUat ft. EX rrichard .Q.B. Hoge (C.) L.H, Hogson n.H. Ilenedict ....... F.B NAVY. UE3.......... 'Ingram UT. Ralston L.O... JIowo C... Perry R.O Brown R.T Voughan R.E.... Gilchrist (C.) Q.B, ...... Nicholson UH.,.,,. McReavey R.H Falling1 v.u Harrison Referee. W. Lanirford. Trlntlv! iunln. A. Sharpo, Yale; head linesman. C, Mar shall, Harvard. Time of quarters, flf. teen minutes each. SIZING UP COAL SITUATION ShoTTtnir Why Prices "Will Con tlnoe to Improve" nt the Ex pense of Consumers. NORDEN AND MISS FASTENAU SEVERELY HURT UNDER AUTO NEBRASKA CITY. Neb., Nov. 28. (Special Telegram.) Dr. J. A. Norden, secretary of the State Veterinarians' as sociation, yea. bout riding' with Miss Fas tcnau, daughter of Commissioner Henry 'Fastcnau, and one of the publto school teachers, when In the northern part of the city, while attempting o dodge sev eral doa that came out Into the road, the automobile struck one of ho dogs an dthe car turned over. Dr. Norden had his right leg broken at the ankle and Is ln the hospital and Miss Fastenau was Injured internally. They had to be dug out" from under the wrecked car We have approached the, time ln the coal trade when the embarrassment over concrete figures as to tho visible supply of coal la felt In all Its seriousness. Householders, retailers and steam users' buy stbrago coal nt this tlme.tand all produces and who eirale companies sell coal IncJttruordlnary volume. Th"e vlsl b'e supply cuts a tremendous figure in the prlfe asked und oUtalhed, but no'ons knots',? anything about what the Visible supply Is. ' As a consequence we are en tering what pronlsca lo bo an. Intensive rerlod with both sides of the market forced to go It blind. Producers do not know .exactly what the situation la. and, therefore, they aro Inclined to ask ex travagant prices. Consumers do not know what the situation actually Is, but, fearing a car shortage and a coal short age, they will Pay any. price rather than speculate that current reports will not f rove .accurate. Tho statements upon which producers Bnd consumers depend are delightfully Indefinite. Eastern coal operators say they are told up for the nest three or lour months. That Is undoubtedly true, 1 prettnt estimates of fulurr demand are accurate. On July 1 some lake shippers iim..e tho statement that West Virginia alone had shipped 23 per cent more coal than It did latt year. Sines last year Weet Virginia was shipping the custom ary amount. It may be said that ship ments this year are 23 per cent In excess of normal. Another report was to the effect that one port had forwarded In June considerably more coal than had tien forwarded last year up to July. 1. That Is not extraordinary, rectus that last year the lake trade as Inactive, due to strikes. However. It Is perfectly apparent that ' tho movement of coal to the northwest. Is going this year to be extraordinarily heavy. A iecent state ment by one of the Important Interests Indicates that dock capacity is now SO per cent of the ordinary consumption and that these docks wilt he completely filled before the middle of August. This means that there will be a tremendous falling off In lake shipments until some of that coal has been moved to the in terior. As that Indicates, a great deal ofcoal and railway equipment will be thus released for movement all rail to Interior points, and that will change the mining situation. The anthracite trade has been only fairly brisk. Still there is no complaint from any section that there Is any short age of anthracite. Buying has apparently been so heavy heretofore that consumers In the west feel that they can let up a little on buying for the remainder of July and the first of August. It Is a fact that the business has fallen off ln the west considerably In the last week or ten days. The one thing which stands out most strongly ln both of these conditions Is the complete absence of any dependable sta tlstlcs as to the amount of coat -produced In the various districts, the amount of coal shipped to various centers and the amount of coal In storage. There Is no indication of what the visible sup. ply Is. Almost precisely the same situation ob tains In the west. There has been some movement of domestic coal, but nothing1 like what the producers wanted to move, Whether the seeming slowness Is due to the abundance of productive capacity and can, or to a genuine lack of buying, no one Is able to say. Just how far the re toilers have gone in storing coal or In neglecting to store coal np one knows. When retailers and householders begin to put ln their winter surplus coal this lack of information Is serious. What Is going to be the Influence of the coming buying upon the price nobody appears to know; certainly there is no way of telling what the price ought to be. As a consequence everyone is guessing, and while they are guessing they are becoming excited over the possibility of a shortage. This, of course, is Improving prices and will con tinue to Improve them until the middle of November or the first of December. 23m Black Diamond. Becauso she wanted to see what It was like to bo a boy. Miss Elizabeth Virginia Stratton, aged 18. hlueeyed and pretty, left her beautiful home In Falls Creek, Fa., November 1. -A week later she was back and glad to be a girl. Togged out In her brother's clothe, she started out to Improvo on nature with a firm resolve. Stopping In a barn, with a pair of scissors she had taken with her, she cut off her luxuriant brown curls and started afoot for Pittsburgh. i?hn reached Summervllle, Jefferson county, that night, and slept under a lumber Pile. When she reached New Bethlehem she gave up her plan of going to Pittsburgh and asked for work ln the plant of the Climax FJro Brlok 'company. So good waa her disguise that the foreman gave the "young man" a Job wheeling bricks. The heavy labor taxed her, but she was game and stuck It out. Her delicate fingers soon became covered with blp blisters, but she concealed her weari ness and exhaustion and mingled with the other day laborers. When bantered about beln "green" she tossed bock good-natured retorts with the best of them. In the meanwhile her father, a well known business man of Fails Creek, was making frantlo efforts to find his daugh ter. Alarms were sent out to the police of the surrounding boroughs and to the police of Pittsburgh. Edward Latimer, a telephone lineman. who. knew Miss Stratton, saw her at work. He noted something familiar about her features and penetrated her disguise. The girl's parents were noti fied and her brother came for her. "I wanted to know the free life of n boy," said Miss Stratton today as she started for homo In her brother's auto mobile, after she had donned feminine garb again. "I did not have any quarrel with my parents. I simply wanted to rough It to see the world from a man's standpoint a,nd to do the work of a man, a common laborer." Glancing at her blistered hands, she added, "but wheeling bricks Is rather strenuous." about sixteen years and that ha know Julian Hah a ml for whose murder he Is belnff tried. He knew o Kopf and TTVrTMn'UV UV Tirr TVPTTWCT" ' Frank Qlbbs and the men whom he Inv JJY THE DE"NSE I piloted In hla cohfcwlon at Burlington. .......... Kn. .ormiirr tu innnnit)- l oiihhIhnIiiii Cnlleil lo shnvr thnt Mrut'nl Condition nf Drfrmtntit Is Impnlrcd. AUBURN, Neb., Nov. S.-(8peclat Tele gram.) The case of tho state airalnst Tho defendant admitted that he lmd caused SChcrltf Qruhh to summon Sheriff Jqnes of Nemeha county In order to tell of h's participation In the murder of man Julian. Counsel for the defense, read the confession to the Jury and Shellen. bergcr ndmltted that he had answered the questions ns rend, but now stated The Persistent ana yuaiclous Use of Newspaper Advertising is tho Road to Business Success. not know why he did. , Under cross-o-xnmliiatlon by Attorney Fcrneau, the defendant told the story of his life an dadmltted that he had gono undor . the assumed names of Charlie Wright, Charlie Gray and Henry Miller In various state safter the murder of Julian. The defendnnt became somewhat con used under the fire of questions and dchled a good many things ho had ad mitted on direct examination. Fuller Shllnnlw.mrr n u,n..,.ui q,,os The defense called one or two wines""': I . T deed nrtr hirh ih. . . ! J PrtIcMlfir of tho contesslon. He said Y !' h. for making It and d'd Tobias Kllnger, a merchant and old resi dent of Julian, who testified -that he had seen Kopf In Julian Monday or Tuesday following the murdor of Julian Bauhaud years ago, and "that Kopl carried a ban daged hand. Tho state; called Henry Albright, rail road section hand: Martin Salle, former lesldcnt of Julian, and Fred Rohm, cx sheriff of Nemaha county, all of whom testified practically as had Kllnger. The defense called Mrs. Joe Kopf, who sworo her husband was In Gmaha at tho time the murder was committed, and that he came homo about one week later to visit his family, and that his hand waa bandaged becauso of Its having been sprained while at work In Omaha. Joseph Kopf, indicted for the murder ot Bauhaud, eworo that ha went to work ln Omaha in May, 1KW, In the bakery of Otto Wagner and worked until some time In August. He sold ho sprained his hand while at work there. He stated that he never hod heard of the murder until ho came home one week later and his wife told him of It The previous testimony of Lech, baker of Omaha, showed that he had been told by Kopf early ln the week following the murder. Kopf denied that ho had any hand In the killing. The defense attempted to Introduce the testimony of a former wirden of the penitentiary, Georgtj W. Leidlgh, as to Shellenbergors mental condition in ISO), but tho court ruled It out on the objec tion of the counsel for the state. The court today decided that tho tectl mtfny of T. J. Mohoney, R. C. Smith and Hayes, the latter a United States mar sral, was on the whole not admissible and ruled all of tho same oit with the exception of. a few mlnuor points. Question of Sanity. Dr. G, W. Fogers, a member of tho In sanity commission appointed to oxamtne the defendant, Shellcnberger, testified that Bheltenberger was a victim of a disease and that this had a tendency to affect his mental condition. On cross-examination by Attorney Fernau for the state, Fcgors slated that he was not so positive the conditions were so marked as to affect tho sanity of Shellenberger; that ln his oplnlin de fendant had at some time had this disease. , The defense was the defendant Snellen- MAGIC OF THEWHITE MAN llondln Conquered nn Kntlre No tion vtlth I.lttlc Black Box. 'Tfct-so aro great times, exulted the Electrician to his friend, the Old Fogy. "With machine guns and other Instru ments of war we certainly aro going some In tho fighting game!" "Yes," agreed the Old Fogy, as he ad justed his glasses, "but do you know that before such things were dreamed of nn entlro nation was conquered with a magnet and a ltttlo black box?" And the Electrician confessed, "No." "You havo heard, no doubt," the Old Fogy ramWed on, "of the marvelous In ventions of Robert lloudln, the great French conjurer, a man who did great things with electricity when Alexander Graham Bell was an Infant. Houdln ap plied electricity to many of his magical experiments and delighted the Parisian public for years In his little theater. When ho retired ho was tho most fa vored performer of his day and had bowed to tho plaudits of royalty!" "Heard all about that," snapped the Electrician. "What about the black box?" "Coming1 to that, boy; coming to that. Houdln retired to his family estate on the left bank of the River Loire, near St. Gervalse, hoping to end his days ln peace. But after a year or so there came to htm, through a military friend a request from tho French government that he go to Algiers. In his memoirs, translated Into English some years before his death, he says that the Marabouts of that coun try, a sort of medicine men and wonder working priests, controlled the masses and Incited them to Intermittent revolts against tho French by their tricks. These tricks, he assures us, were ot tho sim plest and most primitive type. It was "With tho little black box and the magnets?" "Yos. HI reoltal of his performance I In Algiers Is exceedingly Interesting ' Some ot the most distinguished natives were there. Iloiid'n showed them all sorts of things; Allowed himself to be shot nt. and caught the bullet unharmed, and many other such feats. But his piece do resistance undoubtedly waa his box. He called for a strong man to come on tho stage and a giant responded, lloudln toyed with him a moment, bantered with him about his strength, and asked him It he could lift his lltUe black box. DIs dnlnfully the Arab lifted It and smiled But Houdln warned him. 'Walt- But n moment and you shall be as a little child!" He placed the box on tho stage, and dared his huge guest to ralso It The Arab tried with one finger; grasped It with his great muscular hand; tugged nt It with all the strength ot his massive arms, bracing his legs like two huge bronso columns, so Houdln says, to no avail. Try aa he would this son ot tho desert could not stir that little box from Its place. For a breathing spell he released his grip for a moment, then went at It again. And while the awe stricken audience panted In amasement, he suddenly writhed In acuteit agony, and sank groveling on the stage. Tho current coursed through him and gal vanised him Into misery. Then Houdln gave a signal; tho current from the electro-magnet beneath the stage was turned oft and the Arab fell back groan ing. He lifted himself to his feet, and hiding his face lit his cloak, crept away to blush unseen. The little black box had conquered." "And?" Inquired the Electrician. "And," replied the Old Fogy, "Houdln htm shot nt by a man who said he wished to kill; had seen him rob a giant of his strength. No Marabout had ever done that. No Marabout with primlttvo tricks could convince them that any revolt of theirs could provall against the white man and his magic his electricity. The conqueror's conquest was complete." Popular Electricity, Key to tho Sltuatlon-Bee Advertising. Whr It ld Not Come. Years ago It Used to ba tho custom ot tho country folk to work out their taxes by boarding tho teacher, which meant that from tlmo to time ho waa supplied from various quarters with food. Ono day a boy named Ellsha Anderson sought tho teacher and said: "Bay, teacher, my pa wants to know If you like pork?" "Indeed. 1 do," waa tho reply. "Say to your father that there Is nothing In the way of meat I llko bettor than pork." Borne) time elapsed and there was no pork from EUsha's father, a fact that in no way surprised the teacher, for tho old man was known throughout the country as a tight proposition. Never theless, one afternoon the teacher asked tho boy; "How about that pork, Ell aha, that your father promised me?" "Oh." answered the boy, "tho pig got well." New York Globe. Bes Want Ads Produce Results. K I rel jl KNOWN THE WORLD OVER ) This is the Gillette Standard Combination Sr, $6.50 in triple Silver-plate: , other styles to $12. Large variety of Combination Sets, $6 to $50. Pocket Editions and Standard Sets (Razors and Blades only), $5 und up. t CHRISTMAS Shopping today? Get his Gillette Safety Razor. Holiday stocks of Gillettes shown by dealers all over this city, the set you want for the have in mind. Make your choice soon, while the choosing is good. GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPANY, BOSTON Precisely man you The lowest priced, most economical closed car on tho mirket. Six-passenger 4 cylinder SO horse-power. Price Includes two six-Inch xaa lnmps, generator, three oil lamps, horn and tools. Including jack f o. b. Dotrott Get particular from Ford Motor Company, 1010 Hnrnoy SL, Omaha, or direct "roin De troit factory. k i00gr 0nl ji00000 aiaU'.! '"r l'B.&&0000bI Kp1 K' tSr m 1 1S&900001 Ford Model T Town Car-$750 t fn The Magic Grill To grill or broil or fry on tho Electrio Grill is to know ngain tho joy of childron-'s play. You can scarooly bdievo it till you boo tho steaming steaks or chops which it prepares right on tho tablo while the chat ter of guests goes morrily on. It is a de Birablo companion appliance to tho chaf ing "dish and is as' convenient and neces sary, A Christmas surprise, whose useful ness and charm will grow from day to day. Other Electric Christmas Gifts Chafing Dishes Percolators Tea Kettles Desk Lamps Library Lamps Broad Toasters Electrio Toys Heating Pads Massago Vibrators Flat IronB Troo Lighting Outfits Cigar Lighters Vacuum Cleaners Sewing Machine Motors (If you sell electrical appliances, men tion It or offer your assistance 4a ob Ulnlag thorn). Omaha Electric Light and Power Company 000000000000000. fl5000ws0000000000000000 000000000000000fc. iWf 'JBTfll ir 1 .00000000000000BV 0000000000000000000000 Vrsy 00TTJ-00000000000000000y 0000000000000000000 V' aF 0000070000000007 l f0000000000ak00 1 1 Mc31W it odd hh ""i carred caslc5 u 1 Mm Best Northern Rye always selected by a member of the firm. II A IS Purest water from wells sunk hundreds of feet into solid II II That's why the man who knows always insists cm Mm U RED TOP RYE M FERDINAND WESTHEIMER. SONS, DlsttlUrs MB Wfek Cloelnatd, O. Si. Jotssk, Mo. Lcn!rtk, K.