TILE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JANTAUT 21, 1914. BUSINESS PEACE IS COMING President Makes Prediction in Mes sage to Congress. NEW LEGISLATION ADVOCATED Kxccntlre Snjm Commercial mnl 1 n -dnstrlnl Intercuts Will .Meet (lr frnmrnl Unit Wnf nnd the rroblem AVI 1 1 He SoItc.1 . (Continued from rage One.) laratlon for giving the" Interstate Com merce commission power to regulate rail road finances. Another round of applause greeted the statement as to railroad control with its declaration that the "business of produc tion must bo separated from tlio business of transportation." The declaration for an Interstate trade commission was received In silence, and applause greeted the statement that "pen alties and punishment should fall not on business Itself, but on the Individuals Who use the Instrumentalities of business to do those things which public policy and sound business practice condemn." Loud applause greeted the conclusion of the president's address at 12:51 o'clock. Points In Ilia I'lnn. The chief points which the president singled out as a basis for leglstatlpn were: 1. Effectual prohibition of the Inter locking of directorates of great corpora tionsbanks, railroads, Industrial, com mercial and public service bodies. J. A law to confer upon the Interstate Commerce' commission the power to su perlntend and regulate the financial operations by which railroads are hence forth to be supplied with the money they need for their proper development and Improved transportation facilities. Tho president made it clear that "the pros perity of. the railroads and th'e prosperity of the country are Inseparably connected" in this regard. . 5. Definition of "the many hurtful re straints of trade" by explicit legislation supplementary to the Sherman law. 4. The creation of a commission to aid the courts and to act an a clearing house of information in helping business tn con form with the law. 6. Provision ot penalties and punish ments to fall on Individuals responsible for unlawful business practice. 6. Prohibition of holding companies and a -suggestion that the voting power of individuals holding shores in numerous corporations might be restricted. 7. Giving to private individuals the right to found suits for redress in facts end judgments proven in government suits nnd providing that statute of limita tions should run only from the r.a'.e of conclusion of the government's act'on. Text of the Address. The president spoke an foltows: "Gentlemen of the Congress: In my re port 'on the state of the union' which J Had the privilege of reading to you on December 2 last, I ventured to reservo ! for discussion at a later date the sub ject of additional legislation regard ing the very difficult and tntrlcato mut ter of trusts .and monopolies. The time notf seems' opportune o turn to that great question: not only because the cur rency legislation -which absorbed your at tention and the attention of tho country in December snow 'disposed of, but also becauso opinion" seems to be clearing about us with 'singular rapidity In this other great flud of action. In the mat ter of the currency It cleared suddenly and very happily after tho much-debated net was passed; In respect ot the monop olies which have multjplled about us and In regard tu the various means by which they havo been organised and main tained, It seems to be almost clear and all but on universal ngrcement In an ticipation ot our action, it by way of preparation, making tho way easier to see and easier to set out on with con fidence and without contusion of counsel. 'Atmosphere-' Is HlKht, "Legislation has Its atmosphere like everything else, and the ntmospnero of accommodation and mutual understand ing which we now breathe with so much refreshment is a matter of slnr.srn con gratulation. It ought to make our task very much less difficult nnd embarrass ing than it would have been had wn heen obliged to continue to act amidst tho at mosphere of suspicion and antagonism which has so long made it imposst'ito to approach such questions with dispas sionate fairness. Constructive legislation, when successful, is always-'ho cmbdl merit of convincing experience nnd of the mature publlo opinion which finally prints out of that experience. Legisla tion, is a business ot interpretation, not of origination, and it ts now plain what the opinion Is to which wo must give effect in this matter. It Is not recent or hasty opinion. It springs out ot Uie experi ence ot a whole generation. It has clari fied Itself by long contest, and those who for long tlmo battled with It and sought to Chango It are now frankly and honor ably yielding to it and seeking to con' form their actions to It. "The great business men who or ganised and financed monopoly and those, who administered it in actual cvery-day transaction have year after year, until now. either denied Its existence or Just), fled it as necessary for the iffeCMvo maintenance and development of the vast business processes of the country in which modern circumstances of trade and r tjisTSkJSUcsi i a iitiia i iw -- rERUNA SAVED HER. Xrs. Thomas Hover, It, P. D, 2to. 1, ! uncertainty, the law itself and the pen JHottUgne, Mass., -writes j 'A I doc- iaUy bmK maUe w'1 Plain tcd orve a year without inv reiif "And th0 business men of the country kp getting -worse, I gore bo all faefie caterer getting well agsln. I wu l7ra sWwh. could eat rHr . TZ u ? Dy." r r..m rr.i "I cswot express how grateful I feel Sot Peru." TW vAf sJct to liquid msfll fcbM cm mw f recurs Ptruna Ts' Ak Vow JRragii,t tw Free IVruu , Im&i Jfor AUmwhoc for If 14. : manufacture and f Inanee exist; but alt the while opinion has made head agatnvt them. The average business man Is con vinced that tho ways of liberty aro also tho ways of peace and ways of su;asss as well, and at last tho master of busi ness on the great scale have owin to yield their purpose, perhaps their Judg ment also, In honorable surrender. Wlint U iolnc In llnpiirn. "What we are purposing to do, here fore, Is happily, not to hamper or Inter fere with business as enlightened business men prefer to do It, or In any sense put It under tho ban. TM antagonism l.e- tween business ond government is over. We are now about to give expression to Ihc best business Judgment of America, to what we know to be the business con science and honor of the land. The gov ernment and business men are ready to meet each other half way In a common effort to square business methods with both public opinion and the law. Th? best Informed men of the business world condemn the methods and processes and consequences of monopoly as we condemn them; and the Instinctive judgment of tho vast majority of business men every where goes with them. We ihntl now u their spokesmen. That Is the strength of mir position nnd the sure prophecy 'if what will ensue when our reasonable work is done. "When serious contest ends, when men unite In opinion nnd purpose, those who aro to chnnge their ways of business Joining with those who ask for the change. It Is possible to effect It n the way In which prudent and thoughtful and patrlotio men would wish to seo It brought about, with as few, as slight, as easy nnd simple business readjustments os possible in the circumstances; noth ing essential disturbed, nothing torn up by the roots, no parts rent asunder which can be left In wholesale combina tion. Fortunately no measure of mveip. ing or novel changes are nect.if.ary. It will be-understood that our obje.t is not to unsettle business or anywhere seri ously to break Its established courses athwart. On the contrary, wo desire the laws wo nre now about to pass to bo the bulwarks and safeguards of Industry against the forces that have disturbed it What we have to do can be done in a new spirit, In thoughtful moderation, without resolution of any untoward kind. To Hud Monopoly. "We are all agreed that private monop oly Is Indefensible and Intolerable' and our program Is founded on that convic tion. It will be a comparative but not a radical or unacceptable Program and tbeso are Its items, the changes which opinion deliberately sanations and for which business waits. "It waits with acquiescence, in the first Place, for laws which will effectually prohibit and prevent such interiocklngs of tho personnel of tho directorate of great corporations-banks and railroads, Industrial, commercial and publlo servlco bodies as in effect result In making thoso who borrow and those who lend practically ono ond the same, thoso who sell and thoso who buy, but the same persons trading with one another under different numes ond in different com- blnntlonl and those who affect to com pete in fact partners and masters of some whole field of business. Sufficient time should be nllowed, of course, in which to effect these changes' ot organisation, without inconvenience or confusion. "Such a prohibition will work much more than a mere negative good by cor recting the sorious eylls which have, arisen. For example, the men who have been the directing spirits of the grent investment banks have usurped the place which belongs to independent industrial management working in its own behoof. It will bring new men, new energies, a new spirit of initiative, new blood Into i the management ofi our great business en terprises. Is- will opon the field ot In dustrial development and organisation to scores of men who have been obliged to serve them when their abilities entitled them to direct. It will immensely hearten the young men coming on. and wilt greatly enrich the business activities ot the whole country. llnrmfal Itallronil Finance. "In the second place, business men an well as those who direct publlo affairs now recognlxe, and recognise with pain ful clearness, the great harm and Injus tice wntch lias been done to many, It not all, ot the great railroad systems ot the country by the way in which they have been financed and their own dis tinctive interests subordinated to the In terests of the men whr financed them and of other business enterprises which thoso men wished to promote, Tho coun try is ready, therefore, to accept, and accept with relief, as wall as approval, a law which will confer on the Interstate Commerce commission the power to su perintend and regulate the financial operations by which tho railroads are henceforth to be supplied with the money the. need for their proper development to meet the rapidly growing requirements of the country for Increased and im proved facilities ot transportation. We cannot postpone action In this matter without leaving the railroad exposed to many serious handicaps nnd hazards; and the prosperity ot the railroads and the prosperity ot the country nre in separably connected. Upon this question thoso who are chiefly responsible for actual management and operation of the railroads have spoken very plainly and very earnestly, with a purpose we ought to be quick to accept It will be one step, and a very important one, toward the necessary separation of the business ot production from the business ot trans, portatlon. Mast j:ud Uncertainty. The business ot the country awaits nnd has long awaited and has suffered because it could not obtain further and more explicit 'legislative definition of the policy and meaning ot the existing anti trust law. Nothing hampers business like uncertainty. Nothing daunts or discour ages it like the necessity to take chances, to run the risk ot falling under the con demnation ot the law before it can make sure just what the law is. Surely we are sufficiently familiar with the actual processes and methods of monopoly and of the many hurtful restraints ot trade to make definition possible, at any rate up to the limits ot what experience has disclosed. These practices, being now abundantly disclosed, can be explicitly and item by item forbidden by stntuts fin such terms as will .practically eliminate i,Jcilre ou",h', more than that tho mcnace of leKal Process in these matters V made explicit nnd Intelligible. They Weill the advice, the definite guidance information which can be supplied by an administrative body, so Interstate trade comeaiikloa. "The opinion ot the country would in stantly approve ot such a commission. It would not wish to see it empowered to make terms with monopoly or in any sort to assume control of business, as if the government made itself responsible. It -demands such -a commission only as an Indispensable instrument ot Informa tion and publicity, as a clcirtng lionse for the facts by which bath thn nubile 'mind and the managers ot great business undertakings should be guided, and as an instrumentality for doing justice to business where the processes of the courts or the natural forces of correc tion outside the courts are Inadequate to adjust the remedy to the wrong In a way that will meet all the equities and circumstances of the case, "L'nscrnmlilltiK Kbkk." "Producing Industries, for example, which havo passed the point up to which combination may be consistent with the publlo Interest and the freedom of trade, cannot always be dissected Into their component units as rendllv n railroad compnnles or similar organizations can be. Their dissolution by ordinary legal pro ceeds may oftentimes Involvo financial ConMCQUenccs llkelv tn nvrrtvhMfn the . curlty market and bring on It breakdown nnu conrusion. There ought to be nn administrative commission capable of di recting and shaping such corrective processes, not only in old of the courts, but nlso by Independent suggestions, if necessary. Mnkr Penalties Personal. Inasmuch ns our obiect nmi Mm spirit of our action In thesn matter U to meet business half way in Its processes or self-correction nnd disturb its ledti- maio course as little as possible, wo ought to seo to it, and the Judgment of. practical and sagacious men of affairs everywhere would applaud us If wo did see to It, that penalties nnd punishments should fall, not on business Itself, to Its confusion and Interruption, but on the Individuals who use tho Instrumentalities of business to do things which publlo Policy nnd sound business practice con demn. Kvery act of business Is doneat the command or on the InltlatlvMlHfo' ascertainable person or Kroa20!ersons. These had been held Individually respon sible, nnd the punishment should fall on them, not on the business organization of which they made Illegal use. It should be ono of the main objects of our legis lation to divest such persons of their corporate cloak nnd deal with them as with thoso who uo not represent their corporations, but merely by deliberate intention of tho law; Business men the country through would, I am sure, ap plaud us if we were to take effectual steps to seo that the officers and direc tors of great business bodies were pro vented from brim?inrr ti.. .... . . ... llu lne 0U9. ncss ot the country Into disrepute and danger. other questions mmnin .i,ii. .m need very thoughtrul and practical treat ment. Enternrlsna In th... of great Individual fortunes are often times interlocked, not by being under the control of the snmn ..... by tho fact that the greater, port of'tholr vuiyunwo biock is owned by a single person or groUD Of nnrann. thn . some way Intimately related In Interest. We are agreed. I take It. that holding companies should be prohibited, but what I of the controlling private ownerehlp ot Individuals or actually co-operative groups of Individuals? Shall the nrlvntu owners of caDltal ntnnl , ... i - Duitnau to be themselves in effect holding clr cumstances? Wo don't wish, 1 suppose, to forbid the DUrchaae of atnMs. v,.. .... person who pleases to buy them in such luanuues as ne can afford, or In any .uu.nniy io umit the sale of stocks to bona fide purchasers. Shall we re qulro the owners of .stock, -wh.n. otlng power in several cnrntunin. -u,i,ini. ought to be Independent of ono another would constitute actual control, to make election In which of then orlcao their rltrht to vntn? tm r.nA.fin - - 1-VSHWJI I Venture for VOUr rnnMArit., Protect the Little Fellorr. "There is another matter in i poratlve considerations of Justice and fair Piay suggest thoughtful remedlaf action. Not only do many of tho combinations effected or sought to be effected In the industrial world work an Injustice on the publlo in general; thoy also directly and seriously injure the Individuals who are put out ot business in one unfair way or another by the many dlslodelnir and, exterminating forces of combination. I hope that we shall agree In giving pri vate individuals who claim to have been Injured by these Processes the rlal.t tn found their suits for redress on the facts and Judgments proved and entered In suits by the government where the gov ernment has on its own Initiative sued the combinations complained ot and won lis suit, and that the statute of limita tions shall be suffered tn run nirnlnut such litigants only from the date of the conclusion of the government's action. It is ni rair tnai ine private litigant should be obliged' to set up and establish again the facts which the government has proved, lie cannot afford, he has not the powsr to make use ot such processes ot Inquiry as the government has com- maim oi. iiiua snail lnamauai justice be done while the processes of business are rectified and squared with the gen eral conscience. Dp to Congress Xarr. "I have laid the cose before you, no doubt as It lias in your .own mind, as it lies tn the thought ot tho country. What must every candid man say ot the sug gestions I have laid before you, ot the plain obligations ot which I have re minded you? That these are new things for which the country Is not prepared; but that they are old things, now famil iar and must ot course be Undertaken It we are to square our laws with the thought and desire ot the country. Until the things are done, conscientious men the country over will be unsatisfied. They aro In these things our mentors and col leagues. We are now about to write the additional articles ot our constitution ot peace, the peace that Is honor and free dom and prosperity." HISTORICAL SOCIETY MEET MAY BE A LIVELY SESSION (From n Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Nch., Jan. 50.-(Speclal.)-A contest looms up ahead ot the members ot tho State Historical society, which will convene In annual session here tomorrow. A determined fight will te made to dis possess 8ecretury C. 8. Paine fro.n he position whloh he has held since he Un placed J. A. Barrett, nearly a decade ago. John Leo Webster, who has been prc&l dent for many terms, has aroused a con troversy because he believes the society should not bo run as an adjunct t. the University ot Nebraska and Its positions used to Tewavd persons connected with the Institution. Albert Watklns, one ot the society's writers, also is said to have won posi tion, all ot which will be threshed out when the member vote on the organisa tion's policy for the ensuing year. An Ideal Woman's I.sxatlvr JS"o better laxative than Dr. King's New Life Pills. They help the liver and bowels to healthy action. 25c. For sale by all druggists. Advertisement LIVESTOCK EXPERTS DIFFER Jastro Sayi Free Trade Will Not Affect Industry. POOLE TAKES OTHER VIEW Chicago Editor Snys It Una Fright, eneil Tlmltt Growers Into Selllnn; Ilrredlnir Stock nnd (hnt Prices Will Atlvnnce. DKNVER, Colo., Jan. SO.-The failure or the removal of the tariff to reduce the price of meats to the consumer wns uweit upon today at the opening ssslon of the seventh annual convention of the American National TJve Ktnek Hon. Delegates from all stock growing states attended. Tho annual address of If. A. Jastro, president of the association, wm nn cY . hnustlve review of the live stock Industry in tho United States and other counties. Mr. Jastro expressed tho belief that the removal of the tariff on live stock and meat would not Inlum live stock Industry nnd that prices will noi long remain below tho prcsont level. I. T. Pryor of 8an Antnnln T- cussed Mexico nnd Canada as competitive live stock countries nnd the effect of the abolition of the tariff n th in,..t. i the United States. Exaggeration nf mit imr.nw.ti since tho removal of tho tariff wb pointed out br J. K. Pnnl f ri,i- who declared that these had not af fected the market as much as the pre cipitate unloading of live stock by Ameri can growers President Jnmim'n Aililma. That the meat producing industry of the United Btates has been permanently placed on a freo trade basis without uenem or cheaper prices to the con sumer, ana that the removal of the tariff will not appreciably Injure the live stock Industry were the principal conclusions drawn by President II. A. Jastro. He said that perhaps in the distant futuro there might be a realignment of parties and one similar to the agrarian parties of Europe might favor a dlffnront rt. ment of this Industry, but this Is a remote possiomty ana the live stock growers "may as well adjust themselves to a freo trade basis on their products." Tho high cos't of moat In the lost few years, Mr. Jastro said, was tho most Im portant factor In producing tho nresint result, coupled with tho consumers' fail ure to take into account the advanced cost or production and increased land values. Another cause, ho said, wnx thn widespread, hut erroneous belief that tho so-called beet trust was solely responsi ble for the high cost of meats. Accord ing to tho best obtainable information the speaker placed tho live stock slaught ered by the Armour, Swift and Morris Interests at per cent of all tho cat. tie, 30' per cent of alt the hogs and C5 per cent of all the sheep and lambs killed In this country. He expressed the belief that tho nrlr of live stock and meats never again will be as low as In former years. He declared that the beef ncurrliv wan not eonfincd to the United States, but affects every civilized country tho "pop ulation growing faster than the meat sup ply. He expressed the onlnlan Mint thn removal of trie tariff ought not to injure appreciamy the live stock Industry. Severe- Blow to Industry, Placing of meat on the. eren list ha not only failed to reduce tho cost to the con sumer, .out nas administered to the domestic meat producing lnduntrv thn severest blow it has received in many years said J. E. Poole, editor of the Chi cago Live Stock World. Mr. Poole said Ignorance of comrrpitM- men and of eastern editorial wrltcra as to actual conditions ot stock growing and handling tn the west had been responsible for tljo cheap ment agitation that had put every product of the industry on the freo list. "Barely had the session nf mnerna hit. gun," said tho speaker, "when popular ciamor ror lower living cost arose. Fore most tn this clamor were representatives of the retailer's' organization, who nre. rented glib arguments for free meats. 'The agitation proved effective ond in October, tho bars were thrown down to tho llvo stock growers and meat vendors of the world. Prior to that tho advance of the era of cheap meats was proclaimed noisily. "A veritable carnival of misstatement ensued. Small consignments nf hoof from Argentina, by way of London wero magnl nod into cargoes. One boat load direct from the Itlver Platte wns announced at1 New York three times and the editors ttrugclcd to outdo one another In proph esying meat Plcntltlide. I "Washington endeavored to deludo Itself that Us nostrum, was actually effecting reduction of living cost. "The JCavy department announced t had saved half a cent a pound by pur chasing Australian betf. That stuff cost Uncle Sam ,$11.80 per hundred pounds while a big packer's sales In New York that same week averaged but U1.&0 per hundred. Tltnlil Growers Unload. "Alarmed at the Prospect of an inunda tion ot Argentine and Australian beet and mutton and Canadian cattle, timid growers unloaded preclpltiously, If un wisely. All through the summer Chicago and other markets were glutted with stock. At a moment when confldenrn was asserting Itself and growers, detect- Mother! If Child's Tongue Is Coated r If croM, feverish, constipated, bill ous, stomach sour, give "Cali fornia Syrup of Figs.' A laxative today save! a sick child tomorrow. Children slirtply will not taV; tho time from play to empty their bowels, which becom clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach so Jr. Look, At thei tongue, mother! It coatd, or your child Is listless, cross, feverish, breath lad, restpess, doesn't eat heartily, full of cM or has sore throat or uny othe.- ej-lldren's aliment, give a' teaspoon ful. of "California Syrup of Figs." then don't worry, because It Is perfectly harm less, and in a few hours all this consti pation r-tolson, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bow els, nnd yon have a well, playt-jl child agatn. A thorough 'Inside cleansing'- ts oftlmes all that Is necessary. It should be the first treatment given In any sickness. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask ycur druggist for a. M-cent bottle ot "California Syrup of Fls," which has full directions) for babies, children ot ull ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Look carefully and see that It Is made by the "California Fig Syrup .Company." ptn't be fooled' Ad-vrtles4eV Wo havo quite a number of our very fine shirts which havo become soiled or mussed, Thoy sold from $1.G0 to $2.00 and como In all sizes and a nice variety of patterns and colors. We thought to havo them laundered and In voice them at 8Cc each but, we changed our mind. Wo aro going to offer them to you at 85c a plcco and allow you an oxtra lGc for laundry making 70c tho net price 'for you to pay us and you to send them to tho laundry you choose. ing a profit In raising cattle and sheep. wore stocking up, faith was routed by" fear and demoralization ensued, Breed ing enterprises by the hundred were abandoned and orders for cows cancelled, and thousands ot other cows purchased previously in confidence that calf raising was on a paying basis were sent to the shambles. "Thus the very measure designed by Washington theorists to relievo tho con sumer defeated the object for which It was Intended. Had the confidence en Rendered by the high fat cattlo market of 1912 and the consequent advance tn stockers not been destroyed by the menace of freo trade beef, and also mut ton, production In the United States would by this time have made a long stride along the path of recuperation, whereas actual depletion has resulted. "So far foreign beef has fulled to re duce cost to consumers and much of tho stuff reaching Atlantic ports has not been suited for shop trade. The beet Is aged and despite bureaucratic assurance of excellence Is decidedly deficient In that quality However, it must be recognized as a competition and every ton of it en tering the portals ot the United States displaces so much domestic product, If prices are maintained, and that appears to be the disposition. If not determination. of tho distributors. Prediction is mado that completion of the Panama canal will give Australia access to the Atlantic seaboard market, but all Australian ad- vicos tell of. enhancing cost and aro any thing but suggestive of that cheapness the freo trado propagandists have ex ploited." ROBBER BANDIT AT ST. JOE ADMITS PARTIN HOLDUP (Continued from Page One.) St. Joseph, where Flomlng and Murphy followed them. It was "Williams who visited the SlcVcy place during Ak-Snr-Bcn with an employe of the Novelty company after ho had bought n Bull and overcoat there. He talked with Vera lihoff, an Inmate, and asked her to go to the wild west show then at tho auditorium. Suspicions that Williams was a former cowboy havo been verified, according to reports from St. Joseph. It is said that he whb employed on tho O. K. ranch neat Madrid before ho came to Omaha, lie had been llvinc In South Omaha with Mary E. Parrlsh, who was n'lso arrested with him. FOLLOW CLUK TO SOUTH 05IAIM I'ostal lfotiiwl In McVry Ilesorl Lrnds tu Arrmt nt St. Jonepli, Tho chief clue which led to tho arrest of Carter and the Parrlsh woman at St. Joseph came from a postal card which in as found In tho McVey resort after the trogody last week, The postal, though tarn and soiled, was finally pieced to gcthor and the name ot Mary Parrlsh deciphered by tho police. The postaj was taken to South Omuha, Where Captain Zaloudok at once connected the girl's name with a woman who had worked In cafo owned by Irving Proud at Twenty. sixth and O streets. A short tlmo ago Captain Zaloudek was selling tickets for tho policemen's ball. Among other purchasers was a horse dealer whose name is said to be Scott. Scott bought a ticket for the ball and paid for It, but requested Captain Zaloudek to slvo tho ticket to Mary Par- rlah, who worked in Proud's cafe. Cap tain Zaloudok delivered the ticket, and at the time noted that the girl, though she was employed In a restaurant, wore diamonds and other expensive Jewelry. Talked of Crime. When the girl's name was connected through tho postal card with the tragedy nt the McVey resort, officers of the Houth Omaha police force, accompanied by Omaha detectives went to Proud's res taurant. There they found that a man named Carter had worked there for a week. Carter had been attentive to fhe Parrlsh Btrl and was a fair flunkey, nut he talked about crime and gunmen and the Ilka too much to suit Mr. Proud. At the end of his first week there, Carter whs discharged. Nevertheless he con tinued to go out with Mary Parrlsh, and as a result of this relation Mr. Proud likewise dismissed the girl from his em ploy. This occurred on the Saturday prior to the shooting. A search by the officers finally suc ceeded In their obtaining from him tho information that on Friday nlsht. he night after the robbery, ho had nn en gagement with Mary Parrlsh to me-t her at the Union station. Tho man known as Scott went to fill the date, hut tie girl was not there. lie waited a while then decided she had ditched htm, und left tho station. Scott gave the further Information that the girl would likely be found cither at her home In Skidmnre Mo., or at a boarding house In St. Joseph Following this clue. Detective Fleming and Murphy went to Skldmore, and fol lowing the tip given bv the man known as Scott, arrested both Williams, alias Part. Sec tJicm In our west window. A different kind of sale A Laundry Allowance SHIRT SALE Soiled and mussed shirts offered for about Half with an additional allowance for Laundry. OMAHA'S FASTEST GROWING STORK 1010-18-20 FAIINAM STREET t'er, and tho girl Mary Parrlsh in St Joseph. Tho police believe that following tho robbery the party of men and tho woman went to South Omaha and there left on the Missouri Pacific. South Omaha police have also found that Williams was with tho woman in San FranclBco and Portland, nnd that the two wero often visited at South Omaha by an cx-convlct named Collins, with whom Williams often held whis pered conversations. After tho pair had been discharged from the restaurant they mode a trip together to Skldmore, Mo., and returned to South Omaha before the murder. UNION PACIFIC LENDS ITS AID Hold Fast Train Until Suspects Are Taken Off nt Klinbnll. Chief of Detectives Maloney wishes to publicly thank the Union Pacific railroad for its efforts In assisting In tho appre hension of the bandits. Ho says that tho road gave him free uso of Its wires and held ono of its fastest trains at Kimball until two suspects wero taken off. Vallmer Nominated. IOWA CITY, la., Jan. 20.-(SpecIal Telegram.) Democrats of tho Second Iowa district today nominated Henry Vollmer of Davenport for congressman to fill the vacancy caused by the death of I. S. ePpper. Vollmer was named on the rlrst ballot. Key to the Situation Bee Advertising. Papers Diapepsin Will Digest Food When Your Stomach Can't It's Great Stops Indigestion, Sourness, Nausea, Gas, Dyspepsia in five minutes Fine for Stomach. If you feel bloated after eating, and you believe It Is the food which flits you; if what llttlo you cat lies Uko a lump of lend on your ntomacht it there is diffi culty breathing after eating, eructa tions of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching ot gas, you need Pape's Diapepsin to stop food fermentation and Indigestion. It neutralizes excessive acid, stomach poison; absorbs that misery-making gas and stops fermentation which sours your entire meal and causes Dyspepsia, Sick Headache-, Blllloiisness, Constipation, Boys! The Winter Base Ball League Is in Season All the thrills all the excitement all the fun of our great national game are reproduced in Tine r'lJI AIDirrVT BASE ISALL GAME You, yourself, are responsible for base on bans or stolen bases. There Is nothing mechanical Champion nases Kail Game, So simplo that even it you are can play It and enjoy It from It's the greatest bargain you A $1 game for 25c with attached kaa , ..i k PILES $500 i ' Xnndreda of from at! ort iu unfiriA Vbone 43M. $1.50 to $2.00 Shirts for-- 70c CONVICTS TRANSFERRED TO HASTINGS ASYLUM (From a Start Correspondent. LINCOUN, Jan. 30.-(Specfal.)'-MorrIs C. Bressler. sent to tho penitentiary from Boone county for incest and rcJ celved at that institution October 9" 1913, to srve. a term of eight years, ha1 a been adjudged a fit subject for the In sane asylum, and has been taken to the Hastings institution. Louis J. Hronlsh, sent from Boyd county for assault, and given fifteen' years, has also been sent to the same asylum. Ho was received June 9, 19131 GENEVA BANKER OFFERS TO START BANK AT SUPERIOR' SUPERIOR, Neb., Jan. 20. (Special Telegram.) A mass meeting of depos itors of the First National bank was held In tho opera house this afternoon to consider the proposition of Banker Gclsclman of Geneva, who offers to start a state bank and buy the building- of the wrecked bank. The meeting adjourned to consider .again his proposition on Thursday afternoon. Six Store Darned nt Gcddes. YANKTON, S. D., Jan. 2a (Special clegram.) Fire at Geddes last night de stroyed six stories. The loss Is about $35, 000, with. Insurance of 118,000. Griping, etc. Your real and only trouble Is that' what you eat docs not digest, but quickly ferments and sours, produc ing almost any unhealthy condition. A case of Pape's Diapepsin will cost filty cents at any pharmacy here, and will convince any stomach sufferer tn five minutes that Fermentation and Sour Stomach Is causing tho misery of Indi gestion. No matter It you call your trouble Ca tqrrh ot the Stomach, Nervousness or Gastritis, or by any other name always remember that relief Is waiting at any drug storo the moment you -decide to begin its use. Pape's Diapepsin will regulate any out of order Stomach within five minuses, and digest promptly, without any fuss oi discomfort, all of any kind ot food you cat. Advertisement, This 81-OQ GAME only every hit, out, sacrifice, This Coupon about this wonderful and 23c exchanged not a "fan" you jC.. Vl?1'00 the start, Si M P I O N ever saw. The Bee Office, 103 coupon, Bee UldgM Omaha, Neb. ii X' wsnUd by mail stnd 6o REWARD rawi thai SK. UWSH eanaol BtwjB MUBiMjias, x&y watva era v to tHe t Bromlnsat peepi u mihl. nd of tk. Btati ?n i52 bk. lUZWZLL dntr at M ruts i maaa. rtt i iuimal. BANK n . 17TjX AD rAJUTAJC STXHET3. OKAXA.