T1IK JiL'li: OMAHA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER . 2, 1914. FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A r Horn Oars Tet Aayeae Om Vn Without Dlseomfort er Leas af Tim. We have a New Method that cures ihm, and ae want rou to try it at our. expense. So matter whether jour case la of long-standing or racnt devel opment, whether It la preaent aa occasion al or chronic Asthma, you ahrxild send for a free trial of our method. No matter In what rtfmate you live, no matter what your aire or occupation. If you are trou bled with aathma, our method ahould re lieve you promptlv. We specially want to aend it to thnee appaimtly hopeless cases, where all forma of Inhalers, donrhfi, opium preparations, fumes, "patent amokea." etc., have failed. We want to show everyone at our own expense that thla new method la designs to end irll difficult hreathlng, all wheeling, and allNthnae terrible paroxysms at onoa and for1 all time. Thla free offer! la too Important to neg lect a alnsl day. Write now and then be. tin the method at onre. Rend no money, f Imply mall coupon below. Do It Today. ENDORSE WILSON, THE PLEA0F BRYAN "If Yoa Kebuke Him. You Will Do it While World Looks On," Sayi Secretary of State. " URGES SUPPORT OF DEM TICKET Ifclef Aide of President, la Keren t. Aadllorlum, praises Kseea tire sad Mia adtnlals-(ration. Secretary of State William J. Bryan at the Auditorium Aiturday mado a strong Plea, to the voters fot the election of a 'democratic state and cnngreaslonsl ticket aa an endorsement of President Wilson s derrtocratlo administration. "The world wtll be watching the election returns.'' he said. "Our president la doing the diplo matic work' of the wurld today. If you rebuke him, 'you do it while a world look on." Laads ArfmtnMtratlon. He praised Wilson and the democratic administration with refrreni to the tar iff revision, the currency measure and the handling of the Mexican situation. 'The republicans." he said, "had firmly Intended to attack President Wilson's record In the handling of the Meglran situation. . They had prepared to attack him and charge him with puraufng a weak policy In that matter. ' Rut since that time something has happened In Europe. And today there Is not a republican who darei to attack Wilson for keeping out of war. During the most critical tlmea In the Mexican situation the republicans and the jingo press gave the president more troublo than Huerta gave him." Refer to Saffruare. At the opening of hia talk Secretary Bryan made aome extensive reference to the woman suffrage issue to be voted upon in Nebraska, Tuesday. "I do not know how many votes will be cast for woman suffrage next Tuesday," he aald. "I cannot say how many will be caat against It. There will be one vote caat for suffrage that I know of. I have aev eral reasons Tor casting that Vote. One la that I had a mother. The other la that I have a -wife. My rather died before I waa 21, and my mother had the. burden of raising the family. She took' the. rer aponslbllly, and raised that family as well aa any man could have done. ' . Wife Faithful rartaer. "I have a wife hj married me when I didn't have anylhlng. No matter how little money I made ahe kept the lltlng expenses within the Income. She haa been my faithful partner; and III not ask the, government to grant me a privi lege that I'm not willing to. have my wife snare. ( SEVEEE BATTLE IN PROGRESS ON WAY TO OCEAN (Continued from Fsgn One.) Russian Gunboat Beats Off Turks; Afterward is Sunk by Torpedo can be marked In feet or yards, and the advance made a few days ago ly the British In Belgium of 1.2J0 yards waa con sidered remarkable. Throughout the great battle Trent there lias been a repetition of attack! and counter attacks with at tlmea a pro nounced thinning of the lines, whether they have gained a slight advance or l ave been thrown back. The Germans made a particularly violent attnrk east of Polseons on the Alsne, and, according to the German report, drove the French ai ros.i the river. Keporta that Lille haa been reoccupled by the French and that Ostend haa been evacuation by the Hermans lack confir mation and ate oonaJ.lered "premature, but around the former city fighting of a most desperate character haa been going on and the villages aurroundlng Lille have been taken and retaken time after time. THOMPSON PUT OUT BY A BRITISH SHELL (Continued from Page One.) CARLISLE OVERCOME BY -SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY BTFPAlO. N. Y Nor. 1. Syracuse university defeated Carlisle hare today U to 1 Carlisle' attempts at' the' open game'- uauatly ended disastrously, the Indians' most notable gains being mkde by Captain .Calac through the Syracuse renter. , " . .. V i I ' lunch from the supplies captured In Bel gium, but the din of cannonading Was such that I had little appetite. "I saw at closer range, than ever 1 had before, the incredible alaughter caused among the men in the trenchoa by the enemy's shells, and the sight waa sickening. Huddenly the Germans full back by underground paaaagea from their trenches and I found myself alone. I wandrred around these trenches as if. lost in a mass at Coney Island and didn't find the right exit until after1 dark, when there was a lull in the firing. ' ' Knocked Oat by Shell. "That night and the next day I spent at the German headquarters in a small village nearby. Friday night. Just eight days ago, while German officers and my self were having dinner In a private house used for the army headquarters, a shell from a British warship dropped through the roof. - ' I remembered nothing more until 1 found myself rocking about in an ambu lance on my way to Bruges. In the hospi tal there I .was told I had been thrown through . window by the force of the explosion, and that my face was rath-r badly torn rp. They also said that two of my officer companions had, been in stantly killed and another had died In a hospital soon afterward. - ( The German Red Cross nurses, clothed In white, even to their hats and shoes, dressed my wounds. A soon as I was able to fat up I rode to Antwerp on an ammunition' cart, and after a few days there" I came on to London." IjONPON, Nov. 1. The Prtrograd cor respondent of "Renters Telegram company, sends the following dispatch: "The Russian gun'.iont Kubanctaj put up a fight against two Turkish torpedo boats, which entered Olesra harbor and attacked merchant ships. The Kuba nets finally drove the Turkish boats off. "The torpedo boala entered the harbor and fired all their guns. Shells struck the Kubanets, tearing away Ita wooden superstructure, while steamers In the harbor and warehouses on shore wire damaged. The Turks strove to torpedo the Kubanets, but failed. "The psssrngeB and crew of the steamer Yalta, which waa sunk, were saved and most of the crew of the Kaabeck, which also sank, got away on rafts." AMSTERDAM. Oct. fl.-Via London) (The following" .official telegram from Constant Inoplx la published In the Frank furter Zeltungl "A smaU.tari bf;ft Turkish fet In the Blsck sea on Thursday sat.k' the Ruselan mlne;la-yi r1rta-aef of I,) tons, which had on tmirl "M mnV. dam aged a Ruaalan torpedo boat and seised a coal steamer. -- "A torpedo fired from the torpedo boat lfarlet-!-MUlet.ank the Russian . de stroyer Kubanets. T,he Mauyenet-f-MU- let torpedoed . a Russian coast guard ship, which, waa severclyudamaared. Three Russian officers, were saved toy us ana Imprisoned. The, Turkish fleet .suffered no loss and the battle waa successfully continued." -- ADMITS- SLAYING FAMILY Scott' Stone Murden Wife and Children by Dynamiting- Home. ANOTHER WOMAN CAUSED SEED fatted State Army Recralt Makes Written t'onfeaaloa of Crime Fol lewta Arrest oa laferaaa tloa til Tea ty W aaiaa. UNI STUDENTSJLECTIONEER Omaha Student Oat for Dr. Jenkins and V. Debolt for School Board. . . Flec.trle, . Brand, Bitters. Sure' relief' for Indigestion, dyspepsia, liver and kidney complaints. Gives ap petite, adds tone 'to system. 60c and 11,00, All druggists Advertisement. Dee Want 'Ads' Are Famous as Rcsult- SUFTS ALSO IN EVIDENCE (o-F.ds at laatltatloa Basy Cara- palarplna- for Eqeal Votes for Women Political Clafc May JBcOreraaJaed. With the president of the school. Dr. t). E. Jenkins, running for the Board of Education on the citizens ticket, and with one of the student body, V. DeBolt, a' senior.' running for superintendent of Pouglaa county schools, students of the University of Omaha are taking a great intereat In the coming election. There is hardly a student in the uni versity even down to the co-eds who haa not a bunch of cards extolling the merits of these candldatea and cam paigning for their election. Suffrage, literature la also in great evi dence about the school, some of the mgre ardent co-eds campaigning In n sys tematic manner for the equal ballot. In order that DeBolt could keep on playing with the university team on which ho Is fullback, three students volunteered to help him In hi" campaign. Just before the' team left for York Friday afternoon a number of other students, . agreed to work for him If he would make the trip. Bo anxious are the students to see their favorites elected that it is probable thai a political club will be organised on Monday for the booatlng of "their : f a- vorltta. ;.-. " , ; News notes at Caleeralty.l The first Issue, of the' Gateway, : the student publication, will be, out Uonds.y. Miss Minnie Johnson entertained the Utopian society at her home Haturday evening. .,. , i Jacques Rleur, a sophomore, haa or ganised a Menorah society, of which he haa been elected president. Dr. D. B. Jenkins and Prof. T. P; Ramsay attended the Preabyterlau synod, last week at Madison, Neb. An employment bureau Has been started by the Young Men's Ohrlelan- aa aoclatlon of the university.- To date. the work to every ' student who-? has applied for It. . - , , . ......... W. F. Baxter addressed the student body Wednesday In chapel on fhe cltl sena' ticket for the school board. A freahman class party was given last Haturday at the home of Robert Hughes. A large number of students were present Mr. Lyons, International traveling sec retary of the Young Men's Christian ss soclatlon, spoke before, the school branch Friday on "Religion and Education." Miss Kate Mcftugh. Instructor of Hhakespeare and modern poeta, haa dis missed all her claneee for the coming week, because of the State Teachers' con vention, of which she Is president. British Vessel Is Sunk by Mine Off Coast of Belgium LONDON, Noy.jl A British vessel 'as sunk by a mine Saturday off .the Belgian coast, according to a message to the Weekly Despatch from Dover. Whether it was a merchantman or g warship is not stated, but the vessel la said to have left Dover early Friday, carrying 300 pas sengers. It Is possible that the report was "delayed and garbled.' and , refers to ths British cruiser Hermes, which was aunk in the straits of Dover by a German submarine. ' ' organisation haa been able to" SECREURY.LANE SUPPORTS KENT AGAINST DEMOCRAT SAN RAFAEL,. CeL. Nov. .1. Secretary FrankHn Lane, democrat, who Is In the state ' campaigning for James B. t'helan. candidate for United States sen ator, hopped ) over party lines In a tele gram received'- here tonight to endorse William -Kent,', Independent, who Is rua ning for ..congress. Kent, although run ning aa an independent, has the progres sive and socialist nominations. - r ("I hope .-you will be successful nest Tuesde-y,;'; says the telegram. "We need your help, .courage and Intelligence In carrying out our legislative program dur ing the next, two years." . ppposed to Kent In the First district are. Edward Hart,. republican, and O. F. Meldon. democrat, p . ST. LOfI, Mo., Nov. 1 8tt Ptone, a United states army recruit at Jeffer son barracks, nar here, who' "ws ar rested yesterday afternoon at. the request of the state's sttornty of Champaign county, Illinois, thla afternoon made a Written confession that- h had murdered his wife and four children near Tolono, III., on .September 2i . . . He killed them, according to his con fession... by . dynamiting hia heme. He himself tied from the house after he had -lighted the fuse that set off the explosion. . Fire followed the explosion. In the ruins ft the house the .bodies of Mrs.Stone and two children were found. but the bodies of the other two children never were recovered. Evidently they had been burned. . The motive of the crime, according to the confession, was that Stone Bilptu.go amay with another woman a woman in Champaign, whose name he gave as Lu cille. Her Isst aame he said he rould nnt rmember. An order for the arrest of the woman was made by telegraph from Pt. Louis today. It was aald that she was planning to leave Champaign. Btone said that he had been married seven years. Mis arrest here yesterday was due to the atory of a woman, who told the state's attorney of Champaign county that Btone wanted her to go with him and pose aa his wife. According to the. story. Stone mil this. woman the day before the fire and told her the net day he would be In Jail or ahe would see his name In thr papers. The day after the fire Stone met the woman, according to the story, and said he had obtained the kind of divorce he wanted. " Wkea Baby Haa the ( renp. When a mother Is awakened from sound sVwp to find her child, who hss gone to bed apparently In the beat of health, struggling for breath, she is naturally alarmed. Yet If she can keep her presence of mind and give Cham berlain's Cough Remedy every Jen min utes until vomiting Is produced, quick re lief will follow and the child will drop to sleep to awaken In tho morning a well as ever. This remedy haa been In use for many years with uniform sueeeae. Ob tainable everywhere. Advertisement. FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room24-J, Niagara and Hudson fts.. Buffalo. N.Y. Rend free trial of your method to: Oman Suffrage :' :iies iVGr Mean , That Women Must Serve as Jurors Anti-Suffragists Say It Does i The Law bf Nebraska Says It Does NOT . mieh Will You Believe? READ the Nebraska Law Chapter 16, article 1, section 576, Revised Statutes of Nebraska: ' Feraeas eeataeteat aa Jarera. All MALES residing la aay at the eoaatlea af this state, having the qnaliflcatleas af eleetora, and being aver the age af twenty-flve years, aad t soaad mlad aad dlaeretlea, aaa aot Jadgea at the aaareaae eoart or district courts, elerks of the aaprente ar district eoarts, sheriffs, eareaere sr Jailers, ar eaeleet to aay bodily laflraslty sasaatlaf a dis ability, aad who have aot beea eeavlcted at a criminal anTease punishable by Imprlaeameat la the pealteatlarr, aad are aot sabjeet ta liability for the commission af aay alleaae nhlrh by special provisions af law goes ar shall disqualify them, are and shall be -aeteat persona ta serve aa all grand aad petit Jertea, wltbla their eeantlea reapeetlvelyi PHO VIDEO, persona, aver ttO years af age, ministers af the gospel, county ladgea, toawty eoatmlasloaers, licensed attorneys, praetldna; phrslclaas, postmasters, registered pharanarlata, aad carriers af the Fnltod ntatea mails, members of state militia and mem hers at aay are departmeat ar eaaapany shall not be compelled ta arrve aa Jarara. (R. S. p. 60 1011 p. a8 Ann, J7S Com p. T3SS.I I . V ' :" I met T1- Tl-?-T ttltaV Il I 1 m I 'B II II IWI;" . Tirtt iiOv VV iiJiJiVUilli 1 MVCIU 'v; - v-.ct:- i A M If LX e tf.'..Cm vl ': I " o i'V'r 't '' vt "'"'.." m'r ' 'am ' -mm..'. ' 's. i : -waamaanj ' meii5 Wtasi Jr ace Women Compelled to Serve on Juries Should woman suffrage carry In Nebraska, women will have to serve on juries the same as . men do. ' In all states where woman suffrage prevails women are compelled to serve as jurors. The Seattle Daily Times of November 14, 1914, contains an account of a murder trial in that city. The jury was composed of seven women and five men.- (See Omaha Bee, Novem ber 15, 1913, on page 7, column 5). Does anyone imagine that these women served willingly? The facts are that they were compelled to serve as they were unable to furnish valid reasons for being excused. It is re. ported that all these women were opposed to votes for women, had urged that they be excused, and their places taken by women who were frantic for the right to vote, but their pleas went for naught. The presiding judge could see no legal way of letting them off. If a woman ig nores a jury summons, she may be arrested and fined by the court. In some states men are im prisoned as punishment for disregarding the summons to do jury duty. All voters, with a few specified exceptions, are subject to the call for service as jurors. An Associated Press Dispatch from Independence, Kan., under date of Dec. 13, 1912, relates ' how Kansas women were at their wits end to find a way whereby they might evade jury duty. Judge Clark of Independence stated that women bad more time for. jury duty than men, and . would have to serve. (See Omaha Bee, Dec. 13, 1912). An Associated Press Dispatch from Red Wood, Cal, dated Feb. 4, 1913, is to the effect that seventeen women of San Mateo County were called for service on the Grand Jury. No wonder that a strong movement is on foot among women in California and in Colorado asking that the question of repealing women suffrage, be submitted to a vote of the people. Pre dictions are made that the vast majority of women will vote for the repeal of woman suffrage just as soon as the question can legally be re-submitted to the voters of the State, in order that they may thus escape the obligation to do jury service and other duties imposed upon voters. Do Good Women W ant This Kind of Freedom ? That.Ines Milholland is one of the acknowledged leaders alike of the Woman Suffrage Movement, as well as of the "Feminist" Movement, may be gathered from the following, taken from McClure's Magazine for February, 1913: "A NEW DEPARTMENT FOR WOMAN-Conducted by Miss Inea Milholland. Introducing Miss Milholland to its' readers,' McClure's says, editorially: "This movement in its largest general aspect is termed 'FEMINISM;' in its immediate political aspects, 'Suffrage.' No woman in America is better qualified for the important task of conducting this department than INEZ MILHOLLAND." The following is taken in verbatim from Miss Milholland 's article in the February number of McClure's: (Note the imputation of' ignorance touching women of the old school ). "A large proportion of the new voters are women of the old types, bred to an other standard, NOT EQUIPPED TO COMPREHEND the power that has been placed in their hands 1 : But it will not be long before the steady influx to the voting ranks of those millions of YOUNGER women whose impressions are be ing formed in the more alert, stirring air of twiay, adding their clearer vision . and . greater independence'.' of spirit, will bring the REAL issues more sharply 'before -v us. Those unthinking ones who expect the old submission and, silence from the FREE women of today and tomorrow are certainly in for some exceedingly - Opinion of an Eminent Jurist Judge W. W. Slabaugh of Omaha, formerly of the District Bench, in an interview, authorized the following statement: ' "Although the word male appears in the law respecting the selection of jurors, yet if the word male in our fundamental law is stricken therefrom leaving the duties, burdens and privileges of citizenship the same, it will inevitably follow 'that the word male will be stricken from the jury law in consonance with the spirit that struck it from the constitution. "The suffragists who ask equal rights should, to be consistent throughout with their claim, ask to serve on juries where ultimately the issues that arise under our laws are tried and determined respecting persons and property." HERE IS THE BALLOT VOTE NO. The following is the form and number in which the question. will be printed on the official ballot at the election to be held Tuesday, Nov. 3, A. D., 1914: ' . No. Against woman suffrage. 307 Vote "No," ....... X . - V . , - 44 The "real issue," which Miss Milholland has in mind is Home and Marriage, for she goes 'on and says: , . . - '. , . ' "It may be further assumed that this pressure toward a constantly growing FREEDOM.anA POWER on. the part of the sex means that, in the long run, the insti tutions most certain to b? touched and changed are' institutions in which sex, as a sex js most peculiarly and vitally interested. ' And these institutions, it is hardly . necessary to point but, are the HOME and MARRIAGE, itself." L In her 'article Miss Milholland further refers to women of the old types as "the parasitic" sort, that they are naturally V conservative" and clinging. to conditions that maintain them in . idleness. (This is. the .same. Misa Milholland who early this year announced that no woman should spend more than fifteen minutes a day on her housework). She announces that she and her fellow Suffragist-Feminists intend to release women from an "enslavement." She gleefully says thatjwffragists are openly, reading Bernard Shaw's "utterances on forbidden topics, reading .Havelock Ellis work on Sex Psychology, Kaufpaan on1 the jnhabitants of the underworld, etc. In the; Atlantic f Magazine for December 19 13,' W, 17. George, the well-known woman suffra. gist, writes as foDowsV y .. .. .... w;. v i ' . '""The gaining of the vote is, in the Feminist, 'view, 'nothing but an affair of the outposts. Thy intend to use the vote to make women vote as women, not as citizens. : , It is no wonder then that the Feminists should have designs upon the most fundamental of human institutions marriage and motherhood. V In the main, Feminists are opposed to indissoluble Christian marriage. , : 1 That there is a sex war, and will be a sex war, I do. not deny." (Remember, the above are the views of a man who wriies IN FAVOR of woman suffrage)'. TOOTsTOTB A sop ef atoCl ore's fa rehraary ISIS, eaa of tae A.UaaUe Koatal fei Pee em be, ISIS, wlU be feaae 4s aay S-asUe Library. t i Issued by the Nebraska Men's Association Opposed to Women Suffrage