WOMEN APPLAUD ROOSEYELT SPEECH ' . ' Cheer When He Says He Would Tight to Stop Murder of Americans. ... . THE SAME TALE AS TO MEN Chicago" Oct 26. Chicago women . cheered Colonel Roosevelt today when he appealed to them not to be in--ftuenced by the plea that President tWilson had kept the nation out of rwar. When-he told them that he would fight at the drop of the hat if necessary to atop the murder of rwomen and children, they met the an . " nouncement with a long chorui of ap- plausei ; The colonel closed his western tour "here today with two speechesr the -first exclusively to women, with not more than a scant score of policemen 'and reporters in the audience. He had been asked, he said to appeal es pecially to the women who had been .influenced by the peace slogan, but ' he had decided to make, he declared, exactly the same appeal he would have ; made to men. "I'm not going to speak," he said, "to what I might call ithe early Victorian aunt." No Attempt to Hcckls. ; There was no attempt to heckle the speaker, the only interruption after he had described pictures of women .and children killed in Mexico 'and said he would have gone to war if - necessary to avoid that, several voice 'called "What about Hughes?" , "Mr. Hughes can be trusted to keep ; his word," answered Roosevelt. "When he says that he would not submit to the sinking of the Lusitania or the .killing of our citizens in Mexico, he means what he says." "You have stood up and listened to ;the 'Star Spangled Banner and to .America' and you have stood up be cause they were written about a gen eration of Americans that was hot too proud to fight You may notice that the expression 'safety first' is not em . bodied in either sons. And when you tare told to vote for Mr. Wilson be 4 cause he kept us out of war, remember ? that is something that cannot be said ; either of Washington or Lincoln." He was interrupted again when he I told of returning from the border, - where he said he found 50,000 troops, " without knowing what they were there tor. , "Wilson don't want them to vote,' : called a woman. "I was going to be more charitable ' and say that he wanted them there to help make up the president's mind whether he was at peace or at war. ; "The democratic platform said that the Mexicans have made war on our people. The judge advocate general ruled that the American army in Mexico was at war. So the Mexicans are at wary and our army is at war, put mr, wuson is ai peace, v ' The women also applauded his ref erence to hyphenated citiiens "There is no room in this country for the : perpetuation of different nationalties, he continued. , t y I Guilty of Moral Treason. ; -To divide our citizen along politi ' cal racial line is to be guilty of ' moral treason to the republic: To . hold for this country only half an allegiance is in realty to be hostile I . to this country, for in practice when the crisi comes, the man whose loyal ty is on a fifty-fifty basis always : show that hi loyalty to the other i country come firtt." " i "i Only the brief introduction to the '; address was devoted to suffrage, Mr. Roosevelt referring to the womrn as : his fellow American citizens and urg ; ing them to work for the passage of ' an amendment to the federal constitu tion providing for suffrage. He spoke at a mass meeting tonight. LAST WAR U. S. CAM i AYOID.SAYSWILSON . (OMttanM from Fee Oae.) . may take generation for Europe to i regain it tone. After the war we - will have the opportunity to assist Eurone. "American ha had an industrial re- vival in the last two years such as : ahe has never experienced before. The - men who think this is. due merely to the war are merely thinking they do not know. I More Oold Will Come. j "If the war goes on another year i we probably will nave the gold sup ply of the world. t We have created the instrumental! t tie through which the world' bank- ' ins can be done. ' continued the presi' dent He spoke in detail of the provisions of the federal reserve act ' He also mentioned the act. s "Even out of office I can retain my f means of location," he said. "In office and out of office I will preach that we treat other nation a we would be treated. "A good many men are complain ing that we are not fighting for the thinga not apiritual. They want us to cut the army and navy back of in vestments. Nothing in particular started this war, but everything in sreneraL "There had grown up a spirit which ,was sure. "This is the last war of thia kind or of any kind involving the world that the United States can keep out ot." ., , ' ' British Steamship Sidmouth is Sunk London, ' Oct 26. The British steamship. Sidmouth. has been sunk and its crew haa been safely landed, report Uoyd s shipping agency. The Sidmouth hailed from Cardiff. was built in 1903, of 4,045 tons gross and belonged to Anning Bros., of Stockton. It was last reported as ar riving at Spezia, Italy, from Cardiff on September u. - . Gats er teen. Albuquerque. N. M-, Oct. . Vincent netevlene. a netlre of Mexico, who wee eon vtoted here . VMk Me of murder In the ecena degree, wee enteneed In the itletrlot ceurt toder to eerfe from SI to SI yeere In the penllentlerr. According to the teetlmony, Sevovlene mucked Me.rle.no Alveres with e .. knife neeeuee Alvnree relueea to give mm ertnk. Dr. SveU'e riae-Tnr-HeaMV. Heaoy soothes the trrlteUon. Pine Tar , cute the phlegm, relleveo eonveetlon, teethes . the re osolA. lie. All draseiete Adv. QUELLING AN ATHENS MOB An anti-ally mob being quelled by the police is shown in the picture, the f irt to be received in this country showing the disorder in the Grecian capital since the establishment of a provisional government at Saloniki by former Premier Venizelos. SIRX SilSX 1H ATHStfS. HUGHES PROMISES TO START RIGHT IF MADE PRESIDENT . i (OeatUsec tram Pat Oh.) the rights of our citizens at home and abroad, on' land and on sea, is the only course which will give us lasting peace. An American in Mexico is subject to Mexican laws, but he has the right of an American citizen and is entitled to the protection of his government, both as to life and prop erty. ' ''For one I shall never consent to a policy which withdraws from Ameri can citizens the protection to which they are entitled and leaves then) helpless against the lawlessness of a country in which they hive a tight to do business. We shall never expand American trade and aerve humanity by carrying our ability and talents, to foreign parts if we depart from the time-honored policy of our govern' ment in this respect :; Danger to Labor. "There confronts labor in the next four yeara a danger beyond any that American laboring men have been' called to face. When this war began over 1,000,000 American workingmen were vainly seeking employment When the war ends and the developed energies of a new Europe are thrown into commercial production, our na tion will face s competition such as it never knew. - ."When the war ends the demands for our products created by the war ill end;- and the prosperity based IT on that demand also will end. One two thins-s must haDDen: either million of men wilt be seeking work in vain or else there must be sought out the problem of protection to American industry and of commercial organization. France and England and Germany are already at work upon their problems of this charac ter. The nations abroad are prepar ing to defend their markets and to organize for the keenest commercial rivalry in time ot peace, it we are to save our workintrmen from a catastrophe we must plan a tariff protection along sound economic lines. To this endavor the republican party has pledged itself. Opposed to U. S. Interests. In this matter I aeain differ abso lutely from the policy of the present administration.. The democratic plat form in 1912 declares that the gov ernment had no constitutional right to levy duties except for revenue. This is the fundamental faith of our opponents. It is unsound as a mat ter of constitutional law and the pol icy this expressed is opposed to American intrests. It expresses it self particularly in the Underwood bill, snd when that measure went into effect we had soup house and bread line and municipal relief for alert and abole-bodied workingmen who could find no jobs. "Recently the head of the pposing party, through the most extraordinary legislation ever enacted oy congress WIFE TOO ILL , TO WORK IN BED MOST OF TIME Her Health Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Indianapolis, Indians. -"My health a ao poor and my constitution so run down that I eouta not work. I ni thin, pale and weak. weighed but 109 pound and was tn bed most of the time. I began tak ing Lydis E. Pink, ham's Vegetable Compound sod five onths later I weighed 138 pound. do all the house work and washlns for eleven and 1 eaa truthfully say Lydis E, Pinkham' Veg etable Compound ha been s godsend to me for I would have been fo my grave today but for it I would tell H wo men suffering a I was to try ymir vahi abla remedy. "--Mr. Wm.Grbbn, S S. Addison Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. There I hardly s neighborhoor5 in thia country, wherein some woman !; not found health by using this good old fashioned root and herb remedy. . . If there is anything about whit .on would like special advice, write tu the Lydls E. PiiiUuun Medicine Co, LfWW Mas. TBfl BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER (ought to increase the wages of a graup of railroad employes, constitut ing less than 2U per cent ot those em ployed by the railroad companies. I believe that this legislation will be found by labor even by those who, are ostensibly the beneficiaries of the act to be delusive. ' Workers Must Pay. "If the law is effective the great body of workers must pay the bill, as the burdens must fall upon the pub lic, thus constituting, class legislation of a most objectionable character. The interests of the working men of the countrv cannot be furthered by ac tion of this sort. Such action in re sponse to pressure and in advance of inquiry, without knowledge of its justice, is a betrayal of the fundamen tal principles for which governments stands. It is an injustice to labor, which hitherto has cherished the prin ciples of collective bargaining and ar bitration. "I believe that governmental action should be fair to all and not for the benefit of one group at the expense of others. We propose to protect the American workingmen, to protect the American wage scale to the end that there may be the largest participa tion possible in the prosperity of ex panding industry. Condition After War. "It is to be remembered that every European government is putting it self behind its industries, stimulating them, encouraging effective organiza tion, suggesting economies and avoid ing unnecessary friction. When the commercial struggle begins anew the industry of every European country will be backed by the good will and intelligent foresightj of their govern ment. , . 1 . "Our national policy requires that our government maintain a strict scrutiny of business organization, but this supervision can be effective and yet leave the government free to en courage legitimate and wholesome business enterprise. I stand for such supervision and control, but I demand that all business be treated fairly and justly. Only under such conditions can American business pay living wages and compete with foreign busi ness. Brake to Business. "In this respect, the present admini stration holds a contrary policy. It has viewed business enterprise with suspicion ana has made the govern- Bell-ans Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. amninn Opening Friday Evening, Oct. 27, 5 O'clock Hamilton Cafe 24th and Farnam A La Carte, Table d'Hote Open from 7 n. m. to 8 p. m. You will find our food clean? wholesome and tasty. . (- Pure) Food Products . Entirely. P.' A. (Pat) Angelsberg, Lessee and Manager. I TEETH:. inH(W.rui7! AS'tStW.T' DR. McKENNEY Say.:- Tit) BiMtt ut to your wpmr MO It your tMta. If your tMta aro tfeewyed and ned attention eomt U my offio and hav them put la osp t ft vry nkMoaabis) prl. ... Hvtt BrMn r Bwt SUvor rtU. Wsjrls. Mr ttwtk, $4.00 50 Wefieer Pletee worth SIS to (SS. Bwt 32k Galsi Crtnrn S5, $8, $10! $4.00 W g.lw yu r twlvanl your manur McKENNEY DENTISTS 14th end Feimem 1324 Peraael St. Pbeee Dexlee IS7S. J ment a brake to the wheel of legiti mate industrial progress. It has treated the business men of the coun try as if they were suspicious charac ters. It has put this country in four year further on the road to a class war than has been accomplished in a generation before. I honestly be lieve in the honesty of American work ingmen and n the honesity of the American business man I believe that the common good is not to be found in class legislation, but in justice and fair dealing, conceived in a practical manner and in the earnest desire to promote an American prosperity by co-operation and efficiency. Bad Lands Are Now in the Northeast, Says Ira Landrith ; Norwich, N. Y., Oct. 26. The "bad lands" of this country are no longer located in the new west, but have been rolled in liquor barrels to the old northeast, Ira Landrith. the pro hibition vice presidential nominee, to day tola wew xorK crowds when the woman or child, was murdered by a "dry" special train again entered thit state from Pennsylvania. "The very frontiers of civilization," he laid, have been rolled in rum bar rel from the wild and woolly west now dry and law-abiding, to the Deadwoods and Dodge Cities, the Leadvilles and Buttes, the Cripple Creeks and Boises of Pennsylvania, unio, Illinois, Mew York, New Jer sey and the land of ' the Pilgrim ratners. mm Omaha Houtefurnhhing Headquarter Dining Room Furniture of Character , IT EXTREMELY MODERATE PRICES 64-inch William and Mary Extension Tables in oak finish, shown in satisfying variety, some priced tQC Cfi aa Iowa. .. .aPOUeJU Hiffh eane back William and Marv Dinin? Chain, with full Hn seats, in Spanish leather to match; like cuts. Splendid . ffO CA value, at. .1 J Open a Charge Account and Welcome C! Crete, Nebraska, January 28, 1916. Mr. W. C Wilson, President, Bankers Life Insurance Co. Lincoln, 'Nebraska. , Dear Sir: 4 want to thank the Bankers Life Insurance Co., for the very prompt and satisfactory settlement I am getting on my fifteen, year policy. I paid to the Company during, the fifteen years $492. To day I am receiving from your General Agent, Mr. B. L. Stephenson, $655.20, giving me a net profit of $163.20 and fifteen years' insurance for nothing. - I am so well pleased with my experience and settlement that I have taken out $2,000 on my son. .v' -' va: O. D. KEMPER. It's easy to write Bankers Life Policies.' They mature to the satisfaction of every policy i HOME OFFICE LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. , , 27, 1916. SPIRITUAL UNITY - IS NEEDOF NATION President in Cincinnati Ad dress Says People Should Prepare for Work Ahead. WILL SPEAK FOUR TIMES Cincinnati, O, Oct 26. President Wilson, speaking at Cincinnati s re ception to him at the chamber of commerce here today, urged the need for "spiritual unity" on the part of the people of the United States to prepare for greater work ahead of the nation. : : ' President Wilson on his final mid dle western swing of the campaign came to Cincinnati today for the first time in his administration. Arriving here at 11:30 a. m. he was met Dy a cheering crowd and a large reception committee at the Union station and was immediately taken by automobile through the streets, thronged witn people, to a hotel. ' The president's program included four speeches, a reception, a lunch, a dinner and an automobile ride. Ar rangements for his entertainment were made. by the Nonpartisan City club. Mayor George Puchta, a re publican, officially welcomed him. Local democrats, however, gave a po litical color to the president's visit by their cheering. Wilson Leader Pleaaed. Because of the determined fighf for Ohio's twenty-four electoral votes be ing made by both parties, administra tion officials watched the spirit of Mr. Wilson' reception with especial attention. They expressed them selves as well pleased. Cincinnati's large foreign-born population added interest to his visit Although a short period late in the afternoon was set aside for "rest" for the 'president, he expected to be busy INSIST UPON GOOD-WINS POLISH For Yew Furniture, Hardwood Floors , ! Automobile. M. C. Goodwin & Co. 41S S. IStfc St. Omehe. A Good Trunk, Bag 'or Suit Case . Should Come From ; Freling & Steinle, Omene'e Beet -Bess mo Bulliere" 1803 Faurnam St. w'V HAVE YOU ONE OF OUR POLICIES? ASSETS $10,600,000.00 from the time of his arrival until his departure, tonight at 10 o'clock for Shadow Lawn. Mrs. Wilson, dressed in a dark gown and wearing a bouquet of flowers, accompanied the president throughout the day. She was made an honorary member of the Woman's City dub, which entertained the pres ident at lunch. ' On his way here this morning Mr. Wilson was greeted by large crowds at half a dozen Ohio towna through which he passed. He appeared on the observation platform of his private car at each stop, shook hands with a! many people as possible, exchanged laughing remarks and thanked the crowds fos coming out in such large numbers to see him. Engine Screech Welcome. A shrill chorus of locomotive whis tles in the railroad yards here as the president came in furnished an unus ual feature of his reception. The rail road engineera and hremen stood on their engines and waved to Mr. Wil son. During the entire ride from the sta tion to the hotel the president stood in his automobile waving his hat t" the people, who cheered him from the windows of high buildings end along the sidewalks. Bombs bursting THOMKON-BftDEN TLeFonGeroTrlvefWdU ' UaUisUI88& The Fur Shop New styles of moleskin muffs will be placed on display Friday, $37.50 to $50. . ' Second Floor. New Coats, $25 " Full lined coats, fashion able styleai attractive ma terials; we advise an early selection. ' House Dress Section Attractive, stylish new house dresses, all sizes, for $1.00. A full selection of aprons at 29c, 39c, 49c, 59c Basement. - Wool Nap Blankets $3 and $3.50 a pair. Large, double bed size, beautiful new plaids of blue, pink, gray and tan combinations. Basement. Pillow Cases, 1 6c Size 42x36, hemmed; an extra fine grade of bleached muslin. Basement. Closed Brandeis Stores i Main Aisle Complete Showing of Closed Automobiles for Winter Driving WedneseUy, Not. 1 to Saturday, Nov. 4, Inclusive 8i30 A. M. to P. M. Each Day THE utmost that can be designed In automobile luxury will be found at this unique exhibition. Be sure to attend and aee what the manufacturers are offering to make winter driv ing attractive. - ' ' , Admission Free. Omaha Automobile Show Association high in the air added to the dm. A special force of secret service men and police tried vainly to keep the crowds off the street. Mine Sweeper is Sunk by Torpedo, All Officers Lost London, Oct. 26. The British mine sweeping vessel Genista has been tor pedoed and sunk, according to an an nouncement given out by the British admiralty. All the officers and seventy-three members of the mine sweeper's crew were lost The sur vivors numbered twelve. Minnesota Legislature To Have Special Session St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 26. Gover nor J. A Burnquist today isued the call for a special session of the state legislature to assemble at 11 a. m. Saturday, October 28, for the pur pose fo considering legislation that would make it possible for the Minne sota National Guardsmen now at the Mexican border to vote in the general election November 7. 6GQ Distinctive Suits The Thompson-Bdlden label,' assuring anumnrpaised standard of excellence. A complete showing ot all styles. $25 to $110. A SOROSIS Boot For the Business Woman A very practical, good looking model, in patent kid with top of cloth or dull kid, as preferred. Price $5 !t ISSSIISIISi Car Salon Main Floor FIFTEEN PAYMENT LIFE POLICY Matured in the OLD LINE BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY of Lincoln, Nebraska. Name of Insured ...Otto D. Kemper . Residence Dorchester, Nebraska Amount of policy . .$1,000.00 Total premiums paid Company.... 42.00 SETTLEMENT Total cash paid Mr. Kemper I85S.20 And IS Years' Insurance for Nothing. holder. Why not try it? V I f;W"-'r--ai