Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 07, 1917, EDITORIAL SECTION, Image 11

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PART TWO
EDITORIAL SECTION
PAGES 11 TO 20
VOL. XLVI. NO. 251.
OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 7, 1917.
On TrilM. it Motili,
m Standi, tit., ta.
SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS.
The Omaha
Daily
RUSSIAN EXILES
ARE RUSHING HOME
'Fifty Thousand Sledgers Hur
rying Toward the Railroad
from North Siberia.
ALL TRAILS CONGESTED
Tyumen, Siberia, April 6, (Via
Petrograd and London, April 3.)
Fifty thousand sledges, carrying vic
tims of the old regime back to free
dom in the new Russia from the
mines and convict settlements of Si
beria, are speeding in an endless
chain across the snow of North Asia
toward the nearest points on the
Trans-Siberian railway. TJieir pas
sengers range from members of the
old Terrorist societies to exiles who
were banished by administrative de
cree without trial or even known of
fence. It is a race against time, as the
spring thaw is imminent and the
roads even in the coldest settlements
of the lower Lena will soon be im
passable. Exiles who do not reach
the railroad within a fortnight must
wait six weeks or two months until
the ice melts and river navigation
begins.
In order to witness this unprece
dented migration a correspondent of
the Associated Press came here in
company with a member of the
Duma. M. Rosenoff, and two mem
bers of the former council of empire.
The three officials were sent by the
provisional government to explain to
the natives in these remote Russian
outposts the nature of the great
change which has come to the coun
try. Their mission carries them to
some scores of thousands of heathen
Asiatic tribesmen and they are es
pecially directed to instruct voters in
regard to the coming constituent as
sembly, which will decide the form
of Russia's new government.
The liberation of Siberia's prison
ers has hardly begun. West of the
Urals the Associated Press corre
spondent only encountered a hand
ful of exiles, who, when the revolu
tion began, were at or near the rail
road. The first large party was en
countered when the Siberian Express
reached Ekaterinburg, in the Urals.
It consisted of 150 political convicts
and administrative exiles, including
twenty members of the Jewish revo
lutionary band, mostly from the Verk
holenski district, west of Lake Bai
kal. The exiles were traveling in
special cars and had been en the
road continuously from March 24,
five days after they fir&f heard of tile
revolution. .
The cars were met by a vast crowd
at thCjailroad station, which cheered
them fnmultuously. The returning ex
iles returned the cheers, but they were
in a deplorable physical condition,
shaggy, uncouth, unwashed and ex
tremely emaciated. Many were crip
pled with rheumatism, two had lost
hands and feet from frost bites and
one, who attempted flight a week-be-fjre
the revolution, had been shot in
the leg when he was recaptured. He
was lying in a prison hospital when
he learned that he was a free man.
The exiles had started west so hur-
KING DECLARES MARTIAL LAW IN SPAIN Political
and economic unrest in Spain has reached such a state that
King Alfonso ha declared martial law. The picture shows
King Alfonso, the queen, the Princess Beatrice, Don Jaime,
the crown prince and the prince of the Asturias.
riedly that they arrived in an extra
ordinary variety of incongruous garb.
Some wore costumes which had been
supplied by sympathizers along their
route and some had handsome fur
overcoats ''covering their hideous jail
uniform. Among those who wore this
latter costume was a young million
aire aristocrat from Odessa, who had
been sentencedto life ten years ago
for fomenting a revolutionary mu
tiny in the Black Sea fleet. Others
of the party wore shaggy sheep and
woolen skins as a protection against
the bitter Siberian blasts. One man
from the irktsk city jail wore the
gold-braided uniform tunic of the dis
missed governor of Irkutsk under a
ragged and greasy overcoat.
All Ekaterinburg gathered, to do
honor to the exiles and a recption
and dinner was hastily improvised, at
which a speech was delivered by So
phia Vasneff, who spent seven years
in different Siberian penal villages for
possessing revolutionary literature.
The president of the exile reception
committee in Ekaterinburg gave the
correspondent a general picture of
the present conditions and prospects
of the exiles. He said that there were
probably altogether 100.000 persons in
Siberia who had been released under
the amnesty measure of the provis
ional government. This number com
prises political offenders, including
terrorists convicted after trial; per-
Graduate Nurses
are in constant demand the country
over, at very good pay. .The Memorial
Hospital offers three-year course in a
general Hospital to young women with
one year High School or equivalent, from
19 to 30 years of age, who are desirou
of entering the profession of nursing, in
a real home-like hospital. We furnish
free board, uniforms and washing, and
Rive small allowance during entire course.
We asnist our graduates to good posi
tions. Write at once to
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
460 E. 32d St.. Chicago, III.
THE POPULAR PRICE CLOAK AND SUIT STOKE.
777777 ''))))) )?))))))77ffn
S. E. COkNR ltiiri yw uLAS, STS.
SATURDAY ONLY
My New York resident buyer has purchased
and shipped a -most wonderful assortment of new
Spring Coats at the lowest prices ever secured at
this time of the season. They all go on sale Satur
day in four lots.
COATS
Lot No. 1 New Spring Coats in all-wool pop
lins, wool velours; also Nov- e
erty Coats in 43 to 45 in.
long; women's and misses'
sizes; navy, blacks and all
the new leading shades.
Values up to $15.00 on sale
Saturday at $9.85 and ....
fl rfl oc
IF
-.J
COATS
Lot No. 2 New Spring Coats in all-wool pop-
tins, wool veiours, gaoar-
dines ana novelty cloths, in fgfl ft OC
the popular seven-eights I Ov
lengths, flared and straight
line effects, with - distended
pockets and string and wide belts,
in all the new shades. Values to
$20.00, on sale at.
M'
COATS
Lot No. 3 Now Spring Coats in all
that latest models,
in wool valours,
poplins, f a b a r
dines, poiret twill
uid novelty cloth.
There are many
smart Coats hi
this lot that
ought to sell up
to 430.00. Your
choke Saturday,
s long as they
ibsi, at
1
COATS
Lot No. 4 New Spring Coats. In this lot is
included some very smart V
models in high-class coats. ,
Coats that ought to sell up
to $37.50. They are made
up in men's serge, poplin, ve
lour, poiret twill, etc., in all the
new leading shade. On tale
Saturday at
sons suspected of furthering revolu
tionary propaganda and exiled with
out trial by order of the secret po
lice, gendarmerie or the minister ot
k. ;..,.-;,. Ansiu. .....
thousands of peasants exiled without
trial by decrees of the village com
munal councils. Many of the latter
will remain in Siberia voluntarily,
where conditions of life and work are
excellent under the reform government.
Fifteen Thousand at Yakuba.
One of the largest convict settle
ments was in Yakuba, in northeast
Siberia, where about 15,000 exiles and
convicts lived in semi-liberty. In
the mining district of Nertchinsk 100
exiles including seven women, con
victed of conspiring against the em
peror, have been released. The first
to be freed was the famous Mane
Spiridonova, who killed a colonel of
gendarmes for torturing prisoners.
She was herself tortured and abused
for seven days and then sentenced to
death by a field court-martial. After
her release she felt ill and is now in
a hospital in Tchiia.
At Tyumen the correspondent met
a second trainload of exiles from the
Irkutsk prison and penal settlements
of Tobolsk and Tomsk.
Famom Terrorist Talks.
The crowds at the station cheered
the famous terrorist, Nicolai Anuik
hin, who shot and killed the chief of
the Pcrograd Warsaw railway in
1906. His victim, General Fuchloff,
was about to kidnap 400 railroad
strikers1 and send them to Siberia.
Anuikhin, who introduced himself to
the correspondent as a "released jail
bird," is a gigantic, broad-shouldered,
elderly man, with a gray imperial
and an excited manner of speech. He
said:
"After one year in European con
vict prisons I spent ten years in the
Alexandrovsk prison, fifty miles from
Irkutsk. This is the biggest convict
jail in Russia and contained 12,000
ordinary criminals and about 500
political prisoners, mostly sentenced
to life 'katroga,' the severest form of
Russian punishment short of death.
I spent the first five years in the so
called probation class, with hands and
feet manacled and chained to awheel
barrrow, which I had to take every
where. In addition, I was repeatedly
flogged by order of the governor.
The assistant governor, during the
absence of his chief, ordered daily
flojgings for his own satisfaction.
Prisons Overcrowded.
"The badly overcrowded prison was
divided into dormitories, each of
which was intended for thirty pris
oners, but usually contained from
sixty to eighty, half of whom had
consumption or rheumatism. We
convicts had a secret organization
which we called 'the collective.' The
occupants of the different dormitories
communicated by means of tapping
and other systems of signaling. Al
though we also had means of com
munication with the outside world
we knew nothing of the revolution
until the morning of our release. At
that time two terrorists and half a
dozen criminal convicts were being
flogged without apparent cause. The
provincial state attorney suddenly ap
peared and announced to our amaze
ment: 'Russia is a republic and you
are free.'
"After our release we learned that
the assistant governor, on getting the
news of the revolution, declared that
he would give a farewell flogging 'in
order to prepare my jailbirds for
sweet liberty." "
Your Success
Depends greatly upon
your eyes. 1 will exam
ine your eyes, if you
need glasses I will tell
you. My charges are
within the resell of all.
If you are short of cash
you can arranas to
make it in payments.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Dr. McCarthy
TOT and 709 Brandeia Bide.
One Minute
Store Talk
You benefit by our inti
mate knowledge of all cloth
ing markets and all men's
r e q u irements. Responsible
as we are to the largest num
ber of clothes buyers in one
group in the west, we've de
veloped a value-giving sys
tem that binds shrewd men
to this store and adds thou
sands of new customers
every year.
The "freedom of the
seas" in clothes buying
belongs to us. First
choice of America's fin
est products come to the
Greater Nebraska. Our
prestige is yours to
profit by.
JOHN A. SWANSON, Pres.-
WM. L. HOLZMAN, Treas.
fex. W.. rVVMI. tl
Enormous Selections to Meet
the Easter Clothes Demand
IN one vast showing we've assembled the
cream of America's finest ready-for-service clothes,.
Where hundreds of garments have been shown in
Omaha before, thousands are at your command today. All
the latest styles, all the beautiful new fabrics, all the lively new
models from foremost fashion designers. A most C OA T9C (POA
wonderful display of spring suits at . LOl
Young Men's Ideal Spring Suits
Sport Suits are strong favorites you'll see them here in
endless variety. All the new variations from cleverly styled
belt back to vigorous military models with belt all around and
four patch pockets. Single or double breasted; pleated, gath.
ered or fitted back belter suits. Styles and patterns for ex
treme dressers or conservative men looking for a touch of
ultra fashion all from fashion leading designers for par-
ticular dressers.
Blue Suits for Easter
Blue is always good for Easter. Blue serge,
blue flannel, blue worsteds, plain weaves or rich
new stripes. Single or double breasted. One, two,
three-button. Ultra fashions or conservative mod
els; all sizes and proportions. Largest showing
of the season's newest, at $15.00 to $35.00.
Large Men or Small
We'll Fit. You
Men of unusual proportions,
too large or too small for
regular sizes. Stout men,
very tall men, slender men,
short and short stout men. We
fit such men, supply specially
selected fabrics for extra
wear. Guaranteed satisfac
tion. 915 to 340.
v Maa'a, Youatg Msa's ana
Spring Overcoats
$10 to $25
The echo of militarism In
the New Belt around Trench
Coats. Silk lined oxford
Vicuna Chesterfields. Snappy
Balmaroon Box Coats, me
dium and light weight Auto
Coats, Gabardine and Novelty
Plaid Raincoats
$10 $15 $20$25
Bars' Clotalaf Stmi Floor.
Your Easter Hat
"Satisfaction" is the big word in hat selection,
and with thousands of America's best hats to
pick from, you're sure of satisfaction in our great
modern hat section.
The Newest of New Styles from
John B. Stetson Co., $3.50 to $10.00
Crofut and Knapp, $3.50 to $5.00
Neb. Special'Hats.
Unequaled $oV
Nebraska De Luxe.
Absolute $Q
Leaders at O
values at.
Sprint Caps Snappy stylas, 81. 81.50. 22.
Boys' Hats and Caps, at 50J to $1.50.
Traveling Goods
Largest Selection
The importance of buying traveling
goods right now cannot be over-empha
sized. Fortunately we bought Heavily
and offer most complete selections at
prices unequaled in the city.
Suit Cases and Travelint Bags, $1.25 to $35.00
Standard Drass Trunks, $7.50 to $25.00
Steamer Trunks. at $5.00 to $20.00
Finest Wardrobe Trunks at $16.50 to $60.00
P ! 1 Cowhide Bags, leather lined; dr fA
OpcClal 16, 17 or 18-inch. Specially priced, Y u
vaw I
New Spring Shirts
The new patterns and colorings are more beau
tiful than ever before. Manhattans, Yorke, Bates
Street and our own make shirts. Regular and
extra sizes. Largest selections at $1.50 to $3.00-
Superb New Silk Shirts at $3.50 to $7.00
Easter Neckwear
Prepared as no Omaha store has'
ever been prepared before with su
preme selections of spring neckwear.
Bold colors and designs so extremely
popular are here in amazing variety.
Silk quality unsurpassed at
50t. $1.00. $1.50. $2.00 v
Gloves for Men
Silk Gloves make their entree now for
Spring. Plain or silk-embroidered backs at
$1.00 to $1.25.
Kid and Mocha Gloves Tan, gray and
ivory. Black or self-stitching, $1.50 to $3.
Auto Gloves and Gauntlets, $1.50 to'$5.00
Men's Underwear Headquarters
The largest showing we've ever made of Spring
Underwear. Get ready for warm days now. Vas
sar, Superior, Corwith, Madewell, B. V. D. Athletic,
Hatch one-button Union Suits. All weights, sizes
and proportions, $1.00 to $3.00.
Shirts and Drawers, 50 to $1.50
Men's Shoes and Oxfords Newest cocoa brown, tan and black leathers, $3.50 to $7.50.
MEN'S
CANVAS AND
PALM BEACH
OXFORDS,
$3.50$4.00
MNN A SWANSONca.
71-1 'I f 'XnVaMMaaaMatflL
iHiiirsrirr tirrrrfrfTTTii
Mil HOtZMAM.1
.CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
2L
BOYS'
SPRING SHOES
AND OXFORDS,
TAN AND BLACK.
$2,00 TO $4.00