THE BEE: OMAHA, v MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1917. ORDER TO MOBILIZE THE NAVAL RESERVE Men of This istrDiot Ordered to Assemble to Go on Active Service in East. TO i STAKT THIS WEEK Orders were received Sunday after noon by Lieutenant Waddell to mobilize the naval fleet reserve in this district, and as soon as possible send the men to Philadelphia for ac tive sea service. About thirty men are affected by the call They began to gather yes terday afternoon. By this evening, or Tuesday morning at the latest, Lieutenant Waddell expects to have them all assembled here, to go east. A few of the naval reserves in this district live in other towns and two happened to be temporarily away at some distance, but were reached by telegraph. When President Wilson signed the war proclamation, the naval reserves were supposed to be called out at once, according to dispatches from Washington. . However, the order failed to reach Omaha by Saturday night, so Lieutenant Waddell wired an inquiry. The mobilization order then came through, and it is supposed that it was purposely held up before that, in order that other reserves, nearer the seaboard, could first be called. i . Order Comes by Telegraph. Only ten-word telegram was nec essary to cause the lieutenant here to start the mobilization, all details hav ing previously been arranged through instructions from headquarters. Under the present reserve mobilisa tion order, the second and fourth classes of the naval reserve are not to be mobilized until later. The sec ond class includes men who have had sea-going experience, but never be longed to the United States navy. The fourth class includes the coast defense reserves, comprising yeomen, or clerks, and the yeomanettes. Enlisted men of the navy, who are now at home on extended furloughs, are included in the present reserve mobilization order. Gratifying Reports Of German-American Conduct in Country Washington, April 8. Gratifying reports have been made to the De partment of Justice on the behavior of Germans and German-Americans, fol lnwinir the declaration of a state of war between the nations. While about 100 special arrests have been ordered and others are expected, Attorney General Gregory said tonight that so far the situation is very encouraging. The attorney general and Assistant Attorney General Warren, In charge of plot investigation, discussed with President Wilson late this afternoon the activities of Germans in the I !nit4 Ctoja and in .fMtral mnA South America. , ... ..... ,, As a result of its request that gov ernment employes in all parts of the country watch carefully for the activi ties of German agents, many report are being investigated. Although some reports have Indi cated that German spies are employes in the government service so far there have been no arrests. Department of Justice officials would not say tonight whether any was expected. Many protests have been made against the provision of President Wilson's war proclamation forbid ding "enemy aliens" from living or trespassing within ona half mile of government arsenals, navy yards or other government property, having to do with national defense.' . Permits may be issued for some ex ceptions to the general rule. To strengthen the position of the government in hunting down and prosecuting spies the espionage bills, which failed of passage at the last congress, will be pushed to early en actment. Armed and Masked Bandits Rob Woman And Later a Store Miss Paula Lew, 203 South Twenty-fifth street, was waiting for a street : car at Seventeenth and Clark streets - last evening when she was approached by two masked men and told to throw up her hands. . After threatening her with instant death if she screamed, they took her pocketbook containing a small sum -of money, and a bank book. . Shortly after police received a call from Mat Zuckschwert, 2823 Chicago street, that two masked bandits, armed with revolvers held his store , up. They backed him aiainst the :. wall, he said, and then took $7 out of the register, James Lovely, 3001 Chicago street, ,, a customer in the storj at the time . was also backed against the wall and relieved of $1.50. The description of the two men who . held up Miss Lew tallies with the rob bers of the Zuckschwert store. , wu riin I'adii Ciim sum rui. Pari. April S. Th. placlnt f the La fayette flying eorpa under the American fins to aypjiboltse th. entry of the United States Into' the war. hea been dlecueeed for erveral daya. The flsaro now aaya th Mare and Strlpea are flylnr over the head, quartere of the equadrttl which la eoni . poaed lara-ely of American aviators., - Obituary Notes ' MBS. J. B. MOORB, on of the arly settlers near Lyons, was burled In the Lyons cemetery. Her husband having preceded her several years ago. She leaves several children, among whom are Thomas Moore of Lake, Neb., and Mrs. .James Kelley ut Wood Lake, Neb. The Moore ochrl . here was named after the Moure. MK8 MART TIDWELL, axed 0. a pioneer settler of Pottawattamie county, and resident of Harrison for the last seven fears, died Friday. Mrs. Tidwell Is survived by her daughter, Mrs. J. J. Chew, and by five grand children. The funeral was held at the horns five miles east of Logan, Sun day afternoon at t o'clock. LEVI' CROUCH, aged 7S. former resident of Modale. la., died at the Holdit-ra' home at Marahalltown Thurs day. The body la expected to he re turned to MlMeouii alley for Inter nment. Two daughters surviving, live is Omaha. . PUBLIC ROUSED BY SPEAKERS WHO SOUND WAR CALL (ConUnoetJ Prow Part On.) that is the kind that spells Washing ton and Lincoln and Bunker Hill and Lexington and the civil war. The other kind of pacifism which exists occasionally among honest-minded people is partially weak-mindedness, mainly cowardice. It is based upon the belief that there is nothing better than human life, and in that it de grades and lowers human life. "It was because Prussianism be lieved that America had no ideals and lived by gold alone and set life, mere life, human functional, enjoyment, above everything else, that they said, 'We mean to blow to death and to destruction all ships, whether of friendly neutrals or not on the high seas to accomplish our purpose in de stroying France and Great Britain, but you might be inconvenient to us, per haps, so if you went on a certain day tricked out as a clown in a ship paint ed like a barber's pole, you may go once a week to England.' " Autocracy Speaks. "Ah, my friends, there spoke the militaristic Prussian autocracy, that knows no policy but that of 'blood, item and force,', that cannot appreci ate the soul of an. honest, peaceful folk striving for a better world and for better things. Because, through two and a half long years, America had borne wfth almost everything in the hope that peace would come from this awful struggle, they assumed that America was as devoid of soul as a barber's pole. "I have had the pleasure and the privilege of seeing two great people upon the verge of war. It has been said that every man has two coun tries, France and his own, and the great English philosopher, Mr. Lecky, spoke of France as the one country which had, through purely disinter ested and unselfish motives, unsheath ed the sword and unstintingly given of its blood and of its treasure to aid a small and obscure people struggling 3,000 miles away, because the princi ples and ideals of that people so ap pealed to the people of France that they were willing to put their own nation into bankruptcy and to go to the extent of an awful war to aid Washington and the English-speaking colonists in striking off the fetters of liberty imposed upon them by a Hanoverian king, supported by Hes sians and Indians. Maintaining Dignity. "The president told us the other day, in that splendid paper which will go down as a state paper with Wash ington's farewell address and Mon roe's great pronunciamento, that we had reached a point where we could no longer submit and remain a great, free nation. A nation, like an in dividual, has got to live with itself. An individual cannot live and be free and self-respecting unless he main tains his dignity and his personal honor. The United States of Amer ica could no longer have gone 'on re taining its own respect and the re spect of the world while submitting indefinitely to Insult and injury, to the destruction of its citizens and to their assassination upon the: high seas. ) "It was idle to talk international law after the violation of Bela-ium. Our Department of State, with a pa tience that I have admired, time and time again, though I have sometimes deplored it, kept up for long months controversy with the (jerman for eign office, a foreign office which knew no law save necessity kept up a controversy with that foreign office at a time when thousands of women were being systematically by im perial German decree deported into tue toulest and most hideous bondage known since the beginning of time. Talk about international law, with such a foreign office, with such a gov ernment committing such hideous crimes . against God and humanity 1 What a sad waste of timel ; Philosophy of Force, As a great philosopher said. 'If you want to know how philosophic principles work, watch them in the street.' if you want to know how the philosophy of force works, watch it in Belgium, and in North France; I have seen villages systematically razed and destroyed; I have heard from the children of or 8 the story of how they shot "grandpapa" over mere, or over nere; ana tne children were witnesses, so that they, too, might know what the philosophy of blood and iron meant, so that they might know what Pan-Germanism was, so that they might fear the Teu tonic name and respect the necessity which could dispense with the law of God and man. Ah, those children will remember. They have learned the lesson. But more than that, the world has learned, America has learned and America is ready to perform her task in the smnt of the lathers of the nation sternly, calmly, unflinchingly, aligned with the dem ocracies of Belgium, of France, of Great Britain, of the, new Russia in the great struggle for human ria-hts. international law and American honor. Stimson Sounds Alarm. Mr. Stimson, in his address, sounded the gravest note of alarm. This must be a war to the death, he declared. "We have nothing against the Ger man people, but against that irresDon sible autocracy over them we mean business, he declared. ' 'He spoke of documents in the War department files at Washington "which show that Germany, if . the British fleet were removed and if it had freedom of the seas, could land 387,000 men on our eastern shores within sixteen days, using Only half its merchant fleet. And in three weeks more .it could more than dou ble that number. . . ' , "And while this is a large country its heart is very small and very vul- neraoie. . , He traced a line which inctudea 25. 000,000 peoplr, the national capital and eleven state capitals, munitions plants, railroad icrmim. "And this line," he said, "ia shorter than the line the Germans are now holding in France.' East of the Mis sissippi today there is just one regi- ment to delend our country. The first thing for us'to do,ihe de ctared, is to loan a great amount of money to gallant France who loaned us money during- the revolutionary war without interest. , But the big thing he declared to be to, supply men. He declared tor uni. versal military training. SOMEBODY, NOT U. S IS TO GETA LICKIrfG So Declares Judge Zstelle at Elmwood Park Flag Bail ing Exercises. CHILDREN PLAT TEZIS PAST John Wisler, president of West Leavenworth Improvement club, and City Commissioner Hummel of Sun day morning released to the breezes a large flag which floats from the top of an eighly.foot pole in the south western part of blmwood park. I he flag is ten by sixteen feet and was bought by the improvement club. - Exercises which were to have been held at the park were transferred to the club's meeting place at Forty eighth and Leavenworth streets, on account of damp ground. Mr. Wisler presided, fifty children of Grace Lutheran Mmday school sang, umaha Fife and Drum corns offered several selections and talks were given by Judge Estelle, Rev. Clarence F. Swi hart, Emery W. Johnson and R. J. Sutton. Somebody to Be Licked. I would rather live for my coun try, but a man does have one red corpuscle in his veins if he would not die for his country. This is a solemn hour for our nation. Somebody is going to get a good licking and it wilt not be the grand old U. S. A.," said Judge Estelle. He told of Betsy Ross and the flag and related that the first flag he ever saw was made by his mother in Ohio many years ago. Mr. Johnson, veteran of the civil war. auoted statitistics to show that in the war of 1861-5 there were only 46,000 soldiers more than 25 years of age, more than 2,000,000 who were 21 years or less and many thousands who were not m years ot age. tie told the story of having been shot in the leg during an engagement, "It is characteristic of the Ameri can soldier to obey his commander and, if necessary, to die for his coun try. Uur flag stands lor tne Dest at tributes of manhood and we know that those who follow the flag will be worthy of it." said Rev. Mr. Swi- hart, pastor of Grace Lutheran church. Compensation Bill Will Be Considered First Part of Week (From a Staff Correspondent.) Lincoln, April 8. (Special) House Roll 525. the workmen's compensation bill carrying changes from the old law, will probably reach consideration by the senate the first of the week. The changes makes the waiting period during which no monotary compensation is paid seven days in stead of fourteen as under the old law. , Retarding medical aid twenty-one days was allowed following injury limited to $200 under the present law while the bill makes the same pro vision, but extends unlimited time in cases of . dismemberment or major surgical operation. The death benefits which are now maximum amount of $3,500 are raised at $4,200. Weekly disability benefits are changed from 50 per cent of wages to 60 per cent with a maximum of $12 instead of $10 and the minimum of $6 instead of $5 as the law now provides. The specific benefits of 50 per cent of wages for loss of arms, hands, legs or eyes are increased to 60 per cent with some additions for minor losses. While there is practically no pro vision for the administration of the law now. simply requiring an em ployer to file reports with labor com missioner, th latter is now given authority to enforce the law and is made compensation commissioner. .The bill makes other changes and gives a more comprehensive method of enforcement. Stenographers Will Be Given Commissions as Sergeants (From a Sjtaff Correspondent) Lincoln. April 8. (Special.) War news which has escaped the censor and which comes from the headquar ters of the National Ouard is as fol lows: Five men needed at once, must be physically sound. Stenographers will be commissioned as sergeants, quar termaster corps, administrative staff. Apply adjutant general's department. I he regulations provide It ahall not be lawful for any body of men whatever, other than regularly or ganized National Guard of the state and the troops of the United States, to associate themselves together as a military company or organization, or to driil, or parade with arms with m the limits of the state, with out the license of the governor, which license may at anytime be revoked. "Instructions received to the effect that all National Guard organizations will be put in camp in near future for rifle pratice preparations now com plete for improvement of range pro viding the legislature appropriates itimcieni iunas tor promotion ot rifle pratice and improvement of atate range, pay, subsistance and trans portation to be furnished by federal government. . Lyons Wins Debate From Ponca. Lyons, Neb., April 8. Lyons High school won a unanimous decision on the negative of the State league ques tion: Resolved. That the TInit.H States Should Abandon the Vfnnrna uoctnne," against Fonca. The Ponca team consisted of George Iverson, Oscar Peterson and Frank Heydon, and the Lyons debaters were Law rence Smith, Tressie Miller and John Young. The judges were Dr. Edwin Maxey of the University of Nebraska snd Mr. Copple and Mr, Gaddie of Fremont college. This is the second victory for the Lyons team and en titles it to debate in the finals for the district championship. It has won once on each aide of the question and won unanimously eacn time, ... Big Land Deal at Greeley. Greeley, Neb., April 8. (Special.) une ot tne biggest land deals in Gree ley county for years was completed here Saturday, when W. E. Reert" sold a tract west of Greeley to P. J. Rooney for $23 an acre. The tract contains 689 acres and is unimproved. FIVE ARE DROWNED IN MISSOURI RIVER With Bridge Out, They Try to Cross in Small Boat at Bis marck and Oapsise. MAKDAN IS UNDUE WATER Bismarck, N. D., April 8. Five men were drowned and another is believed to be dying as the result of the .cap sizing of a boat in the flood waters of the Missouri river here today. The dead: KD MABSET. Mandan, N. D. HARRY BARWIND, Blamarck. J, H. VALE, Minneapolis A. A. VON HAOEN, Minneapolis. NUD PRENTICE., Blamarck. M. H. Lang of Mandan was rescued, but is in a serious condition and doc tors tonight despaired of his life. Because the high waters of the Mis souri river had suspended railroad traffic, Lang and Massey were taking the others in a small boat from Man dan to Bismarck. The river was still rising today. It is expected that the twenty-four-foot stage will be reached before there is a sign of subsidence. A part of Mandan north of the rail road tracks is under water. Houston Appeals Again to Country . To Speed Up Crops Washington, April 8. Secretary Houston again tonight appealed to the country to make every effort to raise adequate food crops this year, not only for the United States needs, but to meet the requirements of the entente. The Importance to th nation of a ffnerou food supply for the coming roar cannot be over em p haa! zed In view of the economte problem which may arise aa a result of the entrance of the United 8taten into the war, said the secretary. Every effort should be made to produce more orops than are needed for our own require ments. Many millions Of people across tho reas, as welt as our own people, must rely In large part upon the products of our fields and range. This situation will continue to exist even though hostilities should end unexpectedly soon, since European pro duction cannot bo restored immediately to its normal basts. It Is obvious that th greatest and most Important service that Is required of our agriculture under existing conditions Is an enlarged production of the staple food crops. Became of the shortage of such orops prac tically throughout the world there Is no risk In the near future of excessive production, such ts some times has resulted tn un remunerativo prices to producers. This Is particularly true of the cereals and of peas, beans, oow peas, soybeans and buckwheat. In view of the world scarcity of food, there Is hardly a possibility that the production of these orops by the farmers of the United States can be too great this year, and there Is abundant reason to expect generous price returns for all available surplus. The most effective step that may be taken to Increase the production of these crops Is to enlarge the acreage devoted to them In the regions where they are grown habitually. This expansion of acreage should be to the limit permitted by available good seed, labor and equipment Tho placing of too great emphasis on production In new region Is Inadvisable since the Introduction Into a farm operation of a crop not usually grown frequently Involves practical difficulties not eastly foreseen nor quickly surmountable. Oxford Votes Against i Issue of School Bonds Oxford. Neb.. April 8. (Special.) At a special election held here Thurs day to vote on a proposition to bond the school district for Junior-Senior High school building for $25,000. the proposition lost by a vote, 102 to 134. The chief objection to the bond was that they were not sufficient to build building adequate for Oxfords needs. The question will be resub mitted at an early date, carrying suf ficient bonds to insure a building large enough to take care of the present needs of the school and providing room for a reasonable growth. L. Js. Lhadderdon. superintendent of the school, has purchased an inter est in a garage here and has handed in his resignation to take effect the present school year. J he last ot a series ot hve enter tainments put on by the students of the state university Friday evening. People came from miles around to all the entertainments. About $300 was cleared which will be used to buy chairs for the new auditorium. Engineer at McCook . Killed in an Accident McCook. Neb., April 8. (Special Telegram.) Engineer Perry Gass away of this city was killed this morn ing in the local yards as he was pre paring to go out with a freight train. While engaged in oiling his engine, a string of freight cars were shunted against the train to which his engine was coupled, the engine crushed his legs. He was removed to the Co operative hospital of this city, where he died in a few hours. Palmyra Commandery .." Holds Easter Services Superior. Neb.. April 8. (Soecial Telegram.) Palmyra Commandery, No. LI, Jlmghta .templar, neld their Easter . services in the Methodist church this afternoon. Rev. U. G. Brown of Omaha delivered the ser mon. The Superior Choral union furnished the music. Automobile Show On Whole Week at the Capital City (From a Staff Correepondent.) Lincoln, April 8. (Special.) This is automobile week in Lincoln and during the entire week the show will be on. Great preparations are being made to entertain the visitors, who are expected to arrive here by the thousands and Lincoln people have been asked to ooen their homes to take care of the overflow from the hotels and rooming: houses. It is expected to bring as many people ot tne city as tair week. "MOTHER DOESN'T HAVE TO CALL US TWICE SINCE WE STARTED TO HAVE POST TOASTIES FOR BREAKFAST WILSON IN HURRY FOR MILLION MEN Prods Congress for Legislation Permitting Raising of first Arm. OTHER PLANS ABE BUSHED Washington, April 8. President Wilson's war program began to take concrete form and with the reassembl ing of the senate and the house Monday, sweeping measures will be put forward for congressional ap proval. As the first step it is planned to give the entente allies, out of the nation's plenty, an enormous loan to replenish their treasuries against the drain of their military and naval efforts in the common cause against Germany. The president is ready to issue bonds up to $5,000,000,008 to float such a loan as soon as congress shall authorize it. Wants Hen Hurried. That the United States may be ready if necessary to bear more di rectly a share of the actual military burden, the administration appealed for expeditious consideration of the War department bill to raise 1,000,000 men by selective conscription. for the important task of conserv ing food supplies, that the country may support itself and give to the entente the greatest possible advan tage of its broad agriculture resources, the defense council announced plans for a national food commission under the direction of Herbert C Hoover, who' managed the great American work of relief in Belgium. At the same time the agriculture department again appealed to American farmers to do their share in the war by mak ing every farm do its best for the country. 1 lne president expects congress to fall in line quickly behind the war plans, worked out by the executive branch of the government in months of preparation. Should delays develop in committee consideration ot the revenue and army proposals, however, there are many lesser measures which could be pressed ahead for- passage. llie house naval committee already has under consideration and expects to report during the coming week three bills to strengthen the naval establishment. One would provide for graduating the third year clasa at the naval academy in May of next year. Another would give the president the right to commandeer small boats tor the coast patrol and the third would allot an additional naval academy ap pointment to each member of con gress. Personnel increase measures, which contemplate the addition of 63,000 blue jackets and u.ouu marines may be taken up also during the week. In addition congress will be asked to pass espionage and censorship bills, to strengthen the powers of the ship ping board, to revise the federal re serve act, and to adopt many otner measures to fill up gaps in the na tional defense plans. Most of these measures already are in shape for the consideration of congress, on which will rest durinir the next few weeks the responsibility for sounding out the war program. Volunteer Yeomanettes on ; Duty at Recruiting Station Two volunteer veotnanettes Sunday helped the overworked navy recruit ers witn stenograpnic work at ma local station. They were Miss Mar garet Ellis, 2542 Chicago, and Miss Susan Albrecht, 490S California street. Knowing that the men attached to the recruiting station had more work than they were able to handle with a curtailed staff during the recruiting rush, the two young women volun teered to help Chief Yeoman Ross with some of his typewriting work. All Sunday afternoon they typed long reports, and then offered to help some more this week, when not busy at their regular employment. What Is It That Makes C M C Trucks Superior? What accounts for their greater pulling pow er t h e i r 1 o w operating cost their low upkeep their greater durabil ; ity the consistent, depend able service they give? The GMC Line There are GMC Trucks of the proper size and type to meet the requirements of any business. Six sizes in all to 5-ton capacity. If you are considering motor trucks we urge you to investigate the GMC line. "Put It Up to O. to SHOW YOU" Nebraska Buick Auto Co. Omaha LEE HUFF, Mgr. Mac Baldrige Sees Self Wrestling With Lewis in the Movies F. H. Davis, prominent Omaha banker, while playing golf Sunday afternoon on the links of the Country club, struck Mrs. H. H. Baldrige on the face with a golf ball, which he drove in an erratic manner. Mrs. Baldrige, who is the wife of a lead ing attorney, was rustled to Clarkson hospital by John L. Webster and other sympathetic friends. Mr. Bal drige, who witnessed the accident, laughed at his wife's plight as if it might have been a good joke. This did not happen in real life, but in a reel of motion photography which was presented at the Muse theater. It was an impromptu en tertainment gotten up by society folks, being the same motion pic tures presented here last year under the name of "One Summer in Omaha," and offered at that time by Mrs. C. T. Kountze for the benefit of the Child's Saving institute. An added special feature in con nection with this Omaha society film story was a motion picturization of "Mac" Baldrige in a wrestling ex hibition with Ed "Strangler" Lewis. Mr. and Mrs. Baldrige were present and enjoyed the pictures, as did a number of other aociety people. "Mac" Baldrige is home for a few days from Yale. He laughed when he viewed himself wrestling with Lewis and the picturea of himself were cheered by friends who were present. Mr. Baldrige was visibly amused when he saw his wife struck by the golf ball in "One Summer in Omaha." , Men Who Have Red Blood Are Wanted As Recruits in Navy Washington, April 8. Chance of immediate action in the ranks of the men who operate battleship guns in submarine defense is bringing many Americans to marine corps recruiting stations. Seventeen hundred and fifty-eight men have applied for enlistment in the "soldiers of the sea" during the last week at the various recruiting stations from coast to coast, accord ing to recruiting officials here. The marine corps is still short about 4,000 men for war strength and is making a strong appeal to youths of spirit to do their bit in the first line of defense. THE biggest room1 hi the world is room for im provement. But when Nature's best pipe tobacco has been naturally improved into Velvet, that room ain't so big after ail. It's the way GMC Trucks are built that makes them Superior from the standpoint of the Owner, Driver and Caretaker. It's their sturdy, rugged construction their utter simplicity every unit built with a factor of safety, and easily accessible. You can buy GMC Trucks knowing confidently that they are fitted for the work knowing that they will with stand the hardest kind of use. Is Complete Lincoln H. E. SIDLES, General Manager Henry & Co., Distributors Omaha, South Omaha, Council Bluff ANOTHER-MUSTER FOR THE FOURTH Will Be Held by Companies at Their -Various Stations. MAY REQUIRE A MONTH Beginning this week, another gen eral muster will be held of the Fourth Nebraska National Guard, under fed eral authority, similar to the one held last summer, before the guardsmen went to the Mexican border. As every company of the regiment is busy on active guard duty in the state, the muster will be held by com panies, at their various stations. Thus it is estimated by Colonel Baehr that the muster may require perhaps a month. The regular army officers, who will conduce the muster, are already here, ready to begin the task. "Particularly care will be taken in the muster," says Colonel Baehr, "to all nhveical and moral tin- desirables, if any should be discovered. We are determined to Keep up inc standard of the guard in all ways, so that it will be ready and efficient for active war service." If any guardsmen appear for the muster, who have not already taken the federal oath, it will be admini stered to them then. Only men who appear at the muster will have basis for pension claim later on. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young Talks to Boone Teachers Albion, Neb.. April 8. (Special.) The Boone County Teachers' and School Boards' associations conven tions .closed Saturday. The meetings were largely attended. Prominent speakers such as Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, Washington, D. C; President McKenna, Ypsilanti, Mich.; Hon. H. W. Foght, specialist in rural school practice; Hon. W. H. Campbell and others addressed the sessions. Children Die of Scarlet Fever. Logan, la., April 8. (Special.) Dolly, the 6-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clint Fitch of near Beebee town, stricken with scarlet fever a short time ago, died Thursday after noon. The funeral services are planned for Sunday afternoon, ac cording to information received here this morning. The grandchild of E. Mahoneydied of scarlet fever near Magnolia and , the interment was in the Magnolia cemetery Thursday. This makes the third fatal case of scarlet fever re cently in Harrison county. Sioux City S. C. DOUGLAS, Mgr.