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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1917)
THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1917. YOUTH, STABBED BY HIS COMRADE AT PLAY, IS DEAD Concetto Circo Uses Knife on Earl Cunningham in Game That Develops Into Fight. s Earl Cunningham, aged 11, 1417 Pa cific jtreet, was stabbed in the neck by Concetto Circo, aged 12, 1218 Pierce, a boy ompanion. at Thir teenth and Pierce streets at 7:30 Sab urday evening. He died at 1 a. ni. The left carotid artery was com nVtflv crvprrH. After the stabbthff. the wounded boy ran toward home, but tell trom loss ot Diooa m tne mirung ton railroad tracks at Fourteenth and Pacific streets, where he was later found' by V. N. Sherman, 1711 Jack son, and Albert Jones, 1312 South Twelfth, who had been visiting with the Cunningham family. They carried the boy io his home. , . Police were called and rushed him to St. Joseph's hospital, where Drs. Duncan and Swoboda attended the boy'i wound. Circo Under Arrest. Detectives Brinkman and Barta later arrested young Circo, who did the stabbing. He said he had been playing a game called "Teaky-Bear" ' with young Cunningham and a crowd of other boys at Thirteenth and Pierce, and he (Circo) was 'tagged," to be pinched hjr the other boys, but ob jected because, he said, they were not playing the game fairly, whereupon, he said, young Cunningham struck him in th mniitVi A ficlit ensued between Circo and Cunningham, in which the- former pulled out a power Knue ana stabbed Cunningham in the neck. The wounded boy then ran toward home and fell down on the Burlington tracks, where he was later picked up and carried to his home. ; Mrs. JCatie Cunningham, the boy s mother, is prostrated with grief. The boy's father is dead, and he and his brother, Leo, aged 14, who is call boy for the Union Pacific railroad; support the mother. - Probation Officer Miller.took Con cetto Circo to Riverview home, where he will be held by juvenile authorities. Russian Court Favorites Sent . To Lonely Exile (Contlnu4 from Pf On.) SCOOTERS WHO Gruesome Warning to . Ambitious Reporters. WERE SCOOPED Being a Satire by a Young Woman Scribe for The Bee Who Was "Canned" From Fort Omaha. me, the exception being" the grand duke Paul, whoe wife is my kins woman. ,'"'v "The truth about Nicholas is that he has a good character and a quicker and better mind than the good-for-nothing grand duke. His fault is his incorrigible weakness, which ts partly congenital and partly the result of the crushing training ly the mother dow ager and his tutors, who were in structed to suppress every manifest, tion of initiative." .; "Nicholas hated to hear bad news and reports against others. Until the last he had not the slightest notion that all the nation detested and despised him. He told us only a few days before the revolution that he was pleased with the conditions in Russia and. would grant a responsible cabmet after the war. He was posi tively dumfounded at the sudden re volt." " ' ' . -Rasputin's Influence t Legend. "Rasputin's name is wrongfully as sociated with mine. Having been at ...... tli. .nfir. l!m, Ra.nlltitl lUUIl uuiiug .". vmmv ........ ............. was power there, I know that his political influence over Nicholas and the empress and his alleged despotic authority over the ministers are pure legends.; Alix was busy all the time with "me to managing hospitals, of which there were seventy-nine at Tsarkoe Sclo.v Rasputin, as already t-nows throuehout the errfoire. assured Nicholas that daily prayers would cure Ajrana wuKe Aiexis, m son. xac illness of the grand duke was not caused, as hat-teen alleged, by ter rorist attempts' on his life, but through defective protection of the blood vessels, which caused a hem orrhage at the slightest exertion, a disease universal in the Battenberg family. , , "Daily Rasputin prayed,, first alone, and later with .the emperor and em press, who were intensely pious and shared his prayers. Alexis suddenly recovered two years ago, andUe ii now in perfect health. The accusa tions against the personal character of myself and the empress in connec tion with Rasputin are infamous. 'When I am allowed to return 6 Rus sia, I shall bring my calumniators to justice." Viruboda added that Nicholas was not pro-German and did not intend to make a separate peace. Immedi ately before the outbreak of the revo lution she heard him make, the follow ing statement: "I believe und 4iope we will soon beat the Germans soundly." ' "Deny," she concluded, "that I . am exiled as the result of any connection with a grand ducal monarchist plot. I do not believe such a plot could succeed, as not one of the grand dukes is fit to rule Russia." The grand dukes arrested eirlx, this week in connection with the mon archist plot aeainst the provisional government have not yet been sent! from Fetrograd. The date of their departure is being kept secret. Packers Take Up Meat 1 i Question With Hoover Washington, Sect. 9. Meat produc ing and packing interests of the coun try will meet with Herbert Hoover, the food administrator, here Wednes day to take up measures to deal with the meat situation. A threatened shortage in the supply will be given particular attcntton. A committee of twenty-five men, representing the five branches of the producing industry, is in Washington now discussing means to deal with the problem..: , , . The food administration is direct ing its efforts towards decreasing meat consumption that a larger sur plus of meat may be available for export. The Department of Agricul ture a concerned particularly with in creased production and is working on a plan for shifting a large number of live stock from the west to regions u'hr fher i mn rmiffh feed. Persistent Advertising Is the Roayd to Success- By 'BEATRICE FURMAN. Somewhere in Fort Omaha, far from the entrance gate, beyond the balloon house and at the, edge of no man's land, is a little plot of ground. It is dotted .with mounds, freshly soddtd and well kept, whose small dimensions show with a pathos greater than words could express the tender ages of those resting within the windowless palaces, 1 V- In those narrow beds lie the mortal remains of the .valiant band of re porters that sought to disclose to an eager city, state and nation news of the army balloon 'school at Fort Omaha. There they lie, cut off in the flower of their youth by the stern hand of military necessity. Every other Sun day Major Hersey, by whose orders they were laid low, comas over and drops a little white flower on each peaceful mound, and every time he comes there is a new mound or two over which he stands a while. Then he shakeshis head sadly and moves slowly, sorrowfully, away. Scheme to Bomb Kaiser. There rests the 'ambitious youth who discovered the famous Berlin plot of Leo Stevens and Lieutenant Goodale. Their scheme was to sail secretly out of the fort t midnight, head north till the proper latitude was reached, poise in the sky at a certain point and remain motionless while the world turned beneath them till Berlin was directly below, and then dr$4 a bomb on the kaiser's bald spot. Had the reporter remained silent till the deed was done, the war would be over now and all would be well. But the temptation to get ' a scoop was too great. The story was in type all ready for the morning edition when Major Hersey's sleuths discov ered the fact. The story was "killed" at midnight, the reporter shot at sunrise, and the expedition postponed indefinitely. . At the foot of this mound is an other. A simple "headboard tells the tory; , " i i A Starr Totter. ' l i . H died doing1 hli duty nobljn : WHERE GREAT BATTLE IMPENDS IN BELGIUMEx pecting another great offensive by Field Marshal Haig in Flanders, the Germans have ordered the evacuation of civi lians of approximate!; 200 square miles of territory. The danger zone extends from the present battle front from Dix mude south to a point east of Ypres to a line running south ward from Thourout through Roulera to Courtrai. Fleischmann's Balloon Gas. This brave lad was found within the grounds with the goods on him a typewritten ttory( concerning the discovery of Captain Fleischmann. This was an easy method of solidify ing balloon gas, and m: king it into small packages to be carried away in a soldier's pocket. Just before the . . . i .. .. ...1 ' ascension mis was io oe msecica in the balloon bag, a few drops of a chemical compound on it and, presto there would be a big, fat gas bag tugging at its leash, On the way to hand in this story to his paper, the reporter was halted by six soldiers who had been following him. He was never seen again. Just a step farther and you are standing over another pathetic heap of earth , which hides from mortaU view all that is left of the young man who was on the point of printing the biggest society "scoop" Oraha has read in many a day. He had learned, by great daring and strategy, the fact that Captain Prentice had been training for weeks a group of society women for special balloon work; in France. ,-. "Nix On That" Says Major. Because of their constant employ ment with knitting needles m war relief work, their hands had grown so skillful as to adapt them to the most rapid machine gun work. Captain Prentice planned to take them to the front and there let them operate mat chine guns from balloons. But Major Hersey hasn t a good news sens at all. In vain the con scientious scribe explained how such a story would reflect credit on the Fort Omaha school and give it world wide fame. The commander was ada mant. : At sunrise there was a loud "boom" aitrl annther hiKtHincr Ittprarv 0-Ailill had gone tohis long rest! A fourth uuound covers the one who learned and almost printed the news that Sergeant Conollcy was 1o be made a general and ten other non-commissioned officers were to be promoted at once to lieutenant-c6l-onelcies. Coming of George Creel. A fifth had a fine "feature" the news that President Wilson and Gen eral Squier frequently flew from the White House to Fort Omaha, on dark nights," in a big dirigible. There are lots of feature stories at Fort Omaha. And there are big doings, "they say." But "they" don't say 'so out loud at least when a reporter is around, x Still, new recruits are continually found witling to try for some. real news at Fort Onteha. Thus the lit tle mounds increasing number. When the .graveyard is full, it is said a big demonstration will be held. There will be a parade, with march ers bearing banners emblazoned with the,, legend "A bas les rcportrts. George Creel has promised to come to Omaha and head the procession. Henrv 'Seal Iniured in Wreck Near Sheldon, la. -Sheldon, la., ' Sept 9-Passenger train No. 3. Chicago, St. Paul, Min neaoolis & Omaha railway, south bound, was wrecked a mile north of here at 5:30 Sa.turdayj and forty persons hurt, eight seriously. The baggage car jumped the track on a straight roadbed, carrying the retmin ing five coaches with it. . The track was torn up for 500 feet. s 1 Those. seriously injured: V ' Henry Beal, Omaha: E. C. Kem niu, Marion, la.: Mrs. O. W. Thompson,- Billings, Mont; Edward Orth, Minneapolis, Minn.; S. Halverson, Worthington. Minn.; E. Cn Embody, mail clerk, Minneapolis, Minn.; A. W. Long; express messenger, St. Paul, Minn.; John Smith, conductor,. St. Paul, Minn.; Robert Schuhz, Fargo, N. D. ; Charles Smith, Galva, la. Express Messenger Long is re ported in a dangerous condition. . ir- i ss(x?m lUt I ' CLEW iiHTtRVtLOt;J i Vwoumen J t r-j-'jt 1 6TADEN J 4 "m- jSf I wJogledeJ 7LT X Ameuckem . 4 Agoovs ft ' ' 1 V fl Azonncbeke J A pop.n6he lioEaHTiy I HiUMiiiuLiiiirii.iiiii, A K 15 . . - ( -PPE8LHT battle i inb AAAAA-'KDICKTES EXTENT Of LVA.CUA.T&D ".TERRITORY. STEIKERS STILL ' WAITING THE U.S. CONCILIATOR (Continued an Fat Elfht, Column One) a supply of cooks and waiters and offered to pay the union scale. Leaders advised the strikers to keep away from the plants ana cautioned against violence. Telegrams were read stating that employes of the packing houses in Kansas City, East St, Louis, Chicago and Sioux City are to hold mass meetings Sunday morning. Some of these plants arc already involved in Strikes. j Soap Makers Walk Out. Kansas City, Sept. 9. Wtih the walkout of , 700 employes at Pcet Brothers, soap plant and an alleged sympathetic1 strike of workers at the Kansas City Tacking Box company, strikes in .four different industries, in volving nearly 4,000 workers, were in progress tonight in Greater Kansas City. . ' . Higher wages and an eight-hour day were the demands stated by the strik ing Peet Brothers' employes, after or ganizing a soap makers union. Packing plant officials announced they would treat only with a commit to of strikers and noTwith organiz ers, and therewas said to be jio im mediate prospect for a settlement of the packing house employes' strike involving nearly 3,000 workers and four of the seven plants in Kansas City, Kam ' ""V; More Expressmen Strike Approximately 150 Wells-Fargo freight handlers and teamsters joined the exoress strike today,, started yesterday by the walkout of ninety five Adams Express, clerks, freight handlers and teamsters. This, strike already has resulted in an embargo be-, ing placed upon .all shipments of a perishable nature and in addition prac tically no express oi.any description is being moved by either company at the Union station. ; ' ; 1 . SWEDISH-EXPOSE ; ' STARTLES WHOLE WARRING WORLD (CotttlBticd from On. EAGER TO DEFENSE OF HERBERT Lincoln Democrat and Spanish War Veteran Says Howard's , Attack Is Undeserved by Newspaper Owner. (From a Staff Correspondent.) Lincoln, Sept. 9. (Special.) The "panning" by Lieutenant Governor Howard, given H. E. Gooch, with the demand that he be fired from the State Council of Defense, has started things in Lincoln. The charge made by Mr. Gooch that it is the result of the fight made by his paper against the Bryan wing of the democratic party, is considered by those here in Lincoln, who have watched, the po-, litical scrap in democratic ranks, as probably true. Colonel Frank Eager, former populist leader, and now a Lincoln business man, in an interview this morning brands the attack upon Captain Gooch as unfair. "I happen to know of much of the untiring and unselfish work that Mr. Gooch is doing for his country," said Colonel Eager. "He has given, weeks, and months of his time and con tributed liberally of his money to ev ery organization soliciting funds for the aid of the government.: -A more genuine, liberal, hard-working patriot cannot be found inthe state of Ne braska. , " . "Mr. Gooch has shown his brand of patriotism by enlisting as a private soldier in Company L of the Seventh regiment reserve militia and as soon as the regiment is complete will leave his family and luxuries and serve his country in the trenches in France. His comrades in the company have shown their confidence in him by electing, him captain of the company unanimously. It is too bad that there are not governor can be punished for his in sincere, malicious and dastardly" at tack upon ' the patriotsim of a man who has enlisted to serve his country at the Jbattle front m its hour of need. Mr Gooch is so much a patriot that Lieutenant Governor Howard is not worthy to unlace his shoes." RED CROSS PAYS OUT 12 MILLIONS IN SIX MONTHS Care of Destitute Children and Fight "Against, Tuberculosis Part of Work of Amer ican Organization; (By Anoclatod Frew.) Washington, Sept. 9. Approxi mately $12,000,000 for war relief work in Europe will have been expended by the American Red Cross in the first six months since the United State's has been" at war with Germany, ac cording to a report addressed today "to the American -people" by Henry P. Davison, chairman of the , Red Cross war council, in which full de tails are given of the activities of the organization in various nations abroad, chief of which is France. More than $10,000,000 of this sum, appropriated up to and including Au gust 31, by-the war council, since its appointment May 10 last, is for use1 in France. Other countries to receive relief are Russia, Roumania, Italy, Serbia, England and Armenia, the grand total amounting to $12,339,681. the greater part of which will be used by November 1, although some of the appropriations cover a year. Most of the persons in charge of the Red Cross work in France are giving their time and paying their own expenses. A special fund of $100,000 has been privately contributed to meet the ex penses of members of the commission to France enable to pay their own way. Care for Destitute Children. The war council has sent to Europe five separate xommissions, each com posed of representative Americans , m . t j . : SKiuea in Dusiness aumiiii!iyiwuii, m medical and surgical work, and in other lines of Red Cross effort. The work covers a wide scope of relief, from the establishing and maintaining of hospitals for soldiers in the Ameri can army in r ranee io civilian am, in cluding the care ana education oi destitute children and the rehabilita tion of the devastated areas in France , - ti , ' r j j ana Belgium, a-euer ana prvenuvc means against tuberculosis, which has greatly increased since the war, also will be supplied. A plan has been de vised also to extend aid to soldiers and civilians held as prisoners by the enemy. These are only a few of the many avenues through which ' Red Cross relict wilt now to tne countless thousands "of war victims. The Red, , Cross in France has as sumed the management of the wat relief clearing house. It has. taken over under control sof the United States army, the administration of the American Red Cross ambulance at Neuilly. It, has assumed .financial responsibility , for Dr, f. A. Blake's American hospital in Paris. It has allied with itself the work of the American surgical dressing commit tee, which distributed in France in July 782,449 dressings among 35 hos pitals. . Co-Ordinat All Relief. The effort has been in accordance with the express views of the presi-. dent of the United States and of the' civic, and military . authorities of France to co-ordinate along helpful lines all relief work being doje in France and America. The first and the supreme object of the task is to care for our own army and navy. LToward this end the Red. Cross- is establishing field canteens -which it will, provide for every corps of the French army, as well as for the Amer ican armv. There are now large re ception camps pear the ,oast where should be given to neutral diplomats during the war. "The discovery and deciphering of the present series of telegrams is due to the watchfulness and skill of the American intelligence service," says the Sunday Observer. The Ob server states that it received this information ,from "trustworthy sources." The newspaper continues: Neutral Made Dupe. ,v "It must cause f some ground for reflection to the German government that one of the first acts of their ne'w enemy, whose activities and value in the prosecution of the war they have affected to despise, has been to ex pose a procedure which affords, damn ing evidence against themselves and against a neutral government which it is charitable to regard as their dupe. "The contents of the published tele grams cannot but show neutral gov ernments the amount of faith they may put in German promises and Ger man s concessions. The accredited representative of the German empire at Buenos Aires, while actually en joying the hospitality of the Argen tine republic, is seen advocating the deliberate murder of Argentine sub jects on the high seas in order that ,the sinking of Argentine ships by German submarines should leave no trace which would make their crime known in, Argentina and so make an enemy of thatVountry. , . "A further point oi interest is the assurance apparently given by the Argentine government that Araentinc ships will in future onlyxclcar as far! as Las Talmas. ( "In other words, the pretended inv , nunity for Argentine ships, accorded j with a show of magnanimity by the1 German government, is a pure farce. In reality the immunity is secured ; not by Germany refraining from sink- i ing Argentine shins in the war zone, I but by the Argentine government un-J dertaking to arrange that no Argen-I tine vessel should be found in that! zone. - . j , "It will be interesting to hear what Argentine -public opinioi will say i when it learns the real nature of the 'diplomatic victwy which the Argen tina fyivrnmnfr rlaimc ' ri k, I gained." i Anti-German Riots Threatened. La Razon, the most important pa- j per of the president's party, savs the situation nrost be studied carefully 1 before extensive comment ,can be made because the Washington dis closures make the situation of the Swedish minister exceedingly difficult and open to serious and disagreeable incidents. i The Swedish legation denies abso lutely any knowledge of the message sent to Stockholm for Count Luxburg and refuses to make any comment on the Washington rcvelatiohs. ' The police are takiner measures to prevent threatened anti-German man- ucsiauons tomorrow oy stuaents ana certain political organizations. 17 Black Degrees and 2 Copying. For those who dem&xul the best , teR Mm MAM Swiss Demand Expulsion Foreigners of Army Age Geneva, Sept. 9. Several Swiss newspapers demand . that the au thorities take the same measures as were adopted recently at Budapest, Hungary, and expel all foreigners of military age. Such action by the Swiss government would affect many rich men who are here with their families at the best hotels and houses and who legally have no reason for not returning to their native countries. If Switzerland adopted the suggested measures, it is estimated many thousands, in cluding many Americans, would be expelled. Uitited States soldiers are received. Along the route to the firing line the Red Cross has established in firmaries and rest stations. At rail way stations canteens are being estab-r lished where our soldiers may find rest and refreshment. Baths, food, games and other''. comforts will be available. When" American troops start for France, the men are given comfort kits. Christmas parcels will be sent over later. . Various Movements Profit. Various appropriations have been made to worthy causes, such as $1, 000,000 for the relief of sick and wounded French soldiers and their families; $100,000 formedical research work in France; $500,000 for supply warehouses; $1,500,000 to -buy food stuffs to be sent to France, and $1, 000,000 for the hospital supply service. The transportation problem with which the Red Cross has had to cope in moving supplies over seas has been most difficult,- but through official French, British and Italian co-opera tion- with the United States shipping board and leading" steamship and rail road companies, -vast quantities of siinnlips ar now shmnpH almost ftai1v A special Red Cross transport service has been developed in- France as the railroads there are overtaxed with military needs. ' ' Six base hospitals were sent to European' fronts in advance of the American soWiersj and more than a dozen are now actively in service there and others are. rapidly being made ready. It is not the policy of the Red Cross to rebuild French villages, but it is hoped to afford new starts in life to a larae number of persons now destitute through ravages of the Ger man army, a provisional experiment along this line is being worked out. Th Omaha Ambulanc company 1 ex pecting orders to entrain at any moment. No orders hav come yet and It is not known where the company will go. "We wired Washington a a soon ns we had enlisted the men," said Dr. C. A. Hull, "We rather expect some orders will com' Mon day. Untifc they do there is: nothing "io do but watt as patiently as we cam". ROOSEVELT ASKS -YOTE FOR MOTHERS In Spirited Address at Saga more Hill, Former President . Declares Women Not More Pacific Than Men. , . A..-. D. XT V C. 0 W. i cn are entitled to tne Dauot as a ngnc and not as a-favor, Colonel. Theodore Roosevelt told a agthering of about 500 suffragists at Sagamore Hill yes terday. He declared himself most emphatically in .favVr of woman suf frage, and was . heartily applauded when he said: "On the whole the citizen to whofn I will pay the greatest deference as doitig the most indispensible of all duties is the mother. I will put her ahead of every other human being. To deny the mother the vote seems to me something so prcp6sterous that our descendants will fail to under stand how we call ourselves self-governing and democratic and yet deny it. "People have said to me that we must not have women vote because they would all be pacifists. The Lord knows I despise a pacifist, and I have made no special effort to dissemble my feelings about that.' But I have failed to notice that among them the shirking sisterhood of pacifists out numbers the bleating brotherhood of pacifists." . , V ' V Tried to Changs Her v . lf.t. Old Hat for New One Mrsw: Ellen Jones, 703 Farnarii street, was detected by Special Offi cer Finn while. in .the "act of exchang ing her old hat for a new one valued at $16.50 in the millinery department at the Brandeis stores on Saturday afternoon. " She was arrested and is being held on a charge of petit larceny. nurai j amrrs ana .Tensions. WsshlngtonSept. 9. ..(Special Telegram.) Rural letter carriers appointed: Oolfax. Ia.f Emory Jlaln; Fort Dodge. Ia., William St. Hopkins: Humslon, la,, Floyd Hume stoh; Iowa City. Ia.Xloseph P. T. Machovee; Mltchellvlll. fa Howard K. Tacey; New ton, la., William C. Fish; Tork, NeO., Ed ward N. Norwood. Pensions granted: Iowa Elizabeth C, Boke, Muscatine, 13;Lodem Hatswell, Council Bluffis (30'; Mary E. Countermine, Cleghorn, iZ0; Sarah C. Bllven, Sioux City, 112; Susan F. Oilpin. WtnterVt, f 20; Mary A. Johnson, $12; Alpha Harriot L. Moon. Des Moines, $12: Nancy E. McCaffrey, Oska loosa, $20; Williscent . Meneely, Mount ,Pleaaant, $1?. Wyoming Henry A. Bell, T4lsleep, $11.20. ' The postof flees at Olmitz, la;; Jan, la.; Jantasck," Mudd Butte and Walker, S. D. ; Poinsette and Sarngeton, Wyo will become domestic money order offices on October 1. 11 1 ' ii. i Meeting place of Ipresentative -American Men and Women from every vstate in trie Union Fftr rttes, etc., ee advertisement ap pearing on Thursday teDtem -"cv 4 i m in Minima! . ry . j Iff; .kwitV- Hotel Dyckman v Minneapolis FIREPROOF Opened 1910 ; , Location Most Camtntl. 300 Rooms with 300 Privato Baths. Rates $1.75 to $3.50 Per Day. H. J. TREMAIN, Prat, and Manage!-. Boys and Girls Clear Your Skin With Citficura ' Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c When Writing lo Our Advertisers Mention Seeing it in The Bee ember Ideal Month in Colorado Nowhere else can more of interest bi Reen or more real benefit be de-; rived in your two weeks than in Colorado - . . . , . v -. i. .:',- ; The temperature now is around 80 degrees in the daytime and a little less than 50 degrees at night (the sun shines every day there). Vacation crowds have thinned out until - the choicest ((accommodations are'.nw available; fishing is better ,than any time this season. r Omaha to Denver or Colorado Springs and return $20. On sale untif t September 30 with final return limit October 31. Three' splendidly 'equipped daily trains to select from Via. UNION PACIFIC ...... i;'-: i. - Tlie line that is double tracked and protected by automatic elec , trie block safety signalg all the way to Colorado. Denver Special iV...... ................. 7:45 A. 11 Colorado Expresg .......... . . . . . . . . . ....... 4 :20 P. M. Colorado Special ....i 12:30 Midnight For Colorado literature and further vacation and train service information, apply to 1 ' 2. v"-"'- . I BEIND0BFF, City Passenger Agent, ' 0 1324 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. rCJjZI