Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 28, 1918, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1918.
4
FARMERS TO HAND
IN WHEAT OR U.S.
WILL CONFISCATE
v . ' X
- Government Needs Grain for
' Var Purposes and Will Take .
if Not Brought to
Market. .
Farmers will be ordered at once to
taul their vheaf t market. Thi 'Ov
eminent wants it for war piKp.ses
and is preparing to tae it if those
"Requisition, tire wheat -"of llifse
who are holding it with a de7re to
obstruct the government" is the cuder
which, came from Federal Adrrnrs
trator Hoover to State Food Admin
istrator Wattles.
."First." Food AdminU'rator
Hoover's order continues, "direct, the
owner of the wieato bring the qram
lo the nearest elevator within the
shortest time possible. If.he'ia.ls,
...hen requisition the wheat '0.1 the
Sasis of price at the rocal elevator,
less enough to pay necessary chides
for transportation from farm to elevator.-
.
How to Confiscate.1"
vvr.enever wireat is requisifcorca.
ine zone vice presmcni 01 me unieuu. . . , .. .
States grain corporation, must .? no. Madame Alexandra kollantay, forme
tified, and he will make the ne:.-ssar
arrangements for purchase.
"There are sorfe known pro-Ger
man farmers hoarding Jtheir wheat
out of a desire to obstruct the gov
' emment. That they should not
prejudicelhe loyal and decent mem
bers of 'the community, jt is desirable
' that this grain be marketed. And
wherever necessary the wheat must
berequisitioned." 1 '
Otders Sent Out. .
Orders to county food" adminisi
trators, asking them to report all
cases in Nebraska where wheat is be-
. ing held on the farms with the hope
' of obstructing the government, were
sent from Food Administrator Wat
tles' office yesterday afternoon.
As soon as these reports are re
ceived, action, following the request
of H'erbert Hoover, United States
food administrator, will be taken by
the v Nebraska administration to get
this wheat to market. , '
"The order is issued that the gov
ernment mav have the wheat which
may be he!'.', in Nebraska by unpatri
otic holders," say's the Nebraska food
administration.
"It is not aimed at the patriotic
farmer, who is co-operating with the
government, but at those, if any, who
may be attempting to keep wheat
from the rrjarket in the hope that it
will handicap the "government in its
efforts to meet the allied .demands."
Members of the food administra
tion will confer with Charles T.
N'eale, vice president United States
Grain corporation, this morning t
decide on procedure "wherex requisi
tioning is n?cessa'ry.'
'FOOD OFFICIALS
WILL TAKE OVER
i H0ARDED.WHEAT
. - -
Washington, March,, 27, State food
idministratprs will be' encouraged by
:he food aaministraticm to requisition
summarily any' sWks of wheat actu-,
illy being hoafded. A general order'
-.6 this effect has not" yet 'been pro
mulgated, but state administrators
have been advised that, they have au
' 'hority. to act. ' ,
" Although farmers specifically are
ixempted ff om the operation of the
hoarding provisions-of the food act,
mother section empowers the presi
dent to requisition food for any pub
lic use connected with the common
ieferse. This section is construed to
obtain in the case of any farmer wil
fully holding back grain supplies in
the national emergencyi .
The food administration plans will
not affect directly the .common prac
tice of-retaining food stocks for' a
brief, time in expectation of a rise in
the market, but drastic-action will be
$ instituted, ifc is, believed," if. it is found
that ar organized attempt has been
imade to retard the free floV of grain.
JThe food,' administration took its
,' first step in the campaign When re
cently more than 100,000 bushels of
wheat held by a -German sympathizer
in New Mexico, were commandeered.
' Other cases involving hoarding now
are under investigation in the grain
belt of the northwest.
Japan Refused to Enter War I
When Asked by France in 1914
(Paris, 'March --27. Intervention by
Japan in the European war was so
' licited by France at th end of August,
1914, according to a detailed account
" by M. Bernard, ..the historian, as
published today in the Excelsior.
Theopbile Delcasse took charge of
f :he foreign office on August 28. His
first step was to daft a note to Jhe
smpcrpr of Japan, in his own hand.
M. Bernard says the note was com
nunicated to the British ambassador.
The reply was that Japan's. policy was
k entirely Oriental and that her army
.vas hot prepared for action outside
:hat sphere.
, ' " M. Bernard dtnles, on thi authority
of M. Delcasse himself, V. report
which has been current for a l!ng
time that Japan demanded the cession
of Indo-Chinl by France as the price
, of her intervention. .
Oil'Steamer Fights
Off Two Sub Attacks
" Washington. March 27. Sec-tit ry
Daniels has received frotfithe presi
dent of the Vacuum Oil company a
'!eftr praising the conduct of a naval
. irmed guard aboard he company's
atik steamer Paulsboro, in its en
counters with German submarines, on
February 25 and March 1. v
In both instances the gun . vrew,
ifter lively engagements, drove the
submarines off. The submarine in the
March -t attack was probably sank.
Thomas Holmes, Friend .
Ot London's Poor," Dies
Lcmdon, 1 March 7. T homis
holmes, who for the last years had
;iven his attention to improving the
:onditions under which London's
ooresf . toilers work and Jive, died
yesterday after an operation,
y H,e was born in 1846 and was, an
iron worker early in life. Hie . was
editor of the London Homeworker.
HOOVER TRIES OUT NEW WHEAT
food Administrator Evolve Diet' Which .
Represents 100 Per, Cent Conservation.
SAVING RECIPES ON HIMSELF
Washington. March 27. Iferbert C. of breads and rnuffins. Corn starch is
vHoover and 500 other employes of the used for gravies. Continuous cxperi-
food administration hive tried out the ments with wheat substitutes are-ie-
new wheat conservation regulations ing made in the Department of AgW-
which the public is asked to observe culture to evolve new receipts for the
and have pronounced them good. use of the public. Results that may
It became .known that the be unsatisfactory as bread help to
food administrator and his fellow win the war b undergoing a drying
workers. have gone the public one process for use as crumbs,
better by eliminating entirely the use Potatoes are served in .quantity at
of wheat in the administration's cafe- the cafeteria in compliance with the
teria, achieving not only a 100 per cent food administration's injunction to
saving in wheat, but lessening the the public, to use the country's im-
cafeteria's expenses at no sacrifice of mense potato stocks and save the
nutritioh or tastiness. ' grain., x
Flour made from rice, barlej', po- Potatoes here have dropved from
tatoes and corn is used in the making 4 to 2 ceuts a pound recently.
WOMAN SOCIALIST PMSuna's 1
ABANDONS fltUSADE Casualty List
Bolsheviki to Re taliaex Against
Swedes for Treatment of
' Madame Kollantay on
Aland glands.
j Moscow, Monday, March 25.-
commissioner of social welfare and
tlTe "Only woman honored by the bol
sheviki with a cabinet position, has
returned to Moscow after an unsuc
cessful attempt to enter western Eu
tope to make a general crusade on
uchalf of international socialism.
Armed with many tons of literature
and accompanied by 12 assistants,
Madame Kollantay tried to get to
Sweden through Finland, but Finnish
white guards turned the party back.
Going to Helsingfors, the party em
barked on a small ship convoyed by
a Russian warship. The commander
of the warshtp was not a sympathizer
with the crusade, and led the other
ship into a mine field,' where he aban
doned it. .
Madame Kollantay and her party
found refuge on ice floes which drifted
ashore on the Aland islands. Her
they were arrqsted by Swedish troops,
who finallyvreleased them when a
threat was rriade that all Swedes in
-Russia would be arrested in retalia
tion. ' . - -
Although Madame, Kollantay re
signed from the cabinet because she
was opposed to tlie organization of an
army of defense, she is supporting the
bolsheyik party and is now organizing
crusades for guerrilla warfare and the
spread of socialistic jjoctrine. Because
of her treatment on the Aland islands,
the bolshevik government has decided
to deny to Sweden the right' to send
diplomatic couriers through Russian
territory.
Pioneer Woman Dies at v
Daughter's Home in Geneva
j Harvard, Nb., MarclV27. '(Special.)
Funeral services for Mrs. Eliza J.
Davis, who died Monday evening at
the home of her daughter, Mrs. E.
C. Eller, in Hastings, were held at the
Congregational' xhurch "In this city
this afternoonat 2:30. Mrs. Davis was
the widow of Clinton Davis, an Ohio
veteran f the civil war, who came to
this county in the 70s and who at one
time had. charge pf the count poor
tarm. tie died in July, ivw. Mrs.
Davis was an active member of the
Congregational church and Sunday
school and also ot the JLadtes or the
Grand Army. She had been in'failing
Health for,the last year or more. She
was y years old. -
TEUTONS CROSS THE
ANCRE; HURLED MCK
BYHAIG'SPOPS
(Continued From rage One.)
day afternoon and evening astride the
Somme the British troops on both
banks were forced back a short dis
tance inHhe neighborhood of Bray.
The official, statement says:
"As a result of the enemy's attacks
yesterday afternoon and evening
astride the Somme, our troops on
both banks were forced back a short
distance in the neighborhood of Bray.
A heavy attack made early in the
night against-our pew lfhe south of
the Somme was repulsed after severe
fighting. 'At one point in the neigh
borhood of the river the enemy forced
his way into our positions but was
thrown back by our counter-attacks.
"Further local fighting has taken
place also north and northeast of Al
bert, out the situation, on this part of
the4attle front remains unchanged."
Haig Appeals to Britons.
Feld Marshal Hajg has issued the
following special order of the day,
dated March 23: -
"To "all ranks of. the British army
in France and Flanders: We are
again at a crisis, in the war. The en-
I emy has collected on this front every
r- j , - .i
avauaoie division ana is aiming ar tne
destruction of the British army. We
have already inflieted on the enemy,
in the course of the last few days, a
Lvery heavy loss, .and the Frencli are
sending troops as quickly as possible
to our support.
"I feel that everyone in the army,
fully realizing how much depends on
the exertions and steadfastness of
each one of us, will do his utmost to
prevent the enemy from attaining his
object." '
Shells Rain, Down. '
Four trainloads of wounded officers
and men from the battle front in
France reached London last night As
they were being transferred to ambu
lances crowds cheered and threw
flowers. . The wounded responded
smilingly to these greetings.
"What was it like?" was asked of
one wounded man.
"Oh, Fritz has rained shells on us
like a. hail storm," was the reply.-
Geologists Believe Oil
Around Sidney; Will Drill
Sidney. Keb., March '27. (Special.)
Oeologrets ana oil prospectors have
been roaming over the hills near Sid
ney and Lodgepole, prospecting for
oil and are now leasing large' tracts
of land and as soon as the machincr-"
can be .brougMt here from the ea
they will begin drilling for oil.
Rrof. Carl Hardman, one of the be:,
known geologists of Wyoming, claims
this cormtry has the same formation
i as the Wyoming oil field
t -
Washington, March -'. the cas
ualty list made public today by the
War department contains ,30 names,
divided as fellows:
Killed in action, nine: died xi acci
dent, onef.died of disease, four;
wounded severely, two; .woundrt
slightly, 14. ' ,
No officers were named in today's
list, which follows:
" Killed in action:
CADET THOMAS C, NATHAN.
Privates! , ' '
JOHN E. ALLEN.
HARRY E. BOERSTLER.
WALTER T. COHOE.
GARY CRIST.
ARCHIE. HENDERSON". . x
CLARENCE M. JONliS. 4
JESSE L. KOOPMAN. .
ALEK MILLER. '
Died of accident;
SERGEANT HUNTER' MASSIE.
Died of disease:
COOK PAUL BOUCIIET. poison
Privates: ROBERT S. CROSS,' scarlet fever.
JOHN W. LEMKE, diphtheria.'
GEORGE W. OLDFIELD; mas
toiditis. "V ' ,
Wounded severely: '
Privates Dewain E. Montgomery,
George E, Ostrander.
Wounded slightly: Corporal Ed
ward C. Twitchell," Privates, first
class, William C. Peck, Marienus W.
Burgman, Lee A. Charland. Rudoloti
J. Costello, Percy G. Engelke, jr.,
Jacob Ginsberg:. Edward F. Grabill.
John Kletzuig, John D. Perry, Wil
liam Ring, Tony Testa, Elon WTol-
lui, William Van Ber Ploeg.
-T- r
Nebraska Balloon Student "
Commissioned in Texas,
Clarks, Neb., faarch 27. (Special.)
Walter Chamberlain, jr.. son of the
president of the StatcBank of Clarks,
who is'stationed at San Antonio, has
been commissioned a sectfrtgl lieuten
ant .
"I am a'tnll-fledged pilot- a mem
ber of the Aero Club of America, and
the happiest tellow in the world, he
wrues nis motner. i
Walter was eraduated from the hal.
loon school f at Umaha this winter.
ana lias been finishing ins training in
tne south, i he tamily is well known
in, Omaha, where the lieutenant and
a younger brother, Edward, went to
School several years. ' ;
Sidney Fall Wheat' Crops
' Only Five Not 100 Per Cent
Sidney. March 27. (Soecial.) M.
A. McDowell, representing a Chicago
grain commission firm, lias been in
vestigating the fall wheat in Chey
enne county and has reported, after
viewing 426 farms'' in this county,
which are sowed to fall wheat, and
found only five that are. not 100 per
cent perfect. Cheyenne county has a
larger acreage of fall wheat than ever
before. Six.y thousand acres of sod
will be broken this spring and planted
to -fall grain. The fall crop of &ye is
also in solenoid condition. m
Russ Reds Institute ' ;
Compulsory War School
London, March 27. A new law
providing for general compulsory
military instruction will be pub
lished by the bolshevik government
in a few days, anVExchajige Tele
graph dispatch from Moscow says.'
The instruction will be given in the
schools, factories and country dis
tricts. j . N
Doctor Stos Mkm Iron Will J
iriCKLAJb O TKbnuTn or ULUkAIti
People Two
In many inttancei, y City Physkian, per- I
aona have- tattered tor year without I
knowinc what made them feel tired, lilt
leaa and run-down, when their real trouble
was lack of Iron in the blood how to tell.
F you were to make an actual blood test
r
on all people who are ill you would proD
abJy be ereatly astonished at the exceed
ingly large numberwho lack iron and who
re ill for no other reason than the lack oi
ron. The moment Iron is supplied a multi
tude of dangerous symptoms disappear.
Without Iron the blood at once loses the
power to change food into living tissue and
therefore nothing you eat does you goo
you don't get the strength out of it. Your
food merely passes through your system like
corn through a mill with the rollers so wide
apart thathe mill can't grind. Asa result
of this continuous blood and nerve starva
tion, . people become generally weakened,
nervous and all run down and frequently
develop all sorts of conditions. One is too
thin; another is burdened with unhealthy fat;
some are aoiweak they can hardly walk;
some think they have dyspepsia, V'dney ot
liver trouble; some can't sleep at night,
others are sleepy and tired all day; some
fussy and irritable; some skinny and blood
less, but all lack physical power and en
durance. In such cse, it is worse than
foolishness to take-stimulating, medicines or
narcotic drugs, which only whip up your
fagging vital powers for the moment, maybe
at the expense of your life later on. .No
AUTOMOBILES
W will buy you any car that you want. Small payment down, bal
ance 8 per cent, payable in monthly payments. Replies confidential.
UNIVERSAL FUNDING CO., 13,5Bl!dt?,ita!NibP"l,k
Established 1894 I have
4iave perfected the bent treatment in existence today. I do not inject paraffin or wax,
as it is dangeronr. The advantage) of my treatment are: No loyi of time. No detention
f ronyTusinesS. No danger frnns chloroform, shock snd blood poison, and no laying up
in a hospital. Call or write Dr. Wrsy, 306 Bee Bldg., Umaha. i ,
RUSS PEASANTS
RESIST GERMANS
WHO SEIZE BREAD
Leon Trotzky Heads Move
ment to Organize Slavs in
. Combined, Opposition
Against Teutons.
Moscow, Monday, March 25,
Prince Henry of Prussia, brother of
the Germin emperor, and one of his
sons, have arrived at Reval. ps
thonia. They were greeted 4j,eartily by the
German population, but the Eston
ians refused to participate in the re
ception. I he visit is attributed to
desire to create. pro-German feeling
The Germans are misy collecting
and exporting breadstuffs from the
Pskov ditrict,. northeast of Dvinsk.
At rerchorskiya, near Pskov, 40
nenibers of German detachments re
quisitioning breid were killed by the
peasants. Bridges were destroyed
by the.peasant. who also harrassed
the tSeYmanj by carrying away the
bread and destroying cars and wag
ons. 1 . . '
The Germans tricked many of the
peasants into Pskov by announcing
i they had an abundance of bread and
j sugar which would be sold cheaply.
' The Germans seized the carts arid
' horses of the peasants, but sold no
food.
A bolshevik supreme war council
has been formed to take charge of
army organization. 'Leon Trotzky
has been appointed chairman of the
council. Agents are being sent from
Moscow into all the provinces to or
ganize the peasants to supplement
the efforts of the city workmen in
opposing the Germans.
Volunteer will be called for, after
which local committees will prepare
lists of men refusing to volunteer
and will post them publicly. To all
shirkers will be denied the right to
participate in public affairs.
Ukraine Resents Demands.
London, March 27. A serious dis
pute has arisen between the Ukraine
and Germany over Germany's demand
that it be given 85 per cent of the
Ukrainian , wheat, according to a tele
gram received in Petrograd from Kiev
and forwarded by Reuter's, Limited.
Germany also -demanded that it be
given a large percentage ot otner
foodstuffs not needed by the popula
tion of the Ukraine. . :
The telegram adds that there are
dissensions in the Ukrainian cabinet,
which is divided for and against the
German demands.
Cost of Fabricated Steel'
v Ships Exceeds Estimate
Washington, March 27. Total ipst
to the government for constructing
the shinvafd at Hob; Island. Peiuwyl-
vania, where 120 fabricated steel ships
are to be -built under the agency con
tract plan, will be between $35,000,000
and 40,UUU,UUU, the senate commerce
committee was told today by John R.
Freeman of Providence, R. I., an ex
pert naval architect, brought here to
testify by the contractors, f
This"sum includes only the vard
construction and does not "take into
consideration any work on ship con
struction.
An original estimate was made, at
$21,000,000', but officials of the inter
national comoration estimated it
would be much more than that.
Mdrr-bers of the senate committee
have expressed belief that the trtal
cost would go beyond Mr. Free nan's
estimate.
Brifain Sends Younger
Men Into Battle Line
London, March ( 27. Diseasing
mean? of replacing the losses of.man
power . in France, the Daily Mai! sug
gests it prpbably will be found neres
sary to shorten the period of traivng
for recruits and to send to the front
the younger classes at an earlier age
man nercioiore.
All physically able Russian subjects
in Enszland. the newspaper says are
being called to the colors, the author
ities having cancelled the recent order
which temporarily suspendca tne
summoning of,these men,
Weeks Time
matter what any one tells you, it you are
not strong ana w,en you owe it to youraeii
to make the following test: (See how Jong
you can work or how far yon can walk with
out becoming tired. Mex take two five-gram
tablets of ordinary Nuxated Iron three times
per day after meals "for two weeks. Then
test your strength again and see for your
self how much you have gained. You can
talk as you please about all the wonders
wrought by new remedies, but when yon
come down to hard facts there la nothing
like good old iron to put color in your cheeks
and good sound, healthy flesh on your bones.
It is also a great nerve - and stomach
strongthener and one of the best blood build
ers in tTne world. The only trouble was. that
the old forma of inorganic iron, like tincture
of iron, iroji acetate, etc., often ruined peo
ple's teeth, upset their stomachs and were
not assimilated and for these reason they
frequentlydld more harm than good. But
with the discovery of the newer forms of
organic iron all this has been overcome.
Nuxated Iron, for example, is pleasant to
take, does not injure the teeth and is al
most immediately, beneficial. . ,
MamaVtursrs' Note: Nuxtted Iron whlcb Is rec
ommended shove it not a secret remedy, but one
which Is well known to drtiitrfnts eierywhere. Unlike
the older lnorssnlo Iron products. It Is easily assimi
lated, does not Injure the teeth, make them bin-It.
nor upset the stomach. The manufacturers tuarantes
ucoesiful and entirely utiafactory results to every
purchaser or they will refund the money. H Is dis
puted In this city by Sherman A McConnell Drug
Co. and by sll other drusslstt. Advertisement
a successful treatment for Rupture with
j
out resortina; to a pahirul and uncertain surgical
operation. 1 am the only reputable- physician who
will take such cases upon a guarantee to give
satisfactory retilts. 1 have devoted more than 29
yean to the exclusive treatment of Rupture, and
OMAHA ENGINEER NOW IN
SIGNAL CORPS
J
Frank A. Pence, son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. D. Pence, 3116 North Sixty
sixth street, left Omaha Tuesday
night to resume his duties as a lubri
cating engineer' in the army signal
corps. Mr., Pence was lubricating
engineer for an Omaha oil company
previous to entering government
service. J
Montana City Filled With
Hundreds, of Gold-Seekers
Miles City, Mont., March 27
More than 300 claims have bctn
staked out since Sunday at Si.-rty,
near here, as the result of the !is
covcry of what is believed to be goiO
bearing quartz by a rancher w)io was
boring a .well. This city is crowded
with gold-seekers. ,
Aviator Burned to Death.
Wichita Falls., Tex.. March 27 An
American aviation cadet, whose iden
tity has not been established, was
killed and the body badly burned to
day when an airplane fell several hun
dred feetjiear the gunnerv ra.i?e at
Call field This morning. The airplane
caught fire- falling.
Superb
See Our Windows
for an idea of the many hundred otbec
styleswe can show you inside. '
The best and most carefully selected lines in
town. -i
N
$3.00
$3.50
$4.00
1415
Farnam
St.
amisemeSts.
TONIGHT AND
ALL WEEK
Mats. Sat.
THE COMEDY "MARY'S
Something Worth Going a ajfi r
Miles to Ste. AII.L..
Sat., 25c to 75c; Nights, 80c to $1.50.
April 4, -ALICE NIELSEN.
Easter Sunday
for 4 Days
The Song
Ply
"FRECKLES"
All freckled boys and girls un
der 12 admitted free Tues. mat.
Mats.' Sun., Tues., Wed.
BROOKS
"Ths Chelr Rshsansl" I "Dollan and 8en'
Bernle V Baker; Cole, Russell A Davis;
King A Harvey; "Five of Clubs;" Mack A
Williams; Orpheum Travel Weekly. '
OMAHA'S FUN CENTER"
Dally Mats., 15-25-50C
Ev'n- 25-50-73c-$l
Tka 'I7-Mt f illldd st t
rTHE LIBERTY GIRLSB,V;
ilT - 'ACK CONWAY
. Iliaiid new show throiuhmit riclIlT and the Bfrnl
j nary (iirls." I'anilmi mj dim: J.lbertr Four: (ilrl
I -oulfl of Amerif'a: Siirrtn.er iiaidfn HeautT I'hnrus
i LADIES!. OIME MATIHifE WEEK DAYS
I '8aU lU saU OeiaW l 's'(iUlci.'
SALLIE FISKER I ALAN
Is I in
Former Czar Nick to
Be Moved from Tobolsk
London, March 27. The bolshe
vik government has decided to
transfer Nicholas Romanoff, the
former emperor, and his family
from Tobolsk to the Ural region,
according to an announcement in
Petrograd newspapers transmitted
in a Reuter dispatch.
It was decided to take this ac
tion in view ot the possibilities of
complications in the far east.
After his abdication last March,
the former emperor and his family
were imprisoned at Tsarsftoe-Selo.
Last August, they were taken to
Tobolsk Siberia.
Captured German Raider
Arrives at Pacific Port
A Pacific Irt. March 27. Nine
prisoners ot war, two of them women.
arrived here today aboard a United
States warship which had in tow the
auxiliary siooner Alexander Agas
si, outfitted by Germans as a raider
of the seas. ;
The ARassiz was captured a week
ago off Mexico. Government officials
said they had information to the cf
im that seven Germans-embarked on
the would-hc raider 4t Mazatlan.
Mexico, under orders from the Ger
man consul to seize any ship they
coma and men to proceed to the
south seas for" raiding -activities
against commerce of the allies.
Beatrice Man Takes Own .
Life on Eve of Wedding
Beatrice, Neb., March 27.--(Special
telegram.) joint Lrook committed
suicide yesterday by hanging himself
in a barn on Ins farm northwest of
Virginia, this county. The, body was
found last night by his brother, E. G.
Crook. He was to have been married
in two weeks to a Crab Orchard
woman. Ho left a note addressed to
her saying ill hearth caused him to
take hij own life. He was 35 years old.
Five Men Drafted it Geneva.
Geneva, March 27. (Special.)
These five men have been drawn as
Fillmore county's quota for the sec
ond draft: Joseph E. Cecrlc, Milli
gan; George W. Deming, Lincoln;
Earl I. Duncan, Fairfield; Ivan S. Hy.
att, Fairmont; Harold F, Christiancy,
Geneva; for alternate, Vaclav Krejci,
-v ....... , .u..
BERQ SUITS ME
Easter Showing
I 4
ouns aim
'The Suit and Top Coat value, styles and.
1 varieties are greater at this store than v
ever before, and in spite of tho WOOL SHORTAGES we v
are prepared to 1 you meet your ideas of new spring
garments in genu... j ell-wool fabrics. . ( '
at a modest price ; .
Thejjeason's most popular fabrics in picas-
ing colors, shades and patterns have been ea-
jiecially hand-tailored for us by the master '
craftsmen of the clothing world.
The House of Kuppenheimer,
Hirsch-Wickwire and L. System
$22! $25 $30
-AND UP, TO $45.00. ,
TJicrets a snap and dash to every model, and a model '
for evcryman. Single and double-breasted, fdrm-fittlng,, v
hi ilitary and loose back styles. ' y
If All
Is $15,00, $18.00 up to $25.00
by all means com here, where you are
assured of all'wool styles and genuine,
values. , ' ' . . 1
Hats for Easter ; $4.50
You will get the finished appearance you want on &c aa
Easter Sunday if you wear the new Hat. Nothing
adds so -much as a becoming Hat, and we've got one $5.00
to suit you. ' I
riiOTorL.18.
Mary Pickford
Conway Tearle .
in f
"STELLA MARIS"
Last. Times Today
J. Warren Kerrigan
in
"The Turn of a Card"
i
v ,
Fri., Taylor Holmes.
When Buying Adverlised Goods
Say You Read of Jhem in The Bee
SawZZZIZZZZIaZi
1 1 fill I
S U i
I I
PORTER WILL RUN
FOR IOWA EXECUTIVE
Federal Attorney for Southern
'Part of State"" to attend
Meeting at Des Moines
Today.
Ry AniMicUtod IrM.) ,
Des Moines, la., March 27. (Spe
cial Telegram.) More than 400 Iowa
democrats are expected here Thurs
day to plan the democratic state and .
congrcssionaf' campaign for success
at the primaries in June. Claude R.
Porter of Centcrville will undoubtedly
be, a candidate for governor on the
democratic ticket. Porter is now fed
eral atorney for the southern Iowa
district. '
Shipping Board Makes .
Public Result of Work
Washinjjtor.. March 27. Exact fig
ures on-ths progress of ship building
in the United States were made public
tonight by the shipping board as a
result of debate in the senate 'during
which ofiic.als said statements had
been made based on inaccurate infor
mation. . ; . ;?
- Since the ."binping board began St
work, 188 vessels have been launched,
oi wmen wo nave oeen complied
-.,,1 ... . ti.. i. i.:
VMl Illtu J.4IC IdUHMIUtyi ,
were divided between 165 requtai- -
.' .1 I . , t. I. - t VI.
uuiicu vessels ana tj wnicu were omit
on contract in yards constructed for
the purpose or which had only just
been put into operation. Eleven -ot
the launchings were wood, all the re
mainder being steel,
Anti-Suffs Demand . V . --
v Explicit Fraud Charges
(From a BUff Correipodntnt.) -;; ;
Lincoln, March 27. (Special Tele
gram.) Anti-suffragists this after
noon petitioned the Lancaster county
district court to require suttf agists
who are attacking the ; legality df
1;000 names on the anti-suffrage peti
tion niea wan tne secretary ot state-;
to recall the partial suffrage law. to
make more explicit vtheir charges of
fraud in the appearance of names on
the petition, asking that ach.l!egefi
fraudulent entry be .specified. ' , .
lup juai5
you uare to ray
1415
Farnam
St
L JXIXJX1XJX1CJAJAIX1X1X1X1X1XILJ
Today Only , -
GLADYS HULETTE
in "OVER THE HILL"
SUBURBAN2
Today JACK PICKFORD in
"THE SPIRIT OF .'17"
HAMILTON
Today HAROLD LOCltwOOD'
'in "THE SQUARE DECEIVER"
LOTHROP
Today GERALD INE FARRAR
I EDITH STOREY.
I "THE EYES OFi
I , MYSTERY" J
in "THE WOVAN COD FORGOT
7
-7
y