Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 07, 1919, Page 7, Image 7

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    4 THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1919.
PASTOR HAS FILL
OF SETTLING
FAMILY ROWS
Rev. W. G. Jones of Red Oak
Resigns Following Bass
Sedam Hearing by Bap
tist Association.
; Red Oak, la., Aug. 6. (Special!
The Rev. W. G. Jones, pastor of
the Baptist church here, where the
Southwestern Iowa Baptist associa
tion council found It necessary to
meet last week to hear the family
troubles of Mr. and Mrs. Judd A.
Bass and their daughter, Mrs.
Thomas Sedam and her husband,
has resigned. He will enter the
newspaper business.
The Rev. Mr. Jones declared that
settling family disputes is an ob
jectionable feature of a pastor's
work, and one of which fie has had
his fill. He maintained, however,
that he is leaving the ministry tem
porarily .for a rest.
He has not had occasion to speak
to the Judds or the Sedams since the
church hearing, and that hearing, he
said, had nothing to do with his
resignation. He has contemplated
the step three months, he said. He
has been pastor at Red Oak just one
year. He has been 17 years, in the
ministry. "
The resignation came as a com
plete surprise to his congregation.
He resigned last March, when the
problem of settling family disputes
in his church seemed to be too
great, but so many members of the
congregation urged him to stay that
he reconsidered his resignation.
During his 17 years as a minister,
the Rev.' Mr. Jones said he had fre
quently been called to mediate fam
ily and neighborhood quarrels.
The council on the Bass-Sedam
hearing voted to refuse the hand of
fellowship to Mr. and Mrs. Judd
Bass and Mr. and Mrs. George Bass.
Bluffs Soldier Dies
of Tuberculosis Due
' to German Poison Gas
John E. Ingoldsby died at the
home of his parents in Council
Bluffs of acute tuberculosis, which
developed since his return from
overseas three months ago and
was caused by the deadly gas at
Chateau Thierry.
He enlisted in May, 1917, and was
among the first Bluffs men sent
overseas. He was in all the hard
fighting, beginning at Chateau
Thierry and including the St. Mi
hie!, Meuse and Argonne drives. He
was on his way to the Rhine with
the Third division when his health
broke and he was invalided home.
He is survived by his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. James Ingoldsby,
three brothers, James, Thomas and
Joseph, all residing here, and five
sisters, Mrs. Richard Purcell of
Chattanooga, Tenn.; Mrs. George
Johnson, Omaha, and Misses Fran
ces, Margaret and Katherine In
goldsby. The funeral will be held
this morning at St. Francis Catbo
'ic church. Interment will be if
St. Joseph cemetery.
Omaha Gets Relief From
Sweltering Heat Wave
Weatherman Welsh hit the nail on
the head yesterday when he pre
scribed cooler weather for Omaha
and vicinity for Thursday. At least,
all indications last night pointed to
ward that condition. Between 8 and
11 o'clock last night the mercury
dropped from 88 to 79 degrees ana
at midnight it was still going down.
At 2 p. m. yesterday the thermom
eter registered 94, the maximum
reached yestvday.
Allies Receive Austria's
.Counter Proposals to Text
Paris, Aug. 6. The Austrian
counter proposals to the peace
terms were handed to the allied mis
sion at St. Germain-en-Laye at 12:15
o'clock today. The counter pro
posals were brought at once to
Paris and delivered to the supreme
council of the peace conference.
Petition to Repeal Daylight Saving Law.
For the sake of the children and their welfare, their
mothers and others upon whom the Daylight Saving law
works a hardship, we cheerfully sign the petition for its
repeal.
Name
Address
Boxes will be placed at all the moving picture
theaters in Omaha in which coupons may be dropped by
those who do not send them in to The Bee editorial rooms
by mail.
ALLIED COUNCIL
REJECTS TERMS
OF ROUMANIANS
Recognition of Ultimatum
to Hungary Refused
by the Peace
Conference.
Paris, Aug. 6. (By the Associated
Press.) Nicholas Misu of the Rou
manian peace delegation was sum
moned before the supreme council
today which gave him, a communica
tion for hisgovernment, saying that
the Roumanian ultimatum to Hun
gary cannot be recognized by the
peace conference and calling 'upon
Roumanians to live up to the armis
tice terms.
Misu said that the Roumanians
were taking back supplies which the
German field marshal, Von Macken
sen, took from them, but his expla
nation did not alter the decision of
the supreme council, which was
unanimous. 1
While the French hitherto ap
parently were inclined to regard
Roumanian occupation of Budapest
favorably, it was evident at the
council meeting that they have
changed their position since seeing
the Roumanian ultimatum and art
now heartily in accord with the
American and British position which
the Italians have been supporting
consistently.
It was made clear at the meeting
that Roumanian ambitions would cut
off the communications of Central
Europe and make it impossible to
feed large populations and also
would greatly interfere with reparations.
Members of St. John's Hold .
Picnic at Riverview Park
Fifteen hundred members of St.
Johns parish attended the annual
picnic of st. Johns church yester
day afternoon and evening at River
view park.
The crowds began arriving at 3
o'clock. At 6 o'clock a basket lunch
was served. Games and races occu
pied the early part of the evening
and dancing took up the latter part.
Drive on Prices Forces Drop.
Hogs sold at 10 to 20 cents lower
at Union stock yards yesterday,
the top price of the market being
$21.25. . Hog dealers attribute the
abrupt (decline in sale price, in part,
to the nation-wide campaign against
high food prices.
All the paraffin wax for candle
making in South Africa has to be
imported. This amounts annually
to 3,250 tons, valued at $1,500,000.
.peed -and the
price
eat
Forty-eight hours after cattle are
purchased by Swift & Company they are
hanging up as meat; within two weeks
the fresh meat has been sold.
This speed -means money in the
pocket of the one who raises the live stock
and of the one who eats the meat It
means a rapid "turnover" of capital and
investment making possible the trans
action of daily business on a narrower
margin of profit.
Speed permits Swift & Company to do
a successful business on a profit of a frac
tion of a cent per pound.
Such speed, with its rapid turnover
and smaller profits would be impossible
without the efficient organization and
wide scope of Swift & Company, the results
of fifty years' experience in handling meat.
Do you believe that government inter
ference with the complicated and efficient
machinery of the packing industry can
be of any benefit? Experience with
government regulation of railroads and
telephone and telegraph might - suggest
an answer.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
Omaha Local Branch. 13th & Leavenworth Streets
F. J. Souders, Manager '
THIS &HOWS
ufuAT ocrnupc or
THE AVERAGE DOLLAR
ft KtLtlVtV DI T
SWIFT & COMPANY
AND Y PRODUCTS
; as eenTs a who for thk
1 ml tMlkill
12. M CENT FOB tBOR
2.04 CCNT9 RCMAINS
SWIFT COMPANY
n mum
Woman Kills Herself
Despite Patrolman
New Aug. 6. Checkmating
a policeman, who sought to prevent
her from committing suicide, Mrs.
Sybil Boblitt, formerly of Memphis,
Tenn., sent a bullet through her
brain in a Madison avenue office
building Wednesday night.
The policeman was summoned by
Frank H. Goddard, a Newv York
salesman, who informed him that
the woman was about to commit
suicide in his office. Hurrying to
the office, the policeman found her
sitting at a desk with a revolver
pressed to her temple.
The patrolman and the woman
gazed fixedly at each other for sev
eral minutes while he tried to in
duce her to lay down her weapon.
Finally, thinking she was off her
guard, he leaped toward her, but
befefre he could reach her side, she
shot herself.
Goddard told the police he be
lieved Mrs. Boblitt, who was a
widow, killed herself because she
felt he did not reciprocate her in
fatuation for him.
In her purse was found a card
bearine the inscriotion. "Sister. Mrs.
TL. H. Foster, Denver, Colo."
May Import German
Potash Into America
Washington, Aug. 6 German pot
ash may be imported into the United
States under a ruling by the War
Trade board. The commodity, the
hoard announced, has been renfoved
from the limited list of materials on
which wartime restrictions were re
tained when the general blockade
was lifted July 14.
Importation eff potash from Ger
many, the chief source of the com-
fmodity prior to the war, has been
a subject of controversy practically
ever since the signing of the armis
tice. The American potash indus-,
try, which was war-born, asked that
protection be afforded for several
years at least.
Farmers' organizations requested
that importation be permitted as a
means of lowering the cost of liv
ing. Legislation now pending be
fore congress would levy a higher
taritt on potash than that now im
posed. Omaha Labor Union Is Not
Interested in Recall Move
H. J. Tolliver, the president of the
local Central Labor union yesterday
issued the following statement in
connection with the announced move
to recall some of the city commis
sioners: "It has been stated n many quar
ters that the labor organizations in
Omaha are back of the recall of
the city commissioners. So far or
ganized labor has not taken any ac
tion in the movement to recall
some of the commissioners and is
taking a disinterested attitude. Each
commissioner will be judged on his
individual fitness for the office and
labor as a body will take no active
part in the recall if it comes up to
the voters at an election."
Negro Taken to Arkansas
for Murder Was Wrong Man
Joe Lee, negro, arrested in Council
Bluffs as a fugitive and taken to
Helena, Ark., to face a murder
charge, has been completely exoner
ated, according to a letter received
yesterday by H. V. Battey, Council
tsiutts lawyer. Ihe letter stated
that it was a pure case of mistaken
identity.
Lee had also been indicted for a
murder in Mississippi and was
taken there but was again found to
be a victim of mistaken identity.
It was shown that Lee was
working in the Burlington freight
office in Council Bluffs at the time
the murder was committeed.
Will Hold Mooney Meeting I
in South Omaha Sunday
T. HV Tippet, member of the In
ternational Workers' Defense
league, will address an open-air
meeting at Twenty-fourth and N
streets Sunday evening in behalf of
Thomas Mooney, now under indict
ment in California for his alleged
part in a bomb outrage.
On Saturday night Tippet intends
to speak before a mass meeting of
butcher workers in South Side
Labor temple. Mayor Smith has is
sued permits for both speeches.
Nightly meetings for the same
cause are being held in Jefferson
Square.
Leather Worth $2,000,000
Sold at Public Auction
Chicago, Aug. 6. Approximately
$2,000,000 worth of surplus leather
goods, finished and unfinir' . !. pur
chased by the governme- i before
and during the war, was sold at
public auction Wednesday. The
prices obtained for the material
were greater than those paid by the
government at the time ot t. - pur-
chc , it was said.
The material was sold in 140 lots.
some bidders taking the entire
quantity of some of the products.
Ihe bidders represented several
hundred manufacturing, concerns.
$300,000 Worth of Lumber
Destroyed by Big Fire
Seattle. Aug. 6. Fire early
Wednesday night destroyed the mill
of the Bissell Lumber company,
just south of the city limits, and a
large stock ot lumDer, tne loss De
ing estimated at $300,000. Only a
change in the wind, it was stated,
could save $3,uw,uuu wortn ot sup
plies awaiting shipment to Russian
ports. j
Freight for Omaha
Put on Embargo List
t;i. Pnrtc Ark. Auc. 6. Of
ficials of the'Missouri Pacific today
announced that because of condi
tions rpcnltina from the railway
strike an embargo has been placed
on all freight, carloads and less, tor
Kansas City, Umaha, wicnita ana
connections by way of these junctions.
Won't Eecognlze Mexico. ,
London, Aug. 6. A British min
ister to Mexico will not be ap
pointed until the government is con
vinced that the improvement in the
Mexican attitude toward British
interests justifies recognition of the
Carranza eoverjiment, it was an
nounced in the house of commons
by Cecil B. Harmsworth, under
secretary for foreign affairs,
DES MOINES CAR
STRIKE KELP UP
UNTILJEPT. 9
U. S. Judge Grants Street Car
Company Permission to
Borrow Funds to Pay
Wage Increase.
Des Moines, la., Aug. 6. (Spe
cial.) The Des Moines street car
strike, scheduled for next Friday
morning, was postponed 4t least un
til September 9, and perhaps avert
ed, by a decision handed down by
Federal Judge Martin J, Wade, un
der whose orders the bankrupt com
pany now-is operating.
Judge Wade permitted the com
pany to borrow from funds on hand
sufficient money to pay the wage in
crease granted the carmen by an
arbitration board, from August 1 to
September 9.
Unless the city council, by the lat
ter date, has made considerable
progress toward working out a new
franchise which will allow the com
pany earnings large enough to main
tain the higher pay scale, a strike
again will be in prospect. Judge
Wade said he will not extend the
order unless it has become "reason
ably certain that provision will be
made to advance fares." The men
have announced their intention to
strike just as soon as wages drop
back to the old level.
A tin pall on the gravel near Cor
nent Traieimwr's house at Palms,
Mich., reflected the sun's ray against
the house. The wood presentely
began to smoke and then there was
a blaze. - -
Woman Says Lawyer Was
Representing Both Sides
John O. Detweiler, an Omaha at
torney, was made defendant in a
suit for $10,000 brought in district
court by Joicy O. Mickey, who al
leges that while he was retained
by her as counsel, he also repre
sented the German State bank of
Millard, Neb in a foreclosure ac
tion against her on two lots which
she valued at $10,000, and that he
later bought the lots himself.
Railroaders of Britain
Will Not Go on Strike
London, Aug. 6. The national
union of railwaymen declined today
to call a general strike of its mem
bers in support of the police union,
which ordered a strike recently-over
the government's refusal to with
draw its bill affecting the police organization.
Fire Destroys Entire
Block in Nevada Town
Reno, Aug. 6. One entire block,
irrcluding the Lafayette and Martin
hotels, the Perkins warehouse nd
other warehouses across the street,
were destroyed in a fire' at 'Winne
mucca Wednesday night. All wires
are down, but the last information
received here stated that the fire
was still burning and that the South
ern Pacific freight and passenger
depot were threatened.
Fiume Will Be Made Free,
Port, Is Latest Report
Rome. Aug. 6. (By the Asso
ciated Tress.) The settlement of
the Adriatic question, affecting Italy
and Jugo-Slavia. is imminent, ac
cording to the Popolo Romano to
day. In accordance "with the settle
ment, it says, Fiume will be an in
dependent state with the port inter
r
Inaugurating the August
Fur Sale inJDmaha a num
ber of years ago this event of
the Aulabaugh store is awatited
with great interest by the
women of Iowa and Nebraska.
Aulabaugh's better values,
lower prices and exclusive de
signs mark the August, 1919,
sale the greatest in our entire
history.
LAST Sunday in our large ad
vertisement in the Omaha Bee we
explained how Mr. Aulabaugh, by his sys
tem of keeping trading posts among the Indians of the
Hudson Bay country of Canada, is enabled to procure
throughout the year, pelts for his stores in Omaha and
Lincoln of exceptional excellence and luxuriousness. ,
How with his frequent trips to the Northland
he is able to select the skins which are best suited for
draping into fur garments; how-by his careful process
of manufacturing, etc., he is able to present the finished
garments to his customers at prices much below the
houses who are forced to purchase their garments from
the wholesale manufacturers.
How because of his intimate knowledge of the
materials which are used inside and out he is able
to place his unconditional guarantee behind every
article and in case of any latent defect he is able to
make it good in hi& own shop, thus preventing avoid
able delay.
A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL SUFFICE
In order that all our patrons may take ad
vantage of this extraordinary opportunity to
save money on furs
We have arranged that all furs
selected in this sale may , be pur
chased on the basis of
36-Inch Coat of Hudson Seal
Large cape-shawl collar and
belt of
same.
$317.50
Fur Sale Figures
,Afong with the established custom of the
better class of stores we are unable to men
tion tne actual wortn oi our iurs tnat is,
the prices being charged for furs of ordinary
character in other stores. We must content
ourselves in inviting-strict comparison and
in no instance will our salesladies try to in
fluence a customer to buy before they have
had-the opportunity to make this comparison.
Coatee of Dark Canadian Mink
A full rich garment with
belt,
at
Large Full Cape Of Ameri
can Mink, tab fronts; wonder
ful value,
at
VMUV
$195
Sealene Cape Coatee- A most
appealing garment; collar and
buttons of Russian (PI OA
P1V
32-Inch Fancy Coat Of finest
quality CARACUL; with collar
and cuffs of exquisite Russian
Silver Muskrat. Wonderful
furs in very smart CQCC
style, at pJDD
Fitch, at
Hudson Seal Coatee In semi
Dolman style, wonderful qual
ity Hudson Seal, with collar
and cuffs of Hudson Bay
Sable. Strikingly
unusual, at
$575
Ontario Fox Animal Scarf
Dyed a very pretty Baum
Marten color lined with crepe
meteor,
at
Scotch Mole Cape Scarf Just
the right style and size for fall
wear; very finest
quality, at . .
Our Interesting Booklet
NORTH OF
FIFTY-THREE
Being stories from Mr. Aulabaugh's actual
experiences while visiting iis trading posts
in the Northland.
V a small payment at
A w. time of purchase
jRallffllSl ' v and the furs will be
9 . held in our cold
V storage vaults
until called
for.
$345 ftwwtf m
$70 EVlllWi:-
95 wrcrm-
A.k For A T,d ,
19th and Farnam Sts.