THE ' BEE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1919. 5 ARREST WOMAN FOR $1,000,000 U, S. BOND THEFT Mrs. Antonie Held in St. Louis on Charge of Implication in I Robbery, According to Secret Service Men. St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 22. Mr. Fannie Antonie 26, was arrested to day on a warrant issued in Kansas City charging implication in the theft of $1,000,000 worth of liberty bonds, according to secret service men making the arrest. The arrest was made by James Sloan, chief of the bureau of investi gations of the Department of Jus tice, and James Savage, secret serv ice operative, who said they recov ered bonds and securities valued at $21,134 at the same time. Mrs. Antonie was said by these of ficials to have come here with Wal ter L. Major of Kansas City, Mo., who, with Mrs. Pauline von Myre, was arrested Saturday. At that time, the secret service men say, lib erty bonds amounting to $81,000 were identified as stolen from 32 banks throughout the country within the last six months. According to the statement of the ecret service men, the papers re covered at Mrs. Antonie's arrest in cluded $14,450 worth of Liberty bonds; $545 in war saving stamps; 1,000 worth of travelers' checks; $1,000 in treasury certificates iden tified as stolen from the Benton State bank, at Benton, Kan.; $139 worth of stamps; three Madison township (Madison county, Kansas), municipal aid bonds, and three $500 raiiroad bonds of Sedgwick county, Kansas. Death of "Suke" Mott and Pershing's Chase After Geronimo and His Fiendish Apaches Shimizene, Indian Terror, Killed His Good White Friend and Boasted of It Buried Another Man In Ant Hill Mountain Fastnesses Almost Im- penetrable. "SHOE'BANK" IS MEANS OF SAVING MOVIE MAN'S $500 tWid Gunning Conceals Money From Bandits Who Hold Up Car. Wid Gunninar. nunlisW nf WiH'c Motion Picture Review, New York, savea jduu trom three highwaymen at 2:30 yesterday morning when in company with H. M. Thomas, mana ger of Rialto theater. H. B. Watts. manager of the Strand theater, C. E. Hola and E. H. McCray, both of the Blank Enterprises, 314 South Thirteenth street, he was held up by three masked highwaymen on the Carter lake boulevard near Swift's ice house. -Mr. Gunning was in an automobile party given by the mo vie men. When the three bandits found nothing valuable in his pockets, tney took oft one ot his shoes. Mr, V 1 i i uunning naa quicwy concealed tive $108 bills in the other. "Guess there's nothing in that one," one of the highwaymen said. Mr. Thomas lost $12, Mr. Watts f 19, Mr. Hotah $15 and Mr. McCray $110 to the bandits. The five men were returning from a midnight automobile ride, they told police. A large touring car drove in front of them and waved flashlights for them to stop. Three masked men jumped from the touring car and at the point of guns commanded Messrs. Thomas, Watts, Holah, Gunning and McCray to line up. While one highwayman stood at a distance with pointed gun, the ther two searched their victims. It was while getting out of the car that Mr. Gunning concealed his $500 in the side of his shoe. He was just starting to take off his 'other shoe at the command of one of the highwaymen when he felt a ?un in his side. Well, never mind. -j guess you haven't got anything there," the highwaymen said. The masked trio waited until their victims -were out of sight before driving away. Mr. Gunning arrived in Omaha I Saturday enroute from Los Angeles to New York. Gompers Urges Ratification of the Treaty of Peace New Orleans, La., Sept. i 22. Normal industrial conditions can come only when definite peace terms have been agreed to by the leading nations of the world, Samu el Gompers, president of the Amer ican Federation of Labor, declared today to the annual session of the Associated Advertising clubs of the world, meeting here. Mr. Gom pers' address was read to the con vention as he could not be present. Urging prompt ratification of the treaty as an absolute necessity, Mr. Gompers said: "That treaty is not perfect, but it is our only constructive sugges tion for dealing with some of the things which cause wars.' Mr. Gompers address was read in connection with a triangular discus sion which marked the opening session of the convention, testus J. Wade of St. Louis will present the side of capital and Representa tive Champ Clark of Missouri, Cadets at West Point had need for self-control in the old days. The West Point of '86 was not the West Point of today. Today the barracks are equipped with running hot and cold water. In Jack Persh ing's cadet days the only water came from two faucets out of doors in the area of the barracks, and from those faucets, winter and summer, had to be drawn all the water for toilet purposes. It does not require much imagination to picture the scenes about those faucets on win ter mornings when the mercury hovered close to zero and .Arctic blasts swept down the Hudson river, winds always piercing and sometimes snow-laden. West Point ended at last, though. Came one of those rare days in the June of 1886, such a June day as perhaps inspired the poet Lowell. It was graduation day. Jack rersn- ing ceased to be a cadet. He be came Second Lieutenant John Joseph Pershing of the Sixth cavalry, United States armyl Dreams All True. Never at any other time hi his life not even when, on October 6, 1918, he was given the highest honor the United States army oners, a tun four-starred generalship, has a com mission meant so much to him. Dreams jef childhood, dreams of boyhood, dreams of early manhood all had come true. His. ambition was realized at last. How the event was celebrated! West Point custom an unwritten fiat of the academy decrees that the very first affair after gradua tion shall be a class dinner. Thus it was a day or so later found the entire clasps of 1886 all of its 77 members, and those 77 all second lieutenants gathered in a hotel in New York City. Jack Pershing as president of the class of 1886, - presided. What a dinner! Into the next morning it continued such a dinner as . the class of 1886 had never held before, such a dinner as the class of 1886 would never hold again. The Memory of "Suke" Mott. With tfye commissions which West Point, through the War de partment, had given to the class of 1886, came orders that her newest second lieutenants, on this date or on that date, report to this organ ization or to that organization, sta- Sitting Bull art found in the New Mexico coun try. The victim lived for two days, suffering the most excruciating tor ture while the ants slowly ate away the flesh from his head. Jack Pershing, however, was not to reach Fort Bayard in time to take part in the . capture of Geronimo and Natchez. Before joining his command September 30, he first visited Washington, his oldi home in Laclede, Mo., and the new home which his familty had estab lished in Lincoln, Neb. When at last he reached Fort Bayard, Ger onimo and Natcher had surrendered and with a large number of their bands were on their way, under guard, to Florida, where they were placed on a reservation. The story of his visit to Wash ington is worthy of recording. Brigadier-General Charles C. Wal cutt, jr., the chief of the insular bu reau in Washington, told me some what of it. And Jack Pershing himself, in a letter written after he had reached Fort - Bayard written by a strange coincidence on- the very .day that "Suke" Mott was shot tells more of it and of his journey to his '"first post." Mott was "-with him on that journey. "When we reached Washington," General Walcutt told me, "Jack and the others who were with us decided that while the army offered much, civil life perhaps offered still more. We talked over a plan where one of us should resign from, the service and go west, there to make a for tune in a development scheme in Oregon. The man who went west should be supported by the rest of us while he was making money for us. Then we would all resign. Needless to say, the scheme never materiajized." (Continued Tomorrow.) tioned in this place or in that place. Lbranches. And more crud Indians Alia tnese oruers incaui, mc ""-ifi,, .u ner ended, that these second lieu tenants of the class of 1886, after four years of life together, four years during which such friendships had come as only West Point can engender, must separate and scat ter to all four points of the com pass, some of them, perhaps, never to meet again. Indeed, there was one at that '86 dinner, Second i-ieu-tenant Seward Mott, or "Suke," as his classmates affectionately called him, who was never to attend an other dinner of '86 men. Only a few months later, on March 9, 1887, Lieutenant Mott gave his life for his country the first man of the class of 1886 to die for West Point's shibboleth "Duty! Honor! Coun try!" The young lieutenant was shot while on duty with his troop of the Tenth Cavalry, near Nogales, Ariz., by an Indian named Nah-diz-az, and died the next day. Pershing Assigned to Apaches. Jack Pershing's orders called for him to report September 30, 1886, to Troop L of the Sixth cavalry at hort Bayard, in Urant county, iNew Mexico, 90 miles northwest of Mes sila. Fort Bayard was in the De partment of Arizona, and even as Tack Pershing received his orders, General Nelson A. Miles, the com manding general of the department, was' leading the campaign against Geronimo and Natchez, the Apache chiefs, and their bands of renegade, marauding Indians, who for years Red Cloud had terrorized the settlers of New Mexico and Arizona and those parts of Mexico across the border. The territory roamed over by these Indians was at lease 600 miles in extent north and south, and 350 miles east and west. More barren, desolate territory than parts of it do not exist on this continent. The territory lies within the Rocky and Sierra Madre mountains, and the fastnesses in which the Indians took refuge after raids upon the early settlers were practically impenetra ble. - There were various bands of Apaches led by Geronimo and Natchez Yuma, Mohave, White speak from sumer. the view of the will con- Giant Lawson Air Liner Is Due in Omaha Friday The giant Lawson airliner, carry ing 6 passengers on a tlight from Washington, D. C, via Omaha to San Francisco, is scheduled to ar . rive here Friday, according to Al fred W. Lawson, builder of the plane, who is at present in Wash ington. The bureau of aviation of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce has prepared the big Ak-Sar-Ben land ing field on the Center street road, and everything is in readiness for the reception of the big airplane. The plane was built in Milwaukee , and has made a startling trip east ward via Chicago, - Toledo, Syra- cuse, N. Y to New York City and from there to Washington. The Lawson plane is so far the only airliner to attempt a transconti nental flight. It is the largest plane in this country. than the Apaches of Paris, the most cruel robbers in the world, get their name. A few instances of the fiend ish torture to which these Indians subjected. their victims were cited to Jack Pershing when he reached Fort Bayard. They give some concept tion of the Apache atrocities which, barely a quarter of a century ago, stirred the whole world. There was an Indian named Schimizene, whom Jack Pershing is said to have met. For a number of years this Indian had been in the habit of traveling past a certain white man's dwelling. On these oc casions the Indian was always treat ed kindly, and was given food and made comfortable whenever he wished to tarry. One morning after having had breakfast at the dwell ing he leveled his rifle at his bene factor and killed him. The Indian boasted of the crime afterward, in these words: "Why," Schimizene declared, with a grunt, "a weak man or a coward could kill his enemy or anyone who had done him an injury; but it takes a man of strong heart to kill a friend or one who has always treated him kindly." Such was Apache reasoning, Jack Pershing learned. This same Indian, at another time during Indian hostilities, so Jack Pershing discovered, captured an unfortunate white man and buried him, all but his head, in proximity to a large black ant hill NO RELIEF FROM SUGAR FAMINE IS YET IN SIGHT Hotel and Restaurant Men Declare They See No , Hppe for Near Future. The consensus of opinion among restaurant and hotel men is that there will be no ample sugar sup ply available for at least another two weeks and perhaps longer. J. W. Welch, owner of the Welch res taurants, operating in both Omaha and Des Moines, states that there is no relief in sight. He said: "Most wholesalers are exempt from . charges of profiteering. To get any satisfaction the investiga tion will have to be carried much further. Few of the dealers in this country have any sugar to meet the demands of their regular trade, and they are as helpless as the con sumer. The real fault lies in the fact that the government is unable to control the supply of sugar in Cuba and the Hawaiian islands. Plenty of Sugar. "Thre are piles and piles of sugar in both places, but the owners are holding it until such time as regulation of prices is discontinued, in order that they may demand higher prices. Until that time we can do nothing. Des Moines is much worse off than Omaha. They have had no granulated sugar for over a month." H. C. Miller, steward and purchas ing agent of the Hotel Fontenelle, says: "The situation is absolutely out of reason. Considerable ship ments of sucar were made from this territory without regard to our needs, and now we cannot get it back., Nebraska raises enough sugar beets to supply all these states with the finished product if it were kept here. By ordering from firms in Chicago and further east, as well as from Oklahoma and Texas, I have been able to supply sugar for table use, though we are using the same restrictions deemed necessary dur ing the war. - Cannot See Reason. "We make no ices or sherbet, and the use of sugar in our bakery is al most discontinued. Some difficulty is experienced in obtaining meats and various forms of canned goods. I am sure that I can offer no explanation for any of it" Other users say practically the same thing. The only restaurants that have sugar at all are those who anticipated the shortage and laid in supplies to last them several weeks. Even bakeries are finding it neces sary to send around to the smaller grocery stores, buying the "small amounts possible, in order to keep up their products. File Suit Against Estate 3 Years After Man's Death Though it is nearly three years since Edward L. Dodder, Omaha undertaker, was found dead on a road north of the city, a suit was filed yesterday in district . court against his estate. The Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York asked the court to award it $1,000 from his estate. The plaintiff alleges that Mr. Dod der drew a check for this sum on the funds-of Union Pacific lodge, No. 17, Ancient Order of United Workmen, of which he was treasur er, and that he used this money for none of the lodge's business. The check was cashed on January 4, 1917, and he was found dead that same night. ' An electric room heater has two adjustable mirriors to divide its heat and direct it where nfee'ed. The Japanese is fostering the do mestic production of chemical fer tilizers of all kind " SS " That needed office equipment is .per haps In this sale at a discount better Investigate. OFFICE FURNITURE IN A SPECIAL SALE Revising our stock, we find many discon tinued patterns which we intend to clear. The parti-J list below indicates the SAV- INGS to the purchaser: Flat Top DESKS IS&M Flat top Quartered Oak - (slightly used), $65.00 $60.00 Flat top Quartered Oak $35.00 135.00 Flat top Oak Desk, at ....$17.50 $45.00 Flat top"-Oak Desk, at $27.50 $10.00 Flat top Oak Desk, at $25.00 $38.00 Flat top Oak Desk, at $20.00 142.00 Flat top Oak Desk, at . ; $25.00 Steel Files Letter and Cap FILES Oak $60.00 4-drawer File .... $66.00 4-drawer File ... , $54.00 4-drawer File $58.00 4-drawer File .... $37.50 4-drawer File .... $29.50 4-drawer File $20.00 $22.50 4-drawer Oak letter File $15.00 (198.00 5-drawer Steel Bill File- $54.00 ISS.00 12-compartment Document File $68.00 pCI.00 4-drawer Cap File . $45.00 556.00 4-drawer letter File $12.00 An early attendance Is urged. Department of Office Furniture. Sixteenth and Howard Streets. A sucas I II f -fT0 K 7 $0"IS U ' - , ( 0 JO ........ . 1V TJSSi! 18 cents IM Camel an told every. 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Yet, Camels have all the body the most exacting smoker can ask. SI jy You will prefer this expert Camel blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight! Camels flavor is really fascinating! And so refreshing that no matter how liberally you smoke, Camels will not tire your taste 1 Camels are free from any un pleasant cigaretty odor, too! So great is our confidence' that Camels will exceed your cigarette desires that we ask you to put them in comparison with-any cigarette in the world at any price !