TJiE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1919. 11 FIVE BANDITS CAPTURED WITH THEIR PLUNDER PnliM Saw Thu Mau Ro Same - Gunmen Who Looted Ral - ston Bank Near This. City Sept. 20. , Sioux City, la!, Oct 23. (Spe cia!.) Ffve ;bank -robber,, with about $3,000 in caih and currency Irom the bank at Westfield, la, which they robbed in broad day light Wednesday morning, were halted in their dash for liberty in a high powered automobile and captured by tlice here without a shot beinjr fired. ' - - Culver Kennedy, 19 years old, son of C. R. Kennedy, and well known in Omaha and Council, Bluff, was driving the car in which the rob bers were . speeding on their way to safety. V, They were intercepted at the end of the Broken Kettle pavement in the northwest section of Sioux City. . May Be Omaha Bandits. Police declare that the methods used by the Sioux City bank robbers were remarkably like those of the men who robbed the Ralston state bank near Omaha on September 20 and mada their escape with $4,000. Harry Oenson, the taxicab chauf feur, who drove the Ralston robbers from Omaha to the scene of the rob bery and later was forced to drive them at terrific apeed in their flight , until the machine broke down near Ashland, Neb., may be called to Sioux City in an effort to identify the men. Surrender Without Fight Young Kennedy, prominent in the younger . sets or Omaha, Council Bluffs and this city, stopped his car when commanded by Captain O'Keefe of the police force, who covered the five men with his auto matic' rifle. All were immediately cowed into surrendering. Kennedy told the' police that he was forced to become an accomplice of the quartet of bandits at the point of a gun. He was driving to Sioux City from Haywarden, he said, when the four gunmen halted him, and climbed into his car. One of the n.en sat beside him and kept a re volver pressed against his ribs dur ing the jntire trip, y He says he was ordered to drive to Westfield, where the robbers di rected him to stop in front of the bank. He and one of the robbers remained outside while the three others went into the bank. One of the robbers stepped up to Frank Anderson, cashier, and poked a revolver against7 his stom ach, saying, "Put 'em up!" Ander son complied at once and was driven,, with his assistant, T. V. Con verse, into the vault. The three bandit seized a cloth Currency sack, filled with silver, and loaded a leather grip with stacks of silver ana one targe Dunme comamiug $3,000 in currency. , i Locked in Vault V . Then they closed the vault door and escaped. Twenty minutes later, Tom Haynea, anotherv bank ,em- pioye, - appeared ana reieaseu mi rier son and Converse front the vault The alarm was spread and a de scription of the men and machine telephoned, to surrounding town and cities. ' , , As soon as a report of the rob bery reached the Sioux City police station, three machines were sent out by Jens Nlelseen, desk sergeant. Captains O'Keefe and Shannon and Chauffeur Wheelock occupied the first machine. Chief Gus Danielson of the detective department the sec-' ond, while Commissioner of Police T. B. tyann and Detective Harry Luce were in the third car. Captain O'Keefe Instructed his driver to hal,t his machine across the road at the last bridge inside the pavement on the Broken Kettle road. Then he stepped forward and took his stand with a high powered automatic rifle, . The machine soon appeared, con taining the five men, and O'Keefe raised his rifle and ordered them to surrender,; Although the bandits carried five revolvers and quanti ties' of ammunition, they threw up their hands, v They were relieved of their guns and brought , to the station where charge! . of Investigation were placed against them. The robbers gave uic names ui jauica v ivn-tt, San .Francisco; Lee Bafrington. 922 Fourth Street, Sioux City, id; Harry Smith, Seattle, 23, and W. Cullon, San Francisco, 21. The guns found in the possession of the. men. presented a wicked ap pearance. - Four are revolvers ot large caliber and the1 fifth is a heavy automatic. Two of the guns were found on the floor of the ma chine and the remainder were con- Pope Comments Upon - Virtue of Women and The Clothes They Wear Rome, Oct 23. "On the domes tic hearth woman is queen," said Pope Benedict in answering an ad dress presented to him by the wo men's unions. The pontiff added that changed times had given woman functions and. rights she did not possess in former ages and enlarged the field of her activities, but that no altera tion in man's opinion or no novelty of things or of events could separ ate woman, conscious of her high mission, from the family which was her natural center. ' ' ' Pnn Rnriirt nrifH the Arrow ing determination of the Catholic woman to dedicate herself to the cHiimtinn of vnuth and the better ment of the family schools. "The Catholic woman," said the pontiff, "besides feeling it her duty to be virtuous, must feel it her rnv tn annriv inch in the fashion of her clothes, repudiating those ex aggeration ot tasnions wnicn suuw the corruption of those who de signed them and bringing an evil Contribution to the general corrup tion of manners fashions contrary to that modesty which should be the fairest ornament of the Chris tian woman." The pontiff strongly urged the formation of a league of Catholic women to fight what he termed the indecency of the fashion not only in their own clothing but also of that of persons in families who approach them. '.' ' ; Gompers Advises Textile Workers, To Move Slowly Baltimore, Oct. 23. Samuel Gome pers. president of the American Fed eration of Labor, was given a tre mnrfnie Avtinn when he aooeared before the United Textile Workers in convention here. Mr. uompers urged the textile workers to pursue their aims calmly and avoid over reaching themselves. Referring to the employers' group at the Wash ington conference, while condemning hir ,-niircp hp laid tttost of the blame not on the actual employers in the group, but upon their lawyers "I am reuaDiy intormea, ne sam, '.. J UrO C thp IjWVff 111 the CHI- oioyer' group who advised the ma jority -OI ine YOICS in liitl giuuy 4 Via tfit. rf thp trrnnrt in con ference against the declarations of labor." - W .rmitil thai St wac impIpkS for the labor group to continue in the Conference after labor's declarations had been rejected. , While the vote nt th lahnr ffroun could have ore- vented the views of the employer group oeing aaoptea, u couia nave done no more, he saia, ana it wouia tia tipon liaplpas in stnv in thft con ference merely to cast negative votes. , A fZnmnrr annlrA snnrpnativplv AM. - J of the letter sent the conference by rresiaent wnson, Episcopal Congress Revises Prayer Book, But Not the Psalter Detroit, , Oct., 23.-f he triennial general convention: of the Protest ant Episcopal church made rapid progress in clearing up its heavy program. , -. " Because of a demand for a "more democratic" prayer for the president and. the nation the house 6f deputies decided to include in the revised prayer book both the old petition for the president and the new one favored by the house of bishops, the choice- being optional with , the clergy. Textual revision of he psal ter was left to the revision commit tee, which will report at the next convention. -. A group of business and church men was selected to direct the nation-wide canvass of the church membership, to end December 7, for the ' purpose of arousing the full power of the church and awakening it to its opportunities and providing the means to the end. There, is apparent a very strong current in the convention against setting womctv in the legislative council of the church. . ' y? Woman Acquitted, y ;': Sacramento, Cal., Oct 23. Mrs. Ethtfl Loar McGowan, accused of attempting to extort $500 from Gov. William D. Stephens under threat that the Capitol would be bombed, was acquitted by a jury in the superior court, cealed about the persons of the men. The loot from the bank was almost half silver. The rest was cur rency in small denominations, ITALY NOT TIED TO GERMANY IN EVENTOF WAR Hitherto Undisclosed Provi sions of Treaty Conventions of Triple Alliance Made Public by Austrian, Vienna, Oct. 23. One of the hitherto undisclosed provisions of the treaty conventions of the triple alliance has been made public by Dr. Alfred Pribram, nrofessor of rhistory in the University of Vienna, wno was permitted access to the state archives. Article 2 of the original treaty provided that Germany and Austria Hungary should come to Italy's aid in the event of an unprovoked at tack by France. Italy was to come to Germany's assistance if it were attacked by France, but Austria's participation in Germany's behalf was limited to an attack by two powers. Italy was not expected to assist Germany in a war with Rus sia. Italy secured, the insertion in the protocol of the original treaty of a provision to the effect that the triple alliance was not to enter upon any anglophobe policy. In the re newal of the triple alliance in 1887 this clause was rewritten so that Germany would come to Italy's aid in any war with France, even if Italy provoked the conflict, but Aus tria refused to accede to this. , Separate Agreement A- separate agreement was then entered into whereby Austria's par ticipatipn in Italy's behalf was lim ited to a war involving the Balkans or an unprovoked attack by France. Article 4 of the German-Italian Convention contained an expression by Germany of its readiness to guarantee Italy's possessions ; at the cost of France in the event of a successful war. In the renewal of 1891, however, these separate con ventions were incorporated in the triple alliance treaty as a whole. The Crisis of the triple alliance, it is disclosed, came in 1896, when Italy notified her partners that she would not join them in any war in which France and England Were aligned on the same side. ' Italy Gets Free Hand. .... The renewal of 1902 granted Italy a free hand in Tripoli, and in the treaty in 1912 a protocol was added recognising ,. Italy's sovereignty in Tripoli. Dr. Pribram says that, contrary to the popular belief, there were np de fined or detailed military plans in the treaty which merely provide that in the event of war, three powers should draw up a combined plan of operations, Germany, how ever, agreeing that in the event of war with France, the Italian forces should be permitted to participate on the Rhine front. Detailed naval plans were formu lated in the renewal of 1900 to the effect that the three fleets should operate independently. . But in 1913. this was abrogated, and provision was made for united operations to secure supremacy; in the Mediter ranean and prevent the French co lonial forces from reaching the continent. Printers Reject Mediation Plan of Big Publishers New York, Oct. 23. A proposal made bvLeon H. Rouse, president ofsthe "Bix Six," that a mediator be called in to settle the printers' strike and lockout has been rejected by the Printers' league. William Green, chairman of the league's special committee on labor, an nounced. Green asserted, however, that the league had asked Mr. Rouse to sub mit questions involved to arbitra tion, and. pointed out that a medi ator's recommendation would " not be binding on either party. Longshoremen Must Work or Shipping Board Will Act New York. Oct. 23. Unless the unauthorized strike of longshore men at this port is called off bs Friday night, the United States shipping board will undertake to' end the tieup by loading and un loading its ships with men who will be quartered on ; a . vessel now moored at one of the transatlantic piers, according to an announcement by board of officials here. Soviet Convenes Deo. 1. London, Oct. 23, A bolshevik wireless message received from Moscow says the soviet Parliament will convene December I. r Inportant (lotice To Warrant Holders A11 persons holding city special warrants, sucK as Street Improvement, Sewer, Sidewalk, Grading, Paving and Widening Streets and Alleys, also Parks and Boulevards; it is absolutely neces sary that these warrants must be presented to the City Treasurer for re-registration. , i " M. L. ENDRES, City Treasurer. Temporarily located on the 4th floor of the court house. r, $250 will buy 5 shares ' in the beautiful ne w - theater, stores and apartment building, to be -erected at 24th and Ames avenue; No better 1 time no better place. We are sure of dividends from 18 to 25. No watered or promotion stock. Write or Call , v; ; y y- . . AMES REALTY CORPORATION 2404-6 Ames Avenue (Upstairs). Phone Colfax 175. Strikers Will Carry . ; Fight for Liberties , To Supreme Court " Pittsburgh, Oct. 23. Steel strikers will carry their fight to the supreme court in an effort to restrain city authorities from preventing them holding lodge meeting in the strike zone, W. B. Rubin, counsel for the strikers, has announced. Mr. Rubin informed the court that for purposes of the present strike the action will avail nothing, tut it is the intention of labor leaders to have the case determined that it may serve as a precedent for other cases which may arise in the future. Counsel for the strikers was as sured by the court that if there was any stipulation it could consistently make so that the matter could be taken up by the- supreme court it would do so. J. M. Patterson, member of the na tional strike committee, represent ing railroads employed in steel mills, has arrived in Pittsburgh to initiate plans for taking a strke vote of crews in the district, according to an announcement made at strike headquarters. Policeman Picks Up Boy Who Searched Year for His Mother Whea Police Officer George Brig ham found 16-year-old Albert Tee ter penniless at Fifteenth and How ard streets . about midnight last night he brought to a pause Teeter's search for his mother that has ex tended over a year. Teeter was taken to central police station and held for the juvenile authorities. The lad told Police Sergeant Fer ris of his hunt through nearly every middle western state for his mother. "When I was 4 years . old, my mother and my father separated," the boy said. "I was left in my home in Vernal, Utah, with my fa ther, a brick manufacturer. My mother came east. I know my fa ther heard from her somewhere in Nebraska shortly before he died, last year, but I wasn't able to find out' where she was. Pve hunted for her ever since father died. I haven't seen her since I was 4 years old, but somehow I think if we met we'd know one another. I'll have to go to work-and earn, some money, I guess, before I can go on looking for her.". Flood Danger Passes. Dallas, Tex., Oct. 23.With no heavy rains reported in Texas today and a forecast for colder and clear weather for Friday, danger for a serious flood in north Texas seem ingly had passed tonight. Are you going to the theater or movies tonight? If so see amuse ment page. CROP ESTIMATE SHOWS POTATO HARVEST SMALL Early Frost Damaged Ne braska Supply, But Aver age Is Better. Than' ; Expected. . r Frank"; S. Pinney of the federal bureau of crop estimates, Council Bluffs, was authorized by the fed eral department to issue yesterday a statement concerning the condi tion of the potato crop in the entire country on October 15. The depart ment will issue a special commer cial potato report o November 1 and it will contain estimates of the crop that will be available for mar ket, grading NoS. 1 and 2 and culls. The estimate yesterday shows that the general potato situation is more unsatisfactory than it has been for several years. In all of the . New England states, as well as New York, Ohio and Michigan, the crop was nearest to normal, but bad weather conditions in October pro duced rot. Michigan shows the best condition, indicating a commercial crop of 70 per cent of normal. Car shortage is interfering with market ing, i ' - Iowa is not classed as a commer cial potato state, but the. report in dicates that a small surplus of mar ketable spuds may come from Mitch ell county, the banner potato county of the state. There will be little stock to ship outside the state, however. Omaha and Council Bluffs markets will haye to depend almost wholly on Nebraska, Minnesota, the Dakotas, Coloado and Idaho. The federal report for Nebraska says: "Temperatures of 10 to 12 degrees above zero on October 10 are re ported to have injured as high as 25 per cent of the potatoes in cer tain fields that were not harvested. Inasmuch as the large bulk of the potatoes were harvested at that time the total damage may not exceed 5 per cent. Harvesting is practically complete at this time. It appears that the yield will average better than expected and the total ship ments will probably exceed the Oc tober 1 estimate of 2,574 cars, in spite of the loss from the freeze of October 10." , ' Governors May Confer : on the Coal Situation nor Harding's move to hold a con ference of governors on the coal cfriL-o mav rci,1t in a mtincr npinc tailed by Governor Goodrich of Indiana to be held at inaianapous some time next Week. EAT MORE BREAD IT IS A GREAT FOOD AND BEST WHEN M ADE WITH Goocli' Best , Flour The Best You Can Bay 1 H M t i iliifiiMirtiilnf ift iVBifnJ itnrfiiiliifiifiiNii W iHinfiia lul 1 tffiririrtittMrtf'-'1 lpfefeM3IIrlf!rj 1. Most simple, fewest operating parts. 2. k Washes and wrings separately or both at same time. 3. Wringer can't sag, having an unusually substantial mounting. " 4. Two levers control everything, responding' instantly to a touch. . 5. Washes a tubful in 7 minutes beautifully clean, without 6. Wringers are 3-position swinging reversible, with the best rolls made. 7. Instant release on wringer ab solutely preventing any accident. . 8. Motor fully enclosed, protected from water, and has plenty of surplus power. Of Course You Want the Automatic. Call and See One Sold by J. I. PURCUPILE & CO. EUctric Household Appliances. 1908 Harney Street. Phone Dougle. 2360 Omaha Names First and , Last in Bluffs License Book A new marriage license record was opened in Council Bluffs yesterday when the last license blank in the old book was filled. The book was opened April 10 last and contains 624 licenses. Omaha people figure in the first and. last license record ed in the volume, Orville Hayter and Anna Ward, both of Omaha, taking the first license recorded and Timo thy J. Walsh, Chicago, and Emma Harrison, Omaha, taking the last Undergoes Operation. , Mrs. George Parks, Twenty-fifth and D streets, wife of former City Commissioner Parks, was operated on yesterday in St. Joseph hospi tal. Physicians report her recover- mg nicely. $30,000 Given for Monument . For British and U .S. Navies London, Oct. 23. (By Associated Press.) The United, States t ha been offered $30,000 of the Dover patrol fund for the erection of a me morial to commemorate the co-operation of the American and British navies in the war. The money is offered without conditions. !' The United States Government Bought millions of pounds of t BAKING POWDER lot our troops over seas more than all other brands combined. What Better Recommendation Can You Ask For? And the PRICE is the same now as before the war Ounces for it' National Legislatipn of the Meat Packing Industry 5. 6. 7. 8. 1.7 Will not increase the amount of meat you can buy for a dollar. 2. Will not raise ' more animals. 3. Will not produce more meat. ' 4. Will not stop fluctuations in live-stock receipts or prices. . V :: Will not increase the output of the packing ' ; houses.' ' : x Will not prevent strikes. Will not reduce transportation charges. Will not reduce the retailer's cost of doing ousiness. 9. Will not increase the demand for the cheaper cuts of meat 10. Will not lessen the consumers' demand for ex pensive delivery and credit service. 1 1 . Can not at the same time raise prices paid . farmers for live stock, and lower prices paid by consumers for meat 1 But the slowing up of efficiency due to' cumbersome governmental routine will have the effect of increasing the manufacturing charges between the Cost of live stock and the cost of meats, thus forcing lower live-stock prices or higher meat prices. , The packing industry as now conducted, is characterized by keen competition, highest efficiency, and unusually low profits. Let us send yoo a Swift "Dolls." It win interest yon. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, ' Chicago, HI. Swift & Company, TJ. S. A. Omaha Local Branch, 13th ft Leavenworth Streets F. J. Souders, Manager I ySS$P2& THISSNOwTV I VVP X"JATBfCOMtSOr I J? A THI VOUM DOUAlX I I UmmmmsrM swift company Swifi A Company's wV5 ty7 ' "EM0" J i 9