Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 29, 1919, Page 5, Image 5
THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER' 29, 1919. BLAMES STRIKE FOR ATTEMPT TO SLAY HIS WIFE William Philbrick, Ort Trial for Intent tk Murder, Has: 7 Defense of Temporary Insanity. , . .William A. Philbrick on the wit ness stand before a jury and District- Judge Redick yesterday swore that he has no recollection of having stabbed his wife, Mary Philbrick, in an elevator in the First National bank building on June 24, 1919. He is on trial for assault with intent to murder. His defense is temporary insan ity. He said he had brooded to long over his domestic troubles that lie didn't know what he was doing when he stabbed his wife 13 times with an ice pick and then tried to kill himself. He was found in the elevator at the fourteenth floor of the building, the elevator looking like a shambles with his blood and that of his wife. Their troubles started, according to the testimony, when he went out on a strike with the boilermakers' union. While he was unable to sup port the family, Mrs. Philbrick got work running an elevator. Their three children were sent to an orphans' home Mrs. Philbrick filed suit against her husband for divorce since the stabbing, alleging various threats against her life. Mr. Philbrick filed a cross-petition, charging her with misconduct They lived at 1013 South Twenty fifth avenue. New York Man Dies of Injuries Received in Motor Accident C H. Hunter, 68 yeariNold, of Hyatt CJorners, Seneca county, New York, died Thursday of injuries re- Lceived in an automobile accident -near Council Bluffs. Mr. Hunter and his wife and his son, Frank, and family of Mills county, la., were en route to Omaha when the acci dent occurred. None of the others were seriously injured. Mr. Hunter is -widely known in New York and is one of the board of directors ol' the Lackawanna railroad. STOCKS SHAKEN ' BY STRIKE AND MEXICAN NEWS ' " 1 Call Money at 10, and Traders . 'Unload 1,500,000 S ' Shares, j - New York, Nov. 28.The itock market again was severely unsettled Friday, many speculative issues fall ing five to nearly 35 points on a turnover approximating 1,500,000 shares. ; - 6n the stock exchange, and in the financial district generally, the break, which lacked the sensational features of the mid-November up heaval, -was chiefly ascribed to growing apprehension arising from the deadlock in the coal strike and later events south of the Rio Grande. Shares of. the various coal roads were only moderately affected, but issues with Mexican connections were under constant pressure. : European ne"ws was again dis couraging and contributed to the heaviness of exchange on London, Paris and the former neutral counr tries of northern Europe. Selling was at its height in the final hour, when call money, which had ruled at 7 per cent, rose to 10 per cent on the belated demands of borrowers. , The setback doubtless owed much of its success to the renewed activity of the bears or short in terest, but no small part of the sell ing originated, according to com mission nouses, irom discouraged traders at interior centers. -Another noteworthy feature was the renewed selling in heavy volume of Liberty and Victory bonds, sev eral of these issues establishing minimum quotations for the year. It now is generally accepted as a fact that liquidation of these bonds is in process mainly to. adjust losses in the income tax returns of indi viduals and corporations at the end of the year. ' General Motors led the set back, just as it has led all similar movements recently at a net loss of 2ZV points. Other motor shires and their accessories, with oils, shippings and prominent steels and equipments, closed with a heavy to weak tone.- ' Slightly raising and lowering a user's heel actuates gearing vttfat propels a roller skate invented by two Oregon men. The price of the Club Piano is ' The price of the Club Player is .A w m i i k-'' tun iii i x. aWav i m i i i 1 ir ii .( i i i : . ; V ' ; 11 - I ' Blii . ' . I! Wetklj pan 'for 1 V H'tIi HiMw! I W? i Weekly pay for ) IV The Club M . W ft l'c Y&Ki n I ! ATheClub re The 13th Annual TTTvO w an Chub At Schmoller & Mueller's Of fers Extraordinary Inducements to the Buyer of a New Piano or Player fl Bring Along . $10 With You $10 makes you a club mem ber arid entitles you to all the unusual privileges and benefits- of tfie club. The Piano or Player of your choic will be set aside and delivered at Christmas time or you" may have it .delivered immediately just as you wish. Read, Reflect and Act! . Our 13th Annual Christmas Club is the one big "musical treat" of the year to buyers of Pianos and Flayer Pianos. It is not only the greatest bargain event from a standpoint of the inviting prices and liberal terms, but a big feat in mer chandising that is unattempted by any other music house in the middle west. Only the utmost forethought in buying for our Lincoln, Sioux City and Omaha stores and months of planning make it possible for us to offer the Club induce ments this year in the face of the most adverse conditions ever experienced in the music trade. ' ' -, - - - . FREE To Club Members A handsome 6-foot Piano Lamp and Shade (choice of color). A beautiful Bench. Piano Drape (choice of color). . , , $10 worth of Player Rolls. . Specially low terms. Additional discount of 50c monthly if account is paid in two years. - , Join the Xmas Club! and Save $75 on a Piano $155 on a Player Description of Club Piano J This splendid new Upright Grand Piano is made in two different models arid sizes beautifully finished in Ma hogany (dull or polished), quarter-sawed Golden Oak, or American "Walnut. They are instruments handsome enough to adorn any home; and their won-" derful tone will suit , the most exacting musician. You will fall in love with this TV AI ! J. iriauo uie uimuie juu act cj'cb- on it and don't forget that the Bench, Piano Lamp and all other extras are included free. Join the Schmoller & Mueller Christmas Club today.- .; Open Evenings by Appointment ONLY Patrons who cannot possibly get in daring store hours way call us on the telephone and make an evening appointment. Fhone Douglas 1623. fl -. f PIANO frni jtt "T ITU 42Td2tfJ1A III i W Watch the Watch the Speedometer Jj. ...... Speedometer Description of Club Player This new and beautiful Play-' er is an entirely modern and up-to-date 88-note instru ment of "last-minute" de sign, thoroughly guaran teed, which assures you of absolute satisfaction and protection. Designed along plain lines, yet it is so artistic that it is cer tain to satisfy the most dis criminating buyer. It con tains a 5-point motor, noise less mechanism, METAL TUBING and all the latest improve ments and devices for getting per fect expression -a splendid instru- ment in every respects - Come and see the Complete Club Outfits in our window. We invite you to come in and try the instruments. Tou will not be urged to buy. SCHMOLLER & MUELLER 1311-1313 Farnam St. PIANO CO. 1311-1313 Farnam St. T" Gentlemen: Please send me further infor mation about your Xmas Club and a photo graph of the Club Piano Club Player Piano (mark an X after which one). Name Address 1 . V a . . . EXPECT BREAK WITH MEXICO TO FOLLOVVMURDER Seventh Crime Since Car ranza Was Warned That "Next One". Would Lead To Action. (Continued From Para One.) atid they not only went over the Jenkins case, but Mr. Lansing also laid before the Mexican" envoy the report- of the killing of Wallace, which had just been received. Their conference was confidential. but it is understood the secretary conveyed to President Carranza's representative a message more forceful and1 direct than .any yet transmitted in any diplomatic note. No Credence to Charges. Mr. Bonillas was informed that the department placed no credence in the charges on which Tenkins is held in jail in Puebla, in which the Mexican government declines to in tervene, and it is understood that Mr. Lansing further outlined to the ambassador the inevitable conse quences of continued murders and molestations of Americans, probably more pointedly than was done in the government's official note of last July. Third American Dead. About the same time word came in of the death of another American as the result of brutal treatment of bandits who held him for ransom. He was Otto Lund, of Swedish birth, a naturalized American, who died of blood poisoning after being held for ransom five months in the state of Mayarit.' His captors chopped off one of his fingers and wrapped it within their written de mand or ransom money which they sent to .his friends in Tepic. Blood poisoning and gangrene killed the man "while his wife, ai American woman, and their child, are reported in want in Tepic. Ihe murder of Wallace, however. assumes proportions of overshad owing importance. Potrero Del Llano, the ranch on which he was murdered, is six to nine miles south of Tampico. The oil pipe lines of the Aguilar, Gulf Refining and Huasteca Oil companies run through the property. When word ofhis death was received here toe offi cials of all three companies were communicated with for identifica tion). The Gulf company's office at Houston. Texas, responded that the Wallace probably was W. M. Wal lace, who was known to be in the Tampico district and on the Potrero Del LJano property. Eighth Since Warning. If the identification be correct, Wallace is the eighth employe of the Gulf comoanv to meet death at the hands of Mexicans in the Tam- oico district and the eighth Amer ican to be killed in Mexico since July 28, when the United States warned Carranza that further mur ders of Americans would seriously affect the relations between the two countries. According to state department records the eight murders have been in this order: July 31 K. A. Cunningham, at Matamoras. August 28 Adam Schaerer, at finosa. Aueust 30 H. 5. McUH, at Coapua. ,. September Z A. f. tiennessy, ai La Colorado. - Seotember 21 Lieutenant u n. Connelly, U. S. A., at Bahia. Lieuteant' f . is. waternouse, ai Bahia. ' . (The were the two army avi- ai who lost their way, were starved and finally murdered by Mexican fishermen. ) . , November 14 E. K. Lack, at Mexicali, said to have been killed by a Mexican official. November 26 James Wallace, ai Tampico. . ' . Seventh Killed by Carramans. It is further said from the unof ficial records that Wallace js the seventh American killed by Car ranza soldiers in the Tampico dis- trct- ' - i Immediately on receipt of the death of Wallace the State depart ment ordered investigation and fur ther report on the details. , Investigation and report on the new" phases of the Jenkins case, raised in the Mexican note refusing to meet this government's demand for the consular agent's immediate release, already has been ordered. The whole effect of the days de velopments was to put the Mexican situation, already acknowledged bad, into the worst light of probably more than a year. . , . The reports of fighting in Mexico, City and the reported flight of Car ranza, should they be verified, are expected to have a material bearing upon it. So far as revealed no news was received directly from Mexico City. The State and War depart ments and the Department of Jus tice all of which had been receiving information recently tending to fore cast such a development, set about seeking -further information and verification of the day's reports which came to the border. Due to Angeles Shooting. There was just a suspicion that the trouble in the MexicanCapital was a-jeaction from the execution of GeH Felipe Angeles at Chihuahua City, against which many Mexicans, including Carranza supporters, pro tested vigorously. It has been known here for some time that the preliminaries of the Mexican presidential' campaign were waxing warm with Carranza and Obregon as the chief figures. Obre jron has been touring the country and is, just about due at Manzanillo, one of the Pacific coast ports con trolled by Carranza forces. Although the report of an outbreak seemed to be the logical consequence to an accumulation of information at hand there was a disposition to await further news before considering it a real factor in the situation. A change of government in Mex ico, it was pointed out, 'might point the way to a solution of the present difficulties. On the other liand. it was said, a change in government might be accomplished by such dis-! turbances and spoliation ot toreign trs and foreign property as to pre sent itself as an added cause for ac tion. " " There was considerable agitation for positive action among senators and representatives gathering for the reconvening of congress Monday. senator Ashurst of Arizona, demo crat, characterized the State depart ment's policy so far as running "a big bluff with a bobtail flush." The most definite official expres sion obtainable to define the govern ment's intentions was that the ne gotiations would not be prolonged, and that once a course were decided upon the government would be pre pared to carry jt out. Says Murdered-Man Is Her Brother-in-Law Twin Falls, Idaho, Nov. 28. Fears were expressed here by Mrs. R. S.-Lewis that W. M. Wallace, reported killed by Mexicans at Tampico, is her brother-in-law, William T. Wallace, a vice-president and general manager of the foreign, department of the Gulf Oil company. a . . urn. Arrest Mexicans wun 4,800 Rounds Ammunition San Antonio, Texas, Nov. 28. Three Mexicans, supposed to be gun runners, were arrested in a San An tonio hotel and 4,800 rounds of pistol amTnunftion seized in their room. A fourth occupant of the room escaped.- The three men arrested claimed that they are from Piedras Negras, opposite Eagle Pass, and were buying the ammunition for a hardware merchant of that place. They have been making weekly trips here for several months, ac cording to the hotel man. The am munition was concealed between mattresses, in dresser drawers and throughout the room. Private Wires Reassert Fight Against Carranza San Antonio. Tex.. Nov. 28. Tele grams asserting that fighting was going on in Mexico City between adherents of Generals Obregon and Gonzales, candidates for the Mexi can presidency, were received in pri vate messages from various Mexican sources. The messages described what was declared to be a general revolt planned throughout Mexico, de signed to overthrow President Car ranza and eliminate General Gon zales as a political opponent to Gen eral Obregon. v x -v Preparing an Elaborate ' Campaign Against Villa Ojinagaj Chihuahua, Mexico, Nov. 28. Plans for a new ' campaign against jaucisco Villa, the bandit chieftain, rapidly are taking shape in a mountainous region of eastern Chihuahua, Vnown as the "Range o the uoves. ' . General Manuel M. Dieguez,- com mander 1 operations in the. nortl is reported to be marshalling in thi region his command of infantry cavalry and artillery. It is expecd ed the federals will conduct tM campaign after the manner of modi em warfare. j I The "Range of the Doves" if about 100 miles southeast' of Ojij naga, and the eastern part project into the state of Coahuila. It is re ported to be the resort of seven Villa bands under Alvina Aranda Ricardo, Michael, Porfirio Ornelai and Cristrto-Bustillos. i Former Omahan, Shoots . Himself at Maiden. Mass Maiden. Miss.. Nov. 28. Gtotxl A. Wadman, 35 yearrof ge, forer ly of Omaha and Irvington," Neb from which cities he came- here 1917, a mechanic employed Boston, committed suicide shortlv after eating Thanksgiving dinner ai his home, 31 JLonwod street Maiden: He laid down directly after dinnei and fired a bullet into his left tern pie. Members of his family- heard the shot and called Dr. Ralph. Mara of Melrose, but Wadman lived only a few minutes. 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