i "V. 12 THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 27, 1920 SEEK IDENTITY OF TWO ESCAPED BLUFFS BANDITS Police Allege Gangsters Es Reaped After Killing Four ; And Wounding Three Men in Pool Hall. " 't-ntincn HluftJ detectives art fitting clews to the 'identity of two handiti vho are alleged' to have ac companied Harold Roberts, John M&Laughlin and Clifford Barrett to the pool hall in "Little Austria Wednesday niRht when tour men were killed and three received seri ous- gunshot wounds in a battle which followed an attempted holdup. Police say that four bandits, all masked, stepped into the pool hall. l-.arlier report stated tnat only three gunmen appeared. The fourth robber U said to have jumped into toilet room when the shooting started.. He later escaped in the confusion and is alleged to have joined ,a fifth member of the gang who was waiting in an automobile a short distance away. . . Three , Killed in Battle. .TIie attempted holdup was staged 'it Pete Potkonak's pool hall, 1005 Fifteenth avenue, at 8:.W YVednes ' day evening. About 25 Austrian Were in the placiv at the tiinc In the resulting battle three men were tilled, one .suffered wounds from which he died yesterday and three fcthes are now in thet Jennie Kd inmidson hospital w,ith serious bul let wounds. , " . "My boy was a good boy, he was rjean-minded and hardworking, ft wan the influence of pool halls and oldef companions that caused him to become mixed up in this awful affair." ' ; I his was tlie comment made yes terday by B. F. Roberts, 511 Voor his street, Council Bluffs, engineer at the Bloomer cold storage plant And father of Harold Roberts, 21) years old. alleged boy bandit who Was killed in the gun battle Wednes day night at a pool hall in "l.ittb Austria." I- he dead, other man Konerts. are: 'Pedro Jiminez. 1804 Ninth avenue, Union Pacific section forcrnan. C.Steva Kilibarda. 1606 Fiftieth tr john Kedarman, I8U4 Ninth ave nue. ;: Married But Two Months. ".Young Roberts had been married t two months. His bride was Miss Annie Russell, timekeeper at the Milwaukee railroad shops, where Iw was employed up until the time his death. His pretty, young widow was heart-broken this morn ing at his. parents' home, 511 Voor his street, where they have been liv ing since their marriage. ; "Harold wt not s bad man," she ohbed, "I can't understand how he fflpprned to do this awful thing, lie didn't have to bold up people, fet -worked hard every day and wa3 making good money.' i.'.'I pleaded with my son to spend h,fs evenings at home with u and to not treutient pool halls and as sociate with questionable char ters," said Mr. Roberts. . , $Z i Brother Killed in France. "I had only two hoys and now J&haVe lost both of them. Harold's ?fothcr, I.bring, was killed in Vance while in service.' And now Harold is dead. I think we will move away from this city." John McLaughlin, 17 years old, alleged by police to be the youngest of the three gunmen, is lying at the Jennie F.dmuiidson Memorial hospital with three bullet wounds BRINGING UP FATHER- $) Jiff d Mag g n Full PI of Colors in The Sunday Be. Drawn for The Bee by McManus Copyright. 1929 International New Serrlc fvt forgotten' WHAT I WANTED $T TODAY - A MCOE-MOO WOZS1N;iN' V 1910 Inn. riAtuni V1C. IH ?WEET-HEART) I REMEMBER,-IT WrXT) A FOG HORN roR OUR WHAT ARE - ACOOT? jt-i i v l JTfi 1 bssv i i a srt jmrm in n w x . i v n - i . through his chest. He is not ex pected to live. McLaughlin has been working for three years as car repairer at the Union Pacific shops, supporting his widowed niolhcr, Irs. Mjttic Mc Laughlin, with whom he made bis home a 1908 Third aveuue. Father Killed in Omaha. Clifford Barrett, 28 years old, said to he the third, bandit, also is in a critical condition at the Jennie Ed miiudson hospital. He is suffering .(1 ADVKRTISKMKNT A Never Failing Way to Banish Ugly Hairs ', .., . (Aids to Beatlty) No woman is immune to superflu ous growths, and because these are likely to appear, at any time it is advisable to always have some dela tone powder handy to use when the occasion' arises. A paste is made with some of the powder' and wa ter and spread upon the hairy sur face; in about 2 minutes this is care fully removed and the skin washed. You will then find that your skin is sntirely free from hair or fuzz. Be sure, however, to get real dela-tone. If 1 J J r 1 I (m r . tJm &ammaw A, My HEART and My HUSBAND Adele Garrison's New Phase of Revelations of a Wife fnjm a bullet wound through the abdomen. His liver was torn and surgeons say that it is improbable that he will recover. Barrett is a son of Mrs. A. J. Bar rett, 649 Franklin avenue. His father was killed by a fall from a building in Omaha two years ago this spring. He was not married, but supported Jiis mother by working in a Bluffs garage. Eye Witness Interviewed. Nick Depor, 35 years old, a Mexi can laborer living on Sixteenth ave nue, is probably wounded fatally. Louis Ortego, section foreman and the only eye witness that police have interviewed, said that the bandits were the victims of their own guns. In the pandemonium which reigned when many of the Austrian failed to put up their hands and one of them grappled with one of the bandits, shots went wild and result ed in the killing or wounding oi the seven men. he said. Police say that many of the in tended victims probably carried guns antf that some of them may have actually engaged in a pitched battle with the bandits. No evidence can be found to substantiate this theory. however. Ducked Under Table. Pete I'otkon'ak, proprietor of ths pool hall, told police that he ducked underneath a table when the gun men came in the door and that be saw none of the details of the shouting. .'vccoruing to urtego s storv there were about 25 men in the pool hall when the three bandits appeared, all wearing black handkerchief masks across the lower parts of their faces! and carrying guns. Jl W hen the robbers cried, Stick fin up," many of the men standing near the front of the hall complied. Others did not sec of hear the gun men and one of them tired several The Way Lillian "Scampered Off" With Madge. I drove as fast as 1 could toward home, for my interview with Alice Holcomb had consumed more time than 1 had expected, and I dreaded the comment, good-natured and caustic, which my disappearance with the car would call forth from the circle of relatives and friends at the house. But it did me no good to hasten, for when I turned in at the entrance I sfiw that all of the party were sta tioned on' the veranda. Al I walked up the path I knew from the grins on the faces of Dicky and his brother-in-law, and the dimpling smile of Mrs. Durkee that I was in for a bad quarter of an hour. "Well, how's Barney Oldfield?" LDr. Braithwaite boomed the question atross the intervening stretch of grass plot, and little Mrs: Durkee promptly testified to her approbation by a girlish giggle, "Woman! How much did this trip cost me?" Dicky as$umer a menac ing manner. "Confess, now, what the traffic cop nailed you fori" "I hope the merry villagers were properly impressed .with the new car, dear," Lillian put in slyly. I put both hands high above my head. "Don't shoot. I'll come down," I I : 'S p Pi I THERE'S A TOUCH OF TOMORROW IN ALL COLB DOES TODAY 2&rO-ElGHT , ON EXHIBIT AT THEX AUTOMOBILE SHOW , t ( , Hext wbek Traynor Automobile Company RETAIL DISTRIBUTORS ' 2210 Farnara St Phono Doug. 5268 COLB MOTOR CAR COMPANY ! (Vmsms rf4mi Motor fat JNDIANAPOUS, U AA, PHIS liiiaiilll piifi Ah mmm - j ty-' 0:.. . .. shots into the ceiling to attract at tention and emphasize their de mands. Roberts is said to have walked down the line of tables, poking victims in the ribs with his gun and forcing them to put up their hands. Whcu he came to Pedro Jimines, now dead, the Mexican foreman grappled with him, locking the young bandit's arms behind him. One of the other gunmen noticed the situation and began to shoot in that direction. Jimines, said Or tego, wheeled around and placed the bandit between him and the shooter as a shield. A shot struck Roberts in the chest and pierced his right lung and heart, killing him ifistantlv. The Mexican dropped the body and was himself struck by bullets, Jfe tottered, grasping the edge of the counter, then fell to the floor and died. Austrians Create Panic. Steve lKilibarda, the third dead man, was shot while crouching a corner in the rear of the hall. He crawled on his hands and knees through the rear door and his body was found several feet in back of the building. As soon as the firing commenced a panic was created by the Aus trians in their efforts to rush out of the building. The room was found deserted bv police when thev ar rived on the scene. Sixteen bullet holes were counted in the walls. ceiling and fixtures. Barrett, with a bullet hole through Ins abdomen, made his escape from the charnel house and succeeded in reaching the home of Mrs. Martha Johnson, 1512 Eleventh avenue, six blocks away. He knocked at the door and staggered into the house in a semi-conscious condition. Mrs. Johnson phoned police and he was taken to the Jennie Edinundson hospital, where .surgeons operated upon him at once. McLaughlin May Die. McLaughlin, who also made his way from the pool hall after the shooting was found behind a bill hoard two blocks awav bv Don Franks, 16 years old, 1502 Four teenth avenue. ror liod s sake, help me get away!" Franks heard McLaughlin moan as ne passed the bill board He called police. McLaughlin has a slim chance for recovery, sur geons say. Detectives today are investigating the affair to determine whether any or tne intended victims returned tr. nre or me oanaits. tmpty car tridges strewn about over the floor indicated that guns must have been reloaded dcrinsr the fight. The bodies of the dead men were taken to the undertaking parlors of f XT- . .... v-oioncr .uiier. io inquest will De held, according to a statement made ly the coroner this morning, nend ing changes in the condition of the wounded men at the hospital. "Laxative &POMO Tobloto" laughed. "When even Lillian turns against me it's time I surrendered. What do you, want me to do apblogize all around for not inviting you to drive?" "No," interposed little Mrs. Dur kee. "We want an account of your self. I should think you would have had enough of motor driving today, and here you're barely in the house before you scoot off again without a word to anybody, and stay until Dicky has been telephoning every police station within a radius of 20 miles." My little neighbor delivered this speech with a series of giggles that robbed it of any hint of seriousness, and yet I sensed that behind the mirth lay a distinct childish curi osity, one of the little, woman's less pleasant characteristics. I dronntd into a chair and put my hands over my face in pretended terror. An Understanding Flash. "I'll tell vou the whole truth," I said, giving my voice an exaggerated tremolo. "Lillian and I robbed a bank and murdered four people while we were gone, and I just re ceived word that the bloodhounds were on our trail. So I jumped into the machine and ever since have been twisting and turning around the country to throw them off the track. About 15 minutes ago I drove through the brook just north of Crest Haven and completely baf fled them. I don't think they'll trouble us now for a day or two, but we certainly will have to work to fix up an alibi. Almost all all of the group seated on the veranda manifested their ap proval of this arrant nonsense by laughter. They were evidently in the mood, when anything, no mattei how silly, would amuse them. But I caught a flash from Lillian's eyes and knew that she had comprehend ed the message between the lines which I meant her to get. "I think you're horrid, Madge," pouted little Mrs. Durkee, whose laughter, I noticed, was rather per functory. "You made the cold chills run right down my back." ' To the Rescue. I knew that her baffled curiosity had made her irritable, and I rc selved not to give her a chance for further questioning. "Will somebody tell me when dinp ner will be ready?" I demanded. "I'm positively starving." Dicky looked me up and down with a speculative air. "Can't you just see her in another year or two if she keeps this tip?" be asked. "Drives until she's so hungry she has to stop, eats until she has no inclination for any more strenuous exercise than sitting in a car, then drives again, ad libitum, and so forth. Good-bye, Madge. I warn youl When yo acquire jowls and a dou ble cliiu J shall flit like a humming bird out of your life." "You mean like a magpie," Lillian put in dryly. "And don't worry about Madge getting too fat while she has to listen to your brand of conversation. It would wear any body legally compelled to listen to it to a positive shadow. Come away, Madge, with your only true friend. 1 happen to, know that dinner isn't scheduled for another hour, but I have some aromatic spirits of am monia over in my room if you think vou arejikely to swoon before thei Besides, vou have been promising to show me that new knitting stitch for two weeks. You'll just have time to pound it into my head before din ner, and it will take your mind ott the beastly cruelty of the man you're tied to." Sue slipped her hand through my arm and walked me oil the veranda with a gamin-like mouc at Diekv, sauntered leisurely across the lawn to the Durkee home, and up to her room. As she turned the key in the lock she smiled a little grimly: "Well, what's the latest?" she asked. (Continued Tonuirow.) Industrial Festival At Vancouver Seeks Visit by Omaha Mayor "Will wonders never cease?" isked Mayor Smith yesterday when he read a telegram from Van couver, B. C, offering to pay all of his expenses in connection with a visit to a "great industrial festival," to be held in the Canadian citv, April 19 to 24. Man Hurt in Street Fight Dies in Edmundson Hospital Elmer L. Hall. 32 years old. 210) South Twelfth street, Council Bluffs, who was shot in the back in a fight near the Emmet house on Sixteenth avenue and Sixth street, died at the Edmundson hospital Wednesday night. Hall was a member of the Car men's union and had lived all his life in Cbuncil Bluffs. He was a car in spector for the LTnion Pacific. He leaves a wife, two daughters. his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William AT THE THEATERS T' HE Goldirtan company of Yid dish players will offer a drama of red-blooded men and women fiercely loving, fiercely fighting, in tensely hating and better men and women for this very fierceness and lovableness in their nature, entitled "Bought Love," at the Brandcis theafcr tonight. Mabel and Dora Ford at the Or phcum this week are ottering a group of four dances. Three are new creations and the fourth is a step dance winch used to be done by them in association with their two brothers, when the quartet w'as know as the Four Fords. Two other acts are featured. One is presented by Charles E. Bensee and Florence Baird. Miss Baird is especially ef fective as a comedienne. Clara Mor ton, formerly one of the four Mor tons, appears effectively in a "Solo curtain rises at 7:55 o'clock sharp. All the costumes, scenery and properties in the "Paper Dress Revue," at the Empress, are made entirely of paper. The scene shows the interior of a paper shop and the story has to do with a theatrical producer in search of novelties in costumes for a new production he is undertaking. The six pretty models appear and show what paper can do in the making of costumes. Songs and - dances enliven the pro duction, as'wcll as sufficient comedy situations. This afternoon and evening Peter S. Clark's 'Oh, Girl!" company will give its two final performances. To morrow matinee one of the very high spots, in .the Gayety's season arrives the annual weeks engage ment of "The Auto Girls" (1920 models), purposely booked for the week of Omaha's big auto show. Frank Hunter is the principal chauf feur in chafgc of the fun and is ably suoDorted bv a wonderful cast of principals and the famous jov-riding beauty chorus. The production is elaborate in every way and just the thi-.e for Omaha's big gala week. No lovers pf fun and good music and dancing should miss Come Alonor Marv." which comes to the Brandeis theater Saturday and Sun day. The company numbers some 4n neonis with a well known musical comcdv cast and boasts of a bevy of beautiful girls who not only sing and dance well, but appear in one of the most startling and expensive cos tumes ever seen iu musical comedy. "Tiger Rose," written by Willard Mack, staged by David Belasco. with the original New York and Chicago production, is to be pre sented a,t the Brandcis -theater Tues day night by a Belasconian cast. "A Daughter of the Sun," the story of a Hawaiian butterfly, a massive scenic production carrying a carload of special scenery, will be seen at the Brandcis on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, March 4, 5 and 6. dashing 1 adopted daughter of a French nobleman. Each delineation is said to be distinct and a tribute to Miss Dalton's . prowess as an emotional actress. Sun The fashionable atmosphere of high social life in New York City has been lavishly produced in "The Walk-Offs," a photo offering at the Sun theater this week. It is a ro mantic love story with May. Alli son in the role of a young society woman without money, "a walk-off," who has been bred to the shallow standards of society which the man who loves her, a wealthy, young red-blooded Kentuckian, detests. In its story there is intensely ab sorbing and human interest. H. Hall, of this city, two brothers, George Hall of this city, and Will iam Hall of Beardsley. Minn., and one sister. Miss Edna Hall, at home. Three Die in Blast. Manitowoc. Wis.. Feb. 26. The third victim of an explosion in the plant of the Aluminum Manufactur ing comDanv Thursday mornine died of her injuries tonight, increas ing the death toll from three to four. Little hope is held cit for the re covery of four others Flashes From Filmland Neighborhood Houses .RVM) ifilh find ninuey EIS1K FEUlit'SON- n "WITNESS FOll T1IK DEFENSE,"' Mid Sunshiin' i-ornf 11 l 1 1 TON Ulth MUl HmlHon MAE J1UUHAV ill "THE DELI CIOUS I.1TTI.R DEVIL;" aluu T. vnn find Moran ennwdy. LOT HKOr ?4lh and Lothrop WAR HEX KICK Kit 5 AN in "LIVE SI'AKKS;" Mutt and Jeff and Rolin roniedj". DIAMOND 2h and lke JAMES J. COKBKTT 111 '-MIDNIGHT WAN, and srood short feature. mHF. latest Enid Bennett picture Xto be shown in Omaha bears the interesting title of "The Woman in the Sui;; ase," and it will rnntinue the stellar attraction at the Strand the balance of the week. The story centers around a viva cious young boarding school miss, who has always made more or less of a pal out of her father and is shocked to discover the photograph of a comely woman, not her mother, in lus suitcase. The picture bears an endearing inscription and con vinces Mary, the heroine, that her fattier is carrying on an affair with the siren. She determines to rescue him. Moon If you want to see a grip ping, dramatic picture with human problems set forth with all the story teller's art, then visit the Moon theater either today or Sat urday and view "The alley of To- morrow, starring uiiiiam Kussen. Herein this athletic favorite, with Mary Thurtnan and a cast of star caliber, puts upon the screen the tragic hesitations that harass a man when love clashes with his heredi tary duty to kill' his sister's be traver the brother of the woman l.e loves, the very man to whom he owes his own escape from death. Rialto JVith Dorothy Dalton playing three distinct roles and the scene of the action varying from the upper stratum of Parisian life to the Indian jungle, "Black is White," a picture production offer ing at the Rialto the balance of the week, is furnishing much novel entertainment for npvie farts. Miss Dalton portrays the faithful, retir ing wife of an unreasonably jealous husband, a fragile invalid and the j Empress Sylvia Breamer and Robert Gordon are admirably cast in the spicy romantic comedy, "Re spectable by Proxy," which is now srliowing at the Empress theater. The story revolves around a young southern heir who is wedded in haste to a fourth-rate actress whose acting "off-stage" was far from fourth-rat;. and Saturday, is giving the public a photoplay treat of unusual inter est. Hobart Henley, the producer director, produced and directed the picture from the original short story by Edna Ferber. One of the out standing features, among the many splendid points of "The Gay Old Dog" is its fidelity to detail. Down to the finest point, every detail in costuming' and furnishing has been carefully observed. BYSTANDER SHOT AS TWO ENEMIES SETTLE QUARREL Bullet Passes Through Leg of John Lusso and Hits Louis Salerno. Bee Want Ads Are Best Business Boosters. Roy Gruen, 1207 South t Sixth street, shot and slightly wounded John Lusso, Seventh and Fierct streets, and Louis Salefno, 17 year old, 723 Pierce street, during a quar rd between Gruen and Lusso la night, according to police report. The fight was the result of an ole quarrel, police say. Last night Lusso attempted to throw 'Gruen from a house where he was watchman, claiming that he was attempting to steal property in the house. Gruen, who is a night watchman at. the Elfonso Cannella dry good store at Sixth and Pierce streets, went to his room and secured a re volvef, returning to the Queen pic ture show, and was attacked by Lusso in the street. Gruen shot and struck Lusso in the right leg, the bullet passing through and striking Salerno, who was watching the fight from the corner of the street. Tolice were summoned and all three men taken to the police sta tion, where a charge of shooting with intent to kill was placed against Gruen. A large knife was taken from Lusso and he was booked on an assault and battery charge. m r. . . rrl r . muse l nc Aiuse tneater in pre senting "The Gay Old Dog" today ADVERTISEMENT Colds Break Get instant relief with ' Tape's Cold Compound" Don't stay stuff ed-up! Quit blow ing and snuffling! 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Per pair $9.45 i i Hod Sir Between lMh ami ltn f tttttttttttttttti X INTRODUCING Alfred S. Mayer The officers of The Lion take liis opportunity to introduce Mr. Alfred S. Mayer who takes charge, this week, of our City Department. "Al" began working for us more than three years ago and we have never once been sorry about it. The middle "S" in his name stands for Service. And later, it will stand for Success. Alfred is an Omaha product born, raised and educated here, and we suggest that other good Omaha people extend their courtesies to this Omaha product, who is working loyally for an Omaha concern. Alfred obseryes our many lines fidelity bonds, plate glass protection, burglary insurance, contract and depository bonds, automobile lines, accident and health indemnity; then he thinks of our 196,782 people in Omaha, and has set his stakes for pre mium production in 1920 at $196,782.00. Perhaps he will reach the goal, though he has set his mark high. He will,, if he may have your courteous assistance. The Lion Bonding and Surety Company 19th and Douglas. Assets nearly $1,500,000.00 y E. H. GURNEY, President .