1 ft - -. x . , - - ' 'i : ' IV V THE OMAI SUNDAY BEE; MAY 16,i 1920.' DAYLIGHT TIME SENDS BROKERS TO WORK EARLY New York Clocks Back an v Hour, So Western Offices .', ()pen at 6 Poor , Clerks There at 5. San Francisco, May IS. Pity the poor broker. " While die butcher, the baker and the candlestickmaker are taking their "beauty sleep" in the mornings the broker, if he is in business on aw to make a it cm Stocks! Th Investor who tun klch end lifted securities oaitriaht. in well diversified (roup, and t fwilHa tKm iVm, MMHMUMt vain. 1 a libera prow II in DoaidoB to miki : beyond the dividend yield. What kind of Mock to bur, also how and when to buy them, is In Uretrn4y told to our book just peuMiihed. entitled "The Principle of Profitable Investment." Ita 64 peara trll jam the vital thine about the atock market how to iueVi a security how to make a profit on anwi-ti It contain no "dp" on certain iteoee, and nothing for the man who want to take a abort cut to wraith, but draia with fundamental. You V ahould read it before investing. I Write today. Itaree. Dept. 1. mmwm 4 BUY GOOD STOCKS Americas Loco. C. Betlilenasi steel Sinclair Coin. Oil Coade & C. Cam Da Paiee Cos. (rTaaroek Oil A. T. 8. Ft H. CMte Cesser Rya Patrolaun Unltad Rl. Caady Thie week's if sue of our "Weekly Market Guide" advite you on these and other rood stock to buy. Our booklet "Loiae Almost Nil Profits Unlimited," will prove valuable. Both Free if you write today. Your acconnt I not too, small to interest us, or too large to overtax the facllitie of our organization. "tOGJ SroJcmrs-' 7FnxSt. Mew York the Pacific coast, must hie himself to his omce. It is all because the State of New ork is "saving daylight and the rest of the country is not. On account of the difference of time the market opens at 7 o'clock coast time regularly, and since the New Yorkers shoved back their clocks it is necessary for San Fran cisco brokers to be in their omces at 6 o'clock. Whenthe change was proposed coast brokers frantically petitioned the board of governors of the New York Exchange not to change their time, but their petitions -were in vain. Stens were then taken to oersuade the city fathers of San Francisco also to adopt daylight saving. An ordinance was drawn and went to committee and there it died. As a result the financial district witnesses the unusual sight of a string of high-priced automobiles parked there at 6 in the morning. "I often meet myself coming to work if I've been out the night be fore,"' complained one broker. "It was bad enough Waving to get to the office at 7' o'clock,' but 6-is impost sible. But there - is no way out ofit." Brokers' operators have to come to work now at 5 instead of 6, as before. However, the only bright lining of tUc otherwise dark cloud which hangs over the brokerage district is the fact that they have their after noons practically free. , Former Soldiers to Dance At Party Friday Night A dance and outing for local members of the American Legion will' be held next Friday night. Tickets for the affair will be mailed to all, members. Families of mem bers are invited to the outing. Kendall Hammond ' and Leo Bozcll are sponsoring the occasion. It Takes Dead One to Solve That Live Problem--H. C. L. Graves Are Being Made at About Same Cost as 30 Years Ago; Real Estate Advances Force Prices Up in Two Cemeteries; Sexton Advises Purchase Of Lot as Bargain. ' 1 . ROYAL ' - Petroleum Company, Inc. Offers a conservative invest ment with speculative features, under management of successful oil producers and business men. We have oil production. '. Write Cnnn Weekly Mir. for ritlaEa ket Utter Keep informed of development and other important events in Mid-Continent Oil Fields. ROYAL PETROLEUM CO., Inc. O.B. Continental Bank Building, Fort Worth, Texas. WARM WEATHER IS THE BREEDING TIME FOR RATS AND MICE. . RID-OF-RATS pre vent 'raising of new supply. If you have used it, use morel If not, start now t Non-Poisonous . , and sold under Money-Back Guar antee. If your Dealer can't supply J you writ -to , us. - ( "Small Bex I Sc. $1.00 per lb. in bulk. Berg & Beard Mfg. Co., Inc. 100 Emerson Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. '$125 CCO STOCK PRIVILEGES WA PUTS AND CALLS an nvs nnn tyvts. Best, safest way to trade. No margin. Calls possible, as risk is limited. Profits unlimited. Ask for free booklet. "SUCCESS IN THE STOCK MARKET" I . With small outlay hundreds of dollars are made UNLISTED SECURITIES KENNEDY & CO., Est. 1884 Member Consolidated Stock Exchange, N.Y. 74 BROADWAY, NEW YORK TEXAS OIL' BULLETIN FREE Give Valuable information about all the rich Texas Oil Field. Tell where you can buy and . sell any oil stock. Write for it today and ask for any information you may desire. GILBERT JOHNSON V COMPANY For 10 Years Oil 0 para tor 4 Brekara Suit 330. 01 ' Mala St., Ft. Warth. Tax. MONEY IN GRAIN 125.00 invested in Grain Stocks or Cotton, on our plan, gives opportunity to make $250.00; $50.00 will make $600.00. No further risk. Our method of quick daily profit with combined capital gives the mall investor big opportunities. Specu lative markets now showing greatest re turns, ever known. Act quick while mar ket are active. Write for particular. MERCHANTS BROKERAGE CO. 019 Dwight Bldg.- Kan a City, Ms. ITS HISTORY AND ' FUTURE Ty0RE An autfaorltatlre. educational a-pan luususua dock, cob ttlnlni -tiD-to-the-mlnut in formation regardln oil pro- aucwxt ana renniar. , OF GREAT VALUE TO INVESTORS Writ Now For FREE Booklet No. SB Rose & Company SO Broad St, New York GERMJM MARKS ADVANCING STEADILY . Of all feralcn Messy, th Mark haa mad the lartaet sevsaos Is th a two weeks. A further sevaoc si 100 solnta I peealbl wlthM the next 30 dayi. We tasla aevla to Pr.-War Price $4,760 Buy These 20 German Bonds Present Prica - $450 10 Honda Mark 1.000 earh 5 per cent German Gov't. Bonds st 122 50 each' 10 Bond Mark 1.000 each 3 1-1 per cent City of Berlin Bonds t $22.60 each You can buy these 20 Bonds NOW for $450 on our 10 months installment plan, paying $90 cash and $36 each month. " ' " T Two weeks aro you could hate bought the bead for $378. Owini to th rapid ad vane in the Mark, we cannot guarantee prices for any ' length of time, aad we firmly Mlere that thru rery Don da will be aelUn for at letat $30 each within, a month. Aot quick Buy NOW for large sore proftta. ,,1 . . Wire Your Orders at Our Epa sad Vet Raltlaea Fellow Write for complete Hat .of Government, City and Industrial Bond. j Options on German Marks Good For Six Months 10,000 Marks option-$60.00 ; 100,000 Marks opUon-7$400.00 All the abore offerlnea aubiert tn ehanee In -nrie without nnHA. fern! to all pane of Europe by cable; draft limed on the Deutsche Bank, au hi orancnea in uonsany at lowest dally re lee. bought and sold. Money trsnt . Berlin, snd Currency of all uraepean countries HENRI A BERNHARD WOLF & CO., INC. 0 Madias Avenue'"'" W New York City 10 . Send th Mony Now-!-Wir Your Ordr cre. Pecos Valley Oil CjCfl Cash Lease Near Development P' -w , i ., ' Balanc. Payable in 30 and 60 Day ' , - Crra I4ivrtv W1,d activity I on in Peco and Reeves Counties VyUIe "'sncrwhe,., f,mou, Ben wen j, produein; oil at 67 ,fet. the Turner well at 60 feet, and the Toyah Basin Shallow Field at 260 feet, Th discovery of these wells has stimulated development all over thi territory; new locations for wells are being made daily, and a very large number of wells are already drilling. Three month ago aereage In -thin territory could have been bought for $15 an acre; aince then it . hi sold for $1,000 an acre. These developments are constantly increas ing th value of acreage, and the ones who buy ahead of the drill may make a fortune out of a small sum Invested. Ten acres in the Burkburnett Field that could have been bought two years ago at $15 an acre could have been sold later for $39,000 an acre. This may be true of Peco Valley. , nUfOlinr w n'Te thirty-two tracts of ten acre each. These O wuk tracts are southeast of the famous Bell well in Reeves County, southwest of the Turner well in Pecos County, and are practically surrounded by drilling well that arc expected In soon. We offer one of these ten-acre tracts at $150. Your cheek for $50 will reserve one tract for you and you may pay the balance in thirty or sixty day. Maps, full description, and good title. 5-year commercial lease, no dmllinr obligation, will b sent you on receipt of your order. Five per cent discount for all cash. Order will be filled a received. We reserve the right to return your money ia case all these tract are sold. Mall order to th National Bank of Commerce. Fort Worth, Texa. or Workman & Co. Ft Worth, Tex. J Workman A Co., ''..,.' Fort Worth, Texsa : V,? . ( Inclosed pleas find .... first payment on...... tract of ten acre each in Peeoa County a advrtid by you ; at $150 per tract. Th balance due f I agree to par ia St and doday. ( - ' ' Nam t . Address , t REMEMBERi B discount for full payment in eaih"" ' Are you a dead one? . If 'you are, you're about the only 4. a person here i n umana wno can sneeze at Old Man Hicosta Living. And you II be lonesome among: Omahans now making, that mad rush in an effort to accomplish the anriner mAWev For ni the past 10 years sextons of the Gate City of the West have refused to boost the cost of their services in the slightest Degree. Of course, morticians, undertakers and embaimers belong to that large army of men who have had to raise their prices '.'to meet the high cost ot living. So that .trie miner in, which you are borne to your final atyode, and the position you occupy in that wooden couch in your last repose is in keeping with the price you pay for bread, sugar and clothes not to mention yirimurc. Still It Coati to Die. Oh. It rnsfe. snmfthinir tn rliav tnt after you're dead Ooo, lata, you should worry. For any Omaha sexton will fur nish you with the latest' model of eternal bungalow you may desire and at the same price it would! have cost you one long decade ago. So there is something to that saying that you must die in order a t . a f . 10 Dear, ine nign cost ot exisience. But wait! Two cemetery associa tions in Omaha have advanced their price of lots. Yes. sad, but true;, they have fallen away from their more con siderate confreres and have boosted the price. But that boost is merely nominal Yes, really. The price of an eternal cottage in the ' bosom of Mother Earth has been raised 50 cents per yara. And when you stop to consider how, much a dollar is worth these days', you'll have to admit.that the r"i1C 5 mra1if 4tYini 1 ' OaaVV a3 lltVi VIJ llUUIIIIOla ' Real Estate Advances Guilty. "Yes," James Y. Craig of the Forest Lawn cemetery will tell you New York Money. New York, May 15. Mercantile Paper per cent. Exchange Firm. Sterling Sixty-day bills, $J,77H; com mercini tu-uay onis on nanus, 13,77 commercial 60-dny bills, $3.77; demand, I3.S1H; cables. 33.82. Francs Demand. 15.22; cables, 15.20, Belgian Franc Demand, 14.42; cables, 14.40. Guilders Demand, 33tfc; cables. 36HC ii're 'jjemana, zo.72; cables, 20.50. Mark Demand. 2.04c; cable. 2.05c, , Bonds government, heavy; , railroad, Eieaay. New York Cnrh Rfautk ' Allied on 37 a so Boston Wyoming 013-10 iueuen v'li 7a ea iah. Consolidated Copper 314 4 3 Elk Basin 8V4 8 14 u.ciiiwfi vit afefiV 2?A Island. Oil ' sua 54 Mernt Oil it & 17 l.l.M.C.t XIOUMIIIK tO ......... I .3 fnfll.f. Sapulpa Oil g SK Slmms Petroleum 17Uffl 17 k U. 8. Steamship 2tts? 2 '2 White Oil 23 S 23 ' .1 Minneapolis Grain.' Minneapolis, Minn., May 15. Flour 50c Iowev; Mn carload lot, atatiriarrf ein... Muuinu ai sio.zs a barrel in s-pound cot- Bran $53.00. Wheat TTaah Va 1 ,n.tlt., .moic Corn $2.032.04. ' , Oats $1.0a,g,i ojaj. Barley $1.4901.55, Rye No., i $2.H14 J.17. Flax No. 1, $4.(404.(1. 1 in New York Produce. J ill IV. juav 1 n MIITT.r TTIr - v. C6lpta, 2,S( tub; creamery, hlKher 'than extras, 63(3Vic: extra. 2i2Ue: fir.t. MO(mc; nackinar atorlc. p.urm.nt m.u Eirga Irregular; unchanged. Cheeee Firm; unchanged. Poultry Live. not nuntait- ifr.. vwujr bjju unensngea. "it had to come.. The high price of real estate made us do it, along with the evermounting costs of shovels, spades and other essentials to the construction of graves." Fred Larkin of the West Lawn cemetery: also admits that his asso ciation had to raise the ante on their holes in the ground. But West Lawn and Forest Lawn are the only two in Omaha, where the prices have increased. ''Profiteering is unknown here," says D. C. Callahan, superintendent at Prospect cemetery.- "Our lots are the same price they were 30 years -ago. It costs you two and three times as much to build a cozy.littje home 'way out in the suburbs now as it did 10 years ago, but out here let me show you some of our choice " "Wait," we interposed, "were not looking for anyfhing- out here. JvVait a few years. We prefer to battle with life for some time yet." Mr. Callahan has been with Pros pect cemetery for 30 years. He has no memory of an advance in price for lots there in that time. , You Can't Be Ejected., - "I consider this the best location in Omaha for a permanent home," continued Mr. Callahan. , .. , "After all, a man spends more time here after he makes up his mind to come, than he does in any other place.' And now is the time to make reservations for homes here, because if things keen mount ing on the price list as they have in the past, we will be forced to advance our revenue in order to stay modern., Lots in Mt. Hope cemetery sell tor tne same price they did 10 years ago, and a canvass of other sextons and superintendents and secretaries of cemetery associations disclosed the Cheering fact that their. Quota tions, too, are uncnangea. WYOMING RANCHER BUYS DENVER CIVIC CENTER FOR $lo0 Cops Interfere When "New, Chicago Produce. Chicago. May 16. Butter Lower: eggs uncnangea; receipt. 25,027 case, Poultry Alive; unchanged. New York Rarer. New Tork. Mar IS. Raw Surer oinmg; cemriiurai, zi.oic nne granu lated, l.$026.oOc. I ' Iiondoa Money. London, May 15. Bar Silver (Id per ounce. Money IK per cent. Discount Rates Short and three month' bills (H per cent. OIL LAND IS r THE BEST AND SAFEST INVESTMENT People are buying oil lots, in stead of oil stock or leases. Why? Because they get something for toeir money. In the George C. Eselin Tract the investor is pro tected by a gilt edged bond. The plan is safe and just to all. The plan, official prospectus and 'deeds are recorded at . Independence. Kansas. No one can change the plan without first buying all the lot owners out at their own price. Every lot owner will get dividends from every paying well on the en tire 160-acre tract We are sell ing only enough lots to pay for the land and developments. More wells, more oil, more dividends. Get fn now and you wil be in on the first dividend from our Well No. 1, which is being connected up to the pipe lineVv i No officers are paid any salaries. No charter fees. No 'stock for sale. No assessments. Wsite for prospectus today. No obligation for asking for information. Write or call at home office, 522 Paxton Block, Omaha, Nebraska. Adv. Unruffled Optimist With Stepladder; family Laughs With Scorn at H. C. of L. 1 - niisi iii ii ii iH iifTiwMiii Owner" Orders Others to Get Off Grass in His Yard. . Denver, May 15. Denver's " civic center, including several acres of velvety greensward, an artistic open air Greek theater and thousands of ornamental lights that cost the tax payers of Denver several million dollars to operate was worth the entire bankroll of Mr. Joseph Six. oo, ot i hermopolis, Wyo. Joseph decided after an extended Conversa tion with two suave gentlemen who . j i . i i ' . . if- t- . iiitrouuccu tnemseives to ivir. oix as he sat on a park bench feeding the sparrows. Mr. six had just arrived from Thermopolis and his roll, aggregat ing S180, was turned over to the two strangers in exchange for an im pressive sheaf of documents that contained the "bill of sale" of ten ver's beautiful downtown park by the "Denver Civic Center Co., Inc.," to Mr. Joseph Six for the sum and corsideration of $ 180. Orders Others Off Grass. ine real estate transaction was made public when Police Officer Reno asked Mr. Six, where he got the authority to order all the people oft the grass. I guess I gotta right to tell em to get off my grass if I want to." retorted Mr. Six. "I own it, don't- lr -v.- -' "Don't try Xo kid me," the officer replied; "you know you don't own thp Civic Center." Huh! I don't, don't I?" and To- eph drew himself up proudly. Well, just glance at this bill of sale, an' everything." Produces His Bill of Sale. Mr. Six produced the auspicious looking folio which proclaimed ''To Whom It May Concern" that Mr. T - l O' ' 1 V aascpn oix was inc soie owner oi ne Denver Civic Center and that he had purchased it that very day. At police headquarters Mr. Six explained how he had accepted the offer of the two strangers and "pur chased" the park for $180. He said it was all the money he had and was held until friends in Wyomine cou d forward carfare back to the ranch near Thermopolis. Business Men to Practice . Songs for C. of C. Trade Trip "fjingin' school" will ooen at the Chamber of Commerce , some time this week for the instruction of Omaha business men who will make the trade excursion that leaves the city a week' from Sunday. - tveryone ot the excursionists will have to, attend, the committee in charge insists. 7 Mo alibis go, H. o. Hoel, chair man of the trade extension com mittee declared, Everyone who makes the trip has to know .the songs, and those whp can t sing will be taught how. Bee Want Ads Are Best Business Boosters. Pat' him down as an unruffled Op timise With a "stepladder" family of eight children, he laughs at the high cost jpf living and goes about his work as a machinist with an un wrinkled brow. -,.. "Ten can't live as cheaply as one, of course," says William B. Benson, 2866 Ellison avenue. "But I should worry. I leave the worrying to Mrs. Benson." ' "There's no worrying to be done," Left to right on the stepladder: Phyllis, Edmund, Georgia, .Cather ine, Doris, Edalyn, Myrtle and Wil liam B. Benson, jr. Insert: William B. Benson', op timist, 2866 Ellison avenue, and Mothe Benson. declares. Mrs. Benson. "We get along very nicely." Foraging enough sugar to supply a-family j of 10 is sometimes a diffi cult task! in these days, she admits. "But I guess our dispositions jii a. . m wouian i pe soured even it we couldn't get it at all," is her cheer- tui comment. - Father Benson is 47 years old and Mother Benson 44 years old They were married in Omaha in April 23 years aero. Their stepladder octet of seven girls and one boy range in age from to it years, rnyiiis, 4 years old is the baby.- Edmund is 8; Georgia! 12: Katherine. 14: Doris. 16: EHalvn 18; William, jr., 20, and Myrtle, 22 years oia. Marriage Mill Grinds on Despite Old JH. C. L. and . . Mothers - in - Law Et Al. Douglas County Collected $22 a Day Last Year from Prospective Bridegrooms ' for Permits to Enter ; T ;the Charmed Circle of Newlyweds. Opinions : .;. Vary as to Whether "Big Show" Worth $2 Ad mission or Is Just a "Holdup." j , r Do You Want To Make Money? I made over $30,000 last year single-handed. Am in a position to make, above all expenses, from $150,000 to $300,000 within the -nextf six months, which I will divide between four or five ladies or gentlemen who will advance $200,000 to $300,000 and join me as silent partners. Your money will be protected to the last dollar. People with money, this is jvour opportunity to make some quick ami legitimate money. You will have to act quick. State , the r ount you can furnish. " Box G-27, Omaha Be ; .Twenty-two dollars a day was col lected by Douglas county last year for marriage licenses thrcugh the hymeneal bureau of the county fudge's office. j 'iwo bucks is the price of4a ticket on the matrimonial limited now, same as it was 20 years ago. Wittf the exception of water, electric cur rent, gold dust, the Saturday Eve ning Post and air, the marriage li cense is the only thing that has not increased in price during recent years. Yea, bo, and it s the -same price to one and all. Tall or short, young or old, white, black or medium, fat or thin, beautiful or not,, they all pay two dollars. bucks, beans. smackers, iron men,shekles or si moleons and'pass upon the inside" to see the big show of matrimony. There are many connictine reports about this show, some declaring it is undoubtedly the greatest exhibi tion in the civilized universe, others ing to it and that it isn't worth the price of admission. , , . Comfortable Annual Income, The admission price which Doug las county collects amounts to ' a comfortable sum annually. Last year it footed up to $6,640, approxi mately $Zt a day for every day the box omce was open. In 1918 "Cupid" Stubbendorf col lected only $4,854 in license fees, for 2,427 licenses, this being due to the fact that so many of our swains were participating in the well-known European war. Thel had enougn war, so to spealc, without getting married. . Mr. Stubbendorf keeps in a little book a record of his sales, of mar riage licenses to the unsuspecting public.. This shows, that during th eight years ending with 1919 he sold a toml of 21,759 licenses at a flat ra'te of.$2 each, a. total of $43,518". If this sum were given to some happy pair it would enable them to set ur housekeeping in a modest way nowadays and possibly to pay the rent for ,two or three months m advance. "Cupid" Has a Monopoly. Mr. Stubbendorf has a monopoly on marriage licenses in uougia? county. Nobody else can issue any. Of course, in marriage it isn t the original cost, but the "upkeep" that runs into money. Besides, the $2 isn t even all of the original, cost There's the cere mony that has to be performed. Tha county has a ceremony department and Ijjst year 401 couples went from the license counter directly into the office of County Judge Crawford, where the marriage ceremony was performed at a modest but fixed charge of $3. Judge Crawford doesn't brag about it, but he runs far ahead of "Marrying Parson" Savidge in num ber of wedding ceremonies per formed. . In the first four months of this year he married 205 couples, an average of more than two for each working day.; The county also gets these fees, which last year amounted to $1,203. Some "Tightwad" Bridegrooms. Preachers have no "fixed charge and get anywhere from. 50 cents or less to $100 or more. Bridegrooms have been knowrt to gt the cere mony for nothing by oromisine to "send a check" and then forgetting to do so. The official county ceremonv. priced at $3, is the shortest known. K takes just 33 seconds. This fig ures out to 9 cents per second for the judge's time. It happens thus, for example:,, , 2:11:00 Couple enters judge's of fice. 1 2:11:01 Judge dashes in front other door, coming from the court room, where he is hearing a case. 2:11:03 "Do you take this man to be your lawful husband?" asks the judge. 2:11:06 "Yes, sir," says the bride. 2:11:08 "Do you take this woman. CAN SINGLE GIRL CLAIM ATTENTION OF MARRIED MAN? Nurse's Testimony in Divorce Trial Raises Moral Question -rOpjnion. Is Divided. Boston, May 15. Is it possible for a married man to pay attention to a single woman? ' Is it nice of the woman to receive such attentions? iuiss Margaret Merrv, a voung nurse, testified at the divorce trial of Harry M. Garfield that she had gone riding with Garfield when she knew he was married, and that she "thought it was perfectly all right for a respectable eirl to. have the friendship of a respectable man ivei! if he was married." "Are such matters becoming more lax, due to the new freedom of woman and woman's active associa tion with man in all walks of life?" "Is the old order chantrine? Js it all right?" These questions were put to three representative women. Two Mrs. Marie Dewinar FaeJ- ten and Mrs. True ( Worthy White "irae r i 4 !-at nannAa a n t ae ' r. X vaai uaoa V- V vv 4 III KV-Villiaa a I .1SIT T . O. Willi U1UUC1 ITSTI V divorce. It takes, weeks, and some- I tions, it is all right for a single worn times months, to get a divorce and Ian to receive certain attentions from the the to be your lawful wife?" asks judge. ; 2:11:11 "I Mo," responds groom. , . - ' '.; , 2:ll:13T-"Have you got the ring?" asks the judge. ; 2:11:15 "Yes," says the groom, fumbling in several podkets. He finds it at last . ' ' 2:11 o-" Put it on her finger," says the judge. . ' 2:11:31 "I- now pronounce you man and. wife," says the judge, and dashes back to his court room. . Very Simple Matter. Yes, indeed, my children, getting married is extremely simple. Quick and cheap compared with getting a it costs about as much as the law yers think you have. But there is another story. Why snouia that be mentioned in a story aDout marriages.' How absurd 1 And in spite of divorce statistics, the institution of marriage is be coming more nonular everv vpar One chap married two women right here in Omaha within three months. He is now tarrying for from one to seven years at a large, institution just south of Lincoln. Neb. But in legitimate marriages, Clerk atuDbendort says all signs point to ivtu as a oanner year and he confi dently expects to self ' more' than 4.00Q licenses before the close , of business pecember 31. Prominent Politicians Act as Pallbearers at Funeral of CoHsimo Chicago, May 15. Prominent pol ticians, a, judge and leadine busi ness men mingled with gunmen and underworld characters who had acknowledged "Big Jim" Colisimo as one ot their rulers, in serving as pallbearers at the funeral this morn ing of the murdered cafe proprietor viaaa 4aiiu. Iicaucu T.UC lu- neral procession oast the famous cate which bore his name. .. . Word was received here today xnai nis nrst wite was en route from Los Angeles to Chicago. She has declared that 'she can throw no i: l . . - iikui on me- mvsierv surrnnnfiincr nis muraer last luesday evening m his- restaurant. Four suspects are being held by uic puncc. . f Nonpartisan League ; Endorses State Ticket r- At Fargo Convention Fargo. N. D.. Mav'l5. An entire state ticket, headed by. Governor Lynn J. Frazier, and candidates for congress at the June 30 .primary, were endorsed by the state conven tion of the national Nonpartisan league here Friday. . . - , Drl E. F. Ladd,-president of the North Dakota Agricultural college at Fargo, was named as the league's candidate for Unifed States, senator. Dr. Ladd received 44 votes and United States Senator A. J. Grbnna nine. The vote followed an address by A. C. Townley, president of the league, who asserted Gronna was not for the league. - -V , -;-.-' William Lempke, vice president of theleague, was endorsed by accla mation for attorney general. Explorer From Liberia to f; ;i Speak Here Sunday Night Harry F. Dean, a resident of Liberia, world traveler and explor er, will lecture tonight at the People's church, - 513 North Eighteenth street. Foster is a native American and went to Africa rhort than 30 years ago. He has hundreds of photo graphs taken with his own camera and wil) illustratye .tljenvjn connec tion with his lecture. " . a married man. The third woman, Dr. Adelaide M Abbott, replied with a most en phatic "no." There's Worrying In V France, Too, Over the . Next Apartment House Paris, May 15. The difficulty of finding 'an apartment or a house itjv which to live in Paris is growing more serious every day r.nd is at tracting columns of attention inthe newspapers. Two French generals are now dis puting possession of an apartment in the Rue Marignan. General Reg nier, the present occupant, has re ceived notice that he . must move and surrender possession to General Battaille, .who has offered more money. But General Rcgnier, who is the father of six children, cannot find another apartment and has re fused to move. The two generals went to court about it. The judge settled the matter by granting Gen eral Regnier a delay until October 15, on condition that he allow Gen eral Battaille one room in which to live. The lodging crisis reaches even to the Island of Madagascar, accord ing to a French colonial officer now serving there. The rebuilding of cities in the dev astated region of France, has drawn away thousands of building labor-! ers.. Many were killed in the war. Thousands of carpenters have turned their attention to furniture making, a business almost interrup ted during the war, and which they find much 'more profitable than their former trade. But the chief factor hindering building operations in Paris is the high cost of both labor and material. ,' Corn Continues Its Upward Climb During the Past Week 'chlcaro, May 15. prsplrs som hesi tancy at times, the upward sweep of prices In the corn market has continued this week. Railway traffic, difficulties were largely responsible and so too waa activity of export call ror breadaturra. Compared with a week ao. corn quota tions this mornlnr showed 1 to IVic ad vance, oats varied from lc decline to 4o lain, and provisions wer up 2Mc to 60c. j Persistent embarrasament met In ob taining corn here available for immediate uae focussed the attention of traders al most continually on questions of trans portation. Hopes of a gradual betterment of aupplles were roused by orders on sev eral western roads that preference he Riven to train loadlnir, but th congestion failed to yield, and peMlmtam as to th outlook was voiced In statements on the board of trade by one of the moat promt. nent railway officials. Action In th Canadian wheat board In hoisting the t". WILSON'S STAND ON PEACE PACT SCORED BY REED V Missouri Senator Declares No body Outside of Lunatic Asylum Believes Unquali - tied Approval Possible. Cblrar Trlban-Omaha Boa Leased Wire. Washington, May 15 If Presi dent Wilson dictates the platform of the San Francisco convention it will be the "epitaph of present day democracy," because "nobody outside a lunatic asylum believes unqualified approval of the treaty possible," Senator R.ee'd of Missouri, democrat, declared in the senate Friday. 1 The senator's speech j- virtually concluded the general debate on the peace resolution and cleared the way for the final vote in the senate to day. Senator Reed declared he was going to vote for the Knox resolution and indications are the measure will be passed by a majori- , ty of about eight or 10 votes. "No sane man believes it pos sible, Mr. Reed said, "that the peace treaty can be ratified until after March 4, 1921. It the democratic party writes into its platform a declaration for unconditional ac ceptance of the treaty, there cannot be such a change made m senate membership as would prevent one third from rejecting it. A change in the senate to ratify the treaty could not be accomplished before three years after March 4, 1921. Nobody outside a lunatic asylum believes unqualified approval of the treaty possible. Position Insures Defeat. - "I woifder 'what will become of democratic candidates for re-election to. the senate if the treaty is made a party issue. I would not like to predict their fate. Does not the position taken by the president in sure defeat?" Raps All But Six. Taken in one wav or another. Mr. Reed said, all but six democratic senators come under the president's "If thev deserve it. thev oue-ht tn be incontinently put out of office," said Senator Reed. Mr. Reed read a list of those emocratic senators, who at last voted to ratify, the treaty, "incurring all the " dishonor imputed by the president." "They are dishonored, disgraced and damned," said Senator Reed. i "The olatform as written will he- the epitaph of present day democracy." hree Creighton Men Place In Jesuit Latin Contest Creighton university scoooed three laces in the annual intercollegiate Latin contest held last month be tween all the Jesuit colleees of the Missouri province. Leo Wearing, a sophomore in the arts deoartment. won fifth place; Ralph Kharas, a freshman, won sixth place, and George Hennigan, also a sophomore. won ninth place. ine colleges that, participated ere: M. Louis university. St. Louis, Mo.: St. Xavier colleee. Cin cinnati, O.; Loyola university, Chi cago, III.: St. Marv's tolleee. St. Marys, Kan.; Creighton university, Omaha, Neb.; University of Detroit, Detroit, Mich.; Marquette university, Milwaukee, Wis.; St. Ignatius col lege, Cleveland, O.; St. John's uni versity, Toledo, O.: Campion col lege, Prairie du Chien, Wis., and Rockhurst college, Kansas City, Mo. Creighton Glee Club Will Reappear Here on May 20 After an interim of two years the Creighton University Glee club has again .cOme to the fore and will present its eighth annual concert on the evening of May 20, at the Creighton auditorium. The Omaha Symphony Study orchestra and the Creighton Saxa phone quintet will assist. One of the novelties will be a six-hand piano stunt. Chicago Potatoes. Chicago, May 15. Potatoes Steady; re- ' celpts, J3 cars; northern white sacked and bulk, 7.JS7.t0; Canadian, S.O0 5.75: new, steady: Florida barrels. No 1. $15,001S.50; No. 2, I1J.00; Texas trl uinphs, 19,00 cwt. Real Estate Transfers pr of Canadian wheat S5e to 40c bushel counted as a decided further bull ish factor In the corn market, and put special emnhaala on subsequent urgent European Memsnd for wheat and flour from the United State. . . Oata were weakened bv Canadian coin. petition, and by weather likely to promot growth. , Provision ympsthlr.ed with th ad vance of corn. Omaha Hav Market. No. 1 upland prairie hay, $2S.0rff J7.M: No. 1 Upland prairie, hay, UI.0ftf J4.00: No. S upland prairie hay, tls.noifrSO.00: o. 1 midland nrntrte hav. S24.n0ff SS.flO; No. 2 midland prairie hay, S21.OOff2S.0O; No. i lowland pralTte hay, H7.OOifMt.00; No. 2 lowland prairie hay. H3.00ffiH.00; ino: a inwiana prairie nav, jio.oinrii.nn; choice alfalfa; S33.0D ff 34.00 : No. 1 alfalfa. t.ii.nnirii. un; aiannarfl airsira. 11 nojr aii.v: 2 -airaira, sis.uon sz.oo; ftlfalfK 14.O0M.n0; nst straw, i la.vu; wnet.iraw, ?.&oiBll.60, 2 dOJr i and No. 3 I Warn 10,00 I Hu I blv( Loul W. Clark and wife to Mattl Rosenblum, Douclss at.. HI ft.' . of 4sth St., s. a., 60125.6 ft I 6.4B0 Paul B. Wulff and wife to Benson Realty Co.. Blnney t.. 160 ft, e. of 61st t.. . .. 60123 ft 1.I0A Jchn E. Moucka and wife to Vac lav Haluia, 13th at., 132 ft. n. of Martha at;, e. a., 66x134 "4 ft.... 1,900 Magnus Erlckion to Levi C. Khep ard, Corby at., 230 ft. w. of 68th St., . s,, 60x130 ft... i J.TtO Walter Kolacny and wife to Adolph Muall, n. w. cor. 10th and Ban croft t., 42x60 Und. 1,825 Wnlter Kolacny, Gdn. to Adolph Muall, n. w. cor. 20th and Ban croft St., 42x60. Und. 87S Paul Balxovaky and wife to Ignats Jeaones and wife, 36th at., 240 ft. n. of P at., w. a., 40x110 ft 1,100 Power-Heafey Coal Co., to th Noura Oil Co., ti. . cor. 7th and Leavenworth St.. 31x112 ft. 13,100 Gecrge Zellnskl and wife to Mar cel Sosnowskl, 37th at., 0 ft. a. of I at., w. a., 60x130 ft 1,100 William Bone anal wife to Borney Wlssblood, 20th at , 132 ft. s. of Clark stt., . a., 33x140 ft 110 Anton H. Swanaon to Fred M. Berggren, Castelar at., 400 ft. w. of 33th St., a. s.. S0xl23 ft 2,100 Ashel B. Bandle and wlf to Amer ica A. Stuart n. v. cor. Flor ence blvd. and Ellison ave 110x120 ft ,00 Lloyd E. Converse to Margaret Buttery, 16th St., 61 15-16 (t. s. of Locust St., . s., 4Sxl70 ft 2,000 Jchn .O. Seetus and wife to George W. Kinder, 87th St., 376 ft. s. of Davenport at., e. a., 80x127.6 ft.? 3,400 Chsrlea W. Martin and wife to Harry 8. Barthold, n. e. cor. 25th ave. and Whttmore. 43x114 ft 1(0 Jesale Novak and husband to Katie A. -Fltigerald, e st, 60 ft. e. of 29th St., . .. 60x75 ft 1,100 Mary A. Knrlght and husband to Katie-A. Fltsgerald. Missouri ave , 40 ft. w. of llth at., s. ., tOx 100 ft 1,300 John Oliver and wlf to James A. Howard. !d St. 200 ft. n. of Orant St., e. s.. 80x123 ft 1,300 Joe Margulea and wife to La he Ru bensteln et al. Hamilton at., 160 . ft. e. of 26th st s. ., 30x 127.0 ft 1,000 William R. Hennett to Jennl B, Brown, 17th st, 225 ft. of Leav nwnrth St., w. a., 54x14 ft..., I Mary B. Wade to Jennl B. Brown, 27th it., 225 ft. . of Leaven worth St.. w. a.. 66x141 ft 1 Casper E. Tost et al. to Bessie l J,owman. 33d at.. 100 ft. n. of Pacific at., e. .. 50x183 ft 1 Frank Barker and wlf to Edward l ee and wife, n. a. cor. Decatur and Military av 70x160 It J0 rren s. Frank and wife to Marl ller. n. w. cor. Fontenelle d. and Jaynea St., (0x142 ft I t ,t ' (P f f- T- I,