iyi.,!JI(v(tiv!lWi'H " VOL. 50 NO. 63. mm new OH WRANGEL Advice Concerning Policy of Anti-Botsiievik Leader in South Russia Reaches Wash ington Authorities. PLANS TO HOLD PRESENT TERRITORY IN CRIMEA Believes Slackening of Red Authority Will le Brought About by Checking Control Exercised by Moscow. thlcara Tribune-Omaha, Bee Leased Wire. ' Washington, Aug. 29. More com plete information than has hereto fore reached the United States con cerning the policy of General Wran gel, antibolshevik leader in South Russia, has been received here in an authoritative quarter. It has been known for some time that General Wrangel, unlike his predecessor, General Dauikin, and Admiral Kolchak, does not contem plate any extensive military offen sive against the Moscow governs iv;Ctit.- but.- on the contrary, intends ti hold his ground in the Crimea and- adjactant territories as antibol slievist nucelus, pending further de velopment of the situation within s,ovict Russia. ' According to the present informa tion, General Wrangel anticipates that the eventual slackening of the bolshevik authority 'will be accom plished by a shortening of the ra tlins of the control exercised by Moscow. This shortening , of the ...mi ...... .11. - ,4:,....... i I :1U1U9 Will JCSUIl 111 UJ9U111S ui IVl- ritory, from which the bolshevik control radius has contracted, drop ping off from the soviet structure. , :y Anarchy Threatened. ;'. Were there no other government functioning in Russia than that of the bolsheviki, according to Wran ,gl's views, these territories dropped from soviet Russia would fall into a state of' anarchy. If, on the other lifttld, . the antibolshevik elements can' maintain a , liberal democratic . whose administration the masses of tnt people arc content1, mere win De nucelus which can gather m. the trtcts from which the soviet con- has passed and supply to them admimstrative organization which air eadvis Successfully m operation. Denikin and Kolchak both are be lieved by- Wrangel. it is stated, to have made the mistake of concen trating their entire effort to gain military success while neglecting the administrative organization of their territories. Wrangel, it is affirmed. is therefore following a policy of . giving his first attention to. the es tablishment of a government which will bring contentment and satisfac tion to the people under its author i:.v, using his military forces .only for the maintenance of his position. In this way, through agrarian re forms and other measures designed to meet the needs and desires of the people. . General Wia.tgel. it is said, is seekine to attain a degree of stab ility in . order to be welcomed by other parts of Russian territory which, eventually released from so viet rule, would otherwise be left in a. chaotic state. Refugees Need Care. ) One of the reasons also given for this move was the necessity of feed ing and caring for thousands of refu-gf-.t concentrated in the Crimea. These refugees, it was held, were for tU,jhiost part men and women of the intellectual classes, whose preserva tion was a necessity for the good of the future Russian nation. ' Atso, it is said to be one of the Chief efforts of Gen. Wrangel- to moid the influence of an entourage -f military reactionists. While both Pentkm and Kolchak are said to -L.iavc been men of liberal and demo cratic ideals, the rature.of thcif re spective regimes led to an undue in fluence on the part of the purely mili tary circles, in which in all nations there exists a (strong ,te,ndcy to ward military autocracy. 47t is as serted that in this possibility lies the greatest danger to. the Wrangel g6y :rnment and that every precaution is being taken against it. Anothef development in the Rus s'lait situation which has aitracted at tention here is the recently reported irilllUU I1VIC 19 UlC ICVI.IIUJ iVvuvu I passage across Armenia of two bot-4 ,,ffl,n, tn -ff,rt : shjviki infantry regiments to effect a junction with the turtctsn national ist forces of Mustaoha Kerr.al Pasha. In a well informed quarter it is de clared that there need be no undue I alarm either regarding possible co hj operation oh an extended scale be- INFORMATION tween the Soviets of Russia and the Turkish elements opposing the peace , treaty enforcement, or. contrary to the general opinion of the bolsheviki accomplishing 'a strong hold upon any of the Mohammedan peoples of the British empire. ) ' Heavy Rains Cause Delay - Of Union Pacific Trains Because of heavy rains Union Pa cific passenger trairs from the west were rtmning on a late schedule last night. Overland - Limited . No. 2. eastbound, due to arrive in Omaha at 8:30 was an hour and a half late. The delay was due to high water which washed over the tracks near Lane, 12 'miles west ot Umaha m the Pappio valley. The waters dam aged the block system, railroad ot- ncjais believe.. Rebel Chief Killed. . Rome. Aug. 29. M. Ramadana, rebel chief in the district of Mcsu reata, Tripoli, has been defeated and killed by government forces, says a telegram from Tripoli. Two thou sand of the followers of the rebel leader also were killed or captured. trd n Kn-CIll Mttttr UtJ 2t. Oaafia P. 0. Uidtr Act ! Wren Mrs. Harding Works Long Hours Putting Bricks In Her Palace of Dreams Multitude of Details of Campaign Turned Over to Wife of Republican Candidate Mail Alone Is Problem in Itself,' But Every Letter Receives Answer Senator Has Little Time for Front Porch Gossip. By PHILIP KINGSLEY. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee l.eaaed Wire. Marion, O., Aug. 29. Senator Harding's "front porch" campaign is not all lolling in a hammock, smok ing cheroots and reading light sum mer literature while the August lo custs sing in the maples. A view of the wide, deep porch in Mount Ver non avenue seldom includes the tall figure of the senator, who has been christened White Eagle by the In dians. It takes further search to find him. Mrs. Harding is more often in view. She is accessible to all. Fliv ver parties stop. The senator is busy, "Jimmie" Sloan smilingly in forms the head of the family. "Ma" looks disappointed and the little boy digs his heel iu the gravel. Then Airs. Htrding appears, and her gen nine greeting restores happiness. Possibly she goes into the house next door and appearwith the sen ator. She has been named "SnOw Bird' meaning busy worker, by her Indian friends, and she justifies the descrip tion. The Indians have a psychic way of getting at people's character. The candidate's wife is putting bricks in the palace of her dreams, not merely dreaming. No Gossip for Senator. The senator's habitat'is a small back office in the house next door. No front porch gossip for him. His iron gray head is bent over a desk. He is working as hard as a cor poration executive. The phones ring and his secretary pops in and out, the typewriters click and the mes sengers run to and fro. Half a dozen secretaries, 10 stenographers, and still no room and no time for leis ure. "Have I no more rights as a pri vate citizen?" he asked in plaintive voice one day. , , ' "You have not," said Mrs. Har ding, sternly. The mail has to come to the Har ding's with a wagon nowadays. Great sacks of newspapers which the senator has no time to read, stacks of letters which take time and thought. Strings of - "important" vistors, conferences, long distance telephoning. Speeches to write, pes tiferous newspaper men to attend to, interviews to prepare. This is the front porch campaign. The mail alone is a task. It takes one boy all day-to open- H. Then it is passed to Capt. F. W. Parker, an ex-service man, who sits all day reading and indicating what letters are to go to the senator and what HARDING SURE TO CARRY MIDWEST, j JOHNSON SAYS North Dakota Congressman Precfrtts Big Victory for Republicans This Fall. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Uee Leased Wire. 'Washington, Aug. 29. Senator Harding will carry the middle west with a big majority, in the opinion Of jt( Dakc tep. Royal iT. Johnson of South ota, ex-service man, and chair man of the house committee, which investigated war expenditures in France. - . Mr. Johnson has just returned from a nonpolitical speaking tour in 11 of the middle western states. He says ,the west is tired of "Wilson and Wilsonism. of internationalism, inflation and socialistic experiment under the direction of temperamental idealists." . Mr. Johnson said tho western peo ple had first regarded Governor. Cox as an independent, but they not re gard him as dominated by Wilson and such men as Pclmer, Baker, Daniels, Burleson and Post. In describing the impressions of his trip through the west, Mr. John son said: ' "If there is anything certain in politics, it is that Senator Harding will be the next president and that the republican party will gain great ly in representation in congress. The people of the west are for him. not because they know him particularly or have clear impressions of exactly .., MlJ 'tf 1 .JLil what h.c " d lf c'ect?td. " be" cause they arc through with U llson- ism, internationalism, inflation, and socialistic experiments under the di rection of temperamental idealists." l Stunt Aviator Killed When Plane Side-Slips ; Santa Rosa. Cal.. Aug. 29. Leon Ferguson, a commercial aviator and formerly a lieutenant in the Ameri can aviation forces overseas. waS I killed here when an airplane in which he was giving an exhibition fell from a height of about 500 feet. He was hanging by his hands from one of the wings of the plane which side-slipped. The pilot of the plane was only slightly hurt. Discover Still in Coffin; Undertaker Is Arrested ''Chicago, Aug. "29. Thomas Baro-skd.-an undertaker, was arrested when prohibition agents allege they found 27 gallons of whisky in the basement of his establishment and two stills, in a coffin. Ord Teachers Meet. Ord. Neb., Aug. 29. (Special.) The Valley county teachers' insti tute will begin Monday. The in structors for the institute will be Miss Eva B. Schuman, LeRoy Gilkerson and Professor Hoyt of Peru state nornial school. The Omaha 1901. tt (. IS7S. may be intrusted to the various sec retaries. In a little office near the upstairs landing Miss Kathleen Lawler takes care of Mrs. Harding's mail after it has been opened and read by the senator's wife. Miss Lawler got her training in handling matters of this kind under the late Senator Orville H. Piatt of Connecticut, Elihu Root and John Hay. Sixty per cent of the letters re ceived arc valueless. Mant' habitual letter writers who pester Washing ton officials yei. in and year out ap pear, but the letters"all are answered, many in a formal machine-like man ner. Such method of disposing of let ters is.1 of course,' well known in all big offices. But it lacks somewhere the human touch, andi that is sup plied in a remarkable degree in Mrs. Harding's way of dealing with her correspondents. Here is a letter showing the kind of work she is doing. It is in 're sponse to a letter written by a man 83 years of age, who tells her all about his record as a republican voter and shows how much he ad mires the senator. He wants to or ganize a campaign club in his town and asks for buttons and litho graphs. Sample of Work. Mrs. Harding reads the letter, written with such effort, and replies: "My Dear Mr. :' Your per fectly marvelous letter has done me a world of good, and I am delighted to know about you. and am more than plad that you thought to write me and let me know of the fine work in which you are engaged. You may be sure that I will have the litho graphs and buttons dispatched to you at once. I am sure your Har-ding-Coolidge club will be the pro nounced success it deserves to be. With much appreciation of your kind pcrAnal references to Mr. HSrding amPmany thanks for your support ami loyalty. I am, jour's sincerely." Writers seek to commit her on a political issue. She tactfully refers them to her husband's speech of ac ceptance. Anonymous letters come in, usually abusive or threatening. Astrologers and otl ers who read the future are frequent mail contributors. Gifts come -blue berries "from In dian river. Michigan; sugar cured ham from Virginia: peaches, water- melons, cakes with- "Hardinfr"f skil-. fully traced on top. Mrs. Harding never neglects to respond and what ever she says she will " do in her letter she always does. v SIX KILLED AND OVER 40 INJURED IN BELFAST RIOTS Cullingtree Road, in Unionist District, Scene of Sharp at x Fighting Saturday. Belfast. Aug. 29. Belfast's Satur day light was the worst since what is popularly known as the battle of Kashmir road. Si.w persons were ; killed and,nearly 40 wounded, many of Jhem seriously. All the killed j were young men, the victims of gun- I shot wounds. I Ballymacarrett, a suburb of Bel-j fact ricrrtirtrl flip Inrrl mavnr's appeal arfU remained fairly quiet, ! declaring that the one big question but Saturday. afternoon Cullingtree ! v:"" t f progress against reac road. abuttine Grosvcnor road, the ! tl011- He frequently predicted that unionist district, became the storm center. ' Later the battle shifted to the northern part of the city by way of Townscnd street, a long thorough fare extending from the falls to Old Lodge road. The latter and the up per parts' of Crumlin and Old Park roads were the centers of the fiercest fighting of the whole, especially the "Marrow Bone" the nickname of the nationalist enclave, at the top of Old Park road. Sinn Fciners in this neighborhood made an organized descent ott unionists in Crumlin road, smashing windows and firing into houses. Failure by the police to hold them back led to the summoning of mil itary aid. For , several hours arm ored cars were in action together with squads of soldiers and police and voile-? were poured Jito the crowd. After two hours of stiff fighting the Sinn Feiners were driven back into Brown quarters but sniping ! into the unionist quarters continued faf int0 suay morning.. , Pope Benedict Receives Knights of Columbus Rome, Aug. 29. Knights, of Co lumbus, with the addition of some American residents, - formed the croup of 300 Americans receive by Pope Benedict in the hall of the con sistory. " , ' Swiss guards, stationed at the door of the Vatican, rendered mili tary honors. They were conducted up the royal stair case to Clementine hall, which also wasj lined with Swiss guards. f ' The party was next ' conducted into the hall of the consistory. There they were received by the pope, who entered the hall dressd in white. Antisuffs call on Governor Roberts to Drop Nomination Murfreesboro, Tenn., Aug. 29. Resolutions calling on Governor Roberts to give upk. the democratic nomination for re-election because of his activities in the interest of the ratification of the suffrage amendment were adopted at a mass meeting of antisuffr-"i.r. OMAHA, MONDAY, , NAVAL WASTE ADMITTED BY ROOSEVELT Democratic Nominee Gives Sudden Close of War as Alibi' for Extravagance in His Department. 2,000 PEOPLE ATTEND AUDITORIUM MEETING Candidate Repeats Charges of $1 5,000,000 Campaign Fund For G. 0. P. Ticket Claims Montana Speech Misquoted. An open and admitted appeal to progressive republicans to vote for the democratic national candidates, was the keynote of Franklin D. Roosevelt, democratic candidate for vice president, in his speech at the Auditorium Saturday night. The five minute speakers who preceded him, including the chairman, W. H. Thompson of . Grand Island, who is national committeeman, Mayor Smith and James O'Hara, candidate for congress, all called the attention of the audience to the similarity of names. Theodore Roosevelt was eulogized, and at times it was dif ficult to determine whether the meeting was one of democrats or republicans. Mr. Roosevelt devoted the main part of his speech to repeating the charges of a $15,000,000 campaign fund which Governor Cox has al leged is being sought by the republi can committee. He declared he knew of the plan for districting the nation and assigning quotas months ago. It can never be too soon to make of this sort of thing one of the principal issues to be passed on by the verdict of the voters of the na tion," he declared. "Governor Cox has rendered a national service in dragging this foul thing into the light. I feel very certain that Ameri ca will not be cynical about it. Very few people .will say, 'Oh, well, this is just the usual campaign stuff. We have got past that kind of attitude of mind. ' Attacks, Old Guard. "The exposure of Will Hays' and his old guard clique ii of far more moment than a mere partisan at tack. It affects the foundations of our system of government. It is of far more moment than the election of; Governor Co and myself; it bring'-Hp-tlie- -immediate ; tt how to eradicate a known and proven sore iu our body politic. "An immediate remedy is needed. Senator Harding holds that remedy if he will only use it. He should dis charge at once Mr. Will Hays, his national chairman; Mr. Upham, his treasurer, and all others connected with raising this unholy fund. He should put in their places men who have ideals men who will see to.it that his campaign is conducted throughout on high American prin ciples and that money is raised and expended only in ways which are beyond criticism." 'An' audience of 2,000 people at tended the meeting, which formally opened the national campaign in Omaha. The youthful appearance of Mr. Roosevelt was striking. -His ac cent had in it a bit of the "down east" twists that tended to weaken his attitude of being one thoroughly at home west of New York. Attacks The Bee. "I. wish Mr. Harding and Mr. Coclidge would just come once west' of, the Mississippi river, he said, in the west would repudiate the men at the head of the republican party as when Theodore Roosevelt ran in 1912. . In explaining and defending his at titude on the league of nations, the candidate denounced The Omaha Bee for printing the story of his speech in Montana where the press associations announced that he had said that the United States controlled the rotes of a dozen Latin-American neighbors. He also called Congressman Britten of Illinois "a little whipper-snapper, ward 'heeler (Continued en Page Two, Column Two.) Farm Labor Shortages Predicted by Sugar Man J. F. McCreery of Greeley. Colo., Sabor.'superintendent of the Great Hestern Sugar company, while vis iting at the stockyards, said there was going to be great trouble in tut farm. labor situation next season due to the action of the Mexican govern ment in calling its subjects back to their native (soil to work out farm problems there. ' '.'It is up to the farmer to hang on to all his labor all winter," said Mr. . McCreery, "by fixing up and improving the living, quarters and making other inducements to hold them. Mexico has shut down on let ting families leave Mexico and since the . revolutions" are - mostly over, .Mexicans are not sib anxious to leave their own country. It is cs- I sential to get Mexican and other foreign labor in the beet fields as American help cannot be relied upon to stick through the hard beet culti vation and harvest seasons. We have no trouble in getting help for tlie mechanical ends of our sugar plants." ' Forty Injured When Seats At Base Ball Park Collapse Denver, Aug. 29. Nearly 4iLper sonswere injured, one of them criti cally, when a temporary grandstand atlhe Broadway base ball park col lapsed this afternoon. According to (officials of the park, there were abotit 600 persons iu the stznd when it fell. v DAILY BEg AUGUST 30, 1920. ... HUSBAND DIVORCES WOMAN WHO GAVE UP ALL F0R LOVE Artist Charges Aged Bride Left Him to Live in Paris. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee l.emed Wire. Chicago, Aug. 29. Mrs. Alice Clif ford Barney-Hemmick, 9 j'ears ago, gave up $5,000,000, a house in Wash ington and the friendship of her two daughters, Natalie and Laura for love. , - Today Christian D. Hemmick, her second husband, for whom she made the sacrifice, was granted a divorce by Judge Frank Johnston, jr. He testified she left him two years ago to make her home in Pari?. Washington1 society was surprised on Apr! 15, 1911, when cables from Paris announced that ' Hemmick, an artist, 26 years old, had rnarried Mrs. Alice Barney, 61 years old. the wid ow of Albert Barney of Dayton, a banker, who had accumulated a for tune of $10,000,000. Then came the news that Mrs. Hemmick had assigned all her Wash ington property, worth several mil lions, to her daughters in order to satisfy Hemmick, who was said to resent the insinuation that he was "marrying for money." Mr. and Mrs. Hemmick returned to Washington late in 1911. "We are going to live happily to gether if the newspapers .will let us alone," Hemick said at that time. "We have bell chased all over Eu rope by reporters." He testified today that when he ajked his wife to live with him in Pittsburgh, where he is the owner of the Pitts theater, she refused and without ado Mrs. Hemmick. now 70 years old, went to Paris. George B. Noble New . Assistant Professor At State University Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 29. (Special) George B. Noble, who has accepted a position in the international rela tions section of the political science department of the University of Ne braska, arrived in Lincoln Saturday to take up his work as assistant pro fessor. Mr. Noble is a graduate, of the University of Washington, where he won the Rhodes scholarship to Ox ford university in England. He spent three years at Oxford and returned to this country in 1916 as an assist ant in the department of political science at the University of Wiscon sin. In 1917 Mr. Noble went to the training camp at Fort Sheridan and was commissioned a lieutenant. He was then sent overseas to join the 42d division. He was wounded Tuly 28, 1918. and awarded the distin guished service cross for conduct under fire. " . After the signiiiR of the armistice Mr. Noble was sent on the commis sion to negotiate peace. Colonel Cutler, Chairman of Jewish Welfare Board, Dies Providence, R. I., Aug.- 29. The death in London yesterday of Col. Harry Cutler, chairman of the Jew ish Welfare board, was reported in a cable message received at his office here today. The cause of death as not given. He sailed for Europe two weeks ago on duties connected with the work of concentrating the graves of America's soldier over seas, in which he was engaged as a member of the war memorial borad ' Dutch Steamer Aground. San . Francisco, Aug. 29. The Dutch freighter Arakan, en route from Batavia, Jjtva, to San Francisco, was aground on a sandy beach one mile north of Point Reyes, about 30 miles north of San Francisco, ac cording to a wircles's Aessage from the enptamr II By Wall f I Mtr). Indie 4th lee. Dill, Dll 4th 2aaa (I vaarl. Dally art Suaaay. Getting Acquainted NaW-THE klTTV 1 WILL ALWAYS LIKE YOU IF YOU TREAT HIM NICE -- AND FEED HIM CHARGES THIRD DEGREE USED BY POLICE ON BOY Attorney for Youth Suspected; Of Robbery Files Complaint I Against Chief of I Detectives. I . I A complaint charging Acting Chief of liftectives A. C. Andtrsou with using "third degree methods" on Walter DavWfon, 20 years old. Thursday night," was filed with Po lice Inspector Andrew Pattullo yes terday by Thomas P. Curran. David son's attorney. Davidson, who has been living at the Harney hotel,' was arrested -at 6:15 Thursday evening by Detectives Wavriu and Whalen and Acting Chief Anderson. He was booked for investigation, and 'later' was taken to the chief's office where he was ques tioned by. Anderson and other de tectives regarding the robbery of the Goodrich Rubber and Tire company, which was looted a few nights ago of tires valued at $5,000. Curran says that he went to police station Thursday night, following Davidson's arrest, to arrange bonds for his client's release. He was told that there was no possibility of a bond being fixed for Davidson that night, he says. Later he went into the room adjoining the chief's room, where the detectives were question ing Davidson. Attorney Tells of Conversation. "I heard Anderson say. 'Are you going to tell us now or shall I hit you again?'" Curran asserts. Latec he says, he heard them tell the boy that they would take him out in his automobile and when he came back he would talk. Davidson is still in the city jail. He was charged Saturday with breaking and entering, but no bond has been announced for his release, according to Curran. Saturday night, 48 hours after An derson is alleged to have struck the youth, Davidson displayed a swoolen cheek and eyc,and a bruised spot on his arm. Three or four detectives,' besides Anderson, were in the room at the time that the alleged third degree was staged, the boy de clares. TwoSf the. detectives took him several miles in a car, but used no rough tactics then, he says.- . Says Chief Struct Him. He asserts that Anderson struck him several time in the fact with his fist. One of the blows knocked one of his teeth loose, he says. The bruise on his arm was caused when one of .the detectives, whom he docs not know by ' name, but whom he would be able to recognize, struck him. presumably with a "sap," ac cording to the youth. As the de tective struck him, he says, he was asked: "Does that hurt?" Following the filing of the com plaint by Curran.v Davidson was taken from the city jail before Chief of Police Eberstein and Inspector Pattullo, to whom he related the cir cumstances of the treatment given him Thursday night. 1 Chief Eber stein said that the . affair would be considered the firsf of the week. Police Commissioner Ringer said that he would not tolerate third degree methods in the police de partment, regardless of whether a man was 20 or 40 years old. "Such practices when broughfto my atten tion will be dealt with," he said. 1 Pat lyeff Increases Lead in 1 Texas Gubernatorial Race Dallas. Tax., Aug. 29. Pat M. Neff of Waco, continued to gain on Joseph W. Bailey, former United States senator from Texas for the gubernatorial nomination, according to returns tabulated from Saturday's democratic runoff primary. The Texas election bureau announced the following figures: Neff, 237,165; Bailey, 164,508. . . t?: Daily Oaty. U: 14. lit; Dally Oaly. 112: tuaday Oaly. U. LORD MAYOR OF CORK SENDS LAST MESSAGETO WORLD Urges People Not to Think of Masses and Prayers ' For Him. , By JOHN STEELE. Chieago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire. 4 London, Aug. .29. Terence Mac .Swency, voluntarily starving iu Brix ton prison, last night had conquered his cravingyfor food. Yesterday the .16th day of his hunger strike. With his checks sunken and tody nerv ously aquiver, he spurned the most delectable fo6ds, which lay teiript ingly ;arrauged on a table bes'ideni4 hcd. 1 he foods included ctioice meats, chicken, dainty pasteries and candies. , ' This statement was made bv Act ing Mayor of Cork Liam de Roiste: i"MacSeney is calm and thoughtful. He is thinner, more sunken of face His last message to the world tells rec to say: i '"It i.s in my mind to say that nconle nfust never, think of masses and prayers for" me and the princi ples 1 light lor. those whose minds are on a world filled only with thoughts of politics and the calculating moves on the political chess board cannot understand the heroic self-immolation of this man. Terence Mac- Sweney ma- die, but Iris spirit will live as an example ot mans selt sacrifice fof high motives." Quiet prevailed around the prison at a late hour tonight, and no fur ther unruly demonstrations ' are ex pected. The Times this morning contains, a remarkable letter from Bishop Conalan of Cork, appealing to the newspaper to 'use its influence td secure the release of MacSweney. Bishop Conalan is known as a vio lent Sinn Feiner, hut his letter is moderately phrased, -while, at the same time, it includes a striking in dictment of British policy toward Ireland. Seek Army Officers In Connection With' Shortage of $48,789 St. Louis, Aug. 29. Two St. Louis army officers are being sought by military authorities in connection with the disappearance of $48,789 from the quartermaster corps of the United States army it became known when the local police received an army bulletin containing a request for their arrest. Lieut. H. J. Brakcr, it is charged in the bulletin, disappeared from Camp Holabird, Baltimore, with $30,000 set aside for the civilian pay roll in that camp. The second officer sought on a charge of absconding with funds be longing to the quartermaster corps is Cap. Jacques Morrefl. He is ac cused of misappropriating $17,789. Take Steps to Restrict Use of Firearms in Spain . Madrid,. Aug. 29. Strict measures are to be taken to restrain the fre quent use of firearms, it is an nounced by the government. Ac cording to latest Information, over 3,000,000 persons in Spain carry loaded revolvers. Newspaper reports Wiow wherever strikes ot other disturbances occur, firearms are almost alwavs used. with frequently fatal consequences. The Weather v - Forecast. Nebraska Generally fair; much change in temperature. Hourly Temperatures. not S . m.... a. m.. , . T a. m... . a. re.,.. - m- P 1 a. m..T. II a. m.. . . ..4 ,.3 .. ..7 1 p. m.. S p. m. X p. m. . 4 p. m.. 5 p. IB.. n. m.. 7 a. m.. ..75 It .tt p. m. . EnTS"-"" THREE C REPUBLICANS DEMAND COX "ME tOCD" Party Leaders Say Governor Will Be Called on to Prove Campaign Charges Before Investigating Committee. REQUEST PROBE INTO DEMOCRATIC FINANCES Want to Know How Many Ohio Men With War Con tracts Summoned ' to Con tribute to Campaign Fund. Clilraco Tribune-Omaha Be Ienied Wire. Chicago, Aug. 29. Officials of the republican party do not propose that James M. Cox shall get away with his- charges of "big interests" and "corruption' funds." It was in dicated qlearly today that Governor Cox must make good his, accusa tions must "shoot or give up the gun." When the senatorial investigating committee assembles here Monday, the republican chieftains will lay all their cards, Jjaces up, oh the table and will demand that the committee go thoroughly into the democratic campaign funds, methods o col lection and the identity of those be hind the democratic campaign. They will also demand the personal at tendance of Governor. Cox to make good his charges. , , Clark Eager To Testify. George 11. Clark, chairman of the Ohio republican executive - commit tej, aski that he be called to testify tx to tta republican side of the thing in Ohio and continued: "At the same time, I demand that the ; officials, financial and other wise, of the democratic organiza tion, be placed under oath and com pelled to show. Item by item, their receipts and expenditures and spe cifically that they be required to tell how many Ohio business men, regardless- of party affiliations, who had remunerative war contracts with the national government, have been . summoned to make contribu tions of 1,000 or more to the demo cratic campaign fund." , Democrats Take Lid Off." , "Who is running the democratic campaign?" asked Mr. Upham. "They kicked out their best man; Homer S. Cummings, right at-th j start and they have White; asTT sorl .1 or iigurencaa. vi xne start or tne campaign, long before the nomina tions, Col. William Boyce Thomp son, whose job it is to raise money for the republican cafmpaign, an nounced that no contributions ex ceeding $1,000 would be accepted. At the same time the democrats took the lid off completely, placing no limit." Congressman Fred A. Britten, who has been summoned to appeal before the investigating committee Monday, asserts that the British government, through the British press, has admitted the basis of his charges that the extraprdinary ap propriation of $87,500. granted the British embassy in Washington for "entertainment purposes,' has found its way into the democratic cam paign funds. The congressman says he is also prepared to prove that the international banking ring is. back ing Governor Cox. ...( May Probe New Charges. Washington, Aug. 29. The sena torial campaign investigating com mittee, now sitting in Chicago, be fore its work is concluded may be asked to investigate charges that government employes in this cam-, paign are being forced to contribute to the democratic iund in fear of losing their positions. i If sufficient information is forth coming it is the announced intention of the National Federation of Fed eral Employes to secure, if possible, the necessary evidence and demand immediate prosecution of the of- , fenders under the criminal code. Doctors Fear Death Of Lord Mayor of Cork At Almost Any Moment London, Aug, 29. Tlie 6onditio of Terrace MacSwenev. lord mavor Lof Cork, in Brixton jail on hunger strike, was oihciaily stated to b . virtually unchanged today. His sis ter who visited him, said he passed a restless night, and was sinking, and doctors thought he might die at any moment. Miyor MacSweney was still con scioiand told her: "I am convinced I will not be released. It will be better for my country if I am not." All Immigration Records Broken During Last Week New York. Auir. 29. Arrival of 18,691 aliens durinjr the week broka all immigration records at Ellii island 'since the outbreak of the war. Inspections of 15.438 were completed up to this morning, with 3,253 to be, passed upon. Jfrobably the worst congestion m the history of the immigration sta tion confronted authorities tonight with considerably more than 2,000 , io dc noused and ted. Two Mississippi Negroes Are Lynched by Large Mob Cornith, Miss., Aug. 29. Blutcher Higgms and Dan Callicut. negroes, who surrendered to the authorities yesterday after escaping from the county chain gang, were lynched by a mob. Both men were hanged to a telegraph pole just outside the iail after the mob had forced the jailer to turn over his kevs. . - V .