VOL. 50 NO. 108. IV7 1 wanderer Repudiates Confession Chicago Man Denies Slaying Wife and Vagabond Hired to Stage Fake Holdup. Confessed to Get Sleep . Br Tb Associated FrtM. Chicago, Oct. 20. Carl Wanderer testifying in his own defense in the trial for the murder of his wife, to day declared he was innocent and re pudiated the signed statement in which he confessed slaying his wife, their unborn child, and a vagabond he said he hired to stage a mimic holdup and thus divert suspicion from himself. He said the confes sion was wrung from him by "bully ragging and violence" and that he made it "so the detectives would let him alone and let him get a little sleep." He was beaten and mauled in his cell until he confessed, he testified. - r. William Hickson. head of the psy psycopathic hospital previously testi fied ' the defendant was insane and had the mind of a 10-vear-old child. He was insane at the time of the murder and when he made the con fession Dr. Hickson said he believed. " Wanderer entered the court room humming an Irish love ballad. . At no time during the three hours he was on the stand did he hesitate in answering questions. Repeats First Story. He repeated the original version lof the shooting of his wife bv the tramp and the slaying ot the hobo, telling almost word for word the story given the police the day of the affair and which made him a hero until he Was arrested, charged with murder. s "Ruth (his wife) and I went to a picture show," he said. "On the way; back I noticed .a ragged stranger following us, but thought little of it until later, when I recog nized him as the man I had shot. JRuth went into the vestibule in the hallway ahead of me. I could see the outlines of a man, but before I eould do anything he began firing. I drew my revolver and emptied it in his direction." "Did you shoot?" asked one of Wanderer's counsel. ' . "I shot in the direction of .the man," he replied. ' "Did you shoot your wife?" ', Denies Shooting Wife. "No sir; I did not shoot my wife," said Wanderer, i - WandereMthetrixiotA .sbom kit - mother-in-law had come to the door and found him astride the stranger,1 Sting him with a gun He ..then told of his arrest and the confession. ' . Coroner Hoffman, he said, threat ened him and "tried to work on my emotions." ' ? , ''He told me the spirit of Ruth was ' (Continued on Ft Tro, Column Two ) Illicit Romance of Woman Results in the ri' f TV filing OI - an outcast," sobbed Mrs. Gertrude Roell after she had heard her hus band, Gustav Roell, a manufacturer, had filed his diforce suit, naming lames Oliver II, vice president of ihe Oliver Plow company of South Bend, Ind., as co-respondent. .. i .... 1 a a hiienantl 1 ve given ujj ..ujw-..-everything for limmie," continued Mrs. Roell. "I met him four years ago and fell in love with him. He said he would marry me and painted glowing pictures of our happiness l.-.fter we had a home of our own. JBut he was a coward. Without arning.to me, he married another woman at Petoskey. Mich., and left me heartbroken. I had told my hus band everything and he did not tell me he intended to get a divorce." The bill charges that Mrs. Roe'.l and young Oliver became acquainted three or four vears ago and cites ' i :H.i..;n m numerous cscayaucs, uikiuuiiiK ""L July celebration in a cottage at ot. Joseph. Mich., and other doings of a highly sensational nature, includ ing some visits to Chicago hotels. Quite recently Oliver married Miss Louise Farthington,,a southern girl, at Petoskey, Mich. Say Indian Boy Burned . School to Escape Studies Emerson. Neb., Oct. 20. (Special Telegram.)r-Did an Indian boy burn a rural school house near here so he wouldn't have to go to school? That is the theory on which Charles E. Hartford, state fire warden, and an insurance adjuster are working. A visit by the officials called for an elaborate program which included the .questioning of the school chil dren and people living in the vicinity of the school. - According to stories told the officials an Indian boy, who refused to go to school, told his companions the night before the building burned that he was positive that he would not have to go to school the following day. A school house on the same site burned a year ago. - - ' -- " ; .- . , . Bright Lights in Auto Cause Death of Winner Boy Winner. S. D" Oct. 20. (Special Telegram.) A 5-year-old son of Carl Nelson, a farmer living near Witten. was instantly killed and Mr. and Mrs. Nelson seriously injured automobile accident about tive ;. east of Witten. The Nelson iarffily were returning to the farm in in automobile without lights and when he attempted to cross a deep ditch the driver was confused by the brieht lisrhts from an approach ing car and drove off the bridge, dropping 20 feet. The other occu- tints pt the car escaped injuQr v ttarH u mm-CIim Nittof 0k t, 0. Uatar At Harding Will Call New Peace Plan International Court of Nations, Worked Out by Root And a Nnmrwr nf "Fnroiorn Jnrista F.vnoter1 By ARTHUR SEARS HENNINO. Chicago Trlbun-Omh B IhA Wire. New York, Oct. 20. It is now the well settled understanding among republican leaders that Senator Harding, if elected president, will initiate without delay, a conference of the powers to devise a new world peace plan of which the international court, worked out by Elihu Root and a number of foreign jurists, will be the central feature. Whether this court for the pacific settlement of justiciable internation al disputes t shall function as an adjunct to a league of nations, is a matter upon which there is a less definite understanding in republi an ranks. Some leaders are of the opinion that by next spring the whole theory of a' league of nations will be a dead letter in Europe as well as America. By far the greater number of the men who are advising Senator Harding believe, however, that there will be a radical revision of the league of nations covenant and plenipotentaries of the Un'ted States and other great powers, and that America will join the association of nations, thus placed on a new basis and ratify the Versailles treaty, as revised. Eliminate Article 10.' The prospective revision of the covenant would eliminate entirely article 10 and all other features embodying the principle of an al liance of the powers to perpetuate the status of territorial settlements made at the aPris peace conference. In addition, it would eliminate all provisions tending to create superior government imparing the sove.-ignty and complete independence of action of the United States,' and eliminate all provisions under which the U. S. Must Spend f Billions Next YearHouston Secretary of Treasury Tells Bankers' Assoication of In debtednes Faced by Government Washington, Oct. , 20. Govern ment expenditures of . $4,000,000,000 during the next fiscal year were forecast- by vSecretaTys Hotistair; of the Treasury department today in address before the convention of the American Bankers' associa tion, in which he covered a wide range or financial ana economic problems of the nation. The secretary outlined the treas ury's program for handling the war debt and appealed tor the strictest economy not only in our expendi tures, federal, state, county and mu nicipal, but also by thrift on the part of our people," adding that the pro gram necessitated the maintenance of taxation "after this fiscal year on a level of not less" than $4,000,000, annually. He said there were it i : indications of falling receipts. Urges Tax Changes. "In sayintr that the aggregate re ceipts for the government should be maintained at a high level for the purposes indicated, he continued. I am by no means committing my self to existing schedules or to spe cific taxes. I think it of urgent im portance that there be prompt re survey of the situation with a re form of the taxes, to the wiping out of inequities and inequalities and the assurance of sufficient revenue which may not be realized if the present system remains intact." The treasury's program -had been disarranged, the secretary said, by the heavy burdens imposed by the transportation act. He estimated the total amount which the govern ment will nav the roads at $1,000.- 000,000, about one-fourth of which already has been turned over to (Conttnned on Tngo Two. Co'nmn One.) Severe Battle Ragpng Along Dnieper River Sebastopol, Crimea. Oct. 20. (By The Aassociated Press.) Severe fiffhtine continues alone the Dnieper and northeastern front, in the vicini ty of Nikopol. Leon Trotzky, Rus sian bolshevik minister of war, is re ported to be bringing up 10 divisions of communist forces, which will not surrender as easily as the ordinary troops heretofore used on this line. It is asserted numbers ot tormer German officers in-the Baltic pro vinces are offering their services to General Baron Wrangeh head of the anti-bolshevik south Russian govern ment ' Texas Grand Jury Returns . Profiteering Indictments ' Houston, Tex., Oct. 20. The Sug arland industries and 14 wholesale grocery concern? scattered over Tex is, have been indicted by the federal grand jury here, which has been investigating alleged profiteering. Of eight indictments returned, five were made public. Individual sales of sugar are set on: in the indictments. Charges of a conspiracy to hoard sugar are made against the Sugar land industries and 11 wholesale con cerns. - Home of Former Canadian , Premier Robbed of Jewels Ottawa, Ont., Oct. 20. Theft of $6,000 worth of jewelry from the home of Sir Robert Borden, former premier of Canada, was reported to the police. The jewels were owned by Lady Borden and were taken from her home during the dinner hour last night. 'V The Omaha May It, ItM. l Hank S. I7. Conference Upon if Elected President To Be Central Feature. rT'kA united Mates nugiiC become in volved in European quarrels and claim the right ot interferrr.ee in the European and Asiatic nations might affairs of American continents. What would be left is an associa tion of nations, the principal function of which would be to create and maintain the international court of justice and to promote investigation and arbitration of international dis putes, r Root Spokesman. Former Senator Root, often called the master mind of the republican party and certainly one of the fore most American statesmen, is the spokesman of the group which be lieves that Senator Harding, if elect ed, will move to preserve the league of nations, after excision of those parts of the covenant which a major ity of the senate deemed destructive of nationalism. His great speech last night, probably the clearest ex position of the faults of the covenant from the nationalist point of view yet made, has revived speculation on the possibility that Mr. Root may be Harding's secretary of state. Mr. Root impressively corrobo rated Senator Harding's assertion that France and 'England are 'ready and eager to revise the covenant to meet republican objections. Senator Hitchcock endeavors to establish that if Senator Harding had received an agent of the French government he would have violated the Logan act forbidding an American citizen to deal with a foreign plenipotentiary in reference to a controversy involv ing the United States. Nobody, how ever, has accused Senator Hitchcock of such violation when he received British Ambassador Grey last year and learned from him that Great Britain had no objection to most of the Lodge reservations. y Negotiations To End British Tieup Are Near Labor Leaders and Govern ment Officials Show Desire To Reach Understanding To End Strike. ' ' London, Oct. 20. Negotiations which might settle the strike of British miners were today believed to be assured. rGovernneiit officials and labor leaders who outlined their positions before the opening session of Parliament have shown their de sire to reach an understanding. Be lief was general today that propos als were in preparation by both sides. - Premier Lloyd George has definite ly declared he is ready to enter into negotiations. He has, however, stated plans for a tentative wage in crease, pending a complete adjust ment, would not be satisfactory as that method of meeting the present situation would threaten, trouble later. Coal production, he holds, must be augmented, and he may sub mit some proposals which' will deal with this phase of the situation. This morning's newspapers com ment appreciatively on the clairi and dignified tone yesterday in . the House of Commons, and the ab sence of provocative words. This fact is regarded as a good omen, journals maintaining that, although the deadlock still exists, the debate has cleared the (stage .for a com promise. The National Union of Railway Men, the executive of the transport workers, and the parliamentary committee of the Trades Union con gress all held meetings this morn ing to consider their attitude toward the coal strike, but thus far no de cisions have been taken. After approximately two hours of discussion, James Henry (Thomas, general secretary of the 'Railway Men's union, said the whole situa tion had been reviewed and adjourn ment taken until Thursday. The executive of the transport workers and the trades union committee con tinued their meetings this afternoon. Coal Dealers to Consider Reduction in Fuel Prices ; Washington, Oct. 20. Reduction in bituminous coal prices will be considered by mine owners in Cleve land, October 26, at a meeting call ed by the National Coal association, at the suggestion of Attorney Gen eral Palmer. Mr. Palmer's sugges tion carried the assurance, the as sociation's announcement said; that any action toward reduction of high prices and elimination of profit eering would not be construed under the Lever act as an infringement of the law. Boy Confesses Putting Poiso nin Family Meal Salina, Kan., Oct. 20. Disappoint ed bcause his father refused to in stall electricity in their farm horde, officers say, Harlan Hawk, 18, today confessed it was he who, Saturday, put poison in the oatmeal to be eat en by his father and brother, and, according to the police, admitted that he also put poison on his own hands and face on Monday. Hawk has been experimenting in chemistry at high school. - Twelve-Year-Qld Boy Enrolled in Columbia New York, Oct. 20. Master of 12 languages, keenly interested in batting averages, but more demoted to the game of marbles when played for keeps, 12-year-old Edward Rochie Hardy, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rochie Hardy of this city, today qualified as the youngest freshman that ever entered Colum bia university. OMAHA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1920. 7 Killed in Train Crash Near Erie, Pa. Station Results in Injuries to 20-- Grinnell, Iowa, Woman Among Dead. Erie, Pa., Oct. 20. Seven persons were killed and 20 injured, three probably fatally, when New York Central train No. 60, east bound, side swiped train No. 23, west bound, 200 feet west of the union depot here at noon today. A switch, thought to have been thrown by members of a section gang working at the scene of the wreck, is believed to have caused the accident. ' The dead: GASPAR DESCHAMPS, Mis soula. Mont. ALGOT CARLSON, 14, Sebaska, Minn. ANNA L. TOKLA, 76, Norway. ANNA TOKLA, 20, . Grinnell. Ia. Ihe unidentified women, aged ii, 40 and 45 years. The injured: Mrs. Tack Hanson, 32, Seattle Wash. Leroy Hanson, 9, Seattle, Wash, Mrs. S. L. Secord, 31, Chicago. Alma Foresma'ck, 34, North Ship ping, Sweden, dying. Walter Richardson, 27, New York uty. George W. Andrews. Buffalo. Mrs. Ida C. Mayers, 59, Chicago. Mrs. Findley Wood, 20, Palatine, III. Mrs. C. C. Flagg, 36,' Indiana Har bor, Ind. C. C. Flagg, Indiana Harbor. Ind, A. H. Ereeler, 56, Waterbury, conn. William C. Hallicon, 67, South Bend, Ind. ' Paul Koszkodon, 53, Wyoming, renn. Unidentified woman, dvinir. Christen Emmett and Chris Carl son, Sebaska, Minn. ' Gedeon Carlson. 44. Sebaska. Minn. Mrs. Laura Schmaldfejt, 56, Dav- Hert Tokla, 49, Grinnell, Ia. Pullman Wrecked. Ihe, westbound tram had just lett tne depot and the eastbound train, a Cleveland-Buffalo express, was coasting into the station when the crash came. A car on the east bound train suddenly leaned irnm the rails and crashed into the Pull man, tearing its steel sides away as if theyi were paper. The occupants of the car were , hurled from their seats and thrown into a mass as the heavy Pullman toppled over with the open side up. to Use; ladders jn taking the dead roiice and tircmen were forced and injured from the wreckage. All ot ine dead were badly mangled and it is almost impossible to identi fy three of the dead until (the Pull man list can be . checked up. Declare Swith O. K. The crew of the eastbound train declared the switch was all right when they looked at it. Road of ficials are of the opinion that a member of the section gang, believ ing the switch open and seeing the rapidly moving train, threw the lever. Others are of the opinion that as the section gang was working on the switch, that they may have lbosened the bolts. . New York Central officials an nounced that an investigation would be made Friday morning. Coroner Cardot will also hold an Investiga tion. . , Sioux City Tramcar Gets Beyond Control; 20 Passengers Injured Sioux City, Ia., Oct. 20. Twenty passengers aboard a Court street car were injured, one of them perhaps fatally, and eight others seriously, when, the car got beyond control of its motorman Elmer Kehser, this morning, hurtled into the street and was wrecked against the side of a curb. The brakes failed to hold when descending the hill, it was re ported. Woman Sought as Slayer Of Camden Bank Messenger Camden, N. J., Oct. 20. A woman cf the tenderloin of Philadelphia is responsible &r the murder of David S. Paul, the murdered bank messen ger whose body was found near Tabernacle on Saturday. This was the opinion today of Prosecutor Woverton of Camden county. Two men are being held by the authorities in connection with the murder. It is said the two were companions of the Philadelphia woman, who lured Paul to the spot where these two robbed him and beat him to death. Paul disappeared October 5 with $30,000 of the funds of the Broadway Trust company of New York. Bankers Favor 100 Million To Finance Foreign Trade Washington, . Oct 20. Approval of a proposal to organize a $100, 000.000 corporation to finance the nation's foreign trade was given to day by the American Bankers' as sociation, in convention here. President Hawes was authorized to call a meeting of bankers and business men .to work out plans tor the formation of such a corporation under the provisions of the recently enacted Edge law, as proposed in the report of the association's com mittee on commerce and merchant marine, which was presented today. Receivers Are Appointed For Coffee Export Company New York, Oct. 20.-Federal Judge Mack appointed Vincente B. Villa, of Colombia, South America, and Lawrence Berensen, receivers in equity for Vasquez. Correas and company, Inc.; New York coffee ex porter and importers, ' Bails' Bee David Gilinsky On Trial Today Fpr Killing Man Alleged Omaha Bandit to Face Court, Charged With - Mur der of Michigan Sheriff Pals Convicted. x Jackson, Mich., Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) David Gilinsky, third to face he court of the gang of bandits who leld up and robbed the Grass Lake bank July 29, and murdered Under Sheriff Harry Worden in the battle with the officers, which followed at Mack Island, will be tried in the cir cuit court before Judge James A. Parkinson on the charge of murder in the first degree. The trial will be gin Thursday mdrning. Trial on the . . , ... r, , ; l roDDery sparge win iouow rnimcu iately after. Walter Wilson, second of Gilins- ky's pals to be tried, was convicted by a jury on tne muraer cnarge Tuesday night . and Wednesday morning entered a plea of guilty to the robbery charge after a jury had been empaneled to try him, and his attorneys had left him, at his o request, to defend himself. He was sentenced by Judge Benjamin Wil liams to a life term on each of the two charges, being the second of the gang to receive this sentence. The first woman juror ever serving in Jackson county sat in the second case against this defendant. , Immediately after the sentencing of Wilson, Gilinsky was brought in to court, and the clerk informed Judge Parkinson that there were but 27 names left in the jury pox. Alter conference between Prosecutor Hatch, Special Prosecutor Cobb, and Attorney J. J. Noon, for the defend ant, it was agreed that the work of empaneling the jury be deferred until Thursday moniing, when a new panel of 57 has been ordered to re port. It was intimated that a well known attorney from Omaha would be re tained to defend Gilinsky. 'This re port was denied by Attorney Noon, who states he only will act for the defendant. Testimony in both the Harris and Wilson trials has been introduced to support the claims of the prose cution that Gilinsky fired the fatal bullet into the body of the slam under-sheriff. The line of defense to be taken in the case has not yet been indicated. Forty-Two Stowaways Taken From One Steamer New York, Oct. 20. Forty-two stowaways who boarded the steam- ip Logan in Naples were removed under military guard when the boat arrived and were taken to Ellis Is land. According to immigration officials. this breaks all records in stowaways traffic. Officers of the ship said the men were not discovered until the ship was well on the way to New York. 1 ' Officials of the Phelps line, which operates the Logan, said they be- i lieved there is an "organized ring' in Italian ports attempting to Fmuggle immigrants into America. Sugar Advances. San Francisco, Oct. 20. The price of its refined cane sugar advanced from $11 to $12 in the San Francisco market, the Western Sugar Refining company announced. The rise fol lowed the advance yesterday fn the eastern market, , By Mall CI tm), lattfa 4th Im. Dally Oaltlda 4tk Zom (I rwr). Dally The Full Dinner Pail Food Prices in September Fall About 2 Per Cent Some Foodstuffs, y Notahly k Potatoes . t and Sugar, Sus tained Marked Decrease While Eggs Advanced. Washington, Oct. ; 20. Thfe de cline in the retail price of foodstuffs during September was placed at 2 per cent by the Department of La bor's bureau of statistics in its monthly report today. Some foodstuffs, notably potatoes and sugar, sustained a marked de crease in price, while others, includ ing eggs, pork chops and oranges, underwent price increases ranging from 8 per cent for oranges to 12 per cent for eggs. The drop in the price of potatoes was placed at 22 per cent; sugar, 20 per cent; cabbage, 14 per cent, and coffee, 6 per cent The decline in retail food prices, however, according to the bureau's figures, did not keep pace with the drop in wholesale quotations. The latter were placed at 5 per cent. Not all of the 51 leading cities of the country shared alike in the re tail price decline, the drop being es timated at 6 per cent in Butte, Mont, while it was less than five-tenths of 1 per cent in Boston, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Omaha and Washingi ton, D. C. ' The decline was estimated at 2 per cent in Atlanta, Baltimore, Dallas, Denver, Indianapolis, St. Louis and Salt -Lake City, and 1 per cent in Birmingham, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Fall River,' Houston, Kan sas City, New York, Portland, Ore. St. Paul, Savannah and Seattle. I . Irish Debate Begun in British Parliament London, Oct 20. The eagerly awaited debate on the Irish situa tion was precipitated in the House of Commons today by Arthur Hen derson, former labor member of the cabinet, who offered the motion de manding an inquiry into reprisals from the police and soldiers in Ire land. While admitting that the armed forces of the crown had suffered provocation, the government's pol icy, Mr. Henderson asserted, seemed to him to aim at stamping out na tionalist opinion and breaking the spirit of the Jfish people. Charge Miss Pankhurst With Attempt to Cause Sedition London, Oct. 20. Sylvia Pank hurst, who was taken into custody yesterday, was arranged in police court today, charged with attempt ing to cause sedition in the navy. The specific charge was that of editing and publishing an issue of the; newspaper, "The Workers Dreadnaught," on October 16, con taining an article on "Discontent on the Lower Deck." She was re manded for one week, but bail was granted. v President and Mrs. Wilson Will Vote at White House Trenton, N. JL Oct. 20. Presi dent and Mrs. Wilson will not go to Princeton to vote at the general election next month. It was an nounced that both had applied to the Mercer county election board for ballots, which will be mailed "to the White. House .October 23. i an Ii 0 ."'-J"SSK' ft aaay. US: Dall Oaly. Ill; ada Oaly, II Army Airplanes Finish Alaskk-To-Mineola Trip Aviators Given Warm Re ception at End of .9,000 Mile Journey to Nome And Return. Mineola, N. Y., Oct. 20. Escorted from New York to Mineola by an aerial fleet, four American army air planes today completed a 9,000-mile round trip to Alasaka, which they started July 15. So enthusiastic was Capt. St. Clair Street, squadron commander, over the success of the aerial survey made by his "ships" that he announced to night his intention of recommending to the War department that the route blazed by the army fliers from New York to Nome (be made permanent. With his seven companions on the long flight, he will leave tomorrow for Washington, where an official reception has been arranged in their honor. Later, they will submit de tailed reports. The aviators told many interesting Stories of their trip. At some landing places along the way, game was plentiful and fresh meat was always available. The fliers sighted great herds of rein deer and caribou and often saw bear, mountain sheep, and other game. A school of white whale and many seals were sighted in the Bering' sea. From the air also they saw Indians take flight on' approach of the planes. Captain Street said that the expe diion failed to get as many pictures because of poor vsibility. It was necessary to fly high in bad (weather, he said,' to avoid hitting mountain peaks. A good portion of the jour ney was made at an altitude of 8,000 feet Hundreds of miles of the terri tory covered had not been mapped out and the only information avail able was trappers., Pictures which were obtained will be turned over to the geographic survey in Washing ton. The commander of the expedition and 'the other pilots said the per formance of their machines was nothing short of "marvelous." A minimum of mechanical trouble was experienced, although landings were made in wild territory where the slightest mistake would have caused a wreck. 1 The machine took 16 days on the trip west and 15 for the return, al though the actual flying time was much less. Carrier Charged With Burning Political Mail Chicago, Oct. 20. George Klatt, 21, a mail carrier, was arrested and turned over to federal authorities, charged with burning political matter sent through the mails "because it made his pack too heavy." Klatt told police- that when he joined the postoffice service three months ago, other clerks told him they burned political and advertising matter. f The Weather Forecast Rain and colder Thursday. Hourly Temperatures. Ss.ni. Inn. .M .6 .08 ,M 1 v, m m ..IS ..IS ::8 ..w ..sa 1 a. m. . ,. . H ft. m It . m 10 . m 11 a. m 5 p. m 4 . m 6 p. m...... p. m 1 p. m...... I p. Womj... p. . .u THREE CENTS Omaha Girl Stolen by Her Father Wealthy Ranchman's Effort to Stop Wife's bivorce Fails,' $25,000 Alimony Granted. Violates Order of Couri Harry E. Tutin, wealth;.' Stanton, Neb., ranchman, came to Omahi Tuesday and stole his daughter, Mary, 9. from the Central public school, Twenty second and Dodg streets, in an effort to get his wife," Emma Tutin, to dismiss her suit lot divorce in distrkt court. Judge Sears yesterday granted Mrs. Tutin a divorce and $25,000 alininnv ritinflr in thft derree the fact that Tutin has stolen the little girl and violated an injunction grant ed by the 'district court wfcen Mrs. Tutin filrl fnr Hivnrri. a month a CO. This injunction prohibited Tutin i ,.! tj c .1.. irom nioicsung nis who or mc gut. "I will spend every cest ot the alimony to get my little Mary back," exclaimed Mrs. Tutin in the oifice of A. L. Sutton, her attorney, yes terday. v Argued Against Divorce. She said Jier husband came to Omaha Tuesday morning and ( ratlrri ut tipr hntnp. AZfi South Twen- ty-fourth street, and tried to induce her to dismiss her suit for divorce. "I knew it was impossible to live with tiim h a!H. "I tried it for nearly 10 years and I don't care to go through the experience again, i told him that was impossible and he left the house." A short time later the telephone rang and Mrs. Tutin recognized the voice ot her husband. "I have taken Mary from the school and am going to take her away1 where you'll not see her again unless you dismiss that divorce suit," she declares he said. "I'll give you half an hour to decide. Threatened to Flee. M-ilf an linn i- later came anotnef ' telephone call. Mrs. Tutin says she didn't believe her husband would make good his threat. She thought he was "bluffing." But when Mary did not return from school at noon she learned that Mr. Tutin had called there and taken the child away. She says he threatened to flee: to Canada. Immediate action will be taken to collect the $25,000 alimony for Mrs. Tutin. Her husband's wealth is nearly all in rich farm lands. The Tutins were married Fet"t. ary 23, 1910, at Decatur, Neb." i J charged -her husband with crucl.y, n' ". '; t Youthful Murderer Of Nebraska Rancher Confesses to Crime O'Neill, Neb., Oct. 20. (Special.) Floyd Wicks, Rock county mur derer, who slew Clyde Patterson, bachelor ranchman, on the latter' lonely ranch in the sandhills ol southern Rock , county, buried th body under the' steps leading down into a cave, then stole Patterson't cattle and the feed for them, hat been brought to O'Neill and placec" in the Holt county jail for safe keeping. Wicks confessed to the murder at Bassett and after signing the confes sion was removed to O'Neill fot -safety. The 18-year-old murderei does not seem to be worried in thi least concerning he probable pun ishment for his crime and eats and sleeps well. Hospital Attaches Die From Poisoning Oakland, Cal., Oct. 20. Three at taches of the St. Anthonys hospital in this city died during last night and today, and a fourth is believed to be beyond recovery as a result it is thought, of some sort of food poisoning. Autopsies were performed in two instances and analysis of stomach contents was ordered. The dead are: Dr. Edith Strong, assistant physi- , cian. Miss Anna Renas, nurse. Joseph Freitas, orderly, .ittle hope is held out for the re covery of Miss Mellie Russell, an other nurse. Within an hour after Miss Renas complained of feeling abdominal pains, she had died. Action Against Packers Postponed to January 1 Nw York, Oct. 20. Action of the government against the "big five" nackers. chareed with nrnfitiriinr was postponed in federal court in urooKiyn oy agreement ot both sides, until January 1. . Federal Judge Howe objected to further delav. statins' that it wac tViV. duty of the government to prose cute as quicxiy as possible, but con ceded the point when Assistant United States District Attornv Hr. wood said the government was ex pecting a decision from the United States supreme court involving the cases against the packers. Robbers Tunnel Through Brick. Wall and Loot Bank Enid, Okla., Oct. 20. Prying the hinges from a rear door, and tuwiel- inST throuch the hrirk wallc rnh. hers last night entered the Bank of Goltry, about 25 miles northwest of here, and escaped with about $5,000 in cash and Liberty bonds. Murdered in His Store. Roctf ValW. la. Ort 2flW 9 Vanderbrake, a druggist of this town, was murdered in his store last night. A man, believed to be his slayer, was seen to run from the store after the shooting. No mo tive for. the crime is knowu,