SIreep And Cattle War Renewed in North Colorado Bitter Feud Resumed Between Cattle and Sheep Men Rancher Slain, Sheep Slaughtered. By NEIL W. KIMBALL. Hperlal Corrennonilcnt mt the International ' Service. ' Craig. Colo., ' March 20. One man is dead, six have been indicted in connection with sheep killings, several hundred sheep have been slaughtered, the torch has been ap plied to dozens of cattle pens and cattle and sheepmen have again been livideJ. into two hostile camps as a result of the renewal of the sheep and cat'.le war in northwestern .Colo rado and eastern Utah. The armed truce that existed be tween the two opposing stock rais ing interests for the last 25 years followinir the establishment ot a "dead line" over which neither side had dared 'step, has broken into open warfare that county, state and even federal officials are experiencing much (Itfhculty in coping with. Renewal of Bloodshed. Cattlemen say that the sheep in terests have been responsible forthc renewal of bloodshed and conditions bordering on rural anarchy, while the sheep raisers blame the cattle men, charging the latter with taking advantage of abnormal conditions re , suiting from the world war to break the unwritten contract that only sheep should graze on the Utah side of the imaginary "dead line." 'During the world war Utah ranch ers made strenuous efforts to in crease production, and lack of rail road facilities kit them with a sur plus of forage crops. To dispose of this surplus they made ! contracts with the cattlemen to feed their stock in what has been forbidden territory. The cattlemen have taken advantage of this; situation to put cattle on the sheep range, it is claimed. Utah sheepmen have openly stated that they would force the cattlemen to open all the free range in north western Colorado to stock of all kinds. Three times within the past year they have endeavored to insert an enter ing wedge by throwing solid bands of sheep across the boundary line into Colorado. On, the first occasion seven masked men rode into the sheep camp of Snellen Johnson, or Vernal, between Skull Creek and Red Wash, in south- ers bound the sheepherders and clubbed 350 head of ewes and lambs to death. Some time later the sheepmen again put their stock on the range in the same vicinity. For a month they were not molested, but then one night another masked party opened fire on the herders from, the dark ness. John Durncll of Craig, in charsre of the heep camp, was killed i by a high-powered rifle bullet. Part of the sheep were killed and the re mainder; , were scattered on the range to become the victims of predatory animals. . Sheriff Sam Mosier and Coroner J. G. Clayton investigated the kill ing of Durnell. Their attempts to secure evidence, however, was blocked. The sheepmen at the scene of the shooting were apparently re luctant to have the affair handled by the authorities. J. E. Price, father-in-law of the dead herder, testified that 11 men were in the party that attacked the camp, but he declined to identify any of the raiders. It was openly stated by many residents- of western Moffat - county that Price, suppressed the names of several prominent cattle raisers through fear. ""' Men Arrested. The federal grand jury, sitting at Pueblo, returned indictments against six well-known Moffat and Rio jBlanco county cattlemen in con nection with sheep killings. They were arrested, but quickly gavje bond. In January three men were ar rested on a charge of Horse stealing preferred by John W. Spencer of Willow Creek. They were acquitted alter r, trial in this city. Charles Mantle, one of the men acquitted, who runs cattle close to the Utah line, charged that the arrest was a "frame-up" by Jensen, Utah, men who were trying to "run him ovt of the country." Mantle declared that he had been warned that v it would "be, healthy for him" to leave the country. Recently reports came from the Blue mountain section 'of Moffat county, where former depredations have been committed, that sheepmen on the line and started to push them onto the cattle range. The sheep camp was visited by two armed men, disguised with long white beards, and the sheepherders ordered back into .Utah immediately. Desultory outbreaks between the warring sheep and cattlemen are oc curring almost weekly, and authori ties are making every effort to con trol the situation before further cas ualties result Twenty-five years ago all of north western Colorado was in a continual state of warfare over sheep and cat tle. A score of stockraisers were killed in pistol and gun duals over the "rights" of the two animals. At that time the territory which is now Moffat county openly favored the cattlemen. When reported that a large band of 30 gunmen, hired by the- sheep interests, were coming into Moffat county, practically every able-bodied man in Craig seized a rifle and1 met the invaders on the Iron Springs divide.- The attackers were taken by surprise and surren dered. A conference was held and the famous "deadline established. Colorado was to be cattle territory, exclusively, it was decided. For a quarter of a century this truce had been observed, except for minor outbreaks, whetj violation ol the pact resulted in tie burning of ing of sheep. In the spring of 1920. however, a large flock of sheep was turned onto the range near MayhelL Colo. De spite the vigorous protests of cattle men against this so-called "sheep in vasion." no action was taken at the time and the outbreak of sheep kill ing, pen burning and murder fol lowed .within a few months. Selling Whisky by Wireless Is Latest WrinkU in Chicago Chlcat Tribune-Omaha rue UmmI Wire. was a "flash" by wire and wireless, our now at appears to be a tiask. Radio fvnerta hecian kearrh (fir a bootlegger that had been selling hootch Djr wireless. An amateur radio operator is re sponsible for the tip. He picked up a conversation last night, in which certain operators were being bawled out tor not delivering a shipment ot whisky to Mike Costello. "If you don't deliver ft by Thurs day, there'll be no pay," wts the final warning. Costello operates a place in May- wnrtrl and th nmhihitinm ifflriata have had him under suspicion for some tune. All the amateur radio stations in the city are listed and hereafter an expert operator em ployed by the government will "listen in" to catch booze orders by wireless. Woman Named In Stillman Case Fully Identified Mother of "Mrs. Leeds' Acknowledges Daughter Recovers Old Diary to Avert Publicity. (Iiieuro rrlbuni'-Omciha lit Leased W Ire. New York, March 20. "Mrs. Florence Leeds," a one time musi cal show "Chicken" anf "playing card' girl," whbse name is connected with James A. Stilman in his divorce case against Mrs. "Fifi" Stillman, a year ago nook precautions against publicity. She and "Mr. Leeds," now identi fied as Mr. Stillman, multi-million-air president of the National City bank, called o one of herschool day chums 'in the vicinity of her tenement home of former days and got a diary she had written. The diary,' according to the young woman, had nothing in it, however; it was kid talk. But .all doubt about the identify of "Mrs. Leeds" as Florence Law ler was removed this evening. Mrs. James Lawler, at the tenement home admitted that Mrs. Leeds is her daughter. Ever eince "Mrs, Leeds" and her babv. Tav Leeds. 30 months old, were brought into the case by Mrs. Stilman s counsel m preparing her defense. Mrs. Lawler, wife of a plumber ,had denied that she ever had a daughter on the stage. Whereabout! Not Known. Neighbors, trades folk and chauf feurs for "Mrs. Leeds," however, contradicted the Lawlers. "Now. for heavens sake, let me alone," Mrs. Lawler told reporters. She refused to discuss her daughter a life in any way. ' Whereabouts of Mrs. Leeds ana the baby, Jay, are not yet known in New York, Last word , came from Miami, Fla., where it was re ported she, and he youngster were living in seclusion. While Mrs. Stillman's counsel has received many "tips" similar to the one linking Mr. Stillman and the "Mrs. Leeds," another report brings a stenographer into the case. She is said to have been employed at the National City bank, of which Mf. Stillman is president, and was once in his offices. Her story, it is said, has to do, with Mr. Stillman's ac tivities outside banking hours. She was with the bank until last fall and was discharged, it is said, over the activities of an investigator working in the interests of Mrs. Stillman. Many Developments. The first stories related only the details ot Mrs. Stillman's charges. Mrs. Stillman's alleged romance with Fred Beauvais, the Canadian guide at the Stillman summer camp at Three Rivers, Quebec,, was featured. Then it developed that Guy Still man, 28 years old, was codefendant that Mr. Stillman sought to prove that Guy was the son of Beauvais and Mrs. Stillman. But in the last few days, with the cloak of secrecy being removed and Mrs. Stillman s counsel plan ning an "aggressive defense" pub licity has centered about "Mrs. Leeds" and "Mr. Leeds" and his identification by former chauffeurs and servants as none other than Mr. Stillman. v 1 A Close friend of Mrs. Stillman tonight, discussing the disclosures of "Mrs. Leeds" and the identification of "Mr. Leeds" as Mr. Stillman, ex plained the rush of friends and ser vants to her defense. "I have read much in the news paper about the vivacity, charm and beauty of Mrs. Stillman when she was -a debutante. She appeared to be destined for a public career, but, strange as it may seem, Mrs. Still man is what is known as a home woman. "It is true that the case has brought in many of the servants in ie Stillman home who came for ward on their own accord and . of fered to testify for her. "Tin's was due to the fact that Mrs. Stillman, when any of the ser vants became ill, took a personal in terest in the case. , She has sat through several vigils in hospitals, where servants had been taken She really is a simple, unaffected, home loving woman, and she is a devoted mother,' whose love for her children is paramount. She is disregarding alt of her interests nov If it were not for the children, she would not have. contested the action of her hus band by counter attack. She has known for long that his affections have been turned from her. Woman Jailed, Daughter Hurt as Train Hits Auto Pueblo, Colo.. March 20. Mrs. James Sharpnack of Fowler, Colo was killed and her daughter. Hazel, badly injured when their automobile was hit by a Colorado and Southern train at a crossing a few miles east of this city. The women were on their way to Clovis, N. M.. in a new car they had just purchased. South Side Brevities Illinois coal. Sit. Howland Lumbar aV Coal Co. Phone So. 1S14. A. P. Conaway. palntfnc ant p.p.r-hana-tBt. Phona ,T1 liu. jus Vlateo street. Adv. ! Criminals Have Lost Terror of Electric Chair Life a Cheap Gainhle With Odds All in Favor of Slayer, Says Sing Sing Warden. ' By THOMAS WRIGLEY. International N.we Borvice Staff Corres pondent. Ossining, March 20. -One hun dred and eighty have gone the way of "the chair" in Sing Sing prison. Last year 17 walked, the1 march to death through the "little green door." In the first two months of this year three more have paid the extreme penalty, and March was ushered in with another electrocu tion. With the announcement of these figures, given in an interview to the International News service recently, Warden Lewis E. Lawes stated that fear of electrocution no longer ex ists in the criminal mind. "Electrocution as at present car ried out does not keep down the number of murders," he said in dis cussing the recent crime wave which has swept the country and has been attended by many wanton killings. i he list of murders Has grown ap pallingly all over the country. Most of them have been committed, nof for some great or fancied wrong, but in connection with hold-ups and ; petty robberies, the taking of life lit erally for a song. Warden Lawes stated that possibly this is due to an after the war condition. Certain it. is that life is held cheaply now and to many of criminal instincts life is a cheap gamble and the electric chair is no longer a spectre to deter them from capital crimes. Odds With Murder. ' A. nv. i v o 1 1 nun int. .inuivt- crer in this gamble," said Warden Lawes. The percentage of those actually executed is so small com pared to the number of murders comjnitted that capital punishment tails as a deterrent. - . "Here is another astounding fact. said Warden Lawes. "The majority of men who now occupy the death house have not been previously confined; in Prison. Life, indeed. has betome a cheat) sramble. in tact there now exists a spirit of bravado such as never before has been manifest. A typical instance of this was shown not so long ago when five condemned men were put to death at Smg iing in a space of little over an hour, passing one after the other into the death chamber. New Spirit of Bravado. ".Give her the aras turn on the juice," said one of the men as he was strapped into the chair. At sing 5inar where all electrocu tions for New York state are now carried out, the toll of lives in ex acting the extreme penalty is higher than in any other prison in the coun try because of the large state popu lation. But in many of the 30 states which have, capital punishment the stout oaken chair with its electrodes and straps has worked overtime in recent months. And in all of them electrocutions are carried out in practically -the same manner." No "New Improvements." Science has made wonderful prog ress in recent vears in nroloneincr me,- new scrums ana anti-toxins have ! S - . .. ' . been discovered and surgery has ad vanced to a marked degree, but the method of taking life remains the same. i "Electrocution was introduced In this state nearly 30 years ago," said Warden Lawes, "but the chair today is tne same as it has always been. Except for the amount of current used and the length of the contact, there has ben no change. In former years 1,500 volts were used. To day 2,000 volts are used and better results are obtained." . Asked as to whether he did not think that in time science will bring torth some radically new and differ ent method of carrying out the man date of capital punishment. Warden Lawes replied that he did not be lieve any change would be made. "If capital punishment is necessary, he said, electrocution is both effective and humane as to method. . "All prisons using practically the MNDBUrT-REMOVCB HAM APtrfectPniuct Doll not leiva tht hail aoaoy or I'lUckr he. eaaie h it a Mrfectly M pom Sea lelotfoa that diiaolvaa all Dandruff andfoniga lubitinee; eleant acalpt and tnikei hair luitroua. Different from all ethera. Buy to mm at hom-poiitiT ia luaeuoo. ADVRBTIKKMKVr You Can . Have Young Blood Mahai OH Folk Younr and Weak Folk Strong If yon look and ferl old, Teak, and nerv oui and diieouraswd; if you ara lacking in the vim, courage and nargy that you used to ha, it's aJmoit certain you hava old blood blood that lacking- in oxygen carrying red cells and that your nervea ara also run down. What you need to make you look and feel younr, strong and vurorooa ia mora red eella in your blood and itrongtr narvea. For thia purpoaa on of thai finest things known ia to take a five-grain tablet ot Blood-Iron Phos phate with each meal. Thia supplies just the right kind of red-call-making iron and nerve building phosphate to soon make you feel fine and atrong. Go today to Sher man aV McConnell Drag Co. or any other druggist and get enough Blood-Iron Phos phate) for a three weeka' treatment: it eoata only S1.S0 too a week take it regularly, and you'll be simply amaaed at the results. Try it and sea. Your money back it you want it. Ladies Let Cuticura Keep Your Skin Fresh and Yound 8Htoi:T''?-';-"gJ itjiaFsnaaaaK aaasaCaaaaaaaaBalaaaBi 3. '. - ft w as 4 n Vk- QV-baf SfxJ j tu ml mjoI I 1 J THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY. MARCH 21 1921. same methods. From the time the contact is given until pronounced dead by the physician, the average is eight minutes. The first contact is for a period of one minute and IS seconds. The second is usually for five seconds. From the time the first contact is applied the man is entirely unconscious. Care is taken to pre vent burning and defacement, else the execution could be accomplished more quickly. "Let me say, however," said War den Lawes, "that to those in charge of carrying out the mandate of cap ital punishment it is indeed a most disagreeable duty. To those who must enforce the law it is one topic usually avoided. ( "I believe that in time capital pun ishment will be abolished." v Consumption of Meat Shows Drop for 1920 Washington, March 20. Ameri cans ate 10 pounds less meat per capita last year than during" 1918, but 11 pounds more than during the first war year, according to figures made public by the department of agriculture. The consumption . of meat and lard combined last year was 154.3 pounds per capita. Less meat was produced, less ex ported and less consumed in 1920 than in either of the two preceding years, the announcement said. Beef consumption has fallen from 78 pounds 10 years ago to not quite 56 1-2 pounds per head of population last year. Veal was said to be gain ing steadily in favor, and calves mar keted last year were more than double that of six years previous. Secretary Fall Approves Colorado Irrigation Plan 'Washington. March 20. Secretary Fall approved the Orchard Mesa irrigation project in Colorado to irrigate 10,000 acres, mostly in Iruit trees,, as a unit of the $5,000,000 grand valley project. . The Britisli M. P. Says He Cannot Live On His Salary Members of Parliament Get $1,600 a YearOne De clares He Has to Get Along on $14 a Week. London, March 20. Interesting evidence on how inadequate the av erage member of Parliament's salary is if he is without a private income was put before the select committee set up to inquire' into members' ex penses by Mr. Dan Irving, M, P., for Burnley. "I reckon," said Mr. Irving, "that on an average I spend in London, after allowing for the time that 1 am away, $14 a week, which includes postage, street car fares, food in the house and a single room in which to live. Mr, Irving said the $1,600 salary is now his only regular v income. He had to give up his regular occupa tion when he became an M. P. Out of this he pays $420 a year for his third class railroad fare. Keeps Two Houses., He has to keep two homes, one in Burnley, 'where his family live, and the other in Loudon, where he him self resides. . ' "To keep up these two homes," he said, "with my railroad fare brings my expenses up to $1,400 not a cent for clothing, either for myself or my wife. One does not really live on the $1,600 a year; I cannot do it. "The only possible way that I could do it at all would be to aban don going home, except at the end of the session, and to give up my railroad pass. "I have to devote time, attention and study to other methods of in V This is the Today. March 21st, is the first day of Spring the day that everybody has agreed upon as the time when "business will open up." Business is here. It starts from now. It should be greater every day. Industry is awjJcenirig. On all sides you see the evidences of this. In jevery news paper you read of resumption jof work. Back to normal! It is a cheering thought Employer, employee, dealer and customer are glad of it I Out in the country the crops are being put in as of old. Mother Nature never takes a vacation. She is swinging into her spring, work, making the seeds sprout and the crops grow. The food of the world is going to be produced. The foundation of all prosperity exists as it always did Business is here. It is ready at your hand. It is not something to be waited for, not something to be wished for. It is. The first day of spring is a splendid start ing point Winter, with all its handicaps and disappointments, is behind, and can be forgotten. Ahead of us all are days that grow better and better, days when work will .drioloL ti Best i N B. F. Goodrich Company Akron, creasing my income; otherwise I could not possibly live. ; Feels Humiliation. "I feel," went on Mr. Irving, "sometimes a little sense of humilia tion in mixing with my fellows, when I have to scan every item which I am called upon to spend when in company with other men of reason able means, a sense of humiliation, because I appear to be mean when other men are. I do not say ex travagant, but able to act different ly." All throughout the war he had been sitting on public bodies "rais ing everyone's wages except my own," he complained, "and . T no sooner escape from that and come here than I am faced with the same situation myself." After some deliberation the com mittee recommended: ' No change in M. P.'s salaries, but that no income tax sluuld be charged on the salary. 1 That . M. P.'s should have free first-class railroad passes between London and their constituencies but not their homes. Free postage on parliamentary let ters. National Balloon Race To Go to Birmingham New York, March 20. The Aero Club of America announced that it had awarded the 1921 National balloon race to Birmingham. Ala.. and that the start ould be maie May 21. Trophies will be announced later. From the winners will be selected a team to go to Belgium to compete ior me uoraon uenneti international Balloon cup. 1 Amonar the nrosneelive entr-nitf are Lieut Louis A. Kloor, pilot of the American naval balloon which made its spectacular flight into Hud son Bay territory last winter; Bern ard Von Hoffman, H. E. Honeywell, J. S. McKibben and Tohn Berry of St. Louis; Roy Donaldson, Spring field, 111., and Ralph Upson, New York. In addition, three United States army and navy teams will bs entered.' '111...-' First Day of Spring T H E Long SHVERTOWN CORD AND FABRIC , FOR PASSENGER CARS DE LUXE SOLID AND CORD FOR MOTOR TRUCKS FABRIC AND CORD FOR MOTORCYCLES AND BICYCLES U. S. Must Raise $17,000,000,000 Within 3 Years Huge Sum Must Be Provided To Meet Running Expenses . And Refunding Opera tions, Weeks Says. Pittsburgh, March 20. Something like $17,000,000,000 must be provided by the federal government within 30 months to meet its running ex peases and refunding operations, Secretary Week declared. "This," he said, "is a greater task than was ever undertaken by any nation in time of peace and there is no one who docs not view thepros- pect with more or less alarm. . i lie secretary di.scussea economy in government operations, recogni tion of federal activities in Wash ington, txation and the tariff. He urged repeal of the excess profits tax, declaring that with falling prices it was not an effective tax. He said there were innumerable instances where concerns which made large profits in 1919, paying a tax on these profits, lost so much during 1920, that on January 1, 1921, their re sources were less than January 1, 1919. i Mr. Weeks said that the country had reached a point where it must make a radical change in its tariff system. New problems associated with rates of exchange, made the tariff a more complicated question, he said, adding that it would seem to him that the amount of revenue which should be produced from im portations would be between $500, 000,000 and $600,000,000. In a French factory turbines are driven by water from a reservoir on a mountain 600 feet above it. a IMi .mjii, .ViHHiial'l li. . s i . 1 count more and more, when mutual under standing and helpfulness will bring their lasting benefits. The roads are getting better, the shops are showing the new things, people are putting money into circulation. Your dollar, paid out for a necessity, does not stop working. It keeps going on and on increasing the volume of business. "Good times" are coming back with the -sunshine and the flowers, with the hum ming of machinery and the song of the whistles. The hour for moping and com- , plaining has gone; the time for hustling and prospering is with us. In the automotive industry the news is encouraging. Passenger car and truck manu facturers are welcoming the first day of spring with increased activities to satisfy the coming demand. . . , And here in the Goodrich plant the open ing of spring finds us ready to serve our old and new customers through the Goodrich ; dealers in the efficient manner that has char acterized our organization for fifty years. It is the first day of spring the dawn , of the good business era for us alL Tiff R U N Ohio Founded .1870 'raine rire lies Up Trolley Traffic V Firemen laid 2.200 feet of hose ii extinguish a prairie firo in Fas) Omaha' Saturday. Two companies under Battalioil Chief Cogan, answering an F.asl Omaha alarm, found prairie grass-on Fast Locust street Mating , merrily: The nearest hydrant was 2,200 t'etl way, ' The only damage done vas to tn up the East Omaha street car line for a short period, as hose was laid across the track. The fire was a short distance east of the point where the Carter Lake car line, which runs east on Locust, turns toward the north. . -i .it--rr r t Do you know why its toasted delicious DurUy tobaooo flavor. LiCKY STI CIGARETTE I 3 ff I