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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1921)
THE BEE: OMAHA, - MONDAY, APRIL' 18, 1921. Youngsters Play Leading Roles in Marifal Tangles Judges to Consider Children In Deciding Stillman, Stokes v And MCo-6perative Hus-' band" Cases. Chios TrUMiMQHMiMiSlM UmMt Wir. New York, April 17. Youngsters are going to play the leading roles in the final acts of the three absorb ing marital - trajftdks :$eing staged here. . ' . When the family scandals of the "Co-operativt? Jhuiband. or . Andrews case, and the Sjillraan and .Stokes cases have been fully aired, the judges will lit back and figure out the "best way out" for the "sake of the children." ? ""- 'l ' Todav. with' flie Andrews case holding the public spotlight during a lull in the Stillman and Stokes cases, a number of features? were revealed involving the children, mothers and the "orher women." , '"For the sake, of the children," Mrs. Maud Andrews, No.- 1, in the case of Herbert T. Andrews, Wall Street broker, shared her fashionable arartmcnt home with Andrews and wife No;2,.Hta.,;sther-Marie-Ari; drew a young woman, preny anu "fond of dancing and good times." Then sherebe Med, after three months for the "sake of the - children," John, 8,..and-,Harley, 6. Fof Sake of Children. "For the sake .of the children." Mrs. "Fin" Stillman refused at first, to put up a fight against the charges of her rich banker husband. . Then after several months, she opened an attack in reply to his charges that al most shook nim from his high posi tion in the financial world. Stillman charged Mrs. Stillman had a love af fair with? Canadian Indian guide, Fred Betvai, at the Stillman camp in Canada and j challenged the legimatcy of Gay, Stillman, 29 months old. The Uther children bearing the Stillman name involved are Atlne, 20. "Bud" 17, and Alexander, 11. There is Jay Leeds, 31 months old, to be considered, too. He is the son of "Mrs. Florence Leeds," one-time chorus beauty, involved in the af fairs of Mr. Stillman. In the Stokes case, three children are going to have a lot to do vjith the final reckoning. W. E, D. Stokes, rich and aged husband of Mrs. Helen Elwood Stokes, charges one of his sons by a former mar riage as corespondent, but withdrew the cnarge at me inai, now on. c tcrday news came of Mrs. Stokes, battling for her good name and the "sake of the children," how she had t spurned two years ago, Stokes of fer of $1,500 a month alimony, and one-third of his property, estimated ut $25,000,000, for her children. Mrs. Stokes demand was that her husband issue a signed statement re tracting his charges that involved some of his own friends, as core spondents and even dragged forth the Elell murder case, because of some keys found in Mrs. Stakes' rooms. The Stokes' trial is rrcarmg the end. Monday Mrs. Stokes may take the witness stand. Her attorneys hinted about a diary of her married life with Stokes and said k will be introduced. The "hussy-cat" letter Stokes wrote to his children about Mrs. Stokes also is to be introduced in the evidence. The Stillman case will be resumed in secret session May 4. Todav the Andrews "co-operative husband is holding the center of the public stage. . ' Homeless, wifeless and m peril of arrest at any minute on bigamy and perjury charges, Andrews told an officer of "ample" financial aid from a third woman, who is described as "young and beautiful." Her iden tity is not known. ' ' Mrs. Andrews No. 1 and her. children must find a new apartment by Tuesday. Eviction notice was served on her, because of her hus band'a affair, with the former ste nographer he married and brought here. Mrs. Andrews No. 2 has disap peared. She is going to sue for an nulment, while Mrs. Andrews No. 1 has already ; begun action in Jer sey City - ' . . ' Table Rock Relief Fund For Near East Totals $310 Table Rock, Neb., April 17. (SpeciaL)--Table Rock donations for the relief : in the near east amounts to $310.11, enough to buy 775 bushels of corn, aocording to the report of FJ H. Taylor, secretary treasurer of the Table Rock Near East Relief fund. The cash contri bution was $188.31; corn contribu tions, 304 bushels, sold fof $121.80. Sacramental Wine Released , Rochester, N. Y., April .-Sacramental wine seized by Horace Dobbs, federal prohibition agent, ne tir S order of Prohibition Director Kramer at Washington, is to be released for distribution to Jews for use during the holidays which begin Friday night, according to yord from Washington. PanfflionNoJes. Herbert Lee THnm. fro of Mr. and Ur. Otto Timn. niea . ;rro., r"'" V." after aa tllneea of several daya The fyn ral wa held from th bom Wednesday fMrT0Emak.th Lwd.r I. vry Ml, at her heme ia South Papllllon. . . w Mr. Blliaboth Pik celebrated her i(hty-rBih birthday last Thursday mid Tral of hr frienda. Proceedings ; started In federal eotjrl. w..u mm aaalnat th WateMoO Creamery C..' have bn dismissed nd 1 Frasldent iroy voriiM hvkh all company's plants soon. , . -. CtrarlM Marshall of Low Angeles, Calif., ta visiting at th horn of hi son, C.,E. ManhaU, assistant cashier of th Stat ' bank. ' ... ' ?, Mr. ana Mrs. ilerman uneraaau ana on. rred. returned tho latter part of th vMk from California whr ttey spent th winter. -: ' Ernest Watson, charged with -violation of th liquor law, waa found not guilty In hi trial Monday. Tho SI. W. A. lodgo initiated Mveral candidates Tuesday evening and four are ready to b taken in at th ant meeting. Th lodgo will hold a danoe Batorday ovanlng at Bell' hall. . , 1 SczthSide Brevities To let, Vay 1st, gtoro room. T0S S. S4th St, lc op of th beat retail loca tion on South Sid. Rent reasonable. At U Bergquist Adv. : : W dwiro to express our aineer ap preciation for th sympathy and kind aeaa extended to w in tho death and apsis 111 at our son and brother. . MR. AMDsMRS. FRANK WJUTI . . AND f AJItltTw , Sail-Surf boards Popular - V . VVfN WXJ 4f t The latest in beach sporta is the sail-surf board, which has made its appearance on the California beaches. Miss Katherine Perrin is shown with her sail-aurtboard oir tne ucean ran, wai., oeacn. in iiwo ooai ean do evervthirfe a full rieeed sail boat is capable of accomplishing. It is "a common sight to see two or three a race. . . Schools and Colleges rr' 1. ii ivearuey icaiuan uuiiw. . . , . . ,, . . . The children or the kindergarten and the first six .grades of ..the. training school itave the operetta. Motner Gocse." Friday under the direction of Mifs- Elenore Kurth. Mlaa Lula. E. Wirth. dean et women. held a reception Saturday (or the host vesei of the school. About li women met in the gymnanlum and discussed the problem which arlt: in connection with giving board and room to students. The Cecellan glee club of teaeliHrs.' col lege are on tne n-eutern tour, u men in cludes Cozad, Lexington, North Platte and Gothenburg. Mrs. Doris Smiih ac companies them as reader, 41 Us Margaret Black as planlste and Prof. 1.. E. Burton as whistler. Mrs. Grace B. Steadraan is the director. , . ' Prof. R. W. Powell rave a demonstra tion Tuesday of how the younr women In thn department of rural education might conduct a tracK meet. About to students fathered on' th camnus and tha whole body of player divided Into three groups. In th first part oC the program there wer general play, such aa volley-ball. In th second part th group of player held a tryout for a final contest. There wer five events, broad Jump. 80-yard dash, high Jump, three-legged race and tug-o'-war. In th first part of th pro gram th individual and group winner of each of the three original groups which corresponded to three separata school competed for prises. There ,wer thre Judge and th prise, though highly praised and eagerly sought - for. wer mostly Jokes. Tho college deflator. Clauds Weimar, Ilia Weeks and Mlaa Edith Meyers, with Assistant Coach Mias Blanch .Riggs, went to Peru Thursday' for th inter-col-leg! at debate. Tho Kearney .team won the deoislon, two to one. Tho debat season closed Thursday evening, when th affirmatlv team from Nebraska Weslsyan met th home team in th college auditorium.. Th ' visiting team .consisted of Mesers. Brooks and Carrol-and Mr. Thomas Q. -Harrison, for-, tner student of this institution. Tb de oislon wis in favor of Wesleyan, two to one. j . Th office of th dean of women is flooded .'.with Utters of inquiry about board an rooms for the summer school. Th Indications are that tho attendance will be unusually good. " K ' ' Grinnell College. Grinnell college I holding an art ex hibit of original ' American paintings in oil and water cotor, as well as etchings snd reproductions ef the old masterpieces under tho auspices of the Cap and down society. Alloo Bingham, Esthervillo, will play th part of Alice Gray and Harry Barnes, Grinnell, th part of Colonel Gray in the three-act comedy, "Alice-Slt-by-the-Flre." by J. M. Barrie, which will be presented by th Forum and Phi Delph literary ocleties April 30, under tho direction of Prof. J. P. Ryan. , Twenty-seven editors of high school paper in tha state of Iowa hav been Invited to bring their business managers and ataffs to a convention of hirh school Journalists at Grinnell college April 1 and JO. " The 'convention is sponsored, by the Ormneil. chapter of Sigma, Delra". Chi, na tional Jdurnaltstlb fraternity With th co operation of tho Grinnell. Women' Pres Club and th Scarlet and Black.' With 12 varsity men eligible- for de bating next "year, Grinnell College expects an even better -representation' in this in tercollegiate Contest than th record made in tho season' Just past, - Tho Pioneer orator had flv separate teams In the field thi - year and concluded their In tercollegiate debat schedule with a double victory from Drake university, making th acoro four wins and thre defeats. Seniors at Grinnell coileg chose Juno II aa tho tim for th class day oxerctses and sleeted Russell McCsrthy, Greene, orator, Misa Margaret McWilllams, Donna, Tex., has been chosen to writo and de liver th class poem. Th mantis oration will be given by Miss Virginia Sweney, Osage, and Glenn Miller. Marahalltown, prssldent of th Junior class, will make th response for tho Juniors. Th Ivy ora. tton will b given, by Genevlev Burnett, Burlington. Adelaide Sibley; Grinnell, will glv tha class history "while Borglo Lar son, Washington, will make th class prophecy. Angus .McDonald,- Cherokee, will deliver th legacy to th Juniors and th service wilh then, be concluded with in gin to. too college. - in program is in charge of Atwood Knies. Flagler, Colo., chairman of th senior committee. Tho second Shakespearean play In the program in community drama by the Grinnell college English department in conjunction with the Orinnsll Drama league will b "Th Tricking of Malvoleo,-' cene from Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" These Shakespearean scenes are made into a short cpmedy by Miss Maris Nlcolls, Pierson, of tne drama composition class and will be produced under her di rection. .. .- v ' Doane College. Th Doane College glee clubs will fur nish a musical program at tha convention of Women's clubs and several readers from the expression department wlU tak part. , Th - "Entorpean Entertainers" from the Doane College Women's Glee club, and a group from tho men' gJe club, with1 their leader, anjoyed th community din ner at the Plymouth - Congregational church tn Lincoln. - The class of 1921 wer at homo to fac ulty. Juniors and friends at Gaylord Hall parlor, Friday. , rroresBor ana Mrs. j. r. Taylor and Presldort and Mra J. N. Bennett enter tained the members of ths debating teams at a Breakfast at tne Bennett home. Th first of the series of commence ment recitals was gtven Saturday evening, a Junior voice recital by Miss Helen Sher rerd. of Wood; River. Neb. Friday and Saturday, th T. M. C -A. cabinets of the colleges of the state held a training scfeool .with the cabinet of Doane College -in Crete. There were ever miy aws in aitenaanee. Wednesday evening. Coach Johnston's Junior gymnasts) gave an unusual and in teresting exhibition of the year's work In the high school gymnasium. . Chadron Normal. . Among ths resolutions ceased at tha sixth district Motion of th Nebraska State Teachers' association was ons ex pressing approval of the action of the board of regents of the Stat university, in establishing the teachers' college in the university, and urging the legislature to give to - the university authorities such privileges .and appropriations aa shall en able them, to develop in the immediate future a great university of th middle west. Dean W.' T. Srockdale and his co workers wer praised for making- ths pan handle survey of the - graded schools of northwestern Nebraska, which Dr. Charles united effort of Its kind In tho state" Endorsement of the action of th present session of th Nebraska legislature, and specially that of Senator J. W. Good, V V -A xr . f ' - of them outside the breakers staging .','-" . (who introduced teem, in rnsnn ani (ties 2i and ass dwignatmr oui tour itato normal achool aa teachera" colleges .r.nlln. , tar nnrmal board . th Kra(luates the power to confer upon the graduates of the teachers' colleges the degree of Bachelor of Arts. The Alice Freeman Palmer Society is tsklng jip tho study of negro literature and music The faot that our entrance fee has been accepted and that eligibility lists have been asked for, remove all doubt about our having; been accepted into the state athletic conference. Coach West la cor responding with some of the schools in tho eastern part of the state, and in all probability some of these schools will schedule games with Chadron Normal. The Boy Scout band, of which several boys who attend ths normal are members, went to Alliance to assist in a drive for 13.Q00. Th,ls fund Is to. be used to estab lish a permanent camping ground for the Allianc Scouts at Belmont, Nebraska, and also at Broncho Lake, near Alliance. Tho manual training department held an attractive exhibit April 18. There wers on display, furniture, reed work, lathe work, lettering drafting, and hook binding. Cotner College. : : Th Cotner base ball team will moet wealeyan in the diamond sport Wednes day at Cotner and will give th Coyotes a return gam at Wesleyan en April S. On May t the Bulldog nine will engage David City at David City. The first practice game was played last Saturday against the base ball team of the state university. Russell Willard and Cook will perform on the mound position and Tracy Mumford will very likely hold down catcher's position. Davis, Wenflr. Hreson and W. Mumfnrd will nmhihl. make up the Infield and Roland, Ravr and Robb, th outfield. .rror. j. r . uunoan or the educational I mjurimtm gave in mental . measure ment test. to some of the eighth graders of this county at the county court house In Lincoln. The tests are being held un der the direction of Superlntendeht Jean-; ette Nelson. ' Misa Marie Stevens of ths class of "U was elected May queen bylhe - students of Cotner. It is th custom-of the school to elect th most, oonular a-irl frnm th Junior snd senior classes each year for this May festival. Th festival will be held on the college campus on tho night of May and will be a most elaborate affair. Miss .Stevens is a Bethany girl. The "Witching Hour" was staged in the Cotner auditorium ' Friday by the Cotner Dramatlo club. The play waa produced and directed bv Jack Leonard, who also played the leading role. This year's senior play will be the play entitled "Wreckage," a production of Mr. Manner. Jack Leonard will coach the play. Th Cotner Collaiiaa ham . ture, "Th Cotner New Courier." and purports to tell Interesting facts about the organization and ihm nrnvrM, ,, various departments. Each week the alms ana means oi achievement of eaoh de- Sartment will be set forth, accompanied y photographs of members of ths Cot ner faculty, and editorials. . ' The senior class. of rt,.. i,n rA.. Friday via automobile, for, Peru on the ..mc-nuuorgq senior snug car xpdltlon. POUTICAL ADVERTISEMENT. I Ota-Co Election 111 Hundreds Hurt By Tornadoes Several Hundred Injured and Damage Running Into Mil lions Caused by Twister In South. ' By Tho Associated Press. .Memphis, Tenn., -April 17. -i Seventy-five persons reported dead, several hundred injured and prop erty damage roughly estimated in the millions made the toll of a series of tornadoes which broke late Friday in northeast Texas and swept eastward Saturday, over sec tions of five states into eGorgia. Wire reports were meaer, due to interrupted communications. , Arkansas with 51) persons re ported killed in Hempstead and Miller counties, suffered the heaviest loss of life. In Alabama the number of dead was estimated at 10: 7 were killed in Texas and 6 in Mississippi In Tennessee no fatalities were reported. Relief parties tonight were still searching the storm area. The storm apparently broke iu Smith county, lexas. swepf sec tions of Good, Gregg, Case and Bowie counties and passed into Miler and Hempstead counties, Arkansas, where the reported dead list tonight had reached SO. Six of the seven persons killed in Texas were crushed to death when their homes in Avinger were wrecked Crosses Into Arkansas. Crossing into Arkansas the storm skirted Texarkana and cut a swath a half mile wide through a heavily wooded section of Miller and Hempstead counties. Near Hope, Hempstead county, the list of reported dead had reach ed 20. 15 others were said to have lost their lives near Prescott, and a like inumber north of Texarkana. Five persons were reported killed at Steen, near Columbus, in eastern Mississippi and one at Sontag, 16 miles east of Brookhaven. Leaving Mississippi the storm swooped down again in . northern Alabama. In the Aycock com munity, 7 persons were reported killed and three others lost their lives in Ralph, Tuscaloosa county. In Birmingham 10 persons were injured and 100 homes in the suburbs damaged. . Rain Floods Memphis. ; In Memphis, a ' torrential rain storm damaged sewers and drainage canals. At- Rome. Ga.. several persons were injured and property damage estimated at $200,000 done. The rainfall in Mississippi was re- Jorted the heaviest on record. At ackson six and five-tenths inches of rain fell from noon yesterday until early today, causing considerable damage. - .- ; Train service was disarranged and in some instances suspended because of washouts. ' One wreck was reported, a bouth em railway mail train running into a-washout, near Laurel, Miss., and toppliag into a ditch. One passen ger was killed,:" Blizzard at Des Moines. Des Moines, la., April 16. (Spe cial Telegram.) All records for April snowfall were shattered here with a fall of over six inches record ed after an all night and day bliz zard. The blizzard struck the city late Friday night and continued with unabated fury throughout the day. It was preceded by a heavy rain and the ,faj was wet and soggy. Crops blanketed in this coating of soft, damp snow, it is believed, will not be affected by the colder tempera ture which followed today. In the city street; car service was paralyzed practically the entire day, Every effect was extended to pro vide service. but .brought little suc- POMTICAZ, ADVERTISEMENT. ..Vote for.. & Jure 1-: for re-election County Commissioner Douglas County, 1906-08 City and County-Treasurer. 1912-16 City Commissioner, 1918-21 " He Made a Success in Every Office ii cuss. Motor busses, operating en the principal lines, were not so badly handicapped and provided some re lief. . Wire service to the east was prac tically annulled. Communications in this direction had to be routed tn most cases as far west as Omaha before they could be started on their eastward journey. 1 ram service from the east was also badly crippled, ac cording to reports at the local ter minals. The nearest approach to today's storm record was that of April- 7, 1917, when 4.8 inches of snow felu . Chicago Traffic Paralyzed. , Chicago, April 16. (By the As sociated Press.) Snow storms and gales that in many places were re ported to be the worst in the history of local weather bureaus, swept an area from the Rocky mountains to the Atlantic states today. Railroad and wire traffice was interrupted in many places and thousands of dollars damage done to property and crops. 1 he worst spring storm in history swept Chicago, causing injuries to many persons and considerable prop erty damage. A 50-mile gale, snow, sleet and rain combined to obstruct traffic and in some places to level wires. Temoeratures below freezing were forecast tonight in several states. The storm is expected to dimmish late to morrow. The worst blizzard of the year re- ported-from Wisconsin, where a foot of snow fell in Milwaukee and vicin ity. The traction company at Mil waukee was forced to use snow plows for the first time this winter. Snow in Nebraska. From Nebraska came reports of snow and generally cold weather. Railroad and wire traffice were said to be partially disrupted. Ten to 14 inches ot snow leu in tne western portion of the state and tempera tures were as low as 20 degrees, above zero. Northwest Missouri and northeast Kansas sent word of the worst spring snowstorm on record. Many elec tric wires were blown down and dam age to fruit trees and gardens is Ereat. 1 he storm swept east through Michigan, carrvinir a ereat hail storm that was most severe near Uetroit. Railroad traffic was reported blocked in the Rocky mountains re gion, which was digging itself from under 11 to 14 inches or snov. American Legion Opens Campign Headquarters The executive committee of the American Legion opened head quarters in the Henshaw hotel Sat urday to advance the candidacy of John Hopkins for city commis sioner. I he committee held a meet ing yesterday to arrange plana for the campaign and announced a meeting in the Paxton hotel Tues day nifrht at 8. Men and women interested in the Legion's candiate were given an invitation ot attend. Nebraska Wesleyan. : Carl 'Person has been named by the publication board ot Nebraska-Wesleyan p .rfltnr of the 'Wesleyan" student weekly for ths rest of the school year in plaoe of Frank Funnan, who has gono to California. The place of business man ager has been filled by Esley Kirk, who waa formerly assistant manager of ths paper. Election for student member of tha publication board will be held at the time of the class meetings. Monday. Elaborate plans are being made by students and faculty for the high school visitors who ' are expected on the Wes leyan , campus. April-19. for "High School Day." Harold Carr ana a staff Of Work, ers are sending Invltailona to -high school seniors for the day. A program and "free eats" are being planned. - "" -" Tennis was formally Installed - as one of the leading sports at Nebraska-Wesleyan, Wednesday when the local asso ciation met to elect officers for the sea son. Th results were: President. Frank August; secretary. Hiss Joy Schreoken gaet; treasurer, Edgar Holeteln. Examinations in secondary subjects for certificates will be given April 21 in th teacher' colleg building, v , t. ... The co-eds at Nebraska-Westayan hav established a training course for eight weeks' clubs to be held this summer In the home towns of the oellege girls. The first lesson of the course was given April 13 in Prof. F. M. Gregg's department rooms when Dean , Ella Ford Miller was the leader. Courses in the musto of the pip organ will be offered this summer at Nebraska,. Wesleyan by Prof. Clara . Mills. Th large organ In the First Methodist1 'Epis copal church of University Place wfll be used. r Wesleyan university expects to In stall soon its own large organ which ia to be the gift of four graduating elassss. POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. as J yA jyy - r ; v jSwV- f $ ' I . .v.,',.,.' ftisi Tuesday, May, Damage in Erin ' At $20,000,000 Society -of Friends Report In vestigation on Conditions in Ireland 25,000 Families In Need. , New York, April 17. The Ameri can Committee for Relief in Ireland made public a report of an investi gation of condition in Ireland by a qnit of the Society of Friends, in which the Quakers asserted that ma terial damage "inflicted by the Brit ish forces within 12 months amounts to approximately $20,000,000." The unit sent to Ireland by the relief organisation in February also reported there were 25.000 families in Ireland in pitiful need of instant help from the American people. These 100,000 people, said the re port, were composed "of men and women who have. Quietly gone about their peaceful pursuits all their lives and who have refrained from taking part in armed activities. The report' did not include an df- ftcial estimate of "malicious damage" done to Dublin, but said that be tween October. 1920, and March, 1921, "claims for malicious injuries, including both material damage and death, have amounted to 594,899 pounds. "The awards jrranted cut these claims to 222,928," continued the report. "We can hazard only the approximation that the material loss in Dublin the past six months did not exceed 25.000." The unit's figures "of ,$20,000,000 material damage in Ireland, said the report, coincides substantially with the total figures collected by Irish republican statisticians, and it should be noted, are less by $8,000,000 than the estimate given us by a respon sible crown omcial. , , The report estimated that to re pair the $20,000,000 damage to "Irish 6hop buildings, creameries and private dwelling houses" would cost $25,000,000 unless the cost of labor and materials was reduced. The number of buildings damaged or partially or wholly destroyed, the report estimated, was upwards of 600. "Irish republican statisticians," says the report, "place the number of property units destroyed at up wards of 2,000, but this includes not only buildings, but individual shops in buildings, their contents, isolated farm buildings, hay ricks, etc." Regarding labor conditions the're port said: "We may point out that even rOUTICAL ADVERTISEMENT. d Imw cigarette pasiifii when employed, the workman re ceivea a wage so low that it would be dithcult tor an American to un derstand how the Irish workman can support himself and his family. "The prevailing wage for ordinary unskilled labor ranges from $9 to $14 a week; even those who are workers at electric oower houses. for example, receive only $14; mo- tormen receive $U.5U; conductors, $11.50: farm laborers, rarely more than $8. ."Today the 25,000 families tb which we refer have not even this scanty income." At to destruction of property used in . (trowing and marketing farm products, the report said: "From the crippling of the co-op-erative creameries in Ireland, 15,000 farmers who supplied these cream eries1 with milk are suffering severe loss. "Durina the last year more than 50 attacks by - crown forces were made on co-operative creameries, re sulting in their total or partial de struction. The amount necessary tq restore these creameries is 114. 279." - Brothers United After v V Absence of 20 Years Alliance. Neb., April 17. - (Spe c'al.) R. R, Reddish of this city is enjoying a visit with his brother, I. M. Reddish, after a separation of over 20 years. As boys, the four Reddish brothers started out to seek their fortunes and neglected to keep in touch with each other and fo" 20 years no word was received by any of the brothers. Recently, through an ad in an Omaha newspa per, R. R. Reddish located his broth er, I. M., in Minneapolis, an Oma ha man who knew both brothers hav ing read the advertisement. The twov brothers here are now seek'ng to locate the other two, who are be lieved to be living somewhere in the west POtlTICAI. ADVERTISEMENT. I ' . DEAN VLalGsJfA , - V" - A- ? V s'-) a feV'tl'jiv , Vt&& a'iVA!1 ' r r1 r4'- . i I 'T V FOR City Commissioner t- - - ' " . v . ... i . t ! : " ' .' - .- ' r - ': V? RINGER IS FOR Clean Police Administration -Ab-ainst Gin8 Rule f e Against Police Department Dean Ringer is the object of the massed attack .bf ; every influence whic h wi s Kes to ' control the police organiza tion for s elfish purp o s'es. They can't BOSS Ringer. . ..--..-. Vote for Dean Ringer Election Tuesday, May 3 Body of Pittsburgh Girl Found Under Stable Floor Pittsburgh, April 17: The body of Nadiner Kamer, 8, ; who disap peared five days ago,- was found in a stable. The body, bearing many marks of violence, wa lodged in -a hole in the floor. Nadine and another girl were accosted by two men Tuesday night and the former was seiied, the companions said. The cononer said he believed the child 'had been dead since Tuesday, i Man Accused of Brutal Attack on Father-in-Law Lodgepole, Neb., April 17. (Spe cial.) Indignation is rife among Bridgeport citizens over the alleged -brutal assault of T; B. Lynch by his son-in-law, Harry Hilton. Lynch's jaw was broken and he was painfully bruised by a severe kicking which Hilton, a powerful man. is said to have administered. Hilton was ar rested. ' i '. Table Rock Brick Yard Resumes Operations Table Rock, Neb,, April 17, . (Special.) The Table Rock Brick & Material company started in this week with a strong force. Prepara tions for a large output have been grjing on for some time. - Markets have already been secured tor large quantities m " aeveral of the larger cities. - School Head Resigns., Lodceoole. Neb.. Aoril 1 17. (Special.) Frank L. Smith, super intendent of the Chappell schools, ia retiring from Wis position to become platform manager of & Chautauqua circuit. , POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. A ''Vr: '.'" V"'J' ' t i.