Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 17, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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THE BEE: UMAHA, SUMLAX, JUL. I 1. l)ZL.
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United States
Seeks to Allay
Japanese Fears
i 1
Administration la Attempting
To Convince Oriental Gov'
; ernment It Will Not Be at
Disadvantage in Meeting.
Wajhington, July 16. The Wash
ington administration is seeking to
convince Japan that it will not be
olaced at any disadvantage in the
forthcoming conference on limita
tion of armaments and far easten
problems.
President Harding believes that
Japan will eventually decide to par
ticipate in both branches of the pro
posed conference and wm agree to
discuss Pacific and eastern questions
with the other powers invited, as
well as the issues ot reducing arma
ments.
Friday the cabinet considered
Japan's response to the president s
invitation, which was a cordial ac
ceptance of the proposal to discuss
armaments, but failed to agree to the
econd proposal that the interna
tional ' issues, which make present-
day expensive armaments necessary
to be considered with a view to
general adjustment.
Following the cabinet meeting, it
was learned that exchanges are now
in progress between the United
States and Japan with reference to
Japan's implied objection to partici
pating in a discussion of the far east
ern and Pacific questions. Japan's
position, however, has occasioned no
ciclay in plans for the conference and
the president expects to issue the
formal call in the near future.
Every Phase Considered. -
Every aspect of the president's
proposal of a conference of the five
principal alKed and associated powers
and China, was considered at today's
session, with particular reference to
the attitude of Japan, and indications
that certain uninvited nations hav
ing interests in the far east would
like to participate.
There was general felicitation that
the conference was assured, in spite"
of the obstacle apparently raised by
Japan's position.
. Publicly, administration officials
made no criticism, faking the view
that the Japanese government was
entirely within its risht in seeking
;I to ascertain the range of subjects
" that would be considered under the
?; heading of far eastern and Pacific
i questions. It is understood that the
united States government has in
formed Japan that as it is only .one
oi me participating powers, . n no
not undertake to define the limits
of the conference procedure. That
determination. according-1 to the
government'! position, must be left
to the participating governments
when they meet irt Washington,
' No Objection Raised.
No objection exists on the part of
this government to diplomatic ex
changes prior to the conference mh
a view to agreeing in a tentative
way upon an agenda for the confer
ence. It contends that there is noth
ing incompatible between the views
of the United States government and
the desire of the Japanese govern
ment to ascertain the probable na
ture and scope of the conference and
that in the ordinary course ;of events
these will be worked out by the pow
ers before the conference convenes
formally, or by the conference it
self. Japan's position is being made
clearer in news dispatches from
Tokio, where it is evident the fear
exists that Japan will find itself
confronting a bloc of European
powers and America whose attitude
will be to the detriment of meas
ures Japan has taken to strengthen
her hold on China and the far east
The inclusion of China in the list of
nations asked to participate in the
resolution of the far eastern ques
tions is not pleasing to Japan and
suspicion is apparent in Tokio that
France and Italy were invited to at-
strengthen the case that the United
States will present with reference to
problems affecting the Orient and the
future control of the Pacific ocean.
President Harding still clings to
the opinion 'hat armistice day, No
vember 11, will be the most suitable
date for the opening session of the
conference and it is supposed that
his suggestion will be advanced td
the participating governments in the
preliminary convocations.
Man Charged as Draft
1 Dodger Goes on Trial
k Chicago, July 16. Hans Jacob
Zimmerman of Chicago, alleged draft
. Evader named in the government
lacker list, was brought to trial be
rore a general court martial at Fort
Sheridan Friday.. After a brief ses
sion, court adjourned indefinitely be
cs.use of the inability of the trial
fudge advocate to present evidence
In a form acceptable to the court.
Capt Lewis McBride, judge advo
cate, introduced various documents
nsed during the draft. They were,
however, mostly duplicate copies of
the original papers. The court, fol
lowing objections by the defense
counsel, directed the judge advocate
;o procure the" original or properly
autheticated papers.
Edward Maher, retained as de
'ense counsel, indicated that his de
fense would be that Zimmerman had
ever received proper notification to
j-cport for service.
Woman to Answer Charge of
'!'.: Forging Roosevelt's Name
, -Newport, Ind., July 16. Mrs.
Ytmma R. Burkett of Hillsdale, Ind
Started to New York today in the
custody of Detective Sergeant John
Cunniff and a policewoman, to an
swer to the charge of . forgery in
connection with, the filing of a note
for $69,000 against the estate of the
late Theodore " Roosevelt. Mrs.
Burkett was arrested at Hillsdale
Jast Wednesday on the request of
the New York police department, An
indictmeht charging Mrs. " Burkett
with forgery was presented to Sher
iff Leads Sweet by the detective.
Mrs. Burkett waved good-bye to a
crowd that had gathered to witness
her departure and called oat, "I will
write just as soon as I reach New
York." : ,
Screen Queen Chooses Home
Life to a Career in Cinema
t ' rr""''"1 T "2-3
Mrs. Natalie Talmadge Keaton
Conlon, who was named after her. -
Angeles newspaper man, ' .
Casualties in Coal
Field War Placed at
100 By Union Leader
Washington, July 16. One hun
dred casualties resulted ' during the
last year from labor troubles in the
Mingo (W. Va.) coal fields, C F.
Keeney, president of the miners'
district union today testified before
senafe investigating committee.
Mr. Keeney agreed with represen
tatives of the operators who
placed the casualties in the same
period at 27 that the lead were
"mostly men on the other side."
R. H. Kirkpatrick, another union
witness, formerly mine foreman for
the Burnwell Coal and Coke com
pany, testified that an imitation bat
tle around a mine tunnel had been
staged by his superiors and himself
to get martial law declared and
beat the strike." .
W. E. Hutchison, another miner
and organizer, attributed the con
tinuation of the strike to the refusal
of the mine operators to deal in any
fashion with the United Mine
Workers, and to their alleged pol
icy of continuing to work the mines
with nonunion forces.
'J.
and her little god-daughter, Natalie
The baby is the daughter of a Los
Michael Cudahy Weds
Alice Dickson Pinto
Saulte Ste Mar'e. Mich., July 16.
Michael Cudah, M i I w a u k e e's
wealthiest young business man, and
Mrs. Alice Dickson Pinto were mar
ried Friday afternoon by Judge C.
H. Chapman. The wedding inter
rupted a fishing party given by Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Uihlein of Milwau
kee. According to other members of
the party, Mr. Cudahy and Mrs. Pin
to decided to be married immedi
ately. A church wedding was out
of the question, as Mr. Cudahy is a
Roman Catholic and his bride is an
Episcopalian. She is a divorcee and
the rules of both churches forbid
their pastors marrying a divorced
person.
Mrs. Cudahy was married in . 1914
to Pinto, a, Frenchman. Four years
later a Paris court granted her a
divorce and she returned to Mil
waukee. She is the daughter of Mrs.
Charles Page Perin of New York
and Milwaukee.
Earthquakes occur in Great
Britain once a month, on an average,
but only one in every 200 causes any
damage. I
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
$760 f. o. b.
Can you think of any other passenger car that
offers you so many advantages as the Ford Sedan?
It is a car for everybody, everywhere. The business
man finds it an asset in his business; the farmer has
no end of uses for it, and when it is done with busi
ness, it does duty for the whole family.
Order your Ford car now. Don't wait until the
rush season comes. Just phone us or drop us a card.
Universal Motor Company
C E. Paulson Motor Company
Adkins Motor Company
McCaffrey Motor Company
Sample-Hart Motor Company
Details of Trip
To Canada Told
In Stillman Case
Witness Describes First Meet
ing Between Defendant and
Indian Guide Named As
Corespondent.
Poughkeepsie, N. Y., July 16.
Details of the first meeting of Mrs.
"Fifi" Potter Stillman and Fred K.
Beauvais were given Friday by H.
Phelps Clawson of Buffalo on cross
examination by Counsel William
Rand of counsel for James A. Still
man at the hearing before Referee
Daniel J. Gleason.
Mr. Clawson said Mrs. Stillman
first met Beauvais, whom Mr. Still
man has named as corespondent,
while Mrs. Stillman. Miss Anne Still
man, "Bud" Stillman and Clawson
were on a vacation at' "Lake Coch-
aigney, Canada, in November, 1916.
Mr. Clawson said Beauvais was one
of three hired guides for the trip
and naturally assumed leadership be
cause he was the only one of the
three who could speak English.
Clawson said that the family lived
in a log cabin on this trip and
Beauvais and the other two guides
in tents. He said the party usually
split on hur.thiff and fishinir trips.
each with a Ruide. Mrs. Stillman,
he said, seldom went on these trips.
because she was not feeling well at
the time. Mr. Stillman. he said.
was not there.
The hearing was cut short by the
illness of John F. Brennan, Mrs.
Stillman's chief counsel, who de
veloped a fever last night after his
return to his home in Yonkers. It
was decided to adjourn the hearings
until Monday and Tuesday, July 25
and 26. Mr. Clawson was cross-
examined by Colonel Rand from
10:30 in the morning until 1 o'clock
in the afternoon, and was $aid to
have remained unshaken on the
main point of his testimony that Mr.
stillman was with Mrs. Stillman sev
eral times at their country home at
Pleasantville during January, 1918.
J. he only two new witnesses of
the day were Patrick Torpey and
John J. Cronin, both former chauf
feurs for Mrs. Florence H. Leeds
Torpey, who drove the car for
"Mrs. Leeds" from December. 1919,
to August, 1920, identified a photo
graph ot Mrs. Leeds as that of the
woman who had employed him, but
said he could not identify a photo
graph of James A. Stillman as a
likeness of "Franklin Harold Leeds."
Cronin, now a detective in the
New York police department, identi
fied' photographs of Mr. Stillman,
"Mrs. Leeds" and the baby, Jay
Ward Leeds.
"Adam's Ale" Substituted
For 48 Barrels of Whisky
San Francisco, July 16. The re
moval from the government bonded
warehouse at Vallejo, Cal., of 48
barrels of whisky, valued at approxi
mately $150,000, and the substitution
of water, was discovered today, fed
eral, authorities here announced. '
The owner of the whisky is said
to be F. Hollman, San Francisco
realty dealer, Hollman left San Fran-
cisco yesterday for New York on
business.
Detroit
2562 Leavenworth Street
20th and Ames Ave.
4911 So. 24th Street
15th and Jackson Streets
18th and Burt Streets
Ak-Sar-Ben Requests
Fort Omaha Equipment
For Reunion in Fall
Washington, July 16. (Special
Telegram.) Officials of the Knights
of Ak-Sar-Ben have wired Con
gressman Jefferist stating the 34th
(Sandstorm) division will hold a re
union in Omaha," September 19, 20
and 21, during the festivities of Ak-Sar-Ben
week and that they have
applied through proper military
channels for the privilege of using
the barracks and bedding at Fort
Omaha, not in use, with a pledge
that nothing will be taken from the
reservations. ;
A telegram says that formal ap
plication has been made through
Gen. Omar Bundy at Fort Crook
and asks the co-operation of the
other congressmen to secure the per
mission in the absence of Mr. Jef
feris, who is on a tour of investiga
tion in Canada with a congressional
party.
John Shanahan, secretary to, the
congressman, started "the machinery
to secure the necessary permit. Mr.
Jefferis will be in Washington Mon
day personally to urge upon the sec
retary of war the advisability of
granting the request of the Knights
of Ak-Sar-Ben.
.
Body Found Under
Dentist's Burned
Motor Car, Not His
Roseburg, Ore., July 16. The
headless body found near here last
Wednesday beneath the wrecked
and burned automobile of Dr. R. M.
Brumfield, local dentist, was identi
fied today by J. T. Russell and Ed
Russell as that of their brother, Den
nis, a laborer who uvea nere.
A barber often patronized by the
dentist, testified before the coroner
that a bit of human scalp found near
the body was not that of Dr. Brum
field, who has not been seen for sev
eral days.
Mrs. Brumfield, however, persisted
in her original declaration that the
body was that of her husband and
that charges of murder laid against
him in a warrant issued last night
would be cleared up.
Officers today found stains believed
to be blood on the pavement at a
point near where Ora and Kenneth
Ronk, brothers; said they heard two
shots the night before the body was
found.
ThTvariotis currents in the North
Sea are now being tracked by means
of sealed bottles.
GARAGES
WE BUILD THEM FOR
$90 and up
Quality and workmanship first
class. Homebuilding and -carpentering
of all kinds. Estimates
free.
W. STEVENS
Market 0527.
Harding In Favor
Of Amalgamating
Air Department
President Would Place All
Military and Civil Branches
Under One Central
Authority.
Washington, July 16. President
Harding favors the proposal to place
all the aircraft services of the gov
ernment, military and civil, under
one central authority. There has
been an impression that the presi
dent was opposed to this plan and
that impression was emphasized
when Major General Menoher, chief
of the air service of the army, asked
i the secretary of war to remove the
assistant chief who advocated the
amalgamation of army and navy
services.
It was learned today, however,
that the president is heartily in fa
vor of the proposed amalgamation
and that the joint reorganization
commission, which is engaged in
preparing plans for a reorganization
of administration of the executive
branch of the government, is in
clined to recommend the unification
of all the government's aircraft ac
tivities. The position of President Harding
in the matter is that amalgamation
will work for efficiency and economy.
One great difficulty pertaining to
the present separate aircraft services
that has impressed him is that there
is no systematic method of awarding
contracts for the construction of air
craft. One branch awards contracts
without regard to any other govern
ment aircraft organization and the
president believes that this is detri
mental to the upbuilding of private
aircraft manufacture in the LJnited
States.
Inference is drawn from what was
learned today of the president's posi
tion, that he is in favor of the amal
gamation of the War and Navy de-
MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMini ORCHARD & WILHELM CO.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
See
Windows
and Main
Floor
A Special Clearance
Summer
Porch Swings, Chairs, Rockers, Settees
Couch Hammocks, Garden Furniture, Sun
Boom Furniture and Rattan Upholstered
Living Room Furniture
c
The noticeable activity in this store during the last few
months is due to one thing, viz: "we have met the price
situation in a way entirely satisfactory to our trade."
1 1
1920 Price Sale Price
65.00 Gray Enamel Wiltyw Sofa... 29.50
36.00 Chair to match 15.00
21.00 Foot Stool to match 10.00
29.00 Table to match 13.50
158.00 Gray . Enamel, 6-ft. Davenport with
loose cushioned cretonne upholstery,
at v., 69.00
225.00 Frosted Brown, 6-ft. Davenport with
loose cushion, velour upholstery. . . .98.00
91.00 Rocker or Chair to match 43.50
36.00 Old Ivory Chair with cretonne up
holstery 19.50
41.00 Old Ivory Chair with cretonne up
holstery 19.50
120.00 Parchment Settee with loose cushioned
upholstery 65.00
64.00 Rocker and Chair to match, ea., 35.00
40.00 Table to match 25.00
106.00 Chaise Lounge to match 58.00
Large high-back arm rocker, finished forest
green, with cane seat and back. Formerly
$8.00. Now 5.00
15.00 and 16.00 Fumed Oak Porch Swings,
5-ft. and 6-ft lengths, equipped with
chains; complete, each 10.00
12.50 and 14.60 Gray Porch Swings, 4-ft.
and 6-ft. lengths; equipped
each
Crex Grass Rugs
In sizes that are a little short of standard measurements.
Otherwise these rugs are perfect in every respect.
Prices -Very Special
This is an unusual chance to purchase an attractive, durable Grass Rug for
porch, sunroom, bedroom or summer home at a low price.
Among these rugs are a number of the famous De Luxe weave in the extra
heavy weight.
2Ux6 ft, each...... 2.25
4x6 ft, each 3.75
5x6 ft, each...... 5.50
0rcjaixi& Wijhdm Co.
MMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ATLANTIC 3000 uniiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiuiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiijiiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
partments into a department of na
tional defense. The plan under con
sideration by the reorganization
commission contemplates having a
cabinet officer at the head of this
department with assistant secretaries
under him in charge of the army, the
navy and the united aircraft service.
Widow of Famous Surgeon
Leaves $2,000,000 Estate
Chicago, July 16. Mrs. Jeanette
C. Murphy, widow of the late John
B. Murphy, famous surgeon, left an
estate of $2,000,000, according to her
will which was filed Friday in the
rrobate court. She leaves her entire
estate to her three daughters in the
following manner.
First she created a trust fund of
$200,000, the income to be paid to
her daughters. The residue of the
estate she divided outright, share and
share alike among them. The daugh-
THE OMAHA
BEE furnishes a
complete and.
prompt
Base Ball
Score Board
for the benefit and
c o n v e n i ence of
SOUTH SIDE resi
dents on the win
dows of
PHILIP'S
DEPARTMENT
STORE
24th and O Streets
The Omaha Bee
'IgasovsMacioi?
Furniture
1920 Price Sale Price
100.00 Fumed Gray and Black Settee with
cretonne upholstery 39.00
78.00 Fumed Brown Settee with cretonne
cushions 35.00
46.00 Chair arid Rocker to match, ea., 20.00
56.00 Old Ivory 4-ft. Settee ....... 15.00
64.00 Green and Gold Arm Chair. . .29.50
25.00 Fumed Brown Arm Chair 10.00
49.00 Large Fumed Brown Arm Rocker or
Chair with cretonne spring cushions,
at 19.50
85.00 Fumed Brown Settee with tapestry up
holstery 39.50
48.00 Chair and Rocker to match, ea., 19.50
80.00 Old Ivory Willow Settee .29.50
40.00 Chair and Rocker to match, ea., J 8.50
35.00 Table to match 15.00
9.50 Fumed Oak Porch Swings, 5-ft. length;
equipped with chains, each 6.85
3.95 and 5.75 Fumed Oak Porch Swings; 4-ft
length; only two styles; equipped with
chains, each 2.95 and 4.75
6.50 Fumed Oak Settees; 4-ft. length, now,
at 5.00
5-00 and 5.50 Arm Chairs and Rockers to
match, each 2.95 and 3.50
with chains, at,
.7.50 and 8.50
And Many Others.
6x7 ft, each 7.75
6x8 ft, each 8.50
7x9 ft, each 10.00
SIXTEENTH AND HOWARD STREETS "
ters are Mrs. Cecile M. Brnedicta
Mrs. Mildred Hurley, both of Ch
cago, and Mrs. Celeste Murdock o."
Indianapolis. Prior to her death Mrs.
Murphy entered into an sgreement
with her daughters that they should
carry on certain charities she anir
her husband had been interested in.'
These amount to $25,000 a year.
WE can im
mediately deliver the bearing
you need for your
car, truck or trac
tor. We act as the
servicedepartment
of the Timken,
New Departure
and Hyatt com
panies in this city.
See
Windows
and Main
Floor
Sale of
8x8 ft, each 11.75
8x9 ft, each 13.25
9x10 ft, Mh 16.50
JIB
I h" v if li m acn mm m i i i iw
I OMAHA BRANCH f
1812 Harney Strait
Phoo Atlantic 2844 g
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