Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 02, 1921, Image 1

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The Omaha Sunday Bee
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VOL. 51 NO. 10.
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OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOUEIt
1921.
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Packer Men
Will Vote
On Strike
Klection to Decide Whether
' Employe Are Willing to
Leave John to Prevent
C'tit in Wages.
Ballot Set for Saturday
racking plant employes through
out the country are to vote on the
question of striking to prevent reduc
tion iif"' wages, according to J. V.
Burn of Omaha, secretary of district
council No. 5 of the Amalgamated
Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen
of North America.
"The vote is Koiug to he taken
next Saturday," Mr. Bum said, "to
find out if the men are willing to
leave their jobs to protect their inter
r.stk against lowered wages started
by Morris & Company and which
will he followed by the other bii
i .
A Mr. Burns added that the ballots
VJ ere to be mailed out from Chicago
the latter part of last week, but that
they had not yet reached Onnha.
The butcher workmen's union, at
an international conference he'd here
August 15. authorised its executive
board to attempt, to negotiate nn
t agreement with the packers on wages
1 'Hid working conditions to take the
llace of the Alschuler agteciiicnt
which expired .September 15, and to
take such action as deemed neces
sary if negotiations to this end failed.
1 Union officials were unable to
reach an agreement with the packers
and the purpose of the balloting Sat
urday, Mr. Burns said, will be to
find out "what the rank and file"
wart, before any strike order is is
sued by the executive board.
England Hopeful
For Irish Peace
De Valera's Reply Seems to
Promise Agreement .to
' Solve Problem.
- London, Oct I.-(By The Asso
ciated Press.) England was , today
filled with hope that a settlement of
the Irish problem 'would follow the
meeting, of British cabinet members
and the representatives of Sinn Fein
Ireland in this city on October 11.
The prompt icply from Eamon De
Valera, - accepting 1 Prime" Minister
T Uuil r,nr(rp', v iiitMtatii-iTI tn flip
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V. WUICICIIVK auu HIV vullUHOSWiJ ii.
i of the latest exchanges between Lon
don and Dublin seemed to promise
that out of the conference would
come an agreement which would
solve a problem which has proved a
stumbling block for the ablest states
men of the British nation.
Seldom, since the fateful, day in
1155. when King Henry II claimed.
through Rome, possession of .Ireland
had the prospect for peace between
England and the people of that isle
peared brighter. It has been one
the curiousities ot history that
Nickolas Breakspear, the mendicant
scholar, who became Adrian IV, the
only English pontiff, whose reign of
the Holy ace was, one ot the most
remarkable in the annals of the
church, should have been associated
by chroniclers with the beginning of
a controversy which has kept his
native land embroiled for 766 years.
Fort Omaha Ceases to
Exist as Aero Post;
Eqi
juipment Is Moved
Fort Omaha has ceased to exist
as an air service post. Orders
were that all equipment and person
nel should be transferred to Scott
Field, Bellevue, 111., by October 1.
Lieut. A. C. McKinley, Lieut. A.
II. Foster, Lieut. James B. Gor
dan and 56 enlisted men are affect
ed by the order. Equipment is to
be loaded in a caravan of , motor
trucks furnished by the motor
' transport corps. Included in the
equipment to be transferred are 300
balloons.
During the war Fort Omaha was
the chief baloon school of the army.
Future use of the fort has not been
decided upon.
Judge Closes Kansas City
Hotel for Selling Liquor
Kansas City, Oct. 1. Declaring
that the Hendryx hotel here was be-
ing used merely as a cloak to cover
1 the sale of liquor. Federal Judge Arba
S. W Vanvleekenburg issued an
order closing the hostelry and for
bidding the proprietors, the owner of
the building or anyone else from
operating it for any purpose what
ever. ' The order, which invokes sec
tion 11 of the national prohibition
act, is the first of the kind to be is
sued, according to local federal of
ficials. Violations of the court's
order, it was stated, will render such
persons liable to charges of contempt
of court and court penalties.
European Communists Are
Urged to Ask Jobless Bonus
London. Sept. 30. Communists in
Europe have received orders rela
tive t the unemployment crisis, ac
cording to information from Scan
dinavia, by which they are instructed
to ask for unemployment bonuses
from municioalities on the principle
that the amount granted shall equal
average weekly or daily wages.
The orders explain that the object
of the scheme is to "camouflage the
subversive activity of the communist
youth, to weaken municipal finances,
and to convince, workers that it i
pay to be unemployed."
- .
Longshoremen Strike
As Protest on Wage Cut
New York, Oct. I. Several thou
sand longshoremen and checker
walked out today in protest sgaintt
new working terms agreed upon re
cently by transatlantic steamship
operators ami the International
Longshoremen' association.
The district council of the Intuf.
national Longshoremen's association
announced that it had not authorized
the strike.
The working agreement drawn up
last week provide for a reduetirn
in wages, effective today.
The walkout took place along the
Munnauan aim itoiiol.cn water
ironts.
Wni. Ritchie, Jr..
New State Head
American Legion
Omahan Elected Unanimous
ly After Withdrawal of
George Munn, Only
Oilier Nominee.
Fremont. Oct. 1. (Special.) Wil
liam Ritchie, jr., of Omaha, is the
new state commander of the Ameri
can Legion.
lie was so elected by unanimous
ballot at the third state convention of
the legion here this afternoon.
George Munn of Ord was the only
other nominee for the office. As the
roll call vote of the convention pro
ceeded, it soon became evident that
the nosts with the larsrest deleaa
tions were nearly unanimous for the
Umaha man.
Munn Withdraws.
"I withdraw,'' stated Munn. when
he could get the floor, "and request
the convention to make it unanimous
for 'Bill' Kitchie, my old classmate
ana good lriend.
Earl M. Cline of Nebraska City,
boosted m Nebraska for the next
national commander, was chosen
member of the national committee.
Frank Warner of Norfolk wis elected
alternate.
State vice commanders are H. H
Ellis of Holdrege, for the army; Ar
thur cell of York, for the marines
Lester L. Dunn, of Lincoln, for the
navv.
Ray S. True of Syracuse v is eleo
ted state chaplain.
Delegates to represent Ne raska
at the national convention in Kansas
City are: T. J. McGuire of Oaaha,
Charles Reed of Lincoln, F. W. Ash
ton of Grand Island, and Robert G,
Simmons' of Scottsbluff. Alternates
are: Earl M. Cline, L. L. Fitzsini
mons of Fremont. Ray Madden of
Omaha, F. D. Connelly of Madison.
and O. M. McKerrihan . oi North
Platte.
J. B. U Connell ot Lincoln was
re-elected state adjutant, and Frank
Perkins of Fremont, finance officer.
Auxiliary Affairs.
Mrs. Edgar P. Penny, Fullerton,
was elected president of the Ne
braska Woman's auxiliary in its clos
mg session. Mrs. K. G. iimmon,
wife of Past Commander Simmons,
Scottsbluff, was named first vice
president: Mrs. W. H. Holmes, Hast
ings, second vice president; Mrs. tl.
R. Ball, secretary, Lincoln; Mrs. O,
H. Bovle. Fullerton. treasurer: Mrs.
W. F. Bryant, Hartington, historian.
Mrs. J. E. Baido, Lincoln, was chosen
as national committee woman and
Mrs. Penny was made alternate to
the national convention at Kansas
City next month in conjunction with
the national convention ot the Amer
ican Legion. . .
The auxiliary adopted its perma
nent constitution along with its by
laws as offered by the committee.
Humphrey Sullivan, represenenting
the national commander ot the Amer
ican Legion, delivered the main ad-
dress to the women. 1 he auxiliary
will meet next year at York when
the Legion convention will be held
at the same time. -
WHERE TO FIND
The Big Features of .
THE SUNDAY BEE
. PART ONE.
"Omaha Boasts Only Woman
Airplane Manufacturer . in U. S."
Page 8.
"The Canary Kid" Tells "How a
Husband Should Act," by H. R.
Harris Page 8.
PART TWO.
Society and News for Women-
Pages 1 to 5.
Editorial Comment Page 6.
Shopping With Polly Page 7.
Happyland, a Page for the Chil
drenPage 8.
PART THREE. ,
Sports News and Features-
Pages 1, 2 and 3.
Of Special Interest to Motorists-
Page 4.
Want Ads Pages 5 and 6.
State and Farm News Page 7.
"Plain Speaking About Life on the
Farm Page 7.
Markets and Financial Page 8.
MAGAZINE SECTION.
"Wanted: Railroad in a Hurry,
So Omaha Man Gets Job," by J. T.
Armstrong Page 1.
"Education Made Easy," by
James J. Montague Page 1.
"The Yellow Streak," Serial by
Valentine Williams Page 2.
"Black SaurioL" Blue Ribbon
Short Story by Arthur Stringer
Page 3.
"The Married Life of -Helen and
Warren" Page 3.
"Science .Tells Us," by Rene
Bache Page 4.
"Follies of The Passing Show," by
Hanlon Page 5.
"World's , Greatest Detective
Cases" Page 5. . , j
Amusements Pages 6. 7 and 8.
Permanent
Labor Plan
Considered
Industrial Conference to Tale
Up Lading Remedy fur
Prevention of Turin-
plo)inent in V. S.
Will Plan For Future
By ARTHUR SEARS HENNINC
Washington, Oct. 1. Following
the adoption yetcnlay of enter
gency measures to lessen the volume
of unemployment which fore
thadows widespread suffering next
winter. President Harding s indus
trial conference began today consid
eration of a permanent remedy for
the unemployment evil.
N'o reform of greater benefit to the
country could be achieved, in the
opinion of the president, than con
structive public action for the preven
tion of unemployment.
"If unemployment is to be at
tacked with vigor." says the report
of the economic advisory committee
to the conference, "and with a pros
pect of lasting success, steps must
lie taken now to deal with the prob
lem even well in advance of the next
upward trend of business. When the
next downward phase of the business
cycle comes it will be too late for the
application of the most effective
means of assistance. For intelligent
and farsightcd action we believe cer
tain kinds of statistical information
are essential and the gathering of
such data should be promptly under
taken.
Will Plan Public Works.
"We also believe an effort should
now be made to set up a machinery
for the long-range planning of public
works to mesh in with the fluctu
ations of private demands for labor.
"Probably most promising of all is
the opportunity now offered to bring
home to the public mind the sig
nificance of the business cycle and to
enlist the individual enterprise of
business managers singly and
through trade associations in the
work of regularizing employment
within their own establishments.
Stabilization of business and the
avoidance of recurring industrial de
pressions and crises "are in no small
measure dependent upon a more
comolete knowledee of the factors
affectina- the business situation," and
the committee recommends that the
government collect and disseminate
information on inventories, go jdi on
order, production and production ca
pacity, construction, weekly earnings
and hours by trades and establish
ments, employment, cost fundamen
tals, prices, probable . demands for
or consumption of specific articles
and other significant cycle figures
Would Defer Expenditures.
A municipal, state and federal pub
lic works, the committee holds,
should be contracted in years of in
dustrial activity and expanded in
years of depression to revive private
industry and to check industrial de
pression and unemployment to pre
vent the demand of public works for
materials and labor from conflicting
with the needs of private industry and
in general to stabilize industry and
employment.
It is suggested that at least 10 per
cent of the average annual expendi
tures on public works be deferred
during good, times and the deferred
accumulations executed in a year of
hard times, which occurs about, every
10 years. Another suggestion is a
federal bond issue as a loan in aid
of municipal public works in years
of depression.
Otto T. Mallery of the industrial
board of Pennsylvania estimates the
lifting power of public works as one-
third of the dead weight of such de
pression as ' the present that is
$1,650,000,000 of additional public
works wages contrasted witn a de
crease of $5,000,000,000 in wages in
private industry in a year,ot de
pression.
"Save Your Overtime."
The committee makes numerous
suggestions to employers to reduce
the fluctuations of seasonable em
ployment and to exercise such fore
sight in the management of business
as will minimize cyclical unemploy
ment. "In flush times save your
overtime," should be a slogan, says
the committee, which continues:
On the upwave we are taking
the country as a whole and especially
the ultimate consumer stocking up.
On the downward wave we are
drawing from stocks. It is at the
speculative froth on the wave oi
prosperity that we want to aim our
strongest efforts.
Ihe normal sequence is subject to
accidents such as war, natural calam
ity (crop failure, earthquake) and
revolution in political control, in
technical advice, or In consumers
demand, and in one part or another
of the business structure, such ac
cidents are continuous. They cannot
be specifically guarded against, but
are best met by building up the re
sistance of the whole structure by
the avoidance of the strains of over
extension and prostration.
Safety Lies in Planning. .
"For individual enterprises as for
public undertakings safety lies in
planning. If most of them were
planned well ahead we could expect
a healthy swing to the cycle, broken
only by occasional calamity.
It is just where the screws must
be put upon inflation that citizen ed-
(Ton to Tng Two, Column Four.)
Owner of Boat and Crew
Of Five Lost in Storm
New Orleans, La., Oct I. Alfred
Daspit of New Orleans, owner of
the power boat, Venus. Captain
Henry Fry and a crew of four men,
all of New Orleans, were lost in a
storm about 50 miles from Tampico
yesterday, according to a message
received here by Alfred Daspit, jr.
Sentiment Growing in
Favor of Smoot Sale TaxlL
Wa.hlnston. Oit, I. A
sentiment in the senate I
lureri Mies UK at a ubiinVf
the many micrlUneoin w" evle
was claimed today by propenents of
such a 11. They predated that the
more senators tulied the pending
revenue inaiur", the more they
would come to favor the a!n Wy.
Kcpublicaii leaders had not made
rsuvaM of the majority mrnibiTship
and were vithout accurate informa
tion at to the strength of advocates
tf tin form of taxation.
Senator Blames
Organized Labor
For Lack of Work
Minnesota Republican
Launches Bitter Attack on
Trade Union Shouts tie-
fiance to Rail Urotlierhootl
Chlraga TrlbuiM-Omaha IIm iMmed Wlm.
Washington, Oct. 1. Blame for in
dustrial depression and unemploy
ment was laid at the door of organ
ized labor by Senator Knute Nelson
of Minnesota, republican, in a bitter
attack in the senate upon the trade
unions.
Senator Nelson charged that la
br.r's refusal to accept reduced wages
was the chief obstacle to an mdus
trial and business revival. He shout
ed defiance at the railroad broth'
erhoods and expressed the opinion
that it might be well for them to
carry out their strike threats in order
that the railroad controversy might
be brought to a showdown and defi
nitely settled.
The Minnesota senator warmly
praised the recent decision of Judge
Landis reducing wages in the build
ing trades in Chicago. He criticised
the unions for opposing the reduc
tion. "When Judge Landis made a rea
sonable reduction for the building
trades in Chicago it was very mod
erate and very reasonable they pro
tested and threatened to strike,"
said Senator Nelson. "Under such
conditions, if they find themselves in
idleness they are themselves to
blame."
Democrat Raps Wall Street
Senator Nelson's attack aroused
the ire of Senator Heflin of Alabama,
democrat. lie placed responsibility
for present conditions upon "Wail
street" and warmly assailed the re
publican administration for taking no
action to prevent the payment of
Jargc salaries by the New York fed
eral reserve hank. The salaries paid '
to 30 officials in the New York bank,
he asserted, would equal the salaries
of half the United States senate
and that of the president Senator
Smoot of Utah, republican, stated
that he had complained to the federal
reserve board of the salaries paid by
the bank, but that he regarded the
matter as outside the power of con
gress.
Senator Nelson's speech was de
livered in the course of debate on
the tax bill. -
"My opinion is there is nothing
that so retards industrial revival in
this country as the attitude of organ
ized labor in refusing to come down
to reasonable wages and a reason
able basis of employment" said Sen
ator Nelson. - "All over the United
States we are suffering because of
that situation, r
Scores Railway Employes.
"In the case of -railroad transpor
tation, the railroads are unable to re
duce rates because of the high cost
of operation resulting from excessive
wages which their operatives demand
on the same scale that they were ac
customed to receive during the war,
during the administration of Mr. Mc-
Adoo as director general.
1 was told by the junior sena
tor from New York, Mr. Calder, that
bricklayers in New York City were
asking $14 a day for eight hours
work. We all know that the union
does not allow men to do the maxi
mum amount of work, but they are
only allowed to lay so many bricks
a day.
"There would not be many idle
men in this country today if union
labor would come down to a rea
sonable figure in conformity with
what is occurring in other lines of
business and until we reach a lower
level of prices in connection with un
ion labor, until we get more effec
tive service, it is hopeless to expect
a complete and fair revival of the
industries and prosperity , of this
country."
China Rejects Proposals to
Negotiate Over Shantung
Pekin, Oct. 1. Proposals fop di
rect negotiations relative to Shan
tung which were made recently by
Japan, are rejected in a note ap
proved by the Chinese cabinet yes
terday, according to information in
official sources. The note to Japan
attempts to refute all the nine points
made in the communication trom
Tokio. The message will be sub
mitted to the president and it is ex
pected will be handed to the Jap
anese minister here next Tuesday or
Wednesday. ' '
- The foreign office ' proposed to
send identic notes t6 all foreign min
isters here, embodying China's rea
sons for rejecting the plan.
Woman Anarchist la '
Executed by Bolshevik!
Moscow, Oct 1. (By The As
sociated Press.) Pania ' Barron, a
woman anarchist leader, and nine
men have been executed by the
Cheka or soviet inquisition, and
many others have been .imprisoned
in Moscow in connection with plots
dating back to September, 1919,
when bombs were exploded during
a meeting of the Moscow committee
of the communist party, wrecking
the building in which the meeting
was held and killing many persons.
LET your nxt lurnac' b m Holland.
Fhon Dous. 42. 220S Cumins St Ad,
Let Uncle Sam Pull Their Teeth
1
" '
Grand Jury Makes
Report to Court on
"Wild Cat" Probe
True Bills Found Against
Prominent Men; Names Not
. To Be Made Puhlic
Until Later.
The grand jury called to investi
gate alleged "wild cat" promotion
schemes by which the people have
lost millions, returned its indictments
and made its report to Presiding
District Judge Trout at 10:30 Satur
day night.
Names of the indicted men will
not be made public until later. The
report to be turned over to Judge
Troup will not be read until Mon
day.
Foreman Browcr E. McCague of
the iurv srave very definite instruc
tions to court officers that none of
the names shall be made public un
til the men are in custody. Several
very well-known men, prominent in
promotion schemes, are among those
against whom true bills were found.
Arrests will be made Monday.
The grand jury began its sessions
September 8 and has been at work
continuously since then, sometimes
working also at night.
Camp Fire Girls Net
$2,500 in Bead Sale
Annual sale of beads . by the
Omaha Camp Fire girls on the
downtown street corners all day Sat
urday netted the organization SZ,50U,
according to Mary Louise Uay,
executive secretary, who had charge
of the sales.
The girls were downtown at 7
Saturday morning and from then un
til 3 in i the afternoon sold their
beads to passersby. Last year the
sales netted $3,400.
The money obtained by the bead
sales will go toward meeting current
expenses of the organization and to
doing extension work in Omaha.
Nora Bank Robber Pleads
Guilty in District Court
Nelson. Neb., Oct. 1. (Special.)
Joe White and George Melrose ap
peared in district court here to an
swer charges of grand larceny. Mel
rose pleaded guilty and Judge Brown
sentenced him to not more tnan
seven nor less than one year in state
prison. White pleaded not guilty
and was held to appear at . the next
term of court. White and Melrose
were arrested last July at Beaver
City charged with the robbery of the
State bank at Nora.
Use of Liquor to Excess
Opposed in Doctor's Will
Geneva, Neb., Oct. 1. (Special.)
Forfeiture of right to inheritance
if legatees mentioned in the will of
the late Dr. H. L. Smith have used I
intoxicating liquors or drugs, to
excess, within five years of execution
of the document, is found to be pro
vided in his last testament just filed
in probate court The estate of
nearly $500,000 is divided among
next of kin with several thousand
dollar bequents to his nephews.
Oil Fire Under Control
Bakersfield, Cal., Oct. 1. Fire in
the Richfield Oil company's refinery
here was placed under control by
plant employes after a call had been
sent Tor the Bakersfield fire depart
ment According to the plant super
intendent, the fire probably started
when a copper coil burned away.
Aero Meet "Stamp
Week" Announced
Concentrated Campaign to Be
Ileld for Sale of Air Con-
gress
kJlICIkt'lS.
Mayor Dahlman has
this week as "Stamp :
designated
.week",;;.in.
Omaha. ' - ,
' The occasion is a concentrated
Campaign for the Sale of stamps for
the International Aero congress to
be held in Omaha, November 3, 4
and 5.
A score of hoys are selling the
stamps for a prize airplane night to
Chicago, lhey will canvass prac
tically every office m Omaha this
week.
A wireless telegraphy outfit is a
special prize offered the boy who
sells the most stamps during the
final drive this week, officials of the
Omaha Aero club announced yes
terday. Edward Rice, 1912 Emmet street,
William Ulovec, Rollin Dunn, 1016
South Thirty-eighth street, and Gor
don Pray, Carter Lake club, are
highest in th contest.
Ford Plant Employes
Put Out Blaze Before
Fire Fighters Arrive
The assembly plant of the Ford
company, Sixteenth and Cuming
streets, has a fire alarm system and
its employes hold fire drill twice a
month. As a result, workers loiter
ing near the plant extinguished a
blaze in the building late Saturday
afternoon before the fire department
from the barn, one door north, ar
rived on the scene.
At 5:30 dense smoke was discover
ed pouring from the fifth story win
dows. The automatic alarm sounded
hnd about ISO of the employes who
were in the neighborhood of : the
plant, which had shut down for the
day, ran up the five flights of stairs
with fire extinguishers, and had the
blaze, which was in the paint shop,
under control before the city fire
fighters could get into action. The
dense smoke caused from the burn
ing paint hampered the men in their
efforts.
The fire, which is thought to have
originated from spontaneous combus
tion, damaged the paint shop to the
extent of $25. Nearly 300 persons
were attracted to the scene of the
blaze.
Grocers' Trade Journal
Takes Rap at Police Judge
Protest against a decision of Po
lice Judge Wappich in case of E. N.
Bauer, a grocer at 1719 Leaven
worth street, permitting him to open
his store on Sunday, which is al
leged to be contrary to city ordi
nance, is contained in this week's
issue of the Grocery Reporter, pub
lished by the Retail Grocers' associa
tion. ,
The paper states the ordinance was
found constitutional in a test case in
district court, and that Judge Wap
pich is rendering a decision with
absolutely no regard for the law in
making such a ruling.
Miners Postpone Making
Demands for Wage Scale
Indianapolis, Oct 1. By an over
whelming vote, the convention of the
United Mine Workers of America
today adopted President John L.
Lewis recommendation to postpone
until next February the formulation
of demands to be made by the miners
in negotiating new wage agreements
to supplant agreements with opera
tors that expire next March 31.
1
i
Group 6 Bankers
Will ) Organize
To Aid Ranchers
C. II. Cornell of Valentine
Calls Meeting to Start $200,
' 000 Finance Corpora
tion iu West. .
The Northwest Nebraska Agricul
tural Loan association will be formed
at Valentine, October 6. A call was
sent out by C. H. Cornell, a hanker
of that town, to the 68 banks of the
sandhills country composing Group
(5. The object of this farm loan
association is to co-operate with the
War Finance corporation in assist
ing live stock growers.
J. P. Palmer, attorney of the State
Bankers'- association, and Mr. Cor
nell drew up articles of incorporation
and conferred with the state banking
board, securing the tentative approv
al of John E. Hart. The capital of
the new corporation probably will
be $200,000 and its business will be
to rediscount farm loans with the
War Finance corporation. The
counties participating are Holt. Rock,
Kaya Paha, Brown, Cherry, Sheri
dan, Dawes and Sioux. '
'.'If the cattle "industry of western
Nebraska is to be saved, stockmen
must be enabled to hold their imma
ture stock," said Mr. Cornell, who
was in Omaha. "Unless loans are
made possible they will have to ship
a great deal of breeding stock to
market and denude the range. Lot
of yo'ung stuff has already been sent
out. lo return the cattle industry to
prosperity, the bankers ot this dis
tnct are going to organize to get
the money for, farmers and ranch
men to hold their stock until it is
ready for market, and to restock their
pastures.
Custer County Teachers
Hold Annual Institute
Broken Bow, Neb., Oct. 1. (Spe
cial.) About 400 teachers registered
for the two days' session of the coun
ty institute. The 1 faculty, Prof.
Charles Fordyce and Professor Mc
Proud of Nebraska university; Prof.
F. M. Gregg of Wesleyan university,
Miss Knudsen of Kearney normal,
Miss Ellen Brown and Superintend
ent Partridge, was the strongest for
a number of years. Professor For
dyce lectured at the Lyric theater,
and Bess Gcarhart Morrison, reader,
and Maude Hawks Campbell, vocal
ist, gave a program in the Methodist
church.
Holdrege Aviator Makes
Perfect Night Landing
Holdrege, Neb., Oct. 1. (Special.)
Aviator DeForest Swanson made
the first night landing that has been
made at the aviation field here. In
returning from the eastern part of the
state darkness overtook him while
over the Republican river valley with
no good landing ground available.
He continued on home, and made a
perfect landing on his home field in
the dark.
The Weather
Forecast
Probably showers Sunday; not
much in change in temperature.
Hourly Temperatures.
S a. m Ml t p. m.
H a. m. 53 I t p. m.
...61
. . .53
. ...V
...Ml
...SO
...US
...
. . .67
7 a.
p. m.
4 p. tn.
P. ro.
p. m.
1 p. m.
5 p. m.
8 a. m.
a. m.
lit a. m.
It a. m.
It Boon
Utah Town
Shaken By
Earthquake
All Brick and Stone Structures
' In l'.Iritior Abandoned
Neighboring Villages
Itcport Shock.
School House Wrecked
Salt Lake City, Oct. 1. Abandon,
incut of all brick and stone buildingt
iu F.lsinnr, a Mnnll h.imlrt l'0 miles
south of hcrr, came today alter three
additional earthquake Khmks struck
the little town this innrninK and in
creased the damage caused by trem
ors Thursday ami Friday.
Atliltlioii.il thock were recorded
this morning at 8:-7, 8:4S and 8:57.
A school house upon which repairs
were being made from daniaKe
wrought by Thursday's tremor was
ahnot completely wrecked by thii
morning' shocks. Workmen fled
from the building as the walls and
roof began to crumble. Scores of
dwellings were further damaged.
Other Towns Shaken.
Uichfield and Monroe, two nearby
hamlets, alo reported minor damage
from the shocks.
Great white scams have been left
in the nearby mountains by the frac
tured segments torn away from the
high clitfs and Hung in huge land
slides to the canyon bottoms. AH
persons have been warned to keep
out of the canyons.
Streams from the mountains are
said to be running blood red with
oxides shaken from fissures by the
successive quakes.
Shocks In Illinois.
Harrisburg, 111., Oct. 1. Two dis
tinct shocks, believed to be earth
tremors, were felt here at 3 o"clock
this morning. Houses were shaken
and sleepers aroused, causing consid
erable alarm, but no damage has
been reported.
onpartisans
Start New Drive
Headquarters Opened at
Cheyenne to Organize State
Of Wyoming.
Cheyenne, Wyo., Oct 1. (Spe
cial.) Wyoming is invaded by the
National Nonpartisan league. The,
league has started active organiza
tion work and, it is said, will center
its efforts on electing a United States
senator, a congressman, a governor,
and en to all the rest of the offices
at the 1922 election.
Harry M. Lux, claiming to be an
overseas veteran of the world war,
drove into Cheyenne in a small car
and immediately set anout maKing
i.rc nnrntinns tf nnen statft heaHmia'i
1 - "'i . L ' 1
ters here. ; .
A. C. Townley of Minneapolis,
head of the league, visited Cheyenne
in company with his wife and daugh
ter, August, 11. At that time he de
nied that he had anv intention of
starting a drive for members in
Wyoming within the next two or
three years. '.
Inspector Charges
Hams and Canned Fruit
A charge of selling spoiled hams
and canned loganberries has been
filed against Cecil Inzenstat," 2122
California street, by Dr. C. C. Hall,
chief food inspector of the health de
partment. Dr. Hall reported that he has evi
dence that Izenstat sold hams to the
Rosenblum restaurant, 2309 Cuming
street, and canned fruit to the Sani
tary bakery, 1609 Cuming street
Health department records also
show that Izenstat was. found guilty
in police court last March of selling
spoiled canned goods from a store at
414 North Sixteenth street,
Americans in t-nina f rotest
At Indiscriminate Firing
Peking, Oct' 1. (By The Asso
ciated Press.) Complaints have been
made to the American legation here
by three American companies in
Chung-King and I-Chang that the
armies of the northern and southern.
Chinese governments are indiscrim-:
inately detaining and firing on for
eign-owned Yang-Tse-Kiang . river
boats, thereby causing- a cessation of
river traffic to the injury of American
trade.
Locomobile Company Has
Perfected Reorganization
New York, Oct. 1. Reorganiza
tion of the Locomobile company.
auto manufacturers, at Bridgeport
H. Havens of Bridgeport was elected
president. The company declared
that it had terminated its contract -with
Hare's Motors, Inc., undet
which it has been operating its
properties.
Norway Storthing Ratifies
Commercial Pact With Reds
Christiania, Norway, Oct. 1. By a
vote of 69 radical socialists against
47 of the conservatives, the Storthing
today ratified the commercial treaty
with Russia. In the course of the
debate Foreign Minister Racstad ,.
said " that Russia would repay the
Norwegian loan of 4,000.000 kroner.
Quake in Nicaragua.
San Juan Del Sur. Nicaragua, "
Oct 1. Two earthauakes were felt
here at 4:55 o'clock, eastern standard
time this morning. No damage has
been reported.
V