TUB UKK: OMAHA. MU.M'AY. .MAUtll SO. U.3. Ankcny Youth Seriously Hurt i by Power Saw 2?alitMii Ifa) t Dtl From Fifth Story of lloejilial in Df Moinfi Want Kp rciur Hrmorl. lift Moinr, U, Mufh P lpe tial Telegram )Hjrou Canoe. W. va prob-lily faulty injured by a motor driven mw whil sawing v ood at the place pi hn Urother-ii bw, Joseph lUrvey, near Ankcny. i.unoe fell Into the ami received eeral serious rut before lie toiiM Ik ettrit 'I he toy wa broiiKlit to tlie M'thwliit hopitat at lh Moiiiei. Hymn ia the nut of W. I. (iauoe o( Ankeuy. Salesman Leapa to Death. Drepondrnt over ill-health, Jjillr iritrntrlij. 47, of Chicago leaped to Ha death from a fifth tory window i.t the Iowa Mrthodit hospital here. (irueiifeM, vh mi a traveling Mlesman for a Chinas firm, wa lakeri iy the luxpiul March II, uf frringr from a nervooa breakdown. The- tragedy followed a reception held in the entrance of the women' and children' ward. The talesman, who was permuted to walk about the h.illn. eluded the nurses and htepped into the bathroom. Care Jully knocking the ashea from hi pipe on the window ledge the balc iiuu laid l.is pipe on the sill, stepped Ml the edege of a bathtub, climbed to the open window, and plunged forward to hi death. II i.t act wa not discovered until nurse and at tendant on the tloor below saw the hurtling body Mrike the ground. Al though the salesman fell five floors death was not instantaneous. Want Receiver Removed. Firt stops looking toward dissolu tion of the present receivership of the Des Moines City Kailway com I any were taken when Federal Judge Margin J. Wade at Ottumwa signed an orlcr permitting the company to exorcise its corporate power to bor row money with which to pay its debts. The court order was In response to an offer by the company to as sume and pay the debts incurred by the receivership and to pay many of the, long past due debts of the company itself if it were again placed in control of its own property and the receivership lifted. The offer Mates that the company on the strength of its franchise granted No vember 29, ha arranged for credit to pay its debts if it can get it property under its management be tween March 28 and April 1. Britain Asks Japan for Assistance, Rumor Washington. March 19. An nouncement was made by the Amer ican commission to Promote Self government in India, that Great Britain. Under the terms of the Anglo-Japanese alliance, had asked Japan for military aid if the "passive revolutionary movement ' in India leads to a general uprising," while at the same time, the statement was denied by the Japanese embassy. The statement of the society that such request had been made was upon the basis of "confidential sources in Tokio and London," while the embassy statement -declared that the report was "absolute ly discredited, in Japanese official quarter in Washington." The Anglo-Japanese alliance, the embassy asserted, contains "no clause, either express or implied, providing for Japan intervention in the event of domestic trouble in India." t ; Profit on Gas Plant in Omaha Over $500,000 Lincoln, It a r c h 19. (Special.) Total receipt for 1921 for Omaha's municipal gas plant -were $1,900,760 and operating expenses were $1,360, 760, according to a state audit issued today. When the plant was taken over in 1920 rates were increased. The rates have been slightly reduced but are still higher than those paid by Lincoln gas consumers. Coke used for manufacturing gas fell from J17.S0 per ton last July to $1 1.49 in November and gas oil from 80 cents in January to 39 cents in February, according to the audit figures, .-. V Flood Waters af Siojix Falls Reported Slowly Receding Sioux Fallr, S. D., March 19. Flood waters of the Sioux river, which have been surging over sev eral hundreds of acres of farm lands and suburban property, are reced ing slowly. . There was a general drop of eight inches on the bottoms northwest of Sioux Falls, where the water had reached the first floor of many home?. Officials of. the Great Northern railroad said that it would be two weeks before the traffic would be resumed on their . Watertown-Sioux Falls branch, . where! a half mile of track was undermined by the water. Chicago Musicians' Club Of f ices Wrecked by Bomb Chicago, March . 19. The fourth bombing outrage in the past week wrecked the offices of the Musicians' club and caused a near panic among guests of the Washington hotel and the Elks club,. nearby. An informal meeting was in prog ress in the club rooms when the blast took place. -Members -expressed the belief that internal troubles in the club caused the bombing, ' The three other bombings during the week, ac cording to the police, were the re sult of labor troubles. lEberstein Goes Back ' as D. 0. J. Operative I v. Plans for Coal j Son of Henry Ford et..:i.lT,l,.R, ; to Run for Congress Lewis Declares Over Half Million Mrn Will utt April I Utile Aprf inent I Krat hrd, I'ttiuii Chief UtarfhaRBccsleiri. Marshall Flieisinu i going battt into the service cd the Kovernmcnt. The former chief of police, who retired from that pot following the defeat of J. Dean Kinder last spring was tworn in ai a JJrparttncnt of Ju'tice operative. Fbcrstem ha received no align ment yet. It i expected he will be ordered to the Chicago office. Kberstein wa once chief of the local office of the Department of Justice. He wa made police chief under Kinger. He had leeri a gov ernment operative for manv year. 'i'al Al" Reeves Back Willi Banjo OKI Gayety Favorite Returns With One of Bent and CIcv crest Shows of Season. Chicago Manufacturer , Sentenced to Eight Years Chicago, .March .19. t William Johnston, 44, a wealthy manufactur er, was sentenced to eight years in the Joliet penitentiary on charges preferred by two. girls. , His attor neys asked that mercy be shown to the man on account of his age and because he pleaded guilty. His wife and a 20-year-o!d son were said to be in California. A performance that bv the entire absence of anything suggestive makes a direct appeal to the women features Al Reeves "fUg Ileauty" combina tion at the Gayety theater. The show is not made up of bits, but con sist of scenes of merit. There is a costly splash with costumes and scenic effects. "Pal Al" personally appears with hi banjo and a line of chatter that takes one back to the old days. Years ago he won the Richard K. Fox medal in the world's championship ban.io playing' contest, lhs come back this year proves that he has lost none of his cunning with the strings, his fingers manipulating the instrument in flawless fashion, bring ing out the tones clear cut and with out a blemish. Harry (Heine) Cooper, a graduate of other Columbia show, evidences decided improvement. His comedy methods are more effective. Frank Pickett, who assists him in the fun making, will be one of the leading comics on the circuit. His specialty was.one of the big hits of the show. Peggy Readc and Evelyn Dean in their song numbers were one of the most pleasing features of the per formance. Mae Jenese carries the bulk of the song numbers, assisted by Helen Gillis. Walter Pearson, "the man who wears the clothes," and Charlie La Vine, in character parts, add much to the entertainment. if r. Reeves shows that his eyes have not lost their cunning any more than his banjo hands. He has a real beauty chorus. The entire company is well proportioned and the show rank among the topnotchcrs On the circuit.. ;, . ' ., Newark Bankers Buy ' Prudential Insurance Omaha Bee Leased Wirt. New York. March 19. Julius S, Rippel, head of J. S. .Rippel & Co., bankers . and brokers ot . Newark, have acquired all the bank stock holdings of the Prudential Insurance company, according to an announce men. These holdings consisted of 20 per cent of the stock of the Fidelity -Union Trust company, and between 400 and 500 shares of the stock of the Merchants and Man ufacturers bank. The market price of the Fidelity Union, stock is $240 a share and the once of the Merchants and Manu facturers stock is $222 a share. The exact figure in the present transac tion was not made public, but from the market prices, it is believed to be at least $2,000,000, Flood Stage in Mississippi , Predicted by Saturday Memphis. Tenn.. March 19 A 40- foot stage in the Mississippi river at Memphis before next Saturday was predicted by J. H. Scott, United States weather bureau forecaster. Flood stage or 33 feet on the gauge will be reached tomorrow night, Mr. Scott said. Refugees are already beginning to arrive here from the islands and lowlands, unprotected by levees, and steamboat lines have given instruc tions to their crews to pick up these refugees wherever they may be found. Sentiment Strong Against "Balance of Power" Plan Fargo. X. D., March 19. With delegates for 40 counties accounted for, 82 of the 207 representatives named for the nonpartisan league state convention have been instruct ed to oppose the "balance of power" plan, and 95 are without instruction, according to the Fargo Forum sur vey of the county conventions of March 16. More than half the delegates to the state convention will come instructed against the "balance of power" plans, according to a statement by the league's State headquarters. i , ' ' . ., . . -Postmaster Takes Office, Gothenburg, r Neb . March 19. (Special.) Don D. Price, newly ap pointed postmaster here, has as sumed his -duties. The postoffice had been without an official post master since last November when J. H. O'Kane died. He had held office eight years. Xfw York, Mirth J9 Si limi drcl thousand union miner in the anthracite and bitumimnit firld will quit work April I, unk ome on forrrn tolutiyn of the ptficnt controvert j offered in the mean lime, John U Ic". prendrni of the international ofifaiiiauou of I' tided Mine Worker announced, Plant for e valuation of the ininri jlready are under way, Mr, l.ewit Mid. In the event of a walkout rrrwt of pumpmen, engineer, fire men. watchmen and helper will re main at their pi to prevent flood ing of the mine and maintain the properties, It aid. He ctinutcd lltat 1.000 men would remain on duty in the anthracite and J.000 In the bitumiiiotit mine for tuch pur poses. Final Order Neat Week. Final ordi-r fur withdrawal of the men will be Uttird by the gen eral policie committee of the union at Cleveland or Chicago, probably nent week, it was aid. eiieclive In case operator and miner f;l to arrange a new working contract before- April I. The order t upend operation in the anthracite field April 1 al ready ha been iucd by the miners' general wage council, in ession at Shamokin, I 'a. An arbitrations com mittee of eight, coniKsed of opera tor and miners, will meet here Tues day to discuss a new wage scale for- thi field. Work in bituminous niiue au tomatically will cease April 1. Mr. Lewi asserted, lecause of the opera tor' refusal to meet with the miners, in accordance with the terms of their last contract. Wages Above Prewar Level The national industrial conference board i.-sucd a preliminary statement on its investigation of condition in the anthracite coal situation, declar ing that actual earnings of worker under the present agreement with operators arc more than 150 per cent higher than before the war a greater increase than that received by wage earners of railroads and in manu facturing industries. The investigation covered the period from the last half of June; 1914, to the last part of October, 1921, and included 55 companies em olovinor 94.514 men and operating 179 collieries, with production in 1920 of 54,640.938 tons. The percentage of increase in actual hourly earnings for industrial workers, the report stated, was 113 per cent from July, 1914, to July, 1921; for railroad workers up to October 1, 1921, 131 per cent, and for anthracite workers, 166 per cent. By July, 1921. it wa found that the average weekly earnings of work ers in manufacturing industries were only 83 per cent above 1914; those in railroad, work in October, 1921. 102 per cent, while in anthracite mining the increase was 152 per cent. 1 1 Woman Kills Husband; Claims Self-Defense Omnh Bm Ieaaefl Wirr. Atlantic City. N. J., March 19. Lewis Wills, 38, close friend of Mayor Edward L. Bader, the super intendent of rlie Bader Construction company, was shot and killed in his home here by his wife, Mrs. Marcel la Wills, 35. The -wife asserts she fired in self-defense.; vyhen-Wills, af ter beating her; threatened another attack. Sobbing hysterically and with blood streaming from, her face, Mrs. Wills went to the apartment of Har ry E. Sterch, opposite her own. Sterch found Wills lying uncon scious across his bed. ,He died a few minutes later. Mrs. Wills was placed under ar rest charged with murder. ' The Wills' two, daughters, 9 and )0, were asleep in an adjoining room when the shooting occurred. The shot did not awaken them. Man Gives Assets as $3.55 and Liabilities $1,802,587 Omaha Bee leased Wire. New York, March 19. Frank B. Erain, formerly a member of a brokerage firm and now a mere sales man, confessed he was broke, in fact he said he lacks more than $1,000,000 of being able .to take care of his creditors, who are many. : In a voluntary petition "in bank ruptcy filed in the United States dis trict court here he gave his assets as $3.55 and hi? liabiliteis as $1,802, 587. It was set forth that among the involvements were loans from banks. The largest unsecured credi tor was given as Mark H. Crehan of Boston, who, in 1920, the papers said, obtained a judgment against Erain for $647,954 for alleged breach of contract. "?f At n ;:; Southern Ireland Bracing Itself for More Trouble lYtiMon Along T)roiieMonap. han Ilonler Imrraxing hi habitant in Hourly Dread of Uoxlilitir. Ilou Picks Army Kitle Midi With Pen Point: Five Children Hurt University of Nehniska Costs Edsel Ford, son of the multimil lionaire automobile manufacturer, will be a candidate for a seat in congress at the next election, he has announced. Just-what party affilia tions he will seek has not been (lis closed. Fire Threatens Neville Block Blaze Starting in Kase Photo graph Studio Does 310,000 Damage Before Put Out. Wife Steps Out of Love Triangle to Aid Babies Denver, March 19. So ' that her husband's soul mate and two love babies might exchange the stigma of illegitimacy for a name and respect ability, Mr. Grace Jarret Stoffcl, legal wife of George Stoffel, proprie tor of a local garage,' obtained in county court a preliminary, de rf flivnrrp When the final de cree is granted six months from now, Mrs. Stoffel says, her husband will be free to marry "the other, woman" and thereby will be able to gain a name for the woman and the two children she has borne Stoffel in- the last four years. Man Who Attacked Jeweler Is Captured by Crowd New York, March 19. Charles Jansen. jr., jeweler, was clubbed with a pistol and then shot in the shoulder by a -bandit who attacked him on his -way to lunch from Ins shop at Eighth avenue and Twenty-fourth street. Irailed by a -crowd and a policeman, James . Harrison rushed into a hallway and was. ctptjired. ar rested and charged with the crime. He said he came to New York five months ago from Yuma, Ariz., and that he was a miner. Fire which originated in the Kase photograph gallery on the second floor of the Neville block, Sixteenth and Harney streets, threatened to destroy the building shortly before midnight Saturday night. The flames shot from the second floor through the elevator shaft to the third floor, and thcu through the skylight to the roof. Mrs. Josephine Lupton and S. H. Clay, aged residents of the build ing, were carried down two flights of stairs by James McDermott and Po lice Ofticer Jensen. The blaze of the roof attracted a large crowd, which believed that the heart of the city was threatened Nearly every piece of fire-fighting apparatus in the city responded to the several alarms. The fire was under control a few minutes after Fire Chief Salter ar rived on the scene. The damage will pass the $10,000 mark because of the water damage to stores on the ground floor of the building, according to firemen. The fire was of unknown origin. Restaurant Man Fires Shotgun at Robber A holdup man, alone and un masked, walked into the Brissaud restaurant. 1714 Howard street, while Mrs. Adolph Brissaud was at the cash register. Two diners and two waitresses were in the cafe at the time. "1 am not going to hurt anyone," said the bandit as he leveled a gun and backed Mrs. Brissaud away from the register, while he took S3. By this time Adolph, her husband, who was in the kitchen, appeared on the scene with a shotgun and fired at the bandit just as the latter was dis appearing through the door. His shots went high, however, and smashed the transom. The lone holdup escaped. Woman, 75, Sues Son for Return of Homestead Elizabeth Chinburg, 75, brought suit in district court Saturday against her son, Henry William Ploss, charging that after she trans ferred to him their home, 2420 Craig street, on condition that he take care of her as long as she lives, he vio lated the agreement by getting an other family to move in with them, abusing and threatening her and in forming her that he was going o send her away. She said the life there became un bearable and she had' to leave aiyl go to live with her daughter. She asks the court to set aside the deed which she gave him. The property is worth $5,000. Seven Indicted by Grand - Jury Plead Not Guilty Seven persons indicted on various charges by the last grand jury were arraigned before Judge O. D. Wheel er in district court at Council Bluffs Saturday. All entered pleas of not guilty and were remanded for trial. They were George Westrip, Ben Hunt and C. S. Ccmyers, charged with possession of stolen property; Albert Wright and Earl Kimball, facing similar charges in connection with the theft of cigarets from the Illinois Central railroad, and Joe and Rosie Brown, charged with main taining a liquor nuisance. Lincoln Domestic Who . Shot Self Dies in Hospital Lincoln, March 19. (Special.) Mildred Whelan, 18, domestic, who shot herself March 2, died at a hos pital here. Although she regained consciousness she never ' told the reason for her act. Notes were found unaddressed. . One . read in part: "When you get to Heaven you'll know why I did this." The girl's parents live at Bladen, Neb. A By PAUL WILLIAMS. luP)rtiM, 1(11, Dublin, March 19. F.eciiiig noilunB but trouble from Urn, Sir Henry WiUoit, the outh u bracing ittelf agaiu-t the activities of the lorce under the former llritih chief of staff in the execution of the task of restoring order in I'lster and i treugtlrrniiig it frontier. For this purpose SU.Kufl.iXK) h,u rcn set aside. The tension along the Tyrone Monatthan border i inmaMiig and the inhabitant are in hourly dread of hostilities. About 5H) additional Irih republican troop have taken up portions along the southern side of the border between Aughnacloy ami Caledon. Fearing an attack from the north erner. a detachment of the Irish re publican army opened fire on Rrotip of men near .Mullens hill, but there were tin casualties. All the bridge north of Aughnacloy lave been de stroyed and the road have been trenched. Bridges are being de molished all along the frontier and communication between County Moiugh.ni and County Fermanagh arc being cut off. Lackey bridge and Cortmacarra bridge near tlonealv and a new bridge near Clough have tiecn blown up. - 1 he road from Clone to Cavan and Ilelturbet ha been destroyed in several place bv mines north of the border. flic Catholic population within a large portion of Ulster is now iso lated from the free state territorr. The Dublin press asks what i meant by this method of safeguarding the ironuer ana ine answer generally given is war. Viscount Peel to Succeed Montagu New Secretary of India Mem ber of Conservatives Premier Still Silent. Copyright. im. London. March 19. Viscount Pee! has been appointed secretary of state for India to succeed E. S. Montagu. The new secretary is a conservative and his appointment will further trengthen the conservative element in the cabinet, placating the "die hard" tories who are the chief op ponents of Prime Minister Lloyd George. Viscount reel, who had not been mentioned for the post, is now chan cellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and acting minister of transport, which offices are. being wound up. He comes of a famous political family, being the grandson of Sir .Robert Peel and the son of a former speak er of the house of commons. Mr. Lloyd George is itill sitting tight at Criccicth, saying nothing. The political gossips declare it now looks as if he will weather the storm if he wishes to do so. However, it is still likely that he will insist on an early election, at any rate soon after the Genoa conference. Omaha Mm mI Hlrv, l ord. N. J . March ll-rite lul dreu were injured and 27 then thrown into a panic wlun an army I rifle nheil enpli'dcd in Hie eventu grade room of ihe Ford ptiVlic school, Kohert Kmai. 13, who ion n. ihe cartridge in a field near a road lending from government arte- I km I and brought it into the school room, wa. ickmg at it with a pen point when it exploded. He Mitfered Mich laceration that a portion ot hi hand had to he amputated. Another school boy and three girl were wounded slightly by fiaginenU of the kin II and pirce of wood from a dek top splintered by the explosion. Over $2.1100, Cot f Operation Intitule ?iimiiii of Agricultural (!iillcgt mid Oilier lat Uraiulte. Kenyon Makes Start t( kIiuii4 Tram ri . Ii gi!.tttire. btnt tm Mung in lor the undent, ordered a cIl t' hiHiWore e ul!ilu'd to ell leu and reference work at cot. iu ininli a the pront ot a looLlorc come chiefly from silling pencil. 'paper and other Mipphrt and the i legiolatitre failed to mrf!iorie deal ing in ihee, the bookstore u loiig . U:ll I I.' CI I about a month. to riu L.UHU15 ijiiues t it u nt n Ottumwa. la. Mjr.h l' -Judical u much to say if the hgiU.tture di'Mir to cut oil all ae livitie except ihoe on the rampu. - - w i ., , it, t : vigor of the kind that made Kene-i nniveM.iy inum .r run tor one. saw M. Lan.li feared and famous on I !u!f ,' ",w ''; the federal bench found it counter. I J ,,avc !,n,,.t n,8,,J' Part today in. Federal Judge W. I. j V thm. inr-t.Mt a rcat.uny of Kenyon' court from which three of- ' t''le feature are giving val- fenders received sentence to Leaven worth penitentiary. Of the lirct. W. K. Gillespie of Quincy, III., Judge Kenyon Mid he would make an example. Taking money from widows, he said, made highway robbery fade into insignifi cance. He said "blue sky artiMs' had netted $100,000,000 in Iowa alone in the lat few years. Gillespie re ceived 12 years, three year each on four counH of using the mails to de fraud in alleged oil stock deal w hit h in these cases cost two widows f.10,- The former mayor of Lhlon. Ia Francis E. I'ite. received two vcars' sentence under the Mann act. Frank C. Booth, alia "St. Paul Frank," 24. received two years on a plea of guil ty to stealing a mail sack at Center- .-II- i- . . vine, in., containing ifHu.uou) in se curities, half of which i still missing, liable service to the people, some of winch result indirectly. Thus il one complaint about the cost of the agricultural college, it can be replied that the experiment conducted there, quite aside from tins instruction given students, have brought million of dollar profit to the state. For instance, when Tur key Krd wheat v.i brought from J larding to Confer on ; Bonus Legislation II MliMa Sntlu II.. I fvrrjlhui P'ii'i!e ! I'.ni tarry out tie uul.r of viigit. without tnpiiliiig the oiv), Mr, Hauling ail be imalile in icake any trp to AUtl l-elore ion. gfc adjurn, it was do laird, ant linuM cvitino riiiail ill esn I. l td the IliM ot AugU"t. It would then be tiio Me for tii .rc-.idn.t m make the (up, admtinMrat:oti oi. i,,i.,U with the party muI. 1 I he prriith'til will make peevhf 'in the itrar future, ;trwr, it Wa "T declared, lie l booked for three rpiet hi in the near mture, however, at the murilmg of the llatmlioA rti-HMiiui i.i. the tirant memorial m Ohio, ami ihe I m otn iiii-ujun.d in Valiiiigti-ii Mr. Ilaidi'ig dining the fr-v min utes the i r.i.i it( ij! train Stopped at la Ksuiiiilte to t lunge engine, willed l-iiiar and shook hand with the i-nmiuvf, luetuan and menu bit oi I l.i- Hani iew. He wa cordially greeted a"d the engineer Oil the ti.uii 1 1 t ' t irom Jackson wa told bv the president to lake Ins lime, "I will be i art fill," Ihe engineer rrtiticd, as ihe thief executive shovk hi hand and wished him well, Afco!tipauini ihe president liou i? i t'nder Secretary ol Slate I'lrt-li-er, who Mid lie had about two dj- woik to do after reaching Washing ton before rrlui'iuishing hi preei-.t position, Mr. I It-trher said he ex pected to leave the first of next month to t.ike up hi duties t vmha,idor to Itrlgium. Pawnee City High School . Loses Dehate With Auhurn Pawnee City Pawnee City high school debating team was defeated on their home floor by a decision of 2 to 1. The regular high school league question was debated. Local expounders were Harold Bosley, Roy Becbe and Donald Becker for Auburn, Isabelle Snyder, Lavcta Hanlan and Eugene Perry. Judges were Prof. Eason from Peru State Normal and Van Pelt and Boots, law students from the state univer sity. ' Liherty Man Gets Top Price of $73 at Poland China Sale Beatrice, Neb. W. J. Barr sold 35 head of pure bred Poland China hogs at his home near Liberty, the top price being $73 per head. The average was $50 and buyers were present from points in this sectioa of the state and Kansas. Call Meeting of Custer Farmers and Dairy Men Broken How, jTeb. A call has been issued by a committee consist ing of J. D. Ream and H. E. Meyers tor a meeting ot the dairymen and farmers of Custer county to meet at the city hall March 25, to organize a dairymen's association. Adams Couple Sell 360 Acres for Total of $29,000 Beatrice, Neb. A deed was filed by David Bryson and wife of Adams, conveying: 320 acres of land near Adams and 240 seres in Colorado to Willard M. Folson, the consideration being $29,000. ' York College Woodson Spurlock. who won the Rhodes hofArsh4t- at th University of Nebraska- this year, - in in Yorlc college taking an advanced rourse in Latin. He will enter Oxford next fall. Thursday evening the college seniors were entertained at the Hulitt conserva tory by the Aliases Grace King and Gladys Harding. .... Professor Coleman visited York college this week and gave a series of lectures as follows: The National Mind. Changing the National Mind, National Teamwork and National Regeneration. Saturday evening the sophomores eur- prised Pean Ashcraft, their class sponsor, with a party In his )ionor. The sopho mores presented him with a college pillow as a token of their appreciation ot his loyalty and service to mem. Soring athletics are now In full awav. the basket ball season closing last week. The track men. are. now out of doors training.- There are quite a number out this year and the rroapects seem good for a good track and field team. Tennis is also going fine. The court Is getting the final repairs for this season's Blaring and the players are getting their rackets nmDerea up ron tnis seasons games. Every day we see baseball games that cause about as iinuch interest and en thusiasm as an big league game. Wednesday evening the..T. M. C. A. was addressed by Arthur Htltner, the new secretary of the T. M, C. A. His subject .was: The Program of tha T. M. C. A. apd he gave a very good out line ot the possibilities for service in the T. The silver cups which were to be award ed at the end of the training tournament have arrived and are being sent out to the winners of the tournament. Osceola wss the winner of tha class A. cup and this was given them- by the college. Hampton was the winner of the class Ft cup and this cup wss furnished by r BuViock Hardware company of this Olf. Lodge Properties to Be Taxed as Unit Lincoln, March 19. Lodge prop erties in Nebraska will be assessed as a unit, the assessors to make no division of the property, on the theory that the use of such property is not primarily, charitable or re ligious. XV. H. Osborne, state tax commissioner, today instructed coun ty assessors meeting here. As sentiment favored the tax Taw- being clarified to allow the remis sion of taxes only on such nroncrtv as used exclusively and necessarily inr . religious ana charitable purposes, Mr. Osborne instructed the assessors to proceed on this basis as the law. as it now stands, is not specific or definite in its nrovisions. he stater Discussion over the orcsent svstem of classifying lands as "improved- and "unimproved", led to the meet ing going on record as favorinc a new classification under the heads or "lands" and "improvements." Lyons Defeats Emerson in High School Dehate Lyons Lyons won from Emerson in an interscholastic dehate' on the State .Question. "Resolved that - trip movement of organized labor for the closed shop should receive the sup port of public opinion.' The Emer son team, Miss Brink, Miss Bonder son and Mr. Kruse upheld the af firmative side of the question. The negative was upheld by the local high school team: Inez Johnson, Irene Orander and Ershal Freeman. Henry L. Marsh from Morningside college acted as judge. f Odell Declamatory Contest Will Be Held Thursday Wymore The high school dec lamatory contest will be held at the opera house in OdcII March 23. There will be contests in dramatic, orator ical and humorous departments. The winners will go to Edgar April 14, to compete in the southeastern dis trict contest. Marine. Guards Withdrawn. Chicago; March 19. Armed civi lian guards replaced the ma rines who have been guarding the United States mails here for the past few months. The change was believ ed to have been sanctioned from Washington to give the postmaster complete control ot the men, the marines having been subject to army uiscipunc. Wayne Teachers' College I He junior and senior class plays havei oeen selected and characters cast; practice n Kum lorwara unuer tne direction of Mrs. Minnie V. Wittmoj-r-r, head of the" department of expression. The junior clsss have chosen "Nothing but the- "ui". Dy James Montgomery; and the nnniorg win present "Clarence. ' Booth Tarkington's comedy. It is usual for the junior play to be staged about the middle of April and the senior play is given during commencement week in May. Tuesday evening during the motion pic ture show in the auditorium, the audi ence enjoyed a short radio concert, wlilch was made possible by a magna vox placed on tne stage and connected with an aerial. Earl Schroer, graduate student and assistant to the physical science laboratory, was operator at the radiophone in the science building and sent out the concert. , Saturday at Wayne State Teachers col lege, the sceond annual meeting of the ortneaRt Nebraska Kadio club was held. The speakers - on the program were: R. B. Howell of Omaha, chairman of the Radio Service commission, who discussed "Problems Relating to Radiophone Recep tion," and "Radio and the Rural Home, Prof. I. K. Britell, department of science, Wayne Teachers' college; Prof. E. W. Gould of the Norfolk high school; Prof. C, R. Ohinn, Wayne Teachers' college; Prof. Earl H. Schroer of Wayne high school. The -dramatic club of Wayne Teachers' college presented two one-act plays, "The Neighbors," and "The Maker" of Dreams." The plars were under the di rection of Mrs. Minnie V. Wlttmeyer. in structor in oral expression and -dramatic art. imim,i. jroin iH''t 'ie laimrrs i 'i " i Nebraska erc Rowing sprmrt j ) ,L L. Vl. ForrPf4 wheat, l.xperniirnts with the new t-MSIJ'vU VL13 I UUIU winter variety h-d to its K'"ncr;tl Grand Island College ' The annual election of officers of the T. W. and T. M. C A occurred this week. Quite a number of new .students were elected to these offices. Prof. R. B. Stevens of the Bible depart ment occupied the pulpit at Norfolk last Sunday. The Intercollegiate debate between Hastings college and our own will occur on Wednesday night of this week. The negative detaters of Hastings meet our affirmative team here, and our negative team will debate against the Hastings affirmative speakers at Hastings. The question is: "Resolved, That the Prin ciple of the Closed Shop Is Justifiable." The Grand Island college faculty club met last Saturday night at the home of Prof, and Mrs. A. J. Kissinger. Miss Hall of the normal department read a paper on "Educational Tests and Meas urements." Part of the paper Included sn exposition of Jjr, Carl K. Seashore's "Teats for Measuring Musical Talent." These tests consist of four records, play ed on a phonograph and make It possible tor the individual to record his talent In pitch, time, hatmony and musical mem ory. M-mbers of the faculty were sur prised at their musical ability, some rank ing low and others high. f idontioii. with an increase of several bu.shclsj of wheat from each acre. There is another new wheat dis covered more lately that also is giving an increased crop, The -amc u true of oats, and the poultry pro duction of Nebraska is bring him ilarly boomed. Self-Support Difficult. Some critics a.sk why the state farm does not make the agricultural college self-ttipporting. Aside from the fact that experimental plots can not be carried on with any thou.aht of direct financial return, there is an other ancle to be considered. There is a splendid herd of dairy cows on the state farm, yet what happened when the college started a milk route? Ihe dairymen and milk deal ers of Lincoln protested so vicious ly that today the milk is right now suit against the state hog serum plant in behalf of private commer cial enterprises. there remains one other method of lessening the cost of the taxpayer for higher education, aside from cur tailing the university facilities or put ting tcaciicrs on sweainop suji its. This is by increasing the admission fees to some of the protessional or technical schools. At the present time the university dental college is self-supporting, the only one on the campus in which the students pay the entire running expense. Earnest questioning is arising over whether the whole people bear the expense of training young men and women for money-making pursuits, from banking, law and medicine to agriculture, if this last can so be classified. Manv state uni versities are putting on fees of ?oO and more a year. Harvard s school of business lately has decided to go on a business basis and support it self bv chareinsr $400 admission. Ise braska university has a similar school which would pay its own way it each student paid about $60 a year. If the state is to provide this training for merchants and bankers, some as sert, it should be reimbursed, ihe objection that this would build up a class distinction by which many children of the poor would be unable to rise brings forth the suggestion that students might borrow their fees from the state, to repay the debt from their future earnings. Certain ly, under a svstem oi high fees, un less so modified, the tendency to build a ruling class built on wealth would be heightened. Childless Escape Expense. Recently a farmer complained that his share of taxes to the university amounted to $15 a year. His audi tor reported that the farmer had a daughter attending the university, and that it was costing the state more than $100 a year to educate her. Thus it may be seen that any one whose children use the public schools receives back many times what he pays out for their support. On the other hand, those who are childless escape a great deal of ex pense, and broadly speaking, are beter able to pay taxes than they otherwise would be. The cost to the public of a year's course in the various colleges fol lows: Number Total Per College Students Exp'ture Capita Agriculture 488 $3(10.000.10 S614.7:! Arts and Sciences. 3,131 3H0.S33.75 121. 63 Business Adm. ... 732 41.SPO.00 67.17 Dentistry 139 25,461.00 1S3.10 Enginering . ; .. . . S48 106,000.00 193.4.1 Uw ;ss :7, 150.00 105.23 Medicine 3PG 112,000.00 282.82 Pharmacy 77 45,793.73 594.72 Teachers' 600 47.230.00 78.71 Hostile to Fee. Nebraska's legislature always has been hostile to the fee system, and probably this is correct as far as the arts and science courses are -concerned. The senate, at the last reg ular session, adopted a resolution de manding lower fees, and this was promptly heeded by the regents. Hav ing removed this source of revenue, the legislature, in special session, then cut a large slice "off the appro priation as well. Public sentiment does not endow a skinflint policy toward education. It does call for the abolition of un necessary frills and the elimination of waite. It is time some settled policy toward the university and the numerous and various auxiliary activ ities snouia oe adopted. to Wait for Pay Checks Ntw Vuik, March J'. Several hundred diabled nildicri takiuR xocaiiiiti.il training in New York and it. siiluirhs crowded into the district of fice of the vctrians' bureau and unsuccessfully demanded their semi monthly pay. Hehiud the cashier's window weie 6.tKH) treasury check nude out for the veteran, but thr..c were held up. since the bureau was out of funds because congress had not passed deficiency appropriation bill. The disabled, some of them plead ing hungry and empty pocket, went up to the fifth floor and begged Maj. Henry I. Opdycke, district manager, to see that they got their money. He had no authority to act but after telephoning to Washington, permission was received to Issue emergency funds to those most in need. Bootlegger Makes Rum From City Garbage Kane. Pa., March 19. Federal agents who raided the supposed pig gery of Andy Orzchowski de clared .they found the place to be a well equipped distillery and portion of the garhagc its owner had gather ed from the refuse cans of the city had gone into the manufacture oi whisky and not into hog troughs. Fifty gallons of garbage distilled whisky was seized. You take railroad travel for granted these easy days. But remember about Stephenson and the first locomotive. A lucky strike for progress 1 E. STUiff The discovery of toasted tobacco was a lucky striks for us. If you will buy a packag of Lucky Strike cigarettes yourself you will see why millions now prefer th toasted flavor. : 5t9s Tossed Do this today and notice tha delicious toasted Barley when you try Lucky Strike. cn p. Steamships Arrivals. Jlarch 17. Potomac, Bre- 1T. George Wash- -Tenyo Maru, New York, men. Alexandria, March lnKton, New Vork. San Francisco. March 18 Hongkong. I ristoba I. March 17. Alvarado. San Francisco; Frederick l.uckenhach. Seattle. -Manila. March 1 7. fcdmore. Seattle. 1-lverpool, March. 17. Panaman, Tw- coma. Hongkong. March 17. Pine Trre State. Tacoma. 4'onstan2a. March 15. Acropolis, New Tork. ' leparturcs. j Shields. March 16. City of Bombay. San Krancist-0. 1 Cristobal, March 17. Merideti. Mil Francisco. I Manila. March 17. Arak.m. Sin Fran cisco. I New Toilc. March 18 Montcserrst, Ha vana. Liverpool; i-'tnland, Antwerp. i MS Hot Cross Buns Their origin can be traced to the remot est period of pagan history. Ours don't date back that far, because they are made fresh each day. They are tasty and full of raisins and currants. Try them. You will enjoy them. Eat one in the shop and take home a dozen. "Health in Food" Northwest Corner 16th and Farnsm