The Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 51-NO. 271. mm M I CUM MtMm Hw It. MM. OMAHA, SATURDAY, AfRlL 29, 192 ft II aMll Mi Slit TWO CENTS ) S ti.1 a t w 2 Die as Car Turtles on Bluffs Road Deschanel of France Succumbs Former First Citizen of ... 11 A Loan to The Genoa Conference French Republic Is ."tffiffi Offered uuuu u uuulitjuuuu uiruua Russians l"Wit. Jl I a Tenth President oft French RrpuMio ruliiicul Triumph Caused Krtirr nif nt of Clrmeiircau. In Public Life 45 Years Paris. April 21 (By A. P.)-Pul i Deschanel. former president of France, died this afternoon. i M. DcHhanrl a 14km ill witln iiifhifn4 a iw )a ago and on Wednesday n wan annuuncrd tht (duplication had tlrvf lopfd and hit tonuition was serious. After liis reaicnation rum the French presidency, in September, IV20. M. litichanrl lived in retire ii'mt fur several month. con dition improved steadily and late that year it uas announced he had com fctctcly recovered hi hcalih. In Janu ary ot uh year lie became a cantli time in the senatorial election, being teturned lor hurc-l-.t-Loire on Janu ary 9. He It wan attending the fn ate session the following May, and in January of this tear was aoouinted a member of the senile foreign affairs committee to replace M. i'oincare when the latter assumed the premier shin. : Fad Eugene Louis Deschanel. 10th pretident of Trance, entered upon a (.even-year term in that office oil February 18, 19J0, after having been chosen hy the national assemMy the preceding January by the biggest majority since the election of Thiers, the first president of the present re public. Statesman and author and one of the most brilliant public speakers in France, M. Dcschanel's political triumph marked the retire ment from public life of former Pre mier Georges Clcmeuceau. Forty-five Yean In Public Life. For nearly 45 years M. Deschanel had been in French public life, lie was president of the chmabcriof de puties when elected to the pighest post as first citizen of France. Prev iously he had been head of the French parliamentary commission on foreign and colonial affairs. In a speech at Paris the first year of the war, be declared there could be"no neutrals when civilization itself is at stake." Among his first acts upon assuming the presidency were his signing of a decree naming commis sioners to study French living costs and another barring alcoholic drinks from F.lysce palace. Deschanel wasborn in 1857 in pnTsseTr-wh ci,y " ather went after being exiled from France In -1851 for : havW published . a pamphlet entitled "Catholicism and Socialism.". When . he was 2 years old, the boy returned, to France with his father, who was pardoned by an Tt of amnesty,' following a recanta tion of his views. . Educated in Brussels. ; The vountr man was educated in Pans and wren only iu years oia ne entered the public service, becoming secretary to M. de Marcere. then minister of the, interior. He became secretary to Jules "Simon, president of 'the-council.-, the following year, and served until 1885. when he was elected member of the chamber of deputies from the department of Eure-et-Loire. In 1896 he was named vice president of that body and two years later was elected president, a position he held until 1902. when he was defeated for re-election. M: Deschanel was later appointed president of the parliamentary com mission on foreign affairs and col onies, his work in that body continu ing until 1909. In April, 1910. M. Deschanel returned to the chamber, becoming its president in 1912. He remained in the chair continuously until liis election to the presidency. In 1913 he was urged to become a -jnHMato nr nrrsident against Ray mond Poincare, but polled only 18 votes, at the election. In the midst of his political and public labors M., Deschanel found time to write a number . of works on political and social problems. , " I j Mme. Deschanel was formerly Mile. Germaine Brice, daughter of Rene Brice, member of the chamber of deputies for Ille-et-Vilame. ; ; Work Appeals to Public to Better Postal Service Washington, April 28. A message to American public, asking co-operation in the postqffice departments efforts toward perfecting the postal service was delivered by Postmaster General Work and broadcast by radio telephone. Describing the postal service as one of the great undertakings of the business world which has not been developed by private enterprise. Dr. Work detlared its purpose was "nothing more than to serve the peo ple in an intimate way in their daily contact with their fellowmen." Calling attention to "postal im provement week" beginning May 1, the postmaster general said the pub lic's assistance was essential to suc cess, and urged that mail matter be plainly and correctly addressed. Four Jurors Selected in Trial of Gov. Small By The Anorlatrd run. Waukegan, 111., April 26. Trial of Governor Len Small.' charged with conspiracy to embezzle state funds, ended the first week tonight with four jurors selected and sworn and lawyers still trying to fill the second panel So far as actual results go, the trial is no further along tonight, when adjournment was taken for the week end, than it was 48 hours ago. but the lawyers and Judge i Claire C Edwards still believehe f;nal jurors can be found by Tues day night. - . Governor Small and his attorneys left Waukegan immediately after the adjournment to spend the week end in Chicago or at their homes. . j A. ' mi in , ir ... sr..-its .- ' k . sj . t 1 v & V-A"' 1 I A I' tJ - f. . a i 1 "aul Ecsckanel, Miss Ella Fenn Leads Bee Contest Balloting Union Pacific Candidate, Nellie Donn, Is Close Second With 2,655 Seven Entrants Qualify for Peters Trust Bonus. Standing of Omaha Bee Miss Ella 'Fenn, McCord-Brady Co..... 2.805 Miss Xcllie B. Donn. Union Pacific Miss Kathrine O'Brien, Turlington Route Miss Anna McXamara, M. E, Smith Co,!... Miss Elizabeth Kaufmann, Livestock Interest Miss Elizabeth Face, Gminell College Miss Ester Brandcs, Hastings, Neb Miss Myrtle Wood, Wabash. Neb.... Mrs. Agnes Hall, Missouri Valley Miss Gladys Hitchcock, York, Neb .... Miss Lillian Schmidt, Harding Creamery Miss Irene Rice, Alliance Times.... Miss Florence Compson, York, Neb.' '"""..... Miss Grace Trott, Lincoln, Neb.. Miss Anna Funk, Salon de Beaute, Fontencllc Hotel .. Mrs. Paul Rigdon, Associate Western Union Employes Miss Grace Endcrs,' Nebraska City, Neb. Seven candidates participating in the first day's balloting in the Oma ha Bee Good Will contest qualified for the bonus of 250 votes offered for early voting by the Peters Trust company. . , . The funds donated by the Peters Trust company took care of giving 250 votes to four of these and the other bonuses were made possible by funds in the hands of the commit tee. Bonus Time Extended. In order that all candidates may have an opportunity to share in the offer of 250 votes for early voting thetdmmittee is able-to offer all out-of-the-city candidates who purchase drafts made out to W. Ward Clark, treasurer, before the close of bank ing hours Monday, like bonuses. AH of the out-of-the-city candidates hav- Grand Island Man May File for U. S. Senator Lincoln April 28. (Special.) Frank Johnson, Grand Island, prob ably will be the next candidate for republican - nomination for United States senator.- T. W. Call, Alliance traveling man, called at the office of D. M. Ams berry, secretary of state, to get prop er instructions on methods to be pursued to put Johnson in as a can didate. Call announced Johnson would pay his filing fee at Grand Island. ' Johnson is grand chancellor of the United Commercial Travelers' asso ciation and chairman of the legisla tive committee of the Travelers Pro tective association of Nebraska. Candidates already in the field are:. Congressman A. W. Jefferis, John O. Yciser and R. B. Howell, with many republicans urging Attorney General Clarence A. Davis to file. You have until 9 o'clock tonight to get your "Want" Ad into The Sunday Bee tomorrow 17th and Farnara AT Untie 1000 With Total of 2,806 Good Will Candidates. 2,655 1,473 1,400 -1.1,350 U5Q 100 100 100 aoo . .100 100 ..; 100 100 100 100 100 ing 1,000 votes in the mails post marked. May 1 will.be awarded a bonus of 250 votes. ; , Many of the candidates who at tended the meeting at Hotel Fon tenelle Thursday were unable to reach their homes before Friday noon and the committee made this offer to them, in order that they might have equal chance with Oma ha entrants. A Workers for Miss O'Brien are wearing sashes of red ribbon upon which is printed "O'Brien for France," in black; red and black be ing the colors : of the ' Burlington. Enterprising friends of Miss O'Brien have also decorated the freight house roof with a sign said to be the largest ever made in Omaha. It can be read easily eight blocks away. (Turn to Pace Four, Column Three,) Howatt Begins Serving Sentence for Contempt Pittsburgh, Kan., April 28. Alex ander Howatt list night began serv ing the one-year sentence meted out to him through the contempt of -court proceedings growing out of a strike called at the Mackie Fuel company mine in Crawford county in viola tion of an injunction against the call ing of strikes issued by Judge A. J. Surran in the district court here. ' . Park Home for Elk Sought by Nebraska Game Warden Lincoln, April 28. (Special.) George Koester, state fish and game warden, "wants some municipality with a public park to adopt a wild elk located, near Kilgore. Farmers living in "the vicinity report an elk is runing wild and causing no end of trouble. C Koester will catch; the animal if some one ' will take care Of it. .... . .5" " Three Children Burned A to Death on Oregon Ranch " Bend. Ore.. April 28. Three chil dren, -Mildred and Ewce Bergstrom, 13 and . 10, and George Livesly, their cousin. 4, were burned to- death to day at the ranch home of W. L.' Bergstrom near Deschutes in a fire that started in an incubator. Berg strom and his wife are in a hotel suf fering from burns. ; ' Vigilance Committeeman, Loses Auto During Meeting -Lincoln, April 28. (Special.) The Lincoln vigilance committee aug mented by the presence of Chief of Police Peter Johnston held a banquet and studied ways and means to catch auto thieves. After the meeting E. V. Truman, a member of the com mittee, discovered his motorcar had been stolen Allies VUwt for Russia Said to Suggest International Consortium to Finance Trade. Germany to Be Included Geona. April 28.-(By A. P.) riam for Rutia' reconstruction were being finally determined upon today 1n the conference tub-committee on Rusian affairs and the indi cations were that a definite proposi tion would be laid before the Ku tiao delegation by the week-end with the suggestion that the proposition be either accepted or rejectd. with out furthr discussion. The Italian press today gives in dication! of what the allied propos als are: First, it is asserted, no loan will be offered to soviet Russia but will be suggested that an international consortium be formed to finance trade with Russia through combina tions of firms and individuals of the various countries represented. Ger many will be included in the consor tium, it is declared, and provisions made that the United States may join. Colonisation of Russia. This plan contemplates the eco nomic colonization of Russia, with guarantees that the autonomy and s6vereignty of the soviet government will not be infringed upon. The division of trade will be ar ranged in such a way that the countries participating tp the con sortium will have the opportunity of dealing with the sections of Russia situated nearest them. For example, Great Britain would be given the op portunity to trade with northern Russia through Archangel and the Baltic por(s, while the southern countries would be given advantages in the Black Sea ports. While bending his main efforts to ending the Russian deadlock, Mr. Lloyd George is not neglecting his plans for a nonaggression pact, and several tentative outlines of such a document have been drafted. One of these would provide1 an international military force to protect weaic na tions from aggressive neighbors, .but this is understood to have snuU chance of adoption. . Vice Premier Barthou, head of the French delegation here, conversed at length during last night over the long distance telephone with Premier Poincare in Paris. and as a result it was stated this afternoon that the of ficial, viewpoint of France with re gard to the reply to Russia had been harmonized, -t' '' ; Spiriot Conciliation. The difficulty was said in confer ence quarters to have arisen through the growth here of a spirit of con ciliation and co-operation which gov ernment circles in Paris, despite con stant informative messages, from their representatives here, appear not to have crasoed. v ' t ' r j A feeling seems to pervade confer-, ence circles generally that there is wide recognition of the wisdom of Establishing amicable and practicable arrangements with both Russia and Germany which would permit of the restoration of those countries. Many members of the French delegation seem to be . convinced, like Prime Minister Lloyd George of England, that unless western Eu rope co-operates with Russia and Germany those nations, with their overwhelming preponderance of pop ulation, would be driven closer to gether to the eventual detriment of the. peace of Europe., ' I : Beyond Bathou'a Power. ' French opinion at home is pointed to as being influenced by numbers of deputies who fought in the war and who want full satisfaction for France's terrible losses. They are described as pushing Premier Poin care to stand absolutely , firm, both as regards German reparations and Russian debts. -"It is understood here also that the French cabinet is being urged to in sist upon the cancellation of the Russo-German treaty. This is a task beyond the powers of M. Barthou. Even granting its possibility, his po sition is said to be, that such a step, in, -his belief, would only result in forcing Germany and . Russia into closer ties on the morrow. Woman and Daughter Killed. Boise, Idaho, April 28. Mrs. V. H. Ode and her daughter. Verbena, 15, of Dixie, Idaho were ; instantly killed last . night when . an. Oregon Short Line train struck the buggy in which they were riding at Notus. The horse, they were ..driving es caped unhurt. "The Romance, of a Million Dollars" Dunbarton-Kent left his millions to his widow, in trust for two handsome nephews and a niece; they were to receive his fortune provided they committed no crime during the period of trust and one of them had been reared as a thief! Then began the mysterious robberies of millionaire estates on Long Island, all committed with ' the daring and ingenuity of a master thief. Mrs. Dunbarton-Kent lived in mometary fear of an unnamed calamity. And into this sinister atmosphere Walks the little French-Canadian war heroine, Marie Angouleme, who has just escaped from the dread "woman in sables" walks into adventure and romance. And there you have just a hint of the thrills in' store for you in "The Romance of a Million Dollars," the sen-, aational new Blue Ribbon Serial by Elizabeth- De jeans, which starts next Sunday in I The Sunday Bee I A"" Outside view. I 1 ' Wxy? TNw somj c"-Meics$vnAL W 12,000 Cut Off by Flood Waters in Mississippi Tract 35 Miles Long and 50 Miles Wide Inundated Large Area in Louisiana Also Submerged. Vicksburg, - Miss., April 28. Twelve thousand persona are report ed to have been cut off in the north ern and eastern sections of Issa 4uenna county by backwater from break in the Mississippi river levee. Five hundred persons are said to have ' been caught in the town of Valley Park by rising water. The entire area in this section, covered by water which came from a break higher up the river, comprises a tract 35 miles long and 50 miles wide. Calls for help also have reached Natchez, it was said, from Clayton and Lake St. John, both in Concordia Parish. . Forced From Homes. Alexandria, La., April 28. Six thousand persons, forced to leave their homes in Catahoula and Con cordia parishes, Louisiana, by the Mood waters of the Mississippi and other rivers, .were concentrated to day in the vicinity of Jena,' Sicily island and Holloway, La., according to the local Red Cross representa tive, i Thousands of Acres Flooded. New Orleans, La., April 28. With two great sections of Louisiana farm lands already inundated . by flood waters from two breaks in the Mis sissippi river levee in the - last 48 hours, the torrent is threatening to break through at other points in the lower and middle reaches of the river. The levee , near Arkansas' City. Ark., and at P-laqucmine, La., were the two points where trouble was most feared by levee engineers. Additional forces of laborers were put to work also on levees near Hick man, Ky and Greenville, Miss. Flood water? " escaping from the second break in the levee yesterday at I'oydras, 17 miles, below New .Or leans, today had flooded more than 75,000 acres of sugar and trucking lands in St. Bernard and Plaquemine parishes and driven out 350 families. Further uo the river' waters rush- jug through the first break north of rernday,..-La., had engulfed Con cordia parish and were threatening more than half 'of Catahoula and a large ;part- of three' other parishes. The crevasse-has spread to a width of more than 1.500 feet GENOA CONFERENCE FOR THC DISCUSSION or Europe's vital economic PROBLEMS. POLITICS POSITIVELY NOT admitted! Inside view.' L P. A. Holds Annual Meeting in Columbus Columbus. Neb.. April 28. (Spe cial Telegram.) With more than 200 Knights of the Grip, manufacturer! and wholesale dealers from all parts of the state in attendance, the 28th annual convention of the Nebraska division of the Travelers Protective association opened here. Delegates with their wives and visitors formed iu line and, led by the Columbus band, paraded to the hall. The convention was called to order hy H. M. Landreth of Fremont, pres ident, of Post B. who turned the chair, over to State President Earl O, Eager of Lincoln. G. H. Gray, pres ident of the Chamber of Commerce, welcomed the travelers to the city. President Eager responded in behalt of the association. The annual memorial services with a memorial address by Rev. W. L. Blaker. followed immediately after the opening exercises. VV. L. Gaston of Lincoln, assistant secretary of tate, addressed the con vention on "Patriotism." his address being founded upon the observance of the 100th annuversary of the birth of General Grant. ' The travelers and their wives were treated to a novel entertainment, combining the features of a minstrel show, given by the members of the local Elks tonight. Son of Brazilian' Planter Is Missing Los Angeles, April 28. Search for Julio Paixao Cortes, son of a wealthy coffee planter of Brazil, who was last heard from 'in Salt Lake City Febru ary 26. was turned to Los Angeles. "Cortes, described as 24 years old, tall, with- dark hair and complexion, large eyes and acquiline nose, left the home of Juan M. Frikhart of the Colorado Agricultural college at Fort Collins, Colo.. February 22. and four days later mailed a postcard in Salt Lake City. He was believed to be ot. the way to Los Angeles. - Attaches of the Brazilian embassy at Washington are directing' the search, aesisted by L. M. Hbeffler. Brazilian vice consul at San Fran cisco.'..-. - , - ' Cortes was said to have carried a large amount of money and to have worn a valuable ring set with a large diamond and sapphires, indicative of his graduation from the college or Porto Alegre, Braail. Petition for Niewedde . ' .for State, Senator Is Filed' Lincoln, April 28. (Special Tele gram.) A petition asking C. F. B. Niewedde to - become candidate for state senator on the third party tick et was filed,, here. Niewedde was, one of the. Nonpartisan leaguers elected to the lower house last year on the republican ticket. He was active at the annual convention -of the league here in fighting the attempt of A. C. Townley to divorce the league from any political party. t Government Inquiry Into Teapot Dome Leases Likely " Washington," April 28. Congres sional investigation into the leasing by the Interior department of oil rights in the Teapot Dome (Wyo. naval oil reserve to the Sinclair oil interests today appeared in prospect after a long attack in the senate on the leases by Senator LaFollette, re publican, Wisconsin, and announce ments by republican leaders of sup port for a resolution of inquiry. 4 Women Fined for Assault. Green Bay, Wis., April 28. Pleading guilty to charges of assault and battery in municipal court Thursdav, four women, alleged to have attacked "Pat", Gaffney ,and Carl Zoll, proprietors of a roadhouse, Tuesday night, were each fined $100 and costs and put under $500 peace bonds each for two years. Bomb Kills Three Nonunion Miners in Pennsylvania Infernal Machine Hurled Into Bunk House Bloodshed in Strike Clash at Sco field, Utah. Apollo, Pa.. April 28. Three miners were killed and one seriously injured when a bomb waa tbrcpm early today into a bunk Jiouie at the Patterson mine of the Kiski Coal company near here. "TJw'men, who had been employed on a nonunion basis, were asleep in the bunk house shortly after dawn, when the explosion occurred. Each of the dead men was mar ried and their deaths leave fourteen children fatherless. The Patterson mine is in West moreland county. I Before the strike, it employed 75 men, its production, being sent to a steel company here.' Troops on Guard. Salt Lake City. Utah. April 28. National Guard troops were gent to laroon county tnis morning as a re sult of the situation which developed at Scofield yesterday afternoon uu less acting Governor H. E. Crockett is advised before the time of entrap ment that the situation at the coal mines is different from what he un derstands at prasei.t. This announce ment was made by Governor Crockett at 3 o'clock ths morning. The first bloodshed of the present coal . strike situation developed it Scofield yesterday. Mine guards and strikers clashed, many shots were fired, and three men 'were wounded, one perhaps fatally. U. S. Marshal Wounded. The wounded were: . - " -Sam Dorrity. mint guard and for merly chief deputv United States marshal at Salt Lake, wounded in the thigh. - , Fred Garvin, striker, lungs pierced by bullet which entered from ' the back. Believed to have small chance for his life. Mike Stabos or Mike Makesmrti cos, striker, shot through the right arm. . . ' , The wounded are in a hospital at winter quarters, where they were taken from the fracas between mini guards and strikers Which occurred near theJ5co6eld depot. Anaconda Copper Company Mine Will Reopen on May 1 Butte, Mont.. April 28. The Dia mond mine, ai! Anaconda Copper Minipg company property, will re sume full operations next'. Monday, W. B. Daly, general superintendent ot the Anaconda company, announced today. Two hundred men have been employed at the mine, sometime and 400 more will go on shift May 1. "This means that there will be ap proximately 10,000 miners and mine men employed by the various com panies in this district on the first of the month," said Mr. Daly. "This will be the most since 1919." The Weather Forecast. Saturday, cloudy; - not much change in temperature. Hourly Temperatures. 5 .43 .4 .43 ,4S .47 .4 .Rl ..31 ...55 ...M ...AS 6 . m. a. m. S a. m. B n. tn. 10 . m. I ft. tn. 13 noon 1 Highest Friday. f.'heynn 42!Rapltl City Davrnport is; Halt Luke ' Denver MlSaiita Vt , lira Molnca 66 Shtrldan .. I.nml.T 2Sloux City North Platte ...64; Valentin . Pueblo ,.J ..44 ..! ..54 . ,8 ..64 ..it '.Marhine Tumi Otcr Three I unci lurce jicii m Hear Seat KCHjie Injury. j Auto Wrecked at Curve Two men lot their lives on South tveitue in Council liluff at I o'clock yettcrday when the sutonuthile in which they were riding turned over three timet. Three other men riding in the ma chine e (raped without a mtuUIi. Fred W. Bass and William UUit ford. Northwestern roundhouse m ployes are the dead men. The car wa owned and driven by tut. Bess, Blackford and thrre com panions were traveling north on South avenue, near Woodbury sve-. nuc. at the time of the crsth. At this point South svenue takes a shoit swing. In negotiating the curve Bass permitted the left wheels to leave the road and in jerkiirg the car hack into the right of way again the left front wheel was torn off by the rough edge of the pavement. The three men riding in the back seat were thrown clear of the machine as it turned over and thus escaped injury. Bess and Blackford, riding in the front seat, were pinned under the car. , Testing Motor. Ees was 37 and lived at 1014 Fourth street. He leaves a wife, but no children. Blackford was 28 and roomed at 601 Mynster street. He had no relatives in Council Bluffs. His mother, Mrs. Anna Blackford, Marion. 111., has been notified. The three nfen who escaped injury were E. C Peterson. 343 Hyde ave nue; A. II. Mattock, 716 South Sixth street, and Jack Lake, 1000 Fourth street. All but Bess were riding this morn ing in Peterson's 'machine. As they , passed Bess' house he hailed them. He said the motor in his bigger car., wasn't working right and he asked them to go riding with him, while Peterson, whtf is mechanic, might investigate the motor. They did. They drove to the end of the pavement on South avenue, near the Iowa School for the Deaf. On the return trip Peterson got on the running board to listen to tut motor. . .. Truck in Way. As they came to the slight curve by Woodbury avenue a Ford true' loomed in the highway. Bess turned the wheel to avoid crashing iuto. the. truck,-. Peterson said, ami then the'tfont-iakle-snapped as he tried to turn the car back to the paving. The machine turned over thrice, hurling the two men in the rear seat and Peterson on the running board clear of the wreck. The men in the front seat were killed instantly. Peterson said they were driving "fast." How fast they were going he said he did not know. .' His Luck. , Just before the fatal ride was started Peterson picked a four-leafed clover and stuck it in the buckle or his overalls. He is the only mem ber of the quintet who escaped with out a scartch. y - "Guess four-leafed clovers are lucky, after all," h grunted. Harness House Burns With Loss of $25,000 , The Midwest Harness company building, 706 North Sixteenth street, was practically destroyed by fire at 1 yesterday afternoon. The estimat ed damage is $25,000. Great volumes of smoke pouring1 from the building caused residents of second-floor rooming houses in the neighborhood-to flee to the streets. No one was hurt. F. S. Wagner, Chatfiam hotel, and.. Julius S. Wolk, 2018 North Twenty first street, first discovered the fire. Charge Low Test Ice Cream i Is Sold in Small Towns Lincoln, April 28. (Special.) Ne braska ire rrpam Hralprc hav annual. - ... ed to Attorney General Clarence A. Davis tn fnrre nntstatp maniifartiirri to comply with the 14 per cent but- teriai requirements or tne Nebraska ice xcream law. Their complaint is. that certain out state dealers are cpllinor 17 r n butter fat ice cream cheaper than thex. tan wanuiacture ine 11 per lent. Davis has turned the matter ovr to Leo Stuhr, secretary of agriculture, with a request that outstate dealers sruiltv of such nractic.es he dealt with according to law. W. J. Hynes, Wealthy Grain Man, Sued for Divorce William J. Hynes, wealthy Omaha grain man, was sued for divorce and alimony in district' court yesterday by Mrs. Margaret P. Hynes, promi nent in social, club and musical cir cles. Hynes is a member of Hynes Elevator company and president of; the Farmers Terminal Elevator com pany. Airs. Hynes alleges cruelty during the last four years. She asks temporary alimony, attorney's fees and court costs. . uuuiuau uiuiuciuuuu y Holds Session in Fremont Fremont, Neb.. April .-(Special.) The annual state Convention --r-of the Lutheran Brotherhod of the United Lutheran church met in Fre mont. About 150 lay delegates from the various Lutheran churches were present. Rev. C E. Gardner of St. Joseph gave the afternoon address while J. F. Marlctte of Minneapolis addressed the delegates at the ban- ' quet in Hotel Pathfinder, 1