Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 05, 1922, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY. JUNE 5. 1922.
Romance of War
Ends in Tragedy
' at Kansas City
Nure of I)) tun, 0., Kill
Lover and Attempts to
Kn! Own Life Couple
Met in !!opiral.
Ilntkt rVee m4 Mle.
.ansa City. Mo,, June 4 A ro
mance, which uhk from the ar
and a mutual interest in 1'iperanto,
an artiiui.il laiiiiuaar. en Jed trauua
ly today (or Frank V. A"drrm anj
' I'may Marie I.. Ural, a nurse of
Dayton, O.
l'atroltnrii resnoniliiiu to a call
frnm th Vlwlurrt hntrl were d
rected to room !17. 6uet had
Ittard two hots. The patrolmen
tried (lie door. It v.a locked. Thry
( the room they found Anderon dead
on the ned. xliot while ne iiepr.
On lnnr litiltrt through her
Iclt breat. lay Mis Heal. Bcuidc
her was a J8 caliber revolver.
Tk. ..- .... in ,i;.r,rrlr An
A DC I IJVIII W HI II VI M' - - -
. ularni clock, mt for 0 o'clock, ticked
within reach under the hen.
On the dresser wa a novel hy
Kdgar Rice Burroughs. "Thuvia.
' Maid of Mars." " It was open and
corner of a page was turrfed down at
an illustration portraying a woman
dancer standing over the prostrate
form of a man. The woman held a
i i i
uaKger in iter nanu.
Miss Beat, unconscious was sent
to the General hospital. She may not
live.
Met in Hospital
Anderson had met Miss Bcal while
he was lieutenant in the signal
corpi and she was a nurse in the
east. A courtship began in an east
ern hospital. Their letters contained
frequent passages written in Esper
anto. Anderson, after the war,
worked in a St. Louis drygoods
house. He came to Kansas City
three months ago.
Miss Beal for five months had
been a nurse in the Open Air colony
at Springtield, 111. Letters to her
from Anderson plainly showed that
they contemplated marriage, and the
date for her coming to Kansas Ctiy
to become his wife was set two
weeks ago.
Anderson was shot in the back of
the head as he lay on his side. He
was 33 years old. according to an ap
plication for work filed with the dry
poods store where he was employed.
He also stated in the application that
he was married. His home originally
was in Philadelphia, where he ob
. tained his education. His wife is be
lieved to be in St. Louis.
Expresses No Regret.
Miss Beal is 29 years old. She is
a slight figure with refined and at
tractive features. She expressed no
regret at having shot Anderson, who,
she says in a statement to the po
lice, acknowledged he was married
after bringing her here from Spring
field to get married.
During the war Anderson was
stationed at Speedway, III., at an
aviation field. From papers t is in-
fcrred that Andersen had not been
Hp had traveled ex
tensively in promoting liberty bond
campaigns and as he viewed his
activities in retrospect, had written
an article for a magazine, coining
the phrase, "Liberty bombing," to
describe the service of the aviators
who engaged in the drives.
"Oh, I wanted to be fair I did.
I did "the girl, her strength fast
ebbingwhispered to the Rev. J. D.
Small, who sat at her bedside by
her request. "But I couldn't. He
told me of his other loves. He show
ed me a list. There were half a
hundred names and mine was the
last, the very last one. That enraged
me and I demanded an explanation.
"For hours he talked on and on
of his conquests told me of each
girl, her eyes, her hair, her person
, ality. It was then I decided. I
placed my own life on the altar of
woinajnhoodi that others' hearts'
might not die, as mine is now dead.
That is why I shot my perfect
lover."
Attack on Farm Aid
Answered by Baruch
(Continued From rage One.)
simply happens that the farmers can
co-operate, but cannot make use of
the corporate form of organization.
Both sorts of organization are prop
erly subject to governmental regu
lation for the protection of. the
public.
Refers to Price-Fixing.
"To consider intelligently the sub
ject of co-operation among farmers j
one must comprenena tne vast ait
ferences between agricultural and
. manufacturing industry. A compa
ratively few men, if they desired,
could fix the price of steel by a- sim
ple, single order; and, if there should
be over-production, could limit the
rate of output or entirely close down,
in order that the supply might not
overwhelm the selling agencies and
disastrously demoralize the market.
Even though the farmers should be
able to, and unwisely attempt, to
fix an .unfair price for some com-
A-ffioditr, they could persist in doing
sofor only a short time, because
they have neither the credit to carry
their product? nor the ability to con
trol 'their' production, which would
be absolutely necesary and, which
are so easily accomplished in the
manufacturing industries. Nobody
will ever be in a position to com-
mand all, or any great part of the
millions of farmers of this vast coun-
, try to limit their production, and so
the outcome of any holdup, price
fixing farmers selling agencies would
be such a crush to realize on the
attractive price that the selling agen
cy would be swamped."
Government to Join Probe
of Anatolia Atrocities
Washington, June 4. Secretary'of
State Hughes announced that
the United States government is
prepared to join in a proposed in
vestigation of the reports relating to
the deportation of Christian minori
ties in Anatolia and the alleged
atrocities connected therewith. The
government was asked to partici
pate it) aote from Premier Lloyd
George of Great Britain.
Russian Princess Appeals
for Entrance to America
Woman Tells Story of How Husband Was Murdered
by Reds and of Making Part of Trip to United
States as Stowaway Secretary of Labor
Davis Considering Case.
ftasatia Rm I Wire.
Washington, June 4. Out of the
thaos in Rimia undrr the reds,
I'limcs Ivan Ttchernitschow of the
rritwhile Russian aristocracy, hat
fought her way to the United States
and Ins laid her pica for admittance
to the American republic before
Secretary of Labor James J. Davis.
The immigration authorities at New
Orleans ruled Hut the princess
should be excluded, but she has
chimed American citizenship and
has appealed her cause to the highest
authority undrr tit? immigration
laws.
Secretary Davis is making a thor
ough investigation of her story,
which reads like wild romance. It
dials with the murder and crucifix
ion of her husband by the bol
heviki. the disappearance of her 8-year-old
son, a black dispatch box
containing secrets of the lost royalist
i.ause in Russia, a flight across Eu
i ope on foot to evade the secret
agents of (he soviet and a trip across
Attacks Hardin
and Daugherty
Senator Stanley Says' Presi
dent Is Attempting "to
Stifle Press."
Washington. June 4. President
narding and Attorney General
Daugherty were assailed in the
senate by Senator Stanley, demo
crat, Kentucky, in connection with
statements credited to Presi
dent mraing with respect to a
senate attack on Secretary Hoover
and to assertions made "by Mr.
Daugherty in his Chicago address
as to the policy to be followed
in filling the 24 judgeships cre
ated under a bill recently passed
by the senate and house.
Senator Stanley, interpreting the
president's remarks on the "basis of
some newspaper accounts" to refer
to criticism of all cabinet officers
including Mr. Daugherty, said Mr.
Harding was attempting "to stifle if
not to muzzle" the press.
Turning his fire on the attorney
general, the senator accused him of
having, by his Chicago speech, served
public notice on applicants tor tne
judgeships that they must not say
anything in criticism of Mr. Daugh
erty if they expected appointment to
the bench.
Reading from a dispatch in the
Philadelphia Public Ledger in which
it was said that the press had taken
"two-fisted fling at the political
blackguards" who attacked execu
tive officers, Senator . Stanley
wanted to know who were these
"political blackguards who are as-sailine-
the attorney general."
"They are two members of con
gress," he said, "who on yesterday
wore the colors and the uniforms
of a soldier; eminent senators rep
resenting sovereign states, ambassa
dors from two proud common
wealths. Is it possible that a ge
nial, self-poised1, courteous gentleman
occupying this high place could so
far forget himself in his desperate
attempt to shield a man who dares
not shield himself, to speak for a
man who dares not speak for him
self. "Will the president, in his des
peration, finding no other who dare
to say a word for this discredited
official, denounce senators as black
guards who criticise the nefarious
and crooked operations of a political
bicker who makes it a business, it
is charged, at least to deceive the
chief magistrate of the United
States in order that men may de
spoil women in time of peace and
plunder the treasury in time of war?"
Quoting from a dispatch in the
Philadelphia Public Ledger in which
it was stated that the president be
lieved newspaper men and newspa
pers performed a public service in
"putting on the brakes," in the .pub
lication of attacks on executive of
ficers, Mr. Stanley said he would tell
the president that "this is not Aus
tria; this is not' Prussia; this is the
once free America, at least."
Brotherhood of Trinmen
Elect Three New Trustees
Toronto, June 4. The Brother
hood of Railroad Trainmen conven
tion in this city reaffirmed the ap
pointment of the former staff of
grand lodge officers and elected three
members of the board of trustees.
The new members of the board are
William Doherty of Cleveland,
George H. Thomas, Philadelphia;
and J. H. Connelly, the Canadian
representative. Val Fitzpatrick of
Columbus and M. J. Murphy of
Cleveland have been re-elected vice
presidents.
Virginians Pay Homage
to Indian Mai?J, Pocahontas
Jamestown, Va., June 4. Homage
was paid here to the Indian princess,
Pocahonta, savior of Capt. John
Smith, and Nrm friend of the first
English settlers in America. Eight
of her descendants, three little girls
and five boys, took part in the cere
mony, which centered about the pres
entation of an eight-foot bronze fig
ure of the daughter of Powhatan to
the Association for the Preservation
of Virginia Antiquities by Miss Ella
Lorraine Dorset, on behalf of the
Pocahontas Memorial association.
Deficiency Appropriation
Needed for Patent Office
Washington, June 4. Unless con
gress grants a deficiency appropria
tion to meet printing bills of the
patent office, no patents can be is
sued for the last week of June or
the first three weeks of July, it was
learned at the patent office.
This same situation came up last
year and congress granted defi
ciency appropriation in time so there
waa no lapse. Officials believe the
matter again will be taken care of.
The patent office iaiues approximate
ly 1,000 patents weekly.
the AtU'iiic, partly as a stowaway
and partly as a stewardess.
The princes claims that site is a
native American, born in Louisville,
Ky.. August M. 1881. She says her
mother was Countess Potempkin of
tne Kuttian ariktocrary. closely con
nectrd with the Russian royal fam-
I'y, who renounced her rank to wed
her father, Frederick Schlich, a Ger
man naturalized as an American cit
izen. She says her father vanished
when she was but 2 years old.
The princess says that in her de
sire to reach America, penniless and
distraught with her pursuit across
Europe, she stowed away aboard the
steamship Gascomer. five days at
sea, without food and water, forced
her to reveal herself to the 'shin's
officers. So weak the could scarcely.
nana, sne was nursed back to health
and transferred at tea to the steam
ship Texan Drier, bound back to
Antwerp. She succeeded in convinc
ing the captain of the Texan Drier
that she was an American citizen
and he assigned her as a stewardess
for the return voyage to America.
French Define
Hague Conditions
Soviets Must Agree to Recog
nize Debts Before France
Will Attend.
Copyright 1. .
Paris, June 4. The French gov
ernment announced the conditions
under which it will attend The Hague
conference and participate in study
of the methods for reconstructing
Russia.
Quji d'Orsay's memorandum cov
ers every objection that the Ameri
can government made to participat
ing in the discussion of Russia. It
was handed to all countries expect
ed to attend The Hague conference.
A copy was given Ambassador Her
rick for Washington.
The salient points in the document
follow:
1 The Russian note of May 11, in
which the Soviets refused to recog
nize their debts and to restore prop
erty to foreigners must be retired.
i. lhe conference at The Hague
must be confined entirely to eco
nomic and financial phases of the
Russian question and the delegates to
the June IS and June 20 meetings
must be experts.
3. The Soviets must recognize all
their war and prewar debts and they
must return confiscated property to
foreigners unless it is materially im
possible, .and they must drop all
counter claims against the allies.
4. The conditions affecting com
merce and industry in Russia must
be profoundly changed, for The
Hague conference to be worth under
taking. 5. Until the Russian peasant can
be sure of enjoying the product of
his labor, which is a matter for the
soviet regime to adjust, it is use
less to discuss the restoration of Rus
sia. .
The purpose of the note is not only
to lay down the guarantees which
France will demand, but to point out
the necessity of defining the exact
scope and working methods of the
conference. It insists particularly
that the representatives of the June
meeting must not be diplomats.
Falls City Nun Dies ,
Sister Mary Claire. 35." died here
Sunday. She had been a teacher in
a Falls City convent for 10 years. She
is survived by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. H. Donnelly ot halls City,
where the body was taken for burial.
"Btlh'trHrtf
a'
Wt'n btrir
Kelog g'M ft
eur house 'tf
aotktr iHM
aw gia tor
mart but I
isn't cra
'cum I like
.1-. jjP
It's the flavor and
crispness that make
Kcllogtfs Com flakes so
joyously delicious
You'll wish the bowl af your table-seat was about
twice as big when it's "Kellogg's for the ieastr
Great big, sunny-brown corn flakes all oven-crisp
and crunchy crowding each other to spread you
real and true joy I You never tasted such flavor I
Pour in some fresh, cold milk or cream and-
fetart in I iWell, it'll seem you can't get going speedy;
enough to sui$ your appetite 1 Was there ever such
v a keen appetite maker; such happy,
fjjAMffk 1 1 round of appetite-applause you'll win
sV5Tl Great to start the day right I
TOASTED 1 1 Do more
Mini ivi vviji
II ajsllugg'S corn iakes--tneyr
n AK3 II so delicious I
W IBJOCCT ttmUU aai
pi vi a. i rtrxm i
Police Overtake
Train in Hope of
Catching Brown
Race in Automobile With
'Freight' When Boy Reports
He Saw Manacle Man
Climb Aboard.
Police in a fat emergency auto
mobile, in charge of Sergt. Frank
Williams, raced after a train, meeting
it at Gibson following in forma
lion that Fred Brown, the nun
ade man of Benson, wax hiding
on the tram. But no rrrd Brown
could be found. Either he had not
been on the train or he was a plian
torn.
The race followed the receipt of
information that Delmer Campbell,
1.'. 311 William street, had seen
man resembling Brown, sleeping
near the railroad tracks. The boy
was collecting wood.
Ran for Photograph.
"I thought it was Brown." said
young Campbell, "but to make sure
i ran home and got a newspaper con
taiuing the photograph of him. While
the man was sleeping, I looked at
the picture and it was Brown, all
right. Two large revolvers were
sticking out of his pockets. When I
started to run to a neighbor's house,
the man got up and, ran toward the
train of cars."
Delmer called William Merz, 310
Woolworth avenue, who in turn
called police. Williams and his squad
went to Gibson to meet the train,
Find Lincoln Newspaper.
A Lincoln newspaper was found on
the ground near the place where the
man was sleeping, searchers said.
This has led the police to believe
that if the man was Brown, he had
an accomplice or "runner" who has
Deen lurmsmng mm wun iooq ana
newspapers.
Police recovered 30 gallons
of grease and oil and a frying
pan at the Brown shack in Benson
where Brown manacled the girls,
The oil and grease had been .stolen
from the Nicholas oil station at
Thirty-sixth street and Woolworth
avenue.
"Seen" in Lincoln Too.
Lincoln, June 3. (Special Tele
gram.) Brown was reported Satur
day to be biding in one of the
old Gooch flour mills north of here.
Police sped to the scene but could
find nothing of the fugitive. Two
physicians who were driving by were
the ones who said they saw the
manacle man. Brown was once em
ployed by the Gooch mill while he
was on parole from the state prison.
Lions Leave Des Moines
for Convention in Omaha
Des Moines, June 4. (Special Tel
egram.) lhirty Des Moines Lions,
dressed in costumes befitting the
Iowa farmer, left for Omaha to
attend a district convention of Lions
which convenes Monday. The Des
Moines delegation left in automobiles.
They took their own orchestra and a
fast team of goiters, prepared to- cap
ture all golf honors.
The Des Moines Lions will boost
for Judge Hubert Utterback for dis
trict governor. I he district comprises
the states of Iowa and Nebraska.
Judge Utterback had long been
prominent in the local organization.
Whisky Worth $190,000
Seized After Gun Fight
New York, Jime 4. A pistol bat
tle on the Brooklyn water front
early today between rum runnerg
and federal prohibition agents, re
sulting in the seizure of the ISO-foot,
wireless-equipped, sea-going tug,
Kipple. a former mine layer, and its
cargo of $190,000 worth of whisky,
and the arrest of nine men, was, the
means ot revealing what was de
scribed in court as a liquor smug
gling plot, headed by a Long Island
millionaire, now in enforced exile in
Bermuda, whence he is directing
large shipments of whisky to New
York.
Iiealth-making food!
Tomorrow, serve Kelldee's I What a
than ask your groces
iiuhi iuiui uyuui
v -V?
GOBN3LAKB0
miOCCI MAX. U4 mi hUai
Rise and Fall of U. S.
Sea Power Is Faced
ritl4 frmm fat M )
then as yet developed our great iron
industry, nor our Merl indutiry,
which followed later.
Our dominance on the oeat lay
during the day of the wooden Inn.
where we had the same advantage of
propinquity of raw material to the
ttacoast that Britain had ubequent
y when iron ships were tint de
ve loped.
In addition to these very romnett
ing reasons America required all the
borrowed capital she could get, par
ticularly for the development of her
railroads.
These road were built a a roult
of the encouragement given by gov
ernment subsidies of land grants and
they formed the arteries through
which the wealth of the central and
western portions of our country
poured.
Europe Carried Our Products.
Europe loaned us sums required in
hundreds of millions of dollars: and,
being their debtors, we could always
be assured she would send us her
ships to carry the product with
which we were to discharge our
obligations.
In order to insure the development
of our infant industries, America
adopted a system of high tariffs for
the product of factory, mine and
farm alike. Thus, American ships
had to be built by the highest paid
labor in the world and operated by
crews receiving high wages.
None would have American stand
ards of living lower than they are;
but the insurmountable handicap
caused thereby to American shipping
built and operated by protected labor
in competition with foreign ships is
obvious.
Thus, briefly outlined, is the his
torical background of the American
merchant marine in 1914, when the
world war began. At that time
America possessed in all the seas of
the world a total of 15 passenger and
combination passenger and cargo
ships, compared to something over
250 for Great Britain.
Pigmy Compared to Britain.
We had a total of all types of sea
going steel and iron ships of 1,000,000
gross tons, compared to 18,000.000
gross tons for Great Britain, exclu
sive of its colonics.
Let us suppose that in the world
war Britain and its allies had no
need for our products, but could
have obtained them on better terms
in their own colonies or elsewhere.
Our first thought then would be how
could we have disposed of the sur
pluses we would have had and which
would have bankrupted manufacturer
and farmer alike had they been per
mitted to back up at home.
We could only have disposed ot
these surpluses if we had ships of
our own wherewith to carry them to
the neutrals of the world. We did
not begin to have a tithe of the ships
necessary to carry a small percentage
of that surplus.
Fortunately for us, Great Britain
and its allies, in the conduct of the
war before our entry, as after, need
ed all the surplus of products we
could supply and demanded ever in-
g4r ' i)etili)'ii-iluii .I, .ly.tlVrf,Btf.lill..iSi. I, r..i , ,..,, ....i u ' i ij'iniimri ;.,-. m,iifi;,v ,'- ,,m . : 111 I-
Creator of Gumps -Signs 'a Million
Contract and Rides Off in This
THE GUMPS will be with us
at least for the next ten
years. Sidney . Smith (at the
right) will receive from
The Chicago Tribune,
The Omaha Bee and
other papers a minimum of con
siderably more than a million
dollars during this period for
drawing Andy and Min. It is the
highest salary paid by any group
of newspapers to
The contract was
gift of a Rolls-Royce
automobile.
See "The Gumps" in The
Scarch for Dozen
llrmkmt Living
Women Under Way
Vliinijion, June 4. Who are
the I.' gnau.t living wonirii in the
I'niird M4te, i the question the
National l.rsKiie of Women Voters
has had put to it and wlmli it sad
it promised to tuva dithculty in
aiivwrriiii?.
The question was aked by Senor
it a Uraci.itia Maiijuami. dclrKate
from Chile to the ran-Amcriran
conference of women recently held in
Baltimore, who explained she lie
tires to write article about tlieui tor
publication in ncttMxipert of I'lule
which khe kerves as correspondent.
They tmit lie living women, she
stipulated, and those who ir-t de
serve to serve a example mid in
spirations to the women of South
America.
The Irauue, in an announcement,
ys it wishes to kivc .Vnonu Man
juano a comprehensive list restricted
to no movement, party, Mate or
occupation.
creased production from us.
Sailed Ship at Capacity.
In the interest of their national
lives they rveu abused their ships by
steaming them beyond the safety
point in order to make the maximum
number of trips to our shores to car
ry away the goods they required
from us,
A vastly different picture is fur
nished by the Boer war, which
Great Britain carried on at a great
distance from her shores, but for the
conduct of which she required little
of our goods. Then she had to di
vert her tonnage away from u to
the need of the long carriage for the
prosecution of that war; and the
farmer and wool grower of America
well remembered what happened to
them during that period.
Immediately upon our entry into
the world war. April, 1917, our gov
ernment, through the agency of the
United States shipping board, which
congress had created, and in re
sponse to insistent urging from the
allies, began the creation of the larg
est single fleet the world has ever
known.
In. my next article I will discuss
the composition of that fleet and the
problem of its disposition.
Tbo Rh will nrrwnt the third article of
this aerlm tomorrow
Cave Man Assaults Girl
Who Refused to Go Riding
Des Moines. Ia.. Tune 4. (Special
Telegram.) Opal Fitch, 23, is in a
serious condition at the Iowa Luther
an hospital as a result of being beaten
into insensibility Friday at her home
by Ward Dawson, her caveman
sweetheart. Dawson was arrested.
According to the girl's parents, Daw
sou called for Opal and asked her to
take a ride. When the girl declined
the invitation, the man became very
angry and beat her. At the time of
the attack, Mr. and Mrs. William
fitch, parents of the girl, were down
town. Later Dawson came to the
Fitch home and threatened the fam-
ly with a revolver, if they reported
the assault to police.
a cartoonist. sidney smith
sealed by the
The Gumps lead the comic field
in America because the humor of
them is based on human nature.
There is no throwing of bricks
Verdict Reached
in $100,000 Suit
Against Railroad
Long Fight by Man Who Lout
r.yrs hy Explosion Trnta
livtly Km! Decision
Stall Secret.
After three years of legal battle
where is.urs were decided in bntfc
state and fedcr.il supreme court, tin
l,i hv Inhit O'llira. J I
rv'U l-'.iiihth street, Council Blutls,
; gainst the L'nioti Tani'ic railroad for
JlixttHl for the lo of two eyes
wa tentatively derided when a dis
.'. .... mru raihft a varrfiet
Bon: sides still have the right of
appeal.
What the verdict i will not, be
known until 9 Monday morning
a'lin fit inri U lo assemble 111
judge L. U. Dav'a courtroom, where
the sealed decision will he opened
and read.
The jury started deliberating at 4
rrulay afternoon.
.rI-rii!iii in inhn O Yeiser. one
of the O'Hara attorneys. O'Hara lost
both eyes wnue empioyeo in m
i minrii ItlulT vard of the Union
iv,,.:r. ,.,:rniA II uraa rrmnvinff
a fulminating cap from the end ot a
w ire, at the order of a foreman, when
the cap exploded.
A succession of legal tiffs followed.
The Union Pacific brought an in
junction restraining plaintiffs from
trying the case at Council Bluffs. A
counter-injunction was brought by
the plaintiffs. The supreme court
was reached twice in appeals. When
higher courts decided that district
court could try the case Judge Day
submitted it to a jury.
Two Race Drivers Injured
as Speeding Cars Collide
Salem, Ore.. June 4. Harry
Rhodes and Jack Ross, automobile
race drivers, were injured, Rhodes
probably fatally, when their cars
crashed together in the final event
of an automobile racing program
staged on the state fair grounds
track here. Crowds swarmed
onto the track after the crash and
officials flagged the six other cars
in the race to prevent injuries.
Special
Week of Juno 5 to It. Iaclusiv.
Large Clall of Avalon Crape Drink,
Two Large Delicioua Sugar Cookie,
Choice of Special Ham or Cheese Sand
wich ALL FOR 10c
ALL SIX RESTAURANTS
In Confidence
If doubtful aa to outcome of your
plant or the future welfare of wife
and children
You Need Me
fir financial plan cannot fait.
Address Box Y 1913, Omaha Bee.
and custard pies, no heels in the
air at the finish. All the millions
who follow the daily adventures
of Andy and Min con
sider them as
They are living
to those who see
love affair of Uncle Bim and the
Window Zander is dis
cussed with as much ear
nestness as if every read
er were to be a guest at
the wedding breakfast oi
the "Old Kangaroo," as Carlos
calls him. For weeks 1,000
people a day wrote the cartoon
ist. Some folks threatened to
stop the paper if the widow mar
ried Uncle Bim. No matter what
other things readers like in The
Omaha Bee, the day is never com
plete without the exquisite humor of
Andy and Min Gump.
Omaha Bee
Plallr County !niiHhii
Laud Price I uok Suhle
(Vilumbiis, Neb , June Sc
rial,) Tlut iral rsUie m I'laltc
County Ik brioniiii( stabilised atfam
is huwu by two sales in (it and
Prairie towiiihi. Herman Johannes
old a "quarter" It (Kto Mueller
lor f IK.000 and a quarter was sold ti
Theodoie Molilmau for J.'JJ per
acre.
Constipation
Vanishes
Forever
Praaipt Pennaneitt RcBef
CASTER'S LITTLE UVER 111X9
Mmfaa. nmJy vege
tableact aarelr but
nuy oa u
Urn.
(tin tla.l
trttt cor A
V MSHSfl
tSQDl llUUfOFa
tb complcjrioo brighten the eye
taMOfM Baiinnm ITwinPrtca
33x4
Sprague Cords
$24.12
For This Week
Fortnichtlr aervlco by four ntf
aiflceat Empress linera eailinf
from Vancouver to Japan in 10
days, China 14 days, Manila IS
days. Fine epecial train Twin
Cities to Vancouver only 68 hours
"Empress Steamship Special"
connecting; with ships.
R. S. Elworthy
Gen. Act. S. S.
Pass. Dept.
40 N. Dear
born St.
CHICAGO
Kiiiiipiiiiiii
Dollar
Car
friends.
people
the strips.
The
r
Every Day
laArvri-ffW
IIpillsI
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