Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Bell Doug. 616—BOTH PRONES REACK ALL DEPTS.—Ind. A-1941 Pearl Buttons A comj miplgte fine of pearl buttons in all the wanted shapes and sizes. "3eed two and four hole pearl buttons, one dozen on a card; at, a card, be, Fish eye pearl buttons, e a card. p—— CHRISTIAN SCIENCE DEFINED Not Merely Another Sect, Says Judge 8. J. Hanna. BEE: -OMAHA, -FRIDAY, It was the same two men who shot the marshal &t Weeping Water last fall, one evening, when he accosted them as they were feaving town. MERRICK - COUNTY 18 PEACEFUL No Criminal Cases and No Use for rt Juey. CENTRAL CITY, Neb, April 3.—(Spe- RECORD OF I0WA'S SOLDIERS New Doouments Found in Washing- ton Give Interesting History. MORMONS IN MEXICAN WAR Falls Three Stories While Asleep Rich 0il Producer Badly Injured by Walking Out of Hotel Win- Mr. Voter, A Word With You Frankly, this is a political advertiss. ment, honestly bought and patd for. It concerns your businpgs and civie wei- fare . KX The undersigned are the regular re- TO UNIFY RATHER THAN DIVIDE publican nominees for the Omaha Fire and Police Board. We can claim, on & lifetime showing, to be good citizens of Omaha, and to have the trus intercsis of the city at heart. We belleve we have the abllity, as we hAve the Intention, to dischargé the duties devolving upon the Board of Fire and Pelice Commissioners with fairness, falthfness and a due re. gard for the rights of all clements of a cosmopolitan population We realize that Omaha is & live and | progréssive metropdlis; that it has a Fire department and polige force of high meriL, and the standard of duty and competency should be maintained We are seeking the suffrages of the voters of Omaha on the sincere pledge that all of our time required will be cinl.)—Perhaps for the first time In the dow at Tusl history of the county the district court | will convene for a regular jury term with- out & jury panel in attendance, the reason being that there are no cases on the docket 0 be tried which will require the attend- | |ance of a jury. Judge Thomas came up | | trom Columbus to call the docket over and | (o { 2 iR C 9. (Special) set the cases for trial, but he found that ;‘;’_‘?B“";ffl?l‘:'flni:l‘ :“‘{‘"l‘('“:": gy’ there were none demanding jury trial and g - 3 for the war with Mexico and served. hence ordered that the members of the " regular panel, who had aiready been sum- | (NFOUhout the war, marching from fowa mohed, need not ‘wppear and ordered notice | "0Uth Into Mexico and westward to Los glven to that effect. Angeles, Csl o Merrick county can boast that there is| Records showing (hat lowa's military not & single criminal case on the docket |TecOrd begar-in the same year in which it for the May term and there are only nine- | W48 admitted to statehood have been un- teen civil chses lated. Of these several | COvered for the first time in the War de- ,‘s‘_yy,ringer wash buttons in all sizes. Free Lessons in Art Embroidery every day from 3 to 5 P. M. mstrupy the expert needle artist, in charge. ts. off Sedbud Floor. I8 for our great sale of all Linen Handkerchiefs next Saturday. Howard ]‘9’“9 This Is the Vital Parpose of the Teaching that Proposes to Estab- tish & Full Gospel of it Ix Compa Blaffs Marched (o Los Angeles | TULSA, Okl, April 3-<James Davis, a wealthy ofl producer, fell trom the third story window uf the Brady hotel in this clty early today while Ifi a somnambulistic state. Hc was removed to the city hos- pital in a critical condition. NO NEW TAXES IN BUDGET Higher Rates on Present Senrces of Revenne Proposed to Pay Bri Defieit. and Were There Mase )l . tered O p Class Judge Septimus James Hanna, C. 8 D, & member of the Board of Lectureship of the Christian Science church, for ten years editor-in-chief of the Christian Sclence perfodicals and for eight years first reader of the mother church in Boston, lecturcd last night at the Boyd theater on “Not Merely Another Sect”” Judge Hanna, in addition 10 being prominent In the Chris- tlan Science church, has had an active career. LONDON, April 20.-~With a deficit of | nearly $80,000,00 to provide for, it was Lumber Rates He is a native of Pennsylvania, though he remtved from that state to the west when a youth. He practiced law for up- wards of twenty Vears, held various posi- tions of trust—Captain of Company H, 186th regiment Illinols Volunteers, judge of the county court at Council Bluffs, city a torney and during President Arthur's ad- ministration, registrar of the United States land office at Leadville, Colo. At the ter place he became interested in Christian Science, are merely or \mattefs which are purely actions for the settlement of estates. that of Lilllan Wooster against come to trial this year. ACCEPTS INVITATION OF MAN 's in which there is a peace- ful action for the quieting of title to land friendly There is only one divorce case on the docket, Charles Wooster, and it is not likely that this will TO KILL HIM IN QUARREL the possession of Colonel G. W. this city, of compiling the Crosley of re lowa National Guard Historlans knew that lowa had furnished troops for the Mexican war, but how many or who they were was never known until Colonel Crosley racelved the record of the Iowa Mormon battalion of six States Infant partment at Washington and are now in | who is in charge of the work ter of Iowa soldlers | and sallors soon fo be published by the | complete companies and of Company K, Tenth United anticipated that David Lloyd-George, chan- eellor of the exchequer, In introducing the budget in the house of commons today would tap springs of revenue. The chan- cellor, however, had nothing herolc to pro- | pose, and the additional expenditures will 'be met largely by increased drafts on the me sources that have heretofore furnished the bulk of the revenue. There has been no such rush to the house of commons for many years as there wai today. Every nook and even the gangways were packed when the chancellor arose to given to the dischacge of the duties of the office we seek, And that the fire and police departments Wil be. adminstersd with an eye single to the interests of the city wherein all our own interests are centered. Omaha 8 the most sold in a business | sense, the fasting growing and most promising city ofk meteepolitan charm:- ter in the mid-west sagtion of our coun- try; and we, declass pur intentlon to do all that may be AWIthIn our power to further its standing And growth, and to in Mob 4 _#¥ which was recrulted eu- tirely from among the residents of south- castern Towa. Company K of the Tenth regular infantry was recruited from Keosauqua, Fort Madi- son, Muscatine (then Bloomington) and other towns In southeast lowa, and was commanded by Captain Edwin Guthrie, who was wounded with others of his com- mand at Pa La Noga and died a few weeks later in Mexico, The show that many other members of the lowa company fell in battle or died in hospitals in the City of Mexico. Six Companies of Mormons. The other six companies which repre- sented lowa in the war were recruiled from Mormons who had reached Council Bluffs, on thelr westward journey, Yo search of land, where they would be free from persecution. They were called the lowa Mormon battalion, and comprised about 600 young men. keep 1t at the front s ‘one of the great citles of the United States. It Is our home, and we must uil rise or fall with it. On this statement we eatnestly ask your vote on May 4. Circumstances over which we had no control brought us into thé field as candi- dates several weekd after the other re- publican candidates were placed before the people; hence we are obliged to take this method of making our candidacy kiown to the voters. Rich Girl at Neosho, Mo, on Trial for Murder of Her Sise ter's Smitor. Not Merely a Seet. In his addvess last night Judge Hanna said: Many merely fancy f) make his three-hour speech. ¥ Mr. Lioyd-George sald (hat to the In- creaged expenditure on the navy and the ©0ld ago ponsion the deficit was largely due. A considerable Increase in naval expend- Itures was to be expected again next year, as in the present condition of mind of Europe it will be a stupendous folly not to adequately provide for such. MINERS’ PEACE PACT SIGNED Agreement Insnres Amicable Réla- tions Between Workers and Operators for Three Years. Riot| | NROSHO, Mo., Aptil D.A“Jr\)hnny" David- son, a wealthy young woman, who killed Roy Ramsour here in June 6, 1908, following a quarrel at the Davidson home, in which it is alleged Ramsour applied an epithet to | the girl, is on trial here. Miss Davidson's plea is self-defense. Ramsour was a suitor for the hand of Miss Grace Davidson, the defendant's sis- | ter. A few days before the murder the two had quarrelled. Ramsour used improper language toward Miss “Johnny' Davidson, and when he refused to retract, she secured a revolver and confronted him C. M. Willlams, a neighbor of the David- son's, and who claims he saw the killing, was the first witness called. “1 saw the girl go toward Ramsour, who was leaning with his back against a gate. ‘Take it back,’ she said, ‘or I'll kill suppose that Christian Science Is another sect or a new religlous Are Higher ‘-'T‘l!ll'i;’ Figh 3 ‘Fd‘lld?’p Fight Between Brick i Senator Nelson Says Jokers in Sched- ard .Men .and Strike | ule Raise Duties Suppose to T e o s | nothing of value to the many sects already Breakers. | Be Lowered. in existence, there would be no reason why | g |.l' !hlt‘;ul;: have been established, or why it WASHINGTON, Apell #.—Consideration | #10Uld be perpetuated. There 'is no need er multiplic: of the tariff bill resumed by the 8 e o Intensifying In any degree the sectarian senate today. After Mr. Rayner had made | spirit. = Botter wero the number of sects an exhaustive speech in opposition to the |diminished, and the sectarian spirit de- st L 3 general- protective tarift policy of the re- | oooved. The vital purpose of Christian publican party, Mr. Nelson took the floor Sclence is to unify rather than to divide. ¥ No one can impartially and understandingly to present his objections to some of the scheduler, He manifested especial satls- read the Christian Scfence textbook without seeing that the central idea of the author faction over the discovery by himself of what he sald were numerous ‘“jokers” in is to carry out and establish a full gospel of Christ.” Her earnest purpose is to renew the lumber schedule. While supposedly the rates of duty on lumber were lowered, he and reunite, not to distract, the true gospel elements. it her teaching seems In some said, they In fagt were higher even than the Dingley rates. PISHKALL, X. Y., AvEL 2.~An unidenti- ~fied, Lzgliag ,was. shat, and Instantly killed Lin a.glash between 3 rioting mob and tie , smployes,af the brick yards of the Watrous compag)y 0. the. outskirts of, this village ! . 1048y, The. brick. yard, workers have been +Qn .o stelke for peveral days. Two hun- sdred men, apued. with, clubs and stones, \oft.obhe yard. of O'Brien & Vaughey in Fisblll} today and jyarched to the yard of ..ihe Watrous pompany, three miles up the Lxiver,, which. had -heen reopened after the | . sinikq -Foreman, Patrick. Quinn and three «..qther menemployed.at the Watrous yard met: theme The mob, thrawing stones, ad- recor FRED H. HOYE, W. J. HUNTBR, CHAS. J. KARBACH, WM. F. WAPPICH :‘Never Before” PHILADELPHIA, April 20.—The agree- ment between the miners and operators insuring industrial peace in the anthracite coal reglons for another period of three vears was signed here today by the repre- sentatives of the employers and the men. WINNIPEG, Manitoba, April 20.—The coal reepects to differ with prevalent theorles and interpretations, it is only that true theories and Interpretations, and co: quently more correct practice and living, may be substituted. All sincere Christian strivers, as well as all good people of wh . vanced suipon the Jpur. men, whereupon « Foraman; Quinn shot .and killed the mob leader. The other rioters then disappeared. NEWS, OF THE ARMY, POSTS Orders Direct, Lientenant Colonel % 40 Sail for Manila About The fotma) brders’ difecting the transter of Liemtenant:Colonel W. P. Evans, chief of stafe 0t the Dephrtment of the Missourl, have been tecgiyed drdth the Wat depart- ment. The intention s that @blonel Evans will sail for Manila dbout Abgust 1. There is & possibility’ there bé alater change in the ordegs, and thet' Cdloriel Evans may remain in this “depaftrbént.. It fs not ‘de- termined who will b¢ ¥4l Eians’ ®uc- v v as ohlef: of 107, th: iMissour! department:’ At prupt-\t Aooks” a8 If it might be Lieutéhant ‘Colonel M.:¥. Walts, tormerly chief of staff of the Army of Cuban Pacification, or possibly Colonel S ©. Mills, chiel ‘of statf.ofi the Phillppine S SHIMOB: MDA 8 now under. orders- Lo re- turn to the United States. EINRE, AT e been ordered placed on the sick list and ..wrdqmn to pmpceed to Fort “Robinson, ; to Mack’ himself under charge of thé hldentl) SWifrikédn ‘there! He' will return to I§WForE, Dy Aa, Russell, when. sufficlently re- coyered to s0. LA S ) " +% Brigadies Geueral Charles Morton and ‘\‘\uier Quartermaster D. E. McCarthy of “the partient’ of the Missour for Fort;Riley Thursday to make the an-' nual, departmental Inspection of that post First Class Private A. L. Barnes of the signal corps at Fort Omaha has been or dered to Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo., fo electrical and signal work.’ Captain George® B Gibbs 'of “the signal corp® ha¥"beken assighad . to duty as con- structihg S§MIrierdaster “at Fort Omaha. 10 have chérge of the building operatioms now in progress there. He will relleve Captain Charles ¥, Chandler, who has been aseigned to other dutles, openéd at the office of L Colonel F. Eastman, ehlef com- missary of the Department of the Mis- sourl, for 110,000 pounds of potdtoes and 2,000 poundh Bt MR’ for the use of the posts in. this department el o st 4o WPPRERIR *STATE ~DOCTORS “NEXT WEEK Nebraska Hola Bids were Lieu- Medieal Aswociation Sessionof ¥ in Oma ‘The forty-first annual convention of the Nebroske State Megdeal wassoclation will be held In Omaha. at the Hotel Rome. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next waek. The first general will he held at 1:30 Tuesday afterncom. ‘at which time Rev. F. L. Loveland, D. D., will give the address of welcome. The conventio will close Thursday morning. A program »f Interest (0 members of the profession ! been prepared Tuesday evening a w ee Days session dollar dinmer‘will be sarved at the Rome, at which time the sresident will deliver his annual address Wednesday morning the women who will ome to the convention will be given an sutomoblle ride around the city and in the Afterncon they will be the guests of th wives of Omaha physiclans at a matinee party. Wednesday evenimg the’ women physiclans will be given a theater party and after «the .pegmiar sprogram the physi- sans and surgeous whl enjoy & smoker ind an exhibition of refined vaudeville at the Rome. Thursday the women visitors will be shown the Lininger art gallery, the public library museum, the new Young Women's Christian association bullding nd other places of interest . At the close of the medical convention rhursday morning the annual meeting of he Nebraska assoclation for the Study and *revention of Tuberculosis will be held - drén grow Plump and Rosy 8-Nuts 3% FOOD i Chil - (Grap “There's & Reason” will leave | TROOPS WILL RELIEVE HADJIN (Continued from First Page.) and Hamidieh. In addition to killing the men the Moslems carried off women ana children for slaves Mostems in India Stirred. CALCUTTA, April #.—The recent events in Turkey have caused a stir among the Moslems in India, whose organ tnday s that the deposition of Abdul Hamid has brought about the resentment of an over- whelming majority of the Turks outside of Turkey. ‘On the other hand, a number of telegrams of congratulation have becn sent to the new sultan. Dend Bodies Cover Fields. ADANA, Tuesday, April 27.—Conditions in the country surrounding Adana as a result of the recent fanatical Moslem movements upon the Christian population are terrible. Dead bodies are lying out on the fields. | Numberless Armenian farm housés have been bur! 1. nditions Are, most unsani- tary .na enbry J8 appedring. ! Forelgners May Take Hand. $T. PETERSBURG, April 29.—Nelther the Foreten office nor the Turkish cmbassy | fere has'received confirmation of the dis- | patches relating to a revival of the massa- creing at Adana, but if these reports are | true the situation may lead to landing of marines in Turkey by international .agree- mepy. The attitude of | Turkey is the chief source of anxiety to the Foreign office, as some doubt is ex- pressed as to the ability of the new Trkish government to cope with a situation so ar from Constantinople. NADIR PASHA IS EXECUTED (Continued from First Page.) the troops in Asiatie | after valn efforts to restrain his feeling | retired behind & screen, where he broke {into bitter sobs. For a moment tears ['tremblea in the sultan's ey Then he supplicated the soldlers in attendance to ! swear that they would not take his life, | The deputation brougiit the interview to a close and Abdul them as' they departed Enver Bey, the Young Turk leader, in an interview declares that the conviction Is forced upon him that Abdul Hamid was responsible for the .recent mutiny., He thinks that ~all danger of ‘& rieing in Anatolia In support of the ex-sultan now vanished, and Ike General Schefket wishes 10 banish the idea that the army | of occupation is the army of the committee of union and progress. He says that the army and the committee are united only in the sense that each has In visw same goal, namely, the welfara of country the (Continued from First Page.) a4 until the defend- After-get- his father died Melntyre ex- wife's infidelity could not be prove: evidence of prior insamity in ant's case had been established ting General Hains to say from nile insanity,” M. cused the witness. General Hains testified Claudia Hains after she made the confes- slon that she would have to go to her mother. I asked Claudia why she had done that he unless it was that she loved. Annis and he loved her.' Pittsburg Car D * Down Hill and Breaks in Twe on Steel Pole. | PITTSBURC | injured day April ‘en persons were five of them seriously, early 'to- when a Homestead, Braddock & East Pittsburg trolley car became uncontrolable on a steep grade on Forest street, near Beeler, in the Squirrel Hill section. BE. B. MecMasters, the motorman, sus- tained a fractured skull and will probably dle. The car dashed down the steep hill, jumped from the track and was smashed when it struck a steel trolley pole with sufficent forge to break it in two. What caused the accident is not known. w in Wisconsl. MILWAUKEE, Wis., April 2. -Snow rain and hail fell throughout Wisconsin last night. At many places three inghes of Hamid humbly saluted | has | the | CENERAL HAINS ON STAND i o0n 5 i |and in a short time had picked up a hat | some told | this thing, and she said she did not knaw, | | finding more of the property. TEN HURT IN TROLLEY CRASH | ever religlous views, or of no settled relig- lous convictigns, desire to know and do that mankind, If there has been in the world too much religlon and not enough of true Christly living, or Christianity; if there has been t00 much of form and ceremony and not enough of vital Christlan activity; it there has been too much of doctrinai bickering and mot enough of practical application of the true teachings of the Founder of the Christian religion; If any or all of this is true, then surely there should be a sincere desire for the correc- tion bt these shortcomings. If a fundamental part of the gospel of Christ has been neglected or lost sight of, then surely all good peoplé wish a rein- statement "thereof. If mankind need- lessly suffering because of any failure fully to understand ahd apply the great precepts of the Bible, then surely all rea- sonable people must agree that such fail- ure #hould be supplanted by success, if it be possible. If we have wrong concep- tions of' God, of heaven, of life and death, of man and the universe and it is possible to correct such conceptions, surely thera can be no rational objection to all well- directed and honest effort on that behalf. Any teaching, method and works which tend to make life better, brighter, happier, holler, . healthier: anything which aids in destroying the dreadful delusion of 'sin, with all of its blighting and cruel conse- guences, anything which will lessen sick- ness, sorrow, grief, woe, the squalor and wretchedness of poverty, disease, death and destruction, should be welcomed hr every rational being upon the earth. If it is ‘?onlbb‘ then, for ue of today te get more ully established In us the same mind that was wigo-in Christ Jesus, thereby beconi- ing better able 1o do the works which the possession of such a mind necessarily im- lics, why should we not do #0? If Chris- fan Science fs in any measure whatever supplying any lack of the kind indicated, who, “having the best good of humanity at heart, can consistently say it nay? In conclusion, then, 1°say that through Mrs. Kddy's consecrated labors, extending over more than forty years, a fuller and higher gospel of Christ has been taught and practiced; and that the wonderful works thus far accomplished are but har- bingers of the greater works vet to come. We belleve most devoutly that the sun of righteousness has arisen with healing in His wings; that the glorious promise shall sooner or later be amply fulfilled, an that the spiritual vision of John on Patmos shull become a realized verity: ““There shall be no more curse. o And there shall be no night there; and they shall need no candle, neither light of the eun: for the Lord God giveth them light, “and they shall relgn forever and ever.” STOCK DYING ON THE RANGE and Lack of ble for Many Losses. Hay DICKENS, Neb.. April 29.-(Special)— Considerable stock has been dying here the last week. Both horses and cattle are suffering, as the grass crop is rather late this 'spring. Warm weather fs needed to make the grass grow. Some of the ranch- ers falled to get up a sufficlent amount of hay, which accounts for some losses. INDS MINE OF JEWELRY Otoe County Farmer Harrows U Watches, Rings and Wateh Chains. NEBRASKA CI April 2. (Special.) Yesterday while Clem Swenson, a farmer residing north of the city ‘and along the right-of-way of the Missourl Pacific rail- way, was harrowing one of his fields, which he disced a few days ago, found a gold watch near the side of his harrow up and as he did #c he saw another lying a short dis- tance away He then began looking around full of rings, watches, necklaces and wateh chains. The sheriff and his deputy went out last evening and found another hat full of jewelry. It had been scattered all over the tield by the harrow and disc. They found that the Jjewelry had been planted for months and the place had been marked by three sticks which were fast- ened by barh wire which had been cut from a fence near at hand. The harrowing and discing of the fleld had scattered the Jewelry all over It and they will take an- other trip today with the expectation of It Is thought that the stolen goods were planted by the men who robbed the jewelry stores at Stella and Jullan and when In this ocity |they became frightened, and after leaving here going north planted it in the fleld and marked the place, expecting to come | back some time and get it. It is thought | . o . All Physicians \ p— | — Must prescribe some <! the in- ts that are contalned In ood’s Sarsapariila -for ull trous bles the blood, stomach, kid- neys and liver. They include sarsaparills, stillingia, yellow dock, gentian, wild bark mandrake, dandelion, juniper b plg:-n eto. combination and proportions are our own formula and give power to cure beyond the reach of any other prescri) | tion or substitute. at's wh itt snow is reported (o have fallen wise to get Hood’s and only Hood's. which is best for themselves and for all | Well, kill me then,' he replied ‘With that she shot him as he stood with on the fence. Roy fell forward, and beneath him. for a moment, body over to the walk."” The Davidsons are wealthy. The girls some time ago were left a fortune by an uncle in the east “MIKE” GETS VERDICT Judgment for $28,500 Rendered at Little Rock im Favor of J. B. Cavanaugh. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., April 20.—A judg- the sum of $28,500 was rendered in the r- cult court today ‘M favor of J. E. Cav- anaugh. Non-suits were taken against Winn 8. Harris, 1. J. Warner, Montie Me- Cajl and others alleged to have been im- plicated In fleeciig Cavanatgh in a wrest- ling match.at New Orleans two years ago. Cavanaugh will recelve about $3,500, money taken from the men when they were ar- rested. Judge Treibier has ordered sold an au- tomobile, diamonds and other property seized, which will probably bring an ad- ditional 3500 The race hofses attached and he will also receive this. VETERAN SALESMAN John Dacey, Traveling M Walking Typhoid ana Heart Trouble. mount. After lingering for almost a month in a dying condition from walking typhoid fever and heart trouble, Little Falls, N. Y. a well known travel- ing man, died at the Omaha General hos- pital Thursday morning. He was taken seriously sick at the Henshaw on March %, after neglecting to secure medical at- tentlon for a case of typhold fever, from for some time. The EIks' lodge, to which he helonged, and a trained nurse for him and had him until his death. As a fatal ending to his age—63 years—his brother, Timothy Dace and his only son, a student at City, were summoned. The latter returned to Kansas City was at his bedside when death came. Dacey the road for thirty years. close friends~ in Omaha. The body taken to Little Falls for interment, New Schedules Reduce arge Between Chicago and Atlantie Coast.' WASHINGTON, April 2 proper; Interstate Commerce commission points. freight from Boston cents a hundred pounds from New York. Philadelphia - and Baltimore, to. Chicago other classes of freights. Army Men to Be Granted Absence Tmmediately Before Retirement. of absence not exceeding four months with | ment from active service for any cause ‘ther than age or & fallure to pass the re- quired physical examination for premotion provided they desire to avail themselves of such leave. HOME-MADE _ SKIFF Boy FATAL Drowned W o Navigate Missiast of Own Make. ST. LOUIs, April An attempt to navigate a home-made skiff equipped with & wooden sall in the face of & thirty-six- mile wind today resulted in the drowning of Henry Knuemann, 16 years old, in the Mississippl_riyer. Two companions were Tescued by the erew of & ferry boat. Try Boat his arms lyjng back on top of the palings catching ‘Johnny' and throwing her to the sidewalk They lay on the ground and then she pushed the two AGAINST J. C. MAYBRAY ment of default against J. C. Maybray in by Cavanaugh were recently sold for $500 IS DEAD Dies of John Dacey of which he had unknowingly been suffering secured the services of Dr. Lee Van Camp removed to the hospital, where he remained ilness was feared on account of the symptoms and his Kansas recently, but the brother John was & widower and had been on He represented a New York clothing house and had many is at the Heafey undertaking rooms and will be RATES LOWERED TO EAST Freight eneral reduc- tion of freight rates, effective June 1, from New York and Boston points to Chicago is made In tariffs filed with the today. The rates do not include Chicago common lmlm. or Missouri river or Mississippl river In effect the tariffs make a reduction of $ cents a hundred pounds on first-class to Chicago and 2 Proportional reductions are also made on NEW RULE FAVORS OFFICERS ve of | WASHINGTON, April 20.—Officers of the United States army by authority of Presi- dent Taft will hereafter be granted a leaye full pay immedlately preceding their retire- | The records show that none of the Mor- mon battalion was Killed in action, but they marched the entire distance from Council Bluffs, where the battalion was mustered In July, 184, to Los Angeles, Cal, where it was mustered out just a year later. Records show that one member of the battallon died on the Rio Grande river, indicating that they marched south into Texas and what is nuw New Mexico and- thence westward to Los Angeles, then a small Mexican pueblo, After belng mustered out the record shows that many drew traveling allowance from los Angeles over the old Mormon trall to Salt Lake Chy, then just laid out by Brigham Young. Others settled in Cali- fornia and few found their way back to Towa. The records recefved will add materially to the completeness of the roster, which Is to include the names and records of all Towans who saw service from the earliest Indian combat to the close of the Philippine campaign. Towa Phi Beta Kappa Lis IOWA CITY. la. April (Special.)— The elections for the Phi Beta Kappa fra- ternity In the University of Towa have been announced as follows: Miss Glenn Bentley of @elwein, Miss Mary Brooks of Hedrick, Miss Bessie Clark of Hedrick, Miss Maud Ferguson of Ida Grove, Miss Libble Hruska of Cedar Rapids, Miss Ora King of Towa Falls, Carl Kiger of Britt, Miss Caroline Schtl of Algona, H. P. Smith of Manchester, Miss Edna Btone of Logan, Miss Ina Scherrebeck of Cedar Raplds, Miss Meta Schmidt of Marengo, Miss Grace Titus of Ortonto station, Miss Lettie The- dens of Lyons and Miss Hazeldean Toof of Red Oak. Phi Beta Kappa has its membership based on scholarship and election to it is one of the most signal honors that can be con- ferred on a student durlng his college course. Wite Prevents Salcide. HEDRICK, la., April .—(8pecial)—An attempt at suicide made by Charles L. Dean, one of the prominent real estate men in southeastern lowa, was dramatic- ally prevented by his wife yesterday, when she drew the knife from her husband's throat, where he had plunged it in a momentary fit of insanity, then called a physician and then revived him. She tem- porarily bandaged the wound before call- ing the doctor. His condition today Is such that he probably will recover. Osteopathic Physiclan Wins Suit. GLENWOOD, Ia., April 20.—(Special)— The jury in the case of Mabel Norton versus M. E. Corbin, after deliberating five hours, brought in a verdict for Cor- bin. This is the case in which Mrs. Nor- ton brought suit for $10,000 against Dr. Cor- bin, an osteopathle physician. Both are from Malvern. Mrs. Norton claimed as a result of Dr. Corbin's treatment of her that her health was permanently injured, Expert osteopathic physiclans were here from two states, and the case was hard fought. Kemper, Hemphill & Buckingham, | All kinds of plating | | Cotton from Nica NEW ORLEANS, April shipment of cotton coming to New Or- leans from Nicarague has reached here on the steamship Ellls. The snipment com- prised four bales which were grown on the experiment farm of the Campuseano plan- tation, near Managua, and Was sent, here for classification and anal Ten tons | of cotton seed will be shipped to the plan- tation on the return trip of the Ells Sat- urday 20.—The first Prosecute Eloping Pastor. LEXINGEON, Ky.. April 2.-Thomas Hosley, father of Miss Josephine Hosley, who was arrested in St. Louls last night with Rev. P, R. Campbell, recently of the Christian church of Stamping Grounds, Ky., left today for St. Louls. He says he will | prosecute the minister. The couple were | arrested upon complaint of the sheriff of | Stamping Grounds. Shaft to Confederate Scout, NASHVILLE, Tenn., April %.—A momu- | ment to Sam Davis, a confederate scout, who, rather than divulge the source of in: formation which he had secured, suffered death on the gallows at the hands of the federals at Pulaski, Tenn. on November 2, 1583, was unvelled on Capitol hill today strike situation in western Canada is grow- ing serious, Fernie and Michel, controlled by the Great Northern. rallroad interests, are the only districts where coel is being mined and the statement is made that all coal mined there is being sent into the United States. At Lethbridge the schools were closed yesterday and at Moosejaw supplles are being drawn from outside towns. \ 8igns of a settlement of the strike are in l:-ngm. SUGAR TRUST PAYS BIG FINE Completes Two-Million-Dollar Pay- ment Growing Out of Fraad Charges. NEW YORK, April %.—The’ American Sugar Refining company of New Jersey and the New York corporation of the same name paid into the United Stgfes treasury about $900,00, completing a payment of approximately $2,000,000 in settlement of fines and claims made by the government in ita recent charge of fraud on the part of the sughr company. WASHINGTON, April 20.-The attorney general and secretary of the treasury have approved a settlement betwéen the Ameri- can Sugar Refling company and the gov- ernment of all the latter's claims on ac- count of fraudulent weighing of sugar. The total amount Involved s over $2,000,000. ELEVEN MINUTE SESSION Fouse Wolds Short Meeting with Ne Tmportant Husiness Before Hody. WASHINGTON, April 2%..~The house was in session for eleven minutes today. Mr. Ransdell of Texas presented a letter which corrected an erroneous report that he had caused the destruction of several hundred copies of the congressional directory be- cause he had been accredited to Tennessee instead of Texas, and Mr. Wagner obtained permission to have an editorfal on the Panama canal reprinted in the record. Central League Ope; TERRE HAUTE, Ind., April Che tral league base ball season of 110 games begins today with Bayton at Terre Haute, Fort Wayne at Evansville, South Bend at Zanesville and Grand Rapids at Wheeling. Helped Kill Cockrill, JACKSON, Ky., April #.—John Smith, in the trial of John Abner, charged with the assassination of James Cockrill, testified today that he, Abner and Cwrt Jett fired the shots from the court house window which killed Cockrill, Smith recently was granted immunity. This Athletic SUSPENDER Res Supports boys trousers -nmocunp without wrinkling. Freedom of circulation and quickness in dress- ing assured. For boys in knee trous. ers. Made for girls also, Only 50 or 75 cents Worth double it. Dealers replace all defec- tive pairs. Sold by ing Clothing and ment Houses. If not, write Kazoo Suspender Co. Sole Makers It will be & ple nt surprise and you will leave satlsfied if you order. a / Plate Dinner CALUMET FOR ALL THE NEWS THE OMAHA BEE “Whes ves buy Geld Medal Fiowr be sure it fa Waskbura-Oresby’s Gold Medal Flour. This is tmportant, “Never Again” Palace Clothing Co. Promises Something Unprecedented in Saturday’s Sale. “Any suit sale one can cail to. mind— ery clothes event that has gone before, will | pale into insignitigance,” promises the Pal- ace Clothing company of Fourteenth and Douglas streets. They promise this in regard to the suit sale they are planning for Saturday of thin week—a brilllant outpouring of values in Imen'l and young men's fashionable spring attire. Dashy garments for young men—quieter kinds for those more along in years; every model to be included at prices that cannot fail to look attractive in the announcement of this firm which is to appear in Friday's papers. 318 to $25 suits at $12.46—and $15 to 5 sults at 9.8 thdi sivesan ldea of fba imaginable is price lowerings to be expected. The every man in Omaha “to wait."” Palace Clothing company advikes New York City's Great Parks Totaling Ncm;ly 73.7 u Acres, Al Within Easy Riding Distances M THE SI. REGIS HOTEL. The five boroughs of Greater New York contain upwards of seventy public parks both large and small—having a total &rea of approximately six thousand acres. Six of these parks are notable for their size and extent and take.rank with the largest parks in the world. Their beauty Is re- markable and diversified. Each possesses some attribute, some charm of location or some specially developed feature denied to the others, and this variety adds greatly to the enjoyment of visitors. All of New York's parks are within casy carriage or automobile riding distances of the center of Manhattan—the middle borough—and par- ticularly of the St. Regls, at Fifth Avenue and Fifty-fifth street, the hotel most popu- lar with metropolitan visitors of discrimin- ation and refinement. To those as yet un- aware of its exceptional advantages it may be sald that the Bt. Regls, bullt to be America's finest hotel, has more than mc- complished - the hopes of its projectors. Home comforts and home refinements of the highest degree are assured to all; its service 18 of @ character that leaves noth- | ing to be destred; its cuisine~modeled upon those of the most famous forelgn restau- rants—is perfect. Note well, also, that ita restaurant charges are no higher than those of other first class hotels, and that its room rates are extremely reasonablej # and $4 & day for a commodious, hand= somely furnished single bedroom; the same with private bath for $ a duy (or 8 for two people); or $12 a day and up fer an exquisite suite or parlor, bedroom ‘and pri« vate bath. —— AMUSEMENTS, e er—— BOYD’'S CHARLED 5 BAWYORD os Evening—“TEN TAMING OF SBATS NOW SELLING. SUNDAY AND MONDAY Obaries Dillingham Presents ‘‘THE RED MILL" - s URWOO Phones: Doug. 1d nrm:n'?-.‘g.ll' feans.” May u.. ; 1 The ADVAN B R parry & co. ariof 6., Circus Troupe, Original Ma. Taylor & Co., Lisay Dcx. ian Models, Bert and Lottie | drome. Pri 100, Be and is- Wi