Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 11, 1910, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

f b THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11 4 hve moot Print m, | Mudolph F. Swoboda—C. P, A i Chesta of Suver—BEdholm, Jeweler. J )un-' Fixtares,! Burgeas-Granden Co. trietly Mome.Made Fies, ller Grand Cafe / 1350—Naticnal Rife Insurance Co—1910 Charles B. Ady, General Agent, Omaha. The Woman's suxiliaty of Trinity ca- thedral will meet' ¥riday afternoon at 2:30 with' Mrs, M. C. Burnham, 2570 Jones. orge Mamlin—Young Women's Chris. 11 association Thursday evening; famous tenor feports brilllant season. Tickets sell- ing, %8 Boya theater ‘bBhulding. There are Several Ways of Saving -The braskh Savings and Loan assoclation ay, and othérs. Our way pays ¢ per cent per annum. 106 Board of Trade building. | English Bible Stddent to Give Lessons— J. Hixon Irving of Liverpool, England, | will glve & serles of Bible addresses in | (AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA L. D. Harrison Dies of Injuries Received in Fall. MORE PARK BONDS ORDERED n | Commisioners Request Counell to| Make Isswe in Order to Secure Entrance to Mandan Park. L. D. Harrison died at the South Omaha hospital yesterday after lying unconsclous since last Saturday evening when he was struck on the head, felled to the sldewalk and suffered a severe fracture of the skull. He never ‘regained consclousncss. The post | mortem examination showed a crack in the | bones of the cranfum extending from the right to the left temple around the back of the man's head. The frontal bone alone Gospel ball, 2006 Farnam street, beginning Sunday evening at 7:45.' An invitation has 0 extended to all Christians throughout | the city and the public in general. | He Stealla da Coal—Constant com- | plaints of thefts of coal from the yards of | the Illinols Central having been reported | to the office, Spectal Officers Dineen and | Walsh were deputed to keep vigilant watch. | The result'is that Tony de Steffen, 1113 Capltol avenue, ts now Immured ninety days In the ofty jail. Omaha Rallway Club Dolags—D. C. Buell, educational director of the Harriman lines, has been elected a director of the Omaha Rallway club, to sucoeed R. F. Hayward of the Burlington Route, re- #igned. Wednesday evening the rooms of the rallway club were open to the mem- bars of the Transmissouri Frelght associa- tion. A general reception was held, . Warden Smith and Superintendent ¥ stanuel at ¥. M. G, A—The Social Ser foe club of Omaha will have a luncheon and discussion Saturday at the Young Men's Christlan assoclation rdoms. The our for the luncheon fs 12:20, and the dis- iwlon will follow. Warden Smith of the ate penitentiary and Superintendent Manuel of the Keagney Industrial School tor Boyw will be the gucsts of the club and will make brief addresses. Judge Sutton A W1 preside. ¥. M. O. A Bight-of-Way Club—The Young Men's, Christian assoclation has or- | Banized & Right-of-Way club. The soclety | has no connection with rallroad operation, but Is designed to boost the subscription llst In “Assoclation Men," the officlal | monthly magazine of the assoclation. Last year the Omaha assoctation stood third in the subscription lets of the magazine for number of subsorfbers. This year It Is hoped to raise’the subsecription list to 212, The branch that has the-largest subscrip. tion lst will secure a prize a forty- volume sét of encyclopedias, Business Men's Association Bleots— Bamuel Rees was eclected president of the Business Men's assoclation at the annual | the parks. was not cracked. A large blood clot was found on the brain and many of the blood vessels In the brain tissue were ruptured. An inquest will be held this afternoon at the undertaking parlors of Bernard Larkin. Marrison was a well digger and lived out- side the city limits in Homestead addition. He fs sald to have been struck by Frank Lewls of Sarpy county. Lewis came in and #ave himself up Monday and was placed under $1,600 bonds to ippear for trial Feb- | ruary 15. He sald he had had no trouble with Harrison and that he gave himself up because under suspicion. The police claim to have possession of the facts in the case and the names of all witnesses who can give material testimony. Dr. A. H. Koenig had charge of the ca: | and sald he was much surprised that Har- rison lived as long as he did. The funeral of Mr. Harrison will be held at the G. H. Brewer chapel Friday at 3 p. m. Request for Park Bon: The South Omaha Board of Park com- missioners nret last night and came to an agreement concerning the improvement of |the South Omaha parks. The board | adopted a resolution recommending that | the city council issue $15,000 berds to be used for the permanent improvement of One of the stipulations of the request was that $,000 of the issue was to be used to purchase additional land to be added to Mandan park to make it access- fble. Mandan park was bought from Edward Dee durlng the Hoctor administration. The park has no means of entrance with the open streets of the city ‘and can only be reached through the private property of P. J. Barrett, He proposes to sell the city five acres with.a roadway for $6,000. This is more than the park board wishes to ex- pend. The city council is authorized by the statute to issue $15,000 bonds upon the written request of the Board of Park Com- missloners without submitting the issue meeting held Thursday noon at the Com. | melclal club. H. A. Danlel was elected sec- | rolfiry and J. A, Sunderland vice president, Luther Drake was re-eleeted treasurer, Dos Molnes Invites Army Officers— | An Invitation has been extended to the of- ficers of the Department of the Missouri | by the Commercial olub of Des Moines to attend he reception to be given by that club to the officers of the Sixth United States cavalry, recently arrived at Fort Des Molnes for permanent station. McXKoon Motors on Groat Western—Two | McKeen motor ears have been ordered by the Chicago Great Westérn raliroad to be operated in connection with the service out of St. Joweph, Mo. Another coach has been ordered from the General Electric company W Chicago. The Union. Pacific rafiroad is considering the wivisabllity of adding to its motor car equipment between Kearney and Columbus, The Commercal club of Kearney has called the attention of the rullroad to thé heavy traffic between the tw' ints and urges the addition of two moR: dars. ] P It 18 Aangerous ng 1o take a cough medicine containing oplates (hat merely stiflo yonr cough instead of curing it Foley's Honey .and Tar loosens and curcs the cough and expels the powonous germs, thus preventing pneumonla and consump- to & popular vote, The councll will prob- ably act at the earliest moment in com- plylng with the resolution of the board, which will be lald before them at the next meeting. Frederick Millener to Speak. Dr. Frederick Millener of Omaha, the | electriclan of the Unlon Pacific system, one | of the keenest electriclans of the west, will address the Methodist brotherhood this evening at the Methodist church at Twenty-third and N streets. The addvess is under the auspices of the brotherhood |and is free. Just befote the lecture the women of the church will give a dinner to which the public Is invited. Dinner will also be served at noon. The evening service begins at 5:30 p. m. Magle Oty Gaasip.. Dr. W. N. Neal, chief or the bureau of animal industry, s reported ill. Jetter's Gold Top Beer delivered to any part of city. Fred Hefflinger. Tel. South 1649 | B. F. Jackson of Modale, Ia., 1s visiting with 'his son, B. S Jackson, In South Omaha. The South Omaha Commercial club will meet at luncheon today st Miller's res- taurant. The funeral of E. A. Cheshire will held at 2 p. m. today. meet at 1 p. m. The traveling inspectors of the bureau of animal industry pald the South Omaha be The Ragles will It President's Taft fortheoming recom- mendations to congress are followed out by that body, the United States will at last have a great health —organisation com- mensurate with the needs of the nation. The Department of Agriculture can sénd vaceine virus for the protectign of a farmer's cattle from blackles, but only In a moet Indirect way can the health agencies take any steps to protéct that farmer children from smallpox or scariet fever. The government stands powerless to check the ravages of tuberculosls in the human family, although it can turn back the spread of Texas fever among cattle by drawing a quarantine lne horth of Which southern cattle may not go, except under well-defined protective conditions. But this {s by no means the only feature of the existing health laws of the nation which cull for a radical change. There are a number of bureaus now In operation In the government that are concerned principally with health matters, The pub- llc heaith and marine hospital service ranks first among these. Under the able administration of Surgeon General Walter Wyman this service has made itself in- wvaluable to the nation at large. Its work in stamping out the yellow fever epidemic in the south a few years ago, its labors in protecting San Franclsco from the threat- ened outbreak of pestilences after the earthquake, its efforts to bring about & standardizatior of all the herolc remedies and the purity of all viruses for vaccina- tion and anti-toxins, no less than its duty of visiting every ship that comes to an American port to make sure that quaran- tine lawe are observed, have all been done 0 successfully that has been justly styled America’s flying squadron for the defense of the national health. The War department has fts medioal corps, which has distinguished itaelt in mary hand to hand conflicts with dlsease ond death. The triumphs of ita sanitary work In Cuba, where the death rats in Havana was cut in twain in a single year, represents a great vietory for public health over the hosts of pestilence. The work of Major Walter Reed and his colaborers in proving to the satistaction of every medi- cal man the truth of the mosquito theory of yellow fever transmission, constitute one of the most brilfant chapters in the book of human progress. The labors of the army doctors on the Isthmus of Panama, where the Reed theories were again appiled to practice, have borne glori- ous fruitage. The navy, also has its medl- cal corps, Its hospitals and its dispensar- les. The Department of Agriculture bas its bureau of chemistry, and under the ad- ministration of Dr. Wiley this bureau has effected a veritable revolution in the dls- peneing of food products. By striving to gusrantee to the people protection from misbranded and misrepresented producte, and securing legislation to that end, this bureau has made itself a force that at- fects every human being in the ‘country. The census office, in the Departmopt of Commerce and Labor, gathers the’ mor- fality statistics of the nation which reveal the state of the public health. Thus four of the departments of the government have a more or less direct relatfon to the pub- lic health. With each of these agencles active in ita work, it s inevitable that there should be great overlapping of dutles, a continual repetition of labor. With no co-ordination among them, three departments at onoe ay be making independent, investigations of the relations of the water supply to typhold fever. At least three of these bureaus may be studying the relations be- tween milk and tuberculosls at the same time. It Is inevitable under these condi- tions that much money s expended in duplication of research, money that is sorely needed or: account of the economical policy of congress at present. With all these agencles concentrat under one head, with each of them work- Some Things You Want to Kn»w The National Health. education of public sentiment in favor of proper health measures. One scarcely realizes how much ls done and hoW much is expended In the interest of public health. The National Assoelation for the Study and Prevention of Tubercu- losis has gathered the financial and edu- cational statistios of the nation-wide cru- sade against the white plague, and finds that during the year of 1908 the various agencles fighting the disease spent $8,150, 62180 in the campalgn. Over 10,000,000 pleces of literature were oirculated, and 17813 patients were treated for tubercu- losis. Sixty-one thousand of the patients were treated at dispensarfes. New York takes first rank In the effort to wipe out this disease. Pennsylvania second, Masea- chussets third and Illinols, Maryland, New Jersey, California, Colorado, Connecticat &nd Ohio in thelr order. Recent studies of the death rate from varlous allments reveal startling condi- tlons, They show that Americans are pay- ing & terrible penulty for overwork. While the death rate from contaglous diseases has dropped 4 per cent since 1880, that from digeases of the -kidneys, heart and brain has increased 8 per cent In the same period. These figures tell of the tax of hard work and high living. Kidney als- eases, springing from Intemperate eating and drinking and from hard work, now show a death rate ‘hat has Increased 131 per cent since 1880. There are $4 par cent more fatalities from apoplexy today than there were thirty years ago and §7 per cent more deaths from heart disease. Mean- while all contagious diseases are showing » rapidly diminishing death rat It cannot be argued that this inereasing mortality In the diseases of overwork and overindulgence Is due to unpreventable causes. It is estimated that in the United States more than 600,000 lives are annually saerificed on the altar of indifference to known laws of health. More than 3,000,000 people are constantly serlously Ill, halt of them suffering from diseases of a preven- table nature. Once it was supposed that the laws of health were inexorable; that the death rate could not be Increased nor diminished. But statistics show that the; n laws for mortality. The span of human lite in Burope has doubled in less than four cen- turies. During the seventeenth and elgh- teenth centurles the average life was lengthened at the rate of four years per century, and during the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century the average life lengthened at the rate of nine years. Since then civilized countries have made man- kind longer-lived at the rate of seventeen years a century. In Prussia, which is the home of preventive mediclie, the span of life s lengthening at the rate of twenty- seven years a century. Whether this in- creasing span will ultimately bring men back to the ripe old ages of Methuselah and Adam and Noah ho onme can safely predict. Dr. Talmage once éxpressed the conviction that if men returnéd to the sim- ple life as gradually .as they had travelea away from it they would eventuatly live to be as old us those who lived in the day of Noah. It is shown by mortality tables that death comes far more frequently among the poor than among the rich. Insurance figures of industrial companies demofistrate that the death rate among the poor’fs from 50 to 80 per cent greater than among the well-to- do. In the unsanitary distriets-of Glasgow and Paris the death rate ‘#“@ouble that' of the hetter scctions. The ieffect’ of a ‘thm- Paign of education on & “cify's mortality is shown by the fact that since New York undertook the Improvement of conditions in heaith matters, it has reduced its death rate to the lowest poiut on record. The committee of one hundred on natlonal héalth I8 seeking to have ali life insurance companies join in a campaign in faver of disease prevention. Dr. Irving Fisher of Yale, president of this committee, declares @\ shat the Investment of a fraction of I per eont on the policles carried in an educa- 1910. fl That Postal Deficit Postmaster-General Hitchcock reports that the Post-Office Department loses $64,000,000 a year in the business of carrying second-class mail (magazines and periodicals). There is not a deficit of $17,000,000, as the department alleges, but actually a surplus of more than $10,000,000, when the specific loss on free rural delivery is taken into consideration, and the de- partment’s figures of $64,000,000 loss on second-class matter are wrong by more than $60,000,000. THE SATURDAY EVENING POST for February rz2th devotes its editorial page to this subject, showing the injustice of the recommendation to raise the rate on all magazines and periodicals—but not on daily papers or the country weeklies. B&F™ One fact: In the year ended June 3oth, 1908, the weight of second-class matter compared to 1907 decreased 18,- 000,000 pounds. The postal expenditures increased $18,000,000. ‘There is some- thing in it besides second-class matter. Ing in proper co-operation with the others, yaial propagands will 8o -lengthen the the same money and the same effort NOW gyerage life as to make it commercially Look for a dozen more facts in this office a visit yesterday. tion. Refuse substitutes and take only the SEbseavlwanld - xleld , gl gragte st genuino Foley's Honey and T In the yellow package. . Sold by all druggists. MMAHA HIGH SCHOOL HAS MANDOLIN | AND BANJO CLUB Franmcis Potter Takes Charge Mustelahe—Thirty Members i Arve Enlinted. A mandolin and_banjo club has been organized at the Omaha High school. Francls Potter has taken charge of the olub. About thirty boys joined thus far, about twenty of ‘whom are' experienced players. Mr. Potter says he hopes to have the club In shape to appear In public by the middle of March and. he proposes to work with, the. High School Glee club ana oduce @ conoert that will do the high ool students honor. : +The German soclety of the Omaha High school Neld & meeting Wedhesday and A» manlnuowm- program? ng—| the soclety. Plano solo, Elean h gzg%:l: A::V-‘jcom-; Plano solo L) i o8¢ ‘wi e Bro "'I‘g:flnl':u::d\o'll.h“‘,'" Bertha Sellner Btuart’ Goula ‘e “Ronvads Bruo Frank Byrne of Nebraska City reported that he was robbed of $4 Tuesday night at Twenty-sixth and N streets. TELEPHONE So. 868 and have a case of Jetter's Gold Top Beer delivered at your residence. HENRY J. JETTER. Court Allemanie No. 3085, Independe Order of Foresters, will meet mrm;‘y‘ | evening in regular monthly session. Saturday of this week will be the last date upon which withdrawals from the primary election race can be recognized, John Sauter has agreed to sell a strip of land on Washington street to the city of South Omaha for the purpose of opening a street. Nicely furnished rooms for rent, steam heat, strictly modern, private family. sa7 | N. 224 St., South Omaha. Second floor. Living s high; still we can sell you 2,00 pounds of soft nut coal for $4.50. If money is gearce try a ton, Tel 8. Broadwell- Roberts Co. Fanale Ules, 5 months old, died yesterday at the' home of the parents, 118 North Twentleth street. The funeral will be to- day at 2 p. m. The Swed| urweglan Republican club has rented the hall at 2421 D; street f‘:)r the campaign. All members are requested to_be present February 10 at § p. m. to consider special business. John Sentech, 80 years old, llllllt lll "Fl‘n;llfl:l and H uneral wi e at 9 a. m. Friday mornl to 8t. Francis' churc| The hu{h\l is ’:: the German Catholic cemetery. dled Tuesday streets. The BACKACHE GOES AND KIDNEYS ACT " FINE AFTER TAKING A FEW DOSES Out-of-order ‘Kidneys are regulated and the most severe Bladder misery vanishes. No man or woman here whose kidneyd are out-of-order, or who suffers from backache or bladder midery, cén afford to leave Pape's Diuretic untried. Aftef taking soveral doses, all pains in the back, sides or loins, rheumatic twinges, ' nérvousnes: headache, sleep- lessneds, Inflamed or swollen eyellds, dix- siness, tired or worn-out feeling and oth. of clogged, sluggish kidneys anish. thu. urlnation (especially at night)} smarting, diseolored water and all bladder misery epds. The nwu uspect the slightest kidney' ox- Alvorder, or feel rheu- matisni pains, don't continue to be mis- erable or woreled, but get a fifty-cent treatment of -Pabe's Diuretio from your druggist and start taking as directed, with the knowledge -that there is no other medicine, at any price, made any- where else in the world, which is so harmless or will effect so thorough and wompt a cure. This unusual preparation goes direct to/the cause of trouble, distributing its cleansing, healing and vitalizlig influence directly upon the organs and glands af- fécted and completes the cure beforg you realise it. A few days' treatment of Pape's Diu- retic means clean, healthy, active kidneys, bladder and urinary organs—and you feel fing, Your physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantile agency will tell you that Papa, Thompson & Pape, of Cineinnati, is & lafge and responsible medicine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confidence. Accept only Pape's Diuretic—tifty- treatment—from any drug Where in the world. ent storo—any- I, ROOT, 121041212 Howard » turns in reduced mortality and increased longevity. It was to foster the idea of such a consolidation of health agencies that the Committee of One Hundred on Na- tional Health was created. This organiza- tion has been active to such a degree that it is belleved its recommendations, which have the approval of President Taft, will be enacted into law before the present session of congress adjourns. This com- mittee has over 6,000 names on its malling list, and it has proved a great force in the prefitable to the insurance companies them. selves, to say nothing of the vast good that will accrue to the natlon at large. He thinks that by a proper co<ordination of all the health Interests of the nation, headed with a magnificent,. consolidated national health bureau, such.an onslaught can be made upon the strongholds of dis- ease as to give the average American a new lease on life equivalent to one-third of his present allotted years. BY FREDERIC J. RASKIN, Tomorrow—Model License League, Fifty Frightened Steers Run Amuck at Venice, Il Cattle Are Released When Six Cars of Wrecked Train Tumble Down Embankment. VENICE, 1ll, Feb. 10—Fireman G. R. Willlams of Bloomngton, Iil, was crushed to death; Engincer J. A. Rahmond of St. Louls, sustained a broken leg, and twenty or more spectators were knocked down and trampled by stampeding cattle, as the re- sult of & head-on collision between two Chicago and Alton freigit trains In the rallroad yards in this city tonight. Willlams jumped, but was caught be- neath the engine, which rolled down an embankinent upon him. Six cars, loaded with steers, also rolled down the bank, killing a score or more of the animals and tyrning loose more than fitty others. Crazed with fright, the animals stampeded in every direction through & crowd of several hundred persons; many of them women and children, which had collected about the wreck, knocking down scores in their fiight. A riot call was turned in and the police and fire department, assisted by the sheriff's force, fought off the cattle, iflling many of them with sledges and cowing the others with streams of water from fire /hose. DIPHTHERIA SCARE AT CHERRY Nurse Stricken with Disease After She Hed Dealt Out Free Milk to Two Hundred Persons. CHERRY, Ill, Feb. 10~With not a doctor or a patticle of antitoxin in town, every widow and orphan of the St. Paul mine fire Is exposed to diphtheria through the professional nurses that are caring for the sick. Shortly after dealing out free milk to nearly %0 women and children last night, Miss Frances Wheeler of Chicago, one of the four nurses In Cherry, was stricken with diphtheria in the nurses' home. ng Sham is not té have Bucklen's Arnl cure burns, sores, piles, cuts, wounds and ulcers. %c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. I e T ——— i The Key to the Situation—Bees Want Ads. Salve to | Publici—ty Wil Improve Status of Corporations Commissioner Smith Discusses Pro- posed Law in His Annual Report. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—That great in- terstaté Industiies may be brought under permanent federal supervision through a systém of regular reports to a federal agency, in a rational, effective way, which will involve no drastle action, but on the cohtrary will foredtall it, is the conclusion drawn in the annual report of Herbert Knox Smith, commigafoner of corporations, to the secretsry of commerce and labor, made publie today. ' Publicity will improve the standing: of our. corporations securities, both at home and abroad,” Mr. Smith declares, “and will help to give to our busmessmachinery that foundation of falrness and opennéss and public confidence which it must have If 1t is to be a permenent factor in oyr national advance. t will bring together the government and the corporate manager in conference and co-operation, which alone can serve to adjust continuously the complex and chang- Ing relationship between our business forces and the public welfare.” Mr. Smith contends that already under public condemnation, made possible by facts plainly stated, grest corparate abuses have been abandoned. He asserts that a sigantic system of raliroad rate discrimi- nations has been wiped away and numerous forms of commerelal oppreasion diminighed. Corporate managers themselves, declares ———e A Beastiful Face It Is What All Wemen Desire Miss Dora Hansen, 1310 State Btreet, Racine, Wia, writes that “a beautiful face | Is what all women desire, but what woman | oan be beautiful with her face covered With plmples and blotehes? You ask ‘what can we do to provent the pimples and blotches | Sppearing on our faces. Take Hood's Sar- saparilla. It will s00a give you a Glear, soft skin. My mother brother have | taken Hood's Sarsaparilig for impure bhlood #nd cannot speak too Get it toda; hocolated abiets oulied Sarsetata™ * | Mr. Smith frankly advocating a more open accounting, Federal Expert Bakes Bread| Chemist Employed by Government Furnishes Exhibit in Bleached Flour Case, NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 10.—Loaves of bread baked In the laboratory of the| United States Puro Food department in the New Orleans custom house were of- fered as exhibits from the federal court here today In the so-called “bleached flour case.! The bread was baked by Miss E. Wessling, a chemist, employed by the gov- ernment. The case marks the first prosecution by the United States under the clause of the pure food statutes relative to bleached flour, and Is directed against the Aetna Mills and Klevator company of Wellington, Kan. A number of prominent officials of the United Stntes Department of Agricultue ar in New Orleans to attend the trial, among them being W. D. Bigelow, assistant chief of the pure food bureau, and Walter O. Campbell, chief food and drugs inspector. Dr. H. W. Wiley, chief of the pure food bureau, was detained in Washington. copies Vessey Forces Issue on Expense Says He Will Ask for Money to Wipe Out State Debt of South Dakota, PIERRE, 8. D., Feb. 10.—(Spectal.)—Gov- ernor Vessey today gave out his first statement as to his candidacy for renom- ination. He took the position that the coming campalgn (n the primaries will be upon the lssue of state expenditures and said: “I am ready to go upon the plat- form upon that lssue and compare the work of the legislative session of 1906, when Mr. Elrod was governor, and that of 1809, 1 can show that the appropriations for state expen: which were made by the 1900 session could be met with a levy for state expenses which was made for the two years of the REirod administration—4 mills for one ycar and & mills for the other. While such a levy would meet the expenses, 1 am not In favor of reducing the levy this year to 2 mills, but will ask for 4 mills, not only to meet the wtate ex- penses, but to wipe out the debt which has been incurred In the four years prior to 1908, A ¢-mill levy for this year will do thig and leave the state to take care of current expenses and not be hampered by debts of the past administrations, In fact, T will, a8 I did two years ago, stand for a sufficlent tax levy to meet the grow- week’s (date of February 12th) number of THE SATURDAY EVENING POST. Paid circulation this week 1s 1,575,000 The Curtis Publishing"Company Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ing' needs of the various institutions of the sate, mansged in & careful and eeonomieal manner. That will be my po- sition ‘in the eampalgn and I am ready to take up the issue along such lines.” e ' TRAIN HO%IIN PROVES T0 BE POOR PROFESSION Twe Jobs on Missouwri Pacifie Net Bandita Less Than Three Hundred Dollays. 6. LOUIS, Feb. 10~Train robbery fs ons of the poorest paying professions, aceord- ing to the announcement tonight of one of | the officials of the Missour! Pacifie, twe of whose trains have been hald up re- cently, The four men who pohbed one of the company's (raine In wpeotacular fashion near Bureka, Mo, Jenuary 21, netted §155 in rifling the mall sacks, accerding to the announcement, instead of $10,000, the or- iginal estimate of the rallrond and postal officials. The three or four men who robbed the passengers on & Misspuri Pecifio train near Pittsburg, Kan., on February 6, left the train §133 richer, say the offielals, A reward of $7.%00 is offered for the ar- rest of the men who robbed the train near Bureka. A reward of 00 each for the men who participated in the wobbery nedr Pittsburg was announced tonight by fhe ralirosd company. e Peorsistent Advertising ls the read to Retuwrns, Big

Other pages from this issue: