Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 7, 1910, Page 5

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EVIDENCE AGAINST ~ CHIEr ’ Case ites This san Proceeds Prosecution Having Inming. JRECORDS SHOW FINES PAID IN Ouster s testi oftice Inspecto stand during th was Introduced that Chief Ric presence of Bluffs dur J. K. ot stable J 1 handed § 1 It nd was cognis Mabra 1908 charge hm, ot the the an pumchl ' on Stand. 3 ot Officer Had Knowledge Testimony Intended to Show of Cooper P ¥ Thelr Iy ace K. ( aker testifie Chief Richm testimony Justice e Mabray Gang's b j Operations, t to this | proceed- | the affiduvits filed ot the time application | sspension of Chief Richmond was | the but refused Wheeler. the Grar same as contained in Hon in the Major George H. Richmond expected 1o £how Any part of the aceused officer ed fron of the 1 n ouster neral h ments attorne ¥ e| tat witnesses that ef Richm He we sug- | ce e womer by CH A manner n asked them the Attorney will Thomas the whe b it or bribe (he stated that tain person xaminati that t ame The testimor in ar n Casady yesterday. showed fines apd forfeitures inted for afd thit the ®h the nropef Shanne!s Hisappoint h o had hand mor Tinley show dicated hi in- that Ratclife, gambling Justi de from nse money o vidence of the formerly part owner of one this eity ith was well acquainted. The prose line of examination of these witnesses indicated that it wanted to mate that the came Mabra report ning an itemized aceaint of after being filcd with him he finance committee of th it up against chief's report ¢ repor was thly t | houses in m ibmitted city councll the |l Cooper t which records. or wh cution’s two intl m John C. each cheoked The attaghed when the ineil money was of subm in the the ¥ month > aptain fer of the put through a grilling the system of arresting womer t them oper P force examination of th ete lice was as town, was latter M Casady explained » city offic of police for p the course that includin were passed the He knowleds Mabray gang had reached inaware gang Money for Slot Machine. Henry Roark, & stationary engine at 2415 Avenue F, testified to, as he alleged April recelved by Chief Richmond $15 for the return | } Mat gang The letter Ogden hotel. The the police from the e’ postoffice officials and started |, is understood that Cha s Kimball, pro- prietor of the hotel and of the swindijng syndicate, Was | g,ciior Kimball, has made an affidavit to box 44, Instead to box 4 refuting the testimony of this witness and number of the rented by Mabray will 80 testify in proper und his assoclates Il Blutts. Dr. | posoenice Inspector Hancock Had rented box 44 in Councll | o jluffs and thus the letter came into his| oo 0 possession. The leiter in question con-| oo (alned & newspaper clippINg EIVINg AN ac- | o pil iy oy en s count of wrrest of the ‘st im i admitted that he ried thp Lbungolng, of J A¥& | chtef about it and in explanation said he h by the gaig in New Orleans in 197 had not thought it The of $7.00 letters which had fa possession AT teatitied )t the postoffice them, th oy of thi witness said local offi- read the'letter to clals, county disposed witnesy said he uterfere Much ot fetfer, but ala similar to the letter to the who #did ‘the’ matter was out f 1 et also ing to pay fines, 8 questioned as to his the Beyond his said, tions of the state once rumors wh witness had be operations of th s the of the Letter in Evidenc duced by the Dr.' J. C. Hancock salesman an Mabray was travelin a8 int state ot Iy for 1908 ecastern ay wit n time. ’ members question uddressed of box time Cour 2 Swenson was on the | a considerable time during the and told of his first getting to the operations of the Mabray gang work on the case. He had spoken o th the rer not n safe to do 80.” out D a en into the led that he called the city him. k authorities to suspect that and city with the Swenson’s testimony was gave at the trial of Mabray {ates in the federal court recently Rev. J. W. Jones, Rev. J. M. Willlams and Rev. George A. Ray, members of the Ministerial assoclation, testified to what they considered the lack of enforcement of the curfew ordinance by the chief of police | and his officers Slice by telephone "he chief. would send for Dr. Hancock chief of police ot were not the the stated never ewindlers M then what of « he and his aseo How OId Is Your Complexion? Stolen Letters Recoveréd. The letters taken from a mail pouch which was stolen from a truck at the Union Pacific transfer depot Monday nfght were found yesterday morning In the yards of the Northwestern railroad near _the roundhouse. Al ‘of the lettersihiad Heen cut open and rified. The pouch’ contained dinary mail and not registertd matter the postal authorities do not belleve | the thief or thieves secured much booty {1f any. Up to last evening the stolen pouch | had not been recovered. The pouch one made up on lls‘ll.\l train No. 17 and was to be trans- | ferred to the Burllngton for Kansas City - | The Rock Island train was too late to muke regular and the pouch placed on a truck with others to forward at 11 p. m. It was missed at 11 o'clock and must have been taken from | he truck some time between § o'clock and | that hour. Topeka Holds first Contest Under New Rule Billard Probable Nayor Under Com- mission Form of Government—Re- ligious Element in Contest, (From “1 have just returned from Paris where ve been hunting up all the new fasu and have many valuable ideas. I obtained an interview with Madame | De ix. Parls L §ene Aned hieauty. Andn « womiN RNl Seatsdine could’ cas for thirty, ‘The skin ner neck and drms ls clear, soft A4 velvety and entirely free from B rinkles and stray hairs, “she used powder solution by of mayatone hagel, and wice upon London Graphic) fons ily pass =0 has never or paint dissolving an in elght massages her a day with 1t the skin, re blemishes, and pre atr will not be found At all, as_the solution removes from the skin“at once, and gives a iy, natural The Aisappear r ) original nakes ‘a package wite and noy was Rock | tuce 1 moves all nis The eceshuny arn neck show 8 of growth of | powder - doe | cannections was the be sent | G at st face hates I8 any o da coloy tray wi it the rent (Ady t continu LARIB. ) MON A Wonderful Remedy for all L)‘mznses caused URIC ACID IN THE BLOOD These pills cleanse the whole system and P’ bring_sbout a new sense of heahh and strength. The_manufacturers, Belden & Copp Co., Minneapolis, will send you a_sample ab- solutely fres. The regular priceis $1'abox. For sale by’ Myers-Dillan Drug Co. TOPEKA, Kan, April 5.—This city held its first election under the commission form of government today, and late returns in- dicate the election of J. E, Billard for mayor over William Green, the incumbent by about 1,00 majority. | Partsan tickets are impossible under the commission charter and the campaign that | closed today was waged around the per sonality of the candidates. Billard, who was a former missioner, was accused forcement of ‘the police com- of favoring a prohibitory law. A | “liberal” policy, and Green was supportea largely by those who favor a strict en- religlous element was injected the canvass, in that Billard of | being an This a | published statement Municipal elections throughout Kansas today. In several cities | the commission for of government is in | The M‘hll and Genuin operation and there party lines were m.:\ HORLICK’ S + MALTED MILK The Foed-drink for All Ages. jorvs At redunnh.hfl-d fountains. into was accused atheist he denied in also we held J. Newbold lington was elected today held commiss Miller which | mayor of | tirst | form of elected under the | which 1 government was mayor of Salina I cations are that C ed Abou Abflene | mayor . Moses w Independence. the full vote was polled where A. W. Rice was elected inder & commission charter. At rneys say the election was illegally called m.a its validity probably will be tested — |in the courts. Cherryvale voted to adopt the commission form of government {JOHN M'DONALD PROMOTED | * awrence Keep it on your s A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK' 5. . Others are imitations. mayor o one-sixth | Experience Teaches That more SILVERWARE is injured bycleas. ing and polishing with preparations contain s and chemicals than by Brinker ’ John McDonaid is to succeed to the posi. tion of assistant treasurer of the Nepraska | | Telephone company May 1 Lawrence Brinker to enter partnership with Burns, broker. Mr. MDD | assistant these objections and acknowiedged by housekeepers everywhere (o be the best Silver Poiish kmown. IS cost is ARSI for et many times aver by the the Genuine, of your Sliver. G FREE SAMPLE 6 0 receipt of address The Electro Silicon Co.. 3 CURSL. Xew Yarks leaves Samue! when | into bond a Mr. has held Brinker. the position of Does not Color the Hair 32<7s Maie Vigor is composed of P iy S St Nt Show this to your doctor. Ask him if there is a jurious ingredient. Ask im if he thinks Ayer's Hair Vigor, as made from h—ll.hthh.m llhuyumumhhw wkv(n‘t.l. L.thd-:l‘e He knows. | man [ of | not | vision posed | lleutenant of Reed and McKinley THE BEE: ON fAHA, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1910, | /ERSONAL \TTA(I\ NOTRICHT | lackburn Says it is All Right to In- | surge for a Principle. fUCKRAKING TACTICS ARE BAD Onght He Considered ung Nebraska Repub- Switched Into to pre ¥ ne De Are oeratic Camp. sald Thomas departure for insist upon republican leaders by ttacks through hes, they of by by tight other w what the can obje Blackburr L tes Just his Angeles. ey ving individua personal at the play e a a are the thelr fellow the voters leaders by base be ple no longer public confidence resorted to for in- repub- i public spee ng direc and ought ¥ into t be and ind han ny e criticized chastised dual and p partisar muckraking tactic case of G. Cannon. which thoughtful My four terms in and because party t ed to s the are It the n Joseph stance disgusts 1 1 have sire to see speaker of tant because enough, the republican that the the vindication of any Lat b he interests w impe eader or But I think the republicans of Nebraska and young republicans,, established facts \ditions in Wash- themselves to be democratic camp. voters or mat little wh republican candidates this country next fall, con- The election of ¢ another proposition be notice that the confidence of the people republican administration and to be changed. The people such a want of confi- dence and elect a democratic congress, but it should be the result of a campaign of malicious misrepresent and for that | reason 1 would like to make a few sugges- for the Joseph thirty-five Twenty-five gh is individual especiall e sught consider relation to n before bodi) t 1o some present they permit ing arried into rgents. It the happen to or congress tered democratic congress a would has lost the and that the its policies may may individuaily a Such a result party are properly vote s n fon, tions c Cannon is 78 years old vears he has been In eon years ago Speaker Carlisle named him as one of the republican mem- bers of the committee on rules. His asso- ciate republican wa¢ Thomas B. Reed of Maine. When the republicans returned to power, Speaker Reed, Joseph w McKinley constituted the re publican membership of this important For fifty years the speaker has member of that committee. After of the Reed rules the demo- back into power, partly be- Reed was called “czar,” but chiefiy of the McKinley tariff, in 1562, and Crisp of Georgia, as speaker, continued Reed and Cannon on that committee on les and the Reed rules, without essential modification, were adopted by the demo- crats. The “Cannon rules” are the same rules and the American congress has been governed by them continuously now for about twenty years Cannon Unanimous Cholce, When Joseph G. Cannon was chosen speaker, he had been thirty years before the American people as a mémber of con- gress. He was the natural, the unanimous choice of his fellow partisans, as the suc- of Speaker Henderson. re-clected, and at vears' service, two years ago the house re- solved itself into a joint caucus, with Hay of Virginia in the chair, speeches from both sid sented Mr. Cannon with ot esteem which was then well nigh unanimous. ‘1t would have been fortunate, Indeed, for “Uncle Joe” If he had then re- tired from the speakership, with the words these democratic leader, John Sharpe Willlams of Mississippi, ringing with praise for his able common sense. “Why the man who throughout a long and alw active public career, had previously held lle confidence of assoclates and the n It should not be forgotten that late presidential campaign Cannon notable public addresses, and was a favorite everywhere. for G and iam committee been adoption rats SWung the because twice the chamber pre- a valuable token an tion? th made Less than two years ago the nawspapers the country united a cry for free pulp. Spea'ter Cannon said he did favor tinkering with the traiff in de- tail, but thought the wood pulp schedule should wait for the promised gencral re- and there and then gave offense to pubilc press, which has succeeded destroying a reputation of which any would be proud. Then again some enth siastic “‘reformers,” notably “Colliers,” d manded an extension of the forest reserve idea to the Appalachlan forests, and here again the speaker suggested delay. said he thought before the government mitted Itself it would be wise to find sut what the present owners of the pro- reserves would ask fot their land The third cause of the ent erup- tion of abuse of Cannon, was the changes made In the personnel of certain commit- The speaker in the exercise of three times given him, hud on casslons offended congressmen Ly falling o assign them to the committees desired, and eight or ten of 381 members that body were personally hostile. uf New Jersey, Norris of wood man malevol tees. power a oc. out of Fowler »f Nebraska, and r of Wisconsin were three of these Always in the Fight. “The magazine writers and some of the other Insurgents belittle the achievements | ana ability of Speaker but when we remember that he was in the forefront of every form of fight, as the immediate and that not evanescent, but ran the democratic congress, presided “arlisle, Wilson and Crisp, I think be conceeded that Mr. Cannon of distinguished ability. His per- nesty has never been assailed ex- mudslinging invective. the committee of appropriations the chair has admittedly saved the country not than $300,000,000. That | rhitrarily prevent Kressmen introdueing resolutions i otherwise obtaining the floor, notwith standing the exiravagant charges of and arrogance, is made plain Nehraskane. and Cannon his career through over may man sonal cept in wa by « it His pres. on and in less does from tolierance to recognized fered the resolition change the committeo on rules, and G. M Hitcheoek up some sort of political resolution once or twice a month I am not discussing the merits of the rulcrs, though I fancy the next congress it democratie. will not greatly modity them. Mr. Cannon did not make the rules I am objecting to the scape-goat method of the Insurgents. They all know Cannon and most of them love him personally, as do his democratic mssoclates In congress It is mean and contemptible to pretend that Joseph G. Cannon is all that is wicked and bad in American politics, and to join Lands with the slime slingers of that por- tion of the press engaged in maligning him to Aestroy his influence and reputation A &rant that the Payne tarife satistactory. It unsatisfaetory wvorybody. So was the McKinley bill - to The Cannon are | ambition of any | A nsideration of republicans, | gress. | Cannon | He was| the end of five| and with laudatory | ability, sturdy honesty and remark- | then this sudden outbreak against | in | in | He | becarse Judge Norris was | | Witson dem | | creveiana & blur it place Dingley bill was criticised mc during all its life A taxift bl of compromises and always will be until we create a tariff which shall be independent of the local terests which dictate the schedules {With the members of congress whe voted against the Payne tariff 1 haye nd quarre have no one to answer to fof their votes excepting thelr constituents and their science, but the Payne tarlff has b ted into law and no one thinks it de able to enter Into & Hew tariff campaigr before the ink has fairly: dried upon the present schedules. It t= Rolly to permit democrats to drag us off our equilibri upon the trumped up suggestion that did or did the tariff downwar Just stop and reflect. To enact any law We must harmonize the majority of the congressional districts and & majority of the states as they are sented In congress. We cannot pre act & law which will be wholly | by political economists, publicis | tauqua speakers. We are very we manage to have a vote for it taritt was bad it and Dingle three cratic . that ROW OVER AN INTERVIEW Members of Bo;:robjrct to State- ments Made by Karbach. MAYOR DAHLMAN TAKES A HAND not that within tarift The ,.,n.m the | Yook L bitt mmission now the Fuss w mmissioner Starts Beenmuse of Accusation that Me . in Polit Appointments ¢ con % ac v | of ex up we q tarife interests of a glons there interchange not revise ives tha not heard It all Hove out 1ss according to terview Karbach board in appointing Thomas C of the depar 1 a given ou iticiz! and J b erview repre- t A ser tend tc opposed chau when captain Hengen Hoye sald he sha take decl ment board as ¢ the politics th cognizance ared tha was influenced he that he ing any of the Ty | Pach it he Karbach stificatior had said he have repre in that part Commissioner \dded that he board as Casey and 1 cars and 1 mo lucky majority avree to |8nd ins as it stated | by in mak appointment it was He misstatement Tarift Not for Revenue Only. that he Preside Taft knows this. Everybody ought know it, and insurgent senators who still growling about it know that it single amendment to the schedules by them had adopted it would not have relieved the schedules of | criticlsm. A republican taritt is enacted not for revenue only, but for & measure of protection and must be adjusted to produce The Payne tariff is producing the venue. It it the first tariff in forty which was adopted without Injury to busi The wisdom of the measure as & whole can only be determined after it has | been in force for two or more years. Give it the benefit of the doubt until we | its workings | *'President Taft entered upon his dut | with the universal good will of the Ameri- can people. He was praised for every utterance in his inaugural address. When he took & hand in the tariff legislation he | was again lauded and encouraged. His judicial sense and his calm good humor ‘plen-od the nation “All at once there was & change of pub- lic demeanor. It was not due to the Winona speech. It did not follow the signing of the tariff law. His appointments and the removal of Pinchet were not re- sponsible. The president did not profit by the wood pulp experience of the speaker of |the house. 1In a message to congress President Taft stated that the deficiency in the postal service was due to the rates | charged for carrying newspapers and maga- | #ines through the malls. He recommended {that the rate be advanced to something near the cost of performing the and suggested that such an advance save the service something like | per annum “The public press of the ¥ | ished Speaker Cannon for venturing to | pose free wood pulp. The same press | now punishing President Taft for proposing to make the publishers pay something near the actual expense of transporting their | publications through the mats. | | “The last two sentences are well worth | reflecting upon. Reputation fs an asset of great importance to a public man. The press of America is a ruthipss destroyer of | reputation. The people in' the long run| | reach wise conclusions, bt they are some”| | times ‘stampeded by the p.—«:j: ‘and maga- | zines. Unless the republican newspapers | wake up and inform the people correctly on | the pretended issues of the immediate | campalgn the next congress will be demo- cratic, the admnistration will be hampered and the country plunged into the doubt in- cldent to a proposed radical change ernmental policy.” Ked ¢ Kar 4 in his statement that he did that Commissionc south side entation and that the taxpayel of the city complaining Hoye this had facts ymmissio: Practical man i e declared A Hoye the said are thoug the | every ‘ proposed been dented never \dship he a matter have Jght and is the o of pe known he should get Casey however 1 wit revenue. r years one anot \ th ness. or Wappich Commissioner mis sl Hoye that members 'd In took JCorroborates Wappich ¢ and comm should curr executive man up this and indicated his considerations should the board in making appc My policy,” he declared, “has select the man 1 think best for t matter what the recommenda chiefs of the fire and ments muy be. Of course tion to thefr should pass ourselves the candidates As to exec Commissi ye. rroborated Com. can see r fact ted on what discuss oc " session. Dahi of th own feelings influence him and ntmen! h e position police W recommendations, upon the depar pay atten but fitness of | tive sessions, he agreed with Wappich that wha place should considered I would rather have the doing board altogether in public ®o far personally concerned,” he said, “but wh we executive sessiy confid should be respecied.” Hoye endorsed “Doesn't when et there e | have Commissione rouq | men and added veryone - o op | the fight I member 963,000,000 council to have everything public? Figment of Imaginatio Commissioner Hunter characterized the statements made by Commissioner Karbach a tigment of the imagination ‘They emanated,” he said from the mind of man who thinks that the whole board is working against him. Commissioner Karbach repeated that what he said was true, which drew from Commissioner Hunter the retort that surely | the four other members of the board could not be wrong. 1 want it to be unders d, first, last and all the time,” he continued, hat 1 am not influenced by politics in doing anything on, this board.” and with | this declaration of faith, in which all the other members of board with the ex ception of Commissioner Karbach agreed the Incident There was fire in. th discussion, but it was evident and again by the expletive sparks, and the net result of all the pother is that the m Jority of the board feels that what is done in executive ision should be shrouded in the camera cloak, and that if this honor of |HUNDREDS PAY TRIBUTE : AT JOHN ROSICKY FUNERAL | ffoisey i to be abused exect | —p— 1 complain most of,” said Commissioner Services for Burial of Prominent Hoye, is that what did in Omaha Bohemian Held Yesterday | session was not tru told." Were Largely Attended. NUELSEN LIKES ROOSEVELT Methodist Bishop of Omaha Deplores Acrimony, Bat Proud of Ex-- President’s Stand. this senti service e now £ the made of country op- a| a the closed only now in gov- executive sessions But what w tul executive Several hundred persons, among were a number of distinguished men of | the city and state, packed the Bohemian Turned hall at the funeral of John Rosicky Tuesday afternoon. The services opened Impressively o'clock, with an oration L. J. Palda of Cedar Rapids, Ia. Mr. Palda had been a life long friend of Mr Rosicky, the two having known each othe: since they were school children in their [ native land. F. Fuchs, editor of Amerika, | the Bohemian perodical of which Mr. | Rosicky had been publisher, followed with |an address over the bier. In his address | |in -English, Councliman Louis Berka ex- pressed the deep respect feit for the de- ceased. Mr. Berka, with references the accomplishment of the deceased | | Bohemian, told how he had stood out as a figure in Omaha and Nebraska. The active pali-bearers, chosen various groups of local Bohemian were: Joseph Mik, Dr Frank Anton Hudecek, V. Sebek and [Sloup. The honorary pall-bearers John Steiger, Charles Bartos, V. V. Vancura, J. Janak, Joseph Joseph Kavan, Frank Swoboda, V. thaler, Frank Ban v and K. W. Bartos. Great draperies | clothed the 1l and the whom at in Bohemian by e 1 GRANITE CITY, T, April 6—(Special Telegram.)—Bishop John Nuelsen of Omaha, who just returned from Mexico, said in addressing 1,00 persons, Including forty Protestant clergymen, here tonight in the Niedringhaus Memorial Methodist church donated by Mr. Niedringhaus, tnplate king founder of this city “While 1 greatly deplore any acrimonious sectarian controversy that may arise between Protestants and Roman Catholics 1 am indeed proud of the virile and de- ciced stand taken by ex-President Roose- velt in rebuking the arrogant and narrow |power of the Vatican. Former President Roosevelt now stands out as the greatest Christian evangelist of modern times has or to as | from the Turners | Jellen, | Adam were Fuchs, picek Engel. Wolesensky No external application is equal to Cham- berlain’s Liniment for muscles swollen jolnts. sore or auer n walls and black and galleries of floral offering of wreaths and shields of splendid size and design, formed the setting for the occasion The Quartet Lyra, a Bohemian chorus of male voices, and an orchestra of five musi clans had thefr p With the close of | semblage formed into a line mitted to pass round the bier |view of the dead. The funeral started at 3:90 o'clock. Burial Bohemian National cemetery After the services, two wagon loads flowers which had been sent to the funeral were distributed to the sick hospitals. | Three-Cent Fare 1 Brings Big Sum white the : Here | In the ceremony the orations, the and per for a las procession was in the as in Omaha Cleveland Low Rate System Proves Paying Venture and Nets Large better at the good things, r pocket. Mors CLEVELAND, April 6—Three r fares on the Cleveland Traet have not only proven a paying venture after a month's operation, promises t | & handsome surplus to the rallway | pany. The statement Issued by the company covering its operations for the month of March, or since the lifting of the receiver- ship, show a probable profit of & cents over the average car mile expense, or §13,- 9424 over and above operating expenses and the 6 per cent return allowed the siock- hoiders. The company’s disbursements have not been as yet summed up by the accountants but they are estimated at $4S.T70, as agal earnings of 6784 cent stree t | e n system bu &ive com | fence |ana ever tasted In ol your life. Tomorrow Perhaps--- You are going to devote a little time to the buying of a new suit; thing one of our makes; a Schloss Bros., a Stein block, ora society brand will give you entire satis- faction until the end of wear- ing time. We mention the tail- ors of our master garments as undisputed proof of our asser- tion of having the best. Every Style Shape Suit to Fit Any Form or Figure $15 $18 $20 $22.50 825 sur of o Coats---$15 and up RAIN AUTO I some you wear for months i resolution such contingency finance committee, introduced a ‘w avold, as he sald, in the future. His resolution provides that, 0Ty COUNCIL PRU(H‘.D] S Privilege of Fencing Indiana Street vort of appraisers, the same shall be passed s by the clty engineer, who must present Conceded to Sieberg. | a method of raising the neces |sery money. Mr. Funkhouser intimated there have been several serfous mixups Ve OVERBIDDEN"‘””L” to the one involved the com- munication of the Park board, and said the opening of Twenty-second street, from | Howard to Dodge, will present a problem when the appraisers report The resolution was passed by a ot to 4, affer Councliman Bridges had ex | pressed his view that under its provisions Dal sent to the council last[it will be impossible to open or extend a evening a veto of a resolution by Coune|strect or alley hereafter, and Funkhouser cllman McGovern glving Joln Slegberg the answered that such a rule had been right to build a fence across Indiana street for years at Twenty-eighth. And council passed the | ordinance over the veto. Councilmen Bridges, Schroede the mayor, Davis, Funkhousel any council receives any re- to council MAYOR'S Obstraction by Vote to S—May Go to Prevent of &hfare of 4 Loses Out to vote to Court. . Mayor an or had a needed Water Company Protest The Omaha Water company sent communication, which went to the commit- | tee of the whole, protestng against the strest repair gang of the city opening fire ‘o wecure a few buckets of water,” to mix concrete or for other pur- pose, when other means are at hand for securing same. Officers of the Omaha Woman's club sent to the council a letter vontaining a copy or tha resolution adopted declaring in favor of the passage of an ordinance to com- pel a safe and sane Fourth of July by eliminating promiscuous discharge of fire- arms or fireworks. The matter will be con- sidered next Monday in commitiee of the whole. n a John- the Funkhouser voted to sustain while Berka, Brucker, Hummel, Kugel, Mc Govern and President Burmester voted to override the veto City Clerk Butler sald he protests against the resolution, and that the city engineer had just torn down a similar fence. ~ Counciiman McGovern wanted 'to know if the clerk had any pro- tests on file. The clerk sald he had not and McGovern sald it would be time | enough to consider them when ({hey showed up. Two or 4hree protestamts avere in th couneil chamber dnd one sald he would go) VPO 8 cxpressed’the opinfon that the resolu- | FORd to remove a track it has lald on the tidn o AticH Btand In! botrt west side of Fifteenth street, from Web- Ak tpdlntedd by ster to the alley between Burt and Cuming Tebantly’ besn plsting streets. The resolution was sent to the all obstructions from the public streets| committee on street improvements. has personally bossed the work of| An ordinance introduged. & removing cveral fences across streets. Dodgo-street nine inches on the north side, Dt Bresa) Gels Jobs betwen Fourteenth and Fifteenth. This is Dahiman sent in the name of Dr, | the measure desired by the Unlon Pacific Cbariss '8 Breed akinatent ity rallroad, which wants the present buflding rian ana slanghter hotse Inspector. line legalized before it proceeds with the Was! Ancompanies’ by & erection of its new building at Fifteenth trom the health commissioner [and Dodge. The ordinance went to the in which he sald Dr..Breed has been work- | committee on street improvements, ng during the month of March under Councilman McGovern introduced an ordi- tentative agreement, with the object of | nance to amend the existing law govdrning ascertaining If one man can properly In-|Street sales of fruit, vegetables, candy and spect the five Independent packing plants | popcorn. It provides that hereafter all in South Omaha. Dr. Breed reached the |such stuff offered for sale in wagons, push conclusion that he can do the work if the | carts or any similar manner shall be con- council will provide a horse and buggy, at | tained in boxes and be kept properly cov- an expense of §2 2 month ered. The committee of the whole will con- The health commissioner sider it that Dr. Breed be allowed salary of | Councliman Kugel had $1% a month for March, and that he | passed directing the city be given allowance asked horse | hire. The papers sent to thé com- mittee of whole, including the daily reports of the inspector for March g a good many animals were condemned unfit for anything but the rendering tank Levy for Moulevard A communication was received from the Park board asking that the city Mngineer make a levy on the property concerned to raise $5.990.45 to finish paying for property taken for boulcvard purposes at Twenty- elghth and Burt streets, Referred to com- mittee of the whole Funkhouser veto of | | hydrant had heard vern presented & reso- court He was plainiy | passage, a camps its hs has gn 1o clear was narrow or for veteri The com- n mination 3 inicatio a recommended the also for a resolution gincer to re. build the steps at Twenty-fourth and Plerce streets Arc lamps Forty-second and fourth and Center tween Chicago the were to the were ordered Bedford, and on and Cass, installed at at Twenty- Sixteenth be. show- Turposes. A Viper in the Stomach is dyspepsia complicated with liver and kid. ney troubles. Electric Bitters help all such cases or no pay. He. For Drug Co. suffer from rheumatism fon of Why applica relief? when one hamberlain's Liniment glves Councilmar chalrman of the Itls Did You Watch It Grow? Free! Tomorrow’ The Day! * Free! Tomorrow's the day you learn the answer to the E-C question. every housewife trying to out down living expenses and live ame time, every man, woman and child who likes ead this paper tomorrow. It's money in in your than that, it's even something better than you Watch this paper tomorrow. aper tomorrow. ve mn-y--omothln. new-—something m—lo—om Free ,Tomorrow

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