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) L Full shine, family time. It’s and in THE T. F. FAN-TAZ— the drink that helps youthink. gladness. 1t’s for all the healthful. At all fountains, Linceln, Neb. Nebraska Distributers of sun- joy and all the ure and bottles . MEMMEN CO. Women Choose Executives for | Next Two Years Election for Staff Officials is Peace- ful, But Warm Contest Arises Over Directorate, CINCINNATIL, May 18.—(Special gram.)~The executve officlals of the Gen- eral Féderation.of Women's Clubs had no opposition in the blennial election today, although a warm contest has developed er ‘poditions on the Board of directors. llots were cast late this afternoon for the directothte, but ‘probably will not be counted until after hoon tomorrow. The tollowing officers were chosen to serve for the next two yesrs: President, Mrs, Phillip N. More, Missourl; tirst vice president, Mrs. Joslah Evans Cowles, California; second vice president, Mrs. Mary Bell King Sherman, lllinois; recording sccretary, Mrs. Henry H. Daw- son, New Jersey; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Frank N. Shiek, Wyoming; treasurer, Mrs. John Threadgill, Okluhoma; auditor, Mrs. L. L. Blankenburg, Pennsylvania. All of thess were re-elected except as to the office of treasurer, Mrs. G. O. Welch of Minnesota declining another term, Ten were nominated for members of the board of directors and eight will be chosen, Mrs, Eimer Blair of New York and Mrs. Lawrence Maxwell of Ohio were nominated this morning from the floor and this brought up the contest. This evening at the convention Dr. Rich- ard Burton of the University of Minnesota leotured on 'The Theater and the People.” “The Proposed Use of the English Scholar- ship) was, tha,subject. ol an addrees. by Miss Jullet Stewart. “‘Effiolency In Getting Things Done Through the Public Schools™ was the subject of an address by Dr. Wil- liam H. Alley lof New York. John Mitohell, former president of the United Mine Workers of America, made an eloquent address this morning on “Indus- trial and Child Labor.” Mrs. Perry Stark- weather, deputy labor commissioner of Minnesota, advocated as a slogan for the blennial, “Take as good care of our chil- dren as of our tish and gam Mrs. Phillip N. More, national president, 1s the third woman to suffer a broken bone within the week. Mrs. Lawrence Maxwell of Cincinnati, chalrman of the biennial board. has her right arm in a cast on oceount of & fracture and Dr. Loulsa Bouthergate fell on the stairs of the music hall Saturday and broke her left arm. UNCLE SAM'S BATTLESHIPS RANK NEXT TO JOHN BULL’S Yankee Vessels Second in Displace- ment, Althoua’s Ranks Six in Number, ‘WASHINGTON, May 18~The United Btates leads the world in the total dis- | placement of completed warships, with the single' ¢xception of Great Britain, but fs | behjnd, tive other countries in the number « ich vessels. Adding to these com- plétéd war craft the ships provided for but not ,completed, this government outranks all others, except the British, in total dis- placement, but ranks sixth in number. ‘War vessels built and bullding, America ‘m Germany are ‘running on equal terms, ut the former is leading in displacement when the ships provided for in the pendipg naval appropriation bills are added to the caleulation. Great Britain, the United States ‘and Germany remaln the naval powers. These warships rating facts are set forth in "tables’ which Pitman Hulsify, compiler of the navy book, has prepared. WOMEN AID FALLEN SISTERS President of Flarence Crittenden Mis- ton Says Publicity Helps B 1 thp Cause. ST, LOUIS, May 18—Woman's pert In| aiding her unfortunate sister was discussed by Mrs, Kato-W, Barrett of Alexandria, Vai, in° her presidential address at openlng session ' of ~the twenty-seventh annual conference of the Florence Crit- tendon Migsion association here tonight. “Recent ‘publicity that was given to the ‘white slave’ ' traffic’’ Mrs. Barrett sald, “has aided the work of the mission and “he ‘8604 Of the piblicity {s yet to came.” Tele- | leading | the | (Bill; Af_fecting ‘ Indians Ready| House Adopts Conference Reports on Measures Now Ready for President. (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, May 18.—(Special Tele- gram.)—The house late this afternoon | adopted conference reports on the bills authorizing the sale and disposition of a portion of the surplus and unalloted lands in the Rosebud and Pine Ridgé Indian reservations. The senate adopted the con- ference report yesterday and the bills by reason of the action of the house today will now go to the president for his signa- ture. The secretary of the interior has denied the motion for a geview of the department decision In the case of 8. G. Sellers against James H. Ward, filed by the latter in holding for cancellation his homestead en- try located in the O'Nelll land district. Rural carriers appointed are: Nebraska—Nebraska City, route 1, Frank BE. Rector, carrier; Saran Rector, substi- tute. ‘Lilden, route z George W. Saifell, carrier; no substitute. lowa—Carroll, route 2, Carl E, Potter, carrier; Cathryn Potter, suostitute; route 6, John R. Byerlle, carrier; . M. Byerlie, substitute, South Dakota—Millette, route 1, M. E. Rockwell, carrier; no substitute. Nebraska postmasters appointed are: Lewellen, Garden county, L. O. Robelee, vice . Dick resigned; Willlow 1sland, Dawson county, Danlel ¥. Mckee, vice W. B. McKee removed. Colonel Melvin Grigsby of Sioux Falls, one of Roosevelt's Rough Riders, is in Washington for a few days. Henry T. Clarke, sr., of Omaha s in the oy, Wives Plead for Husbands’ Wages S’how Family Expense Accounts in Efforts to Secure Increased Pay for Engineers, CHICAGO, May 18.—Wives of “engineers submitted their family account books in an effort to establish their contention that it is impossible to “make both ends meet,” to the arbitration board which Is trying to settlo the wage dispute between the 27,000 employes end forty-nine rallroads west of Chicago. Mrs, Martin Oliver of Chicago, placed the following comparison before the board: Per Lb. Three Now. ¥r's Ago. Sugar . <8¢ 50 Round -14e e Liver de Bacon Ham e sc Prunes g “Meat is t00 expensive to eat, cabbage | is nearly a luxury and we can't atfora to buy anything but the cheapest of clothing,” concluded Mrs. Oliver. ALL WOMEN ARE LIARS, SAYS PREACHER AT CONFERENCE Rev. Edwin C. Brown Also Says Tell- Falsehoods is Women's Chiet Sin. CHICAGO, May 18.—Rev. Edwin C. Brown | annual Western Unitarlan conference here today, when he sald. “All women are liars and telling falsehoods is woman's chlet in. Two hundred women were attending fhe meeting and Mrs. C. V. Merzereau, inter- rupted the speaker.' Bhe declared Rey. Brown could not prove his assertion. Another outbreak occurred, when Rey. Brown sald he knew & number of minis- ters, who were “llars,” who preached that | things can be measured by nobler things than money aad yet lived their personal lives with money as their chief object of worship. | Rev. E. R. Shippen of Detroit took fs- | sue with Rev. Brown on this point. N> external application 1s equal to Cham- berlain's Liniment for sore swollen jolnts. muscles or tity bition to fory might you ‘will, to work. your appetite it will keep that Fimgeri cure in ¢ ceat. of all cases, of Buffalo, N. Y., great sucaess has come from his wide 't be wheedled by a penny-gral tutes for Dr. Do you think you just can’t work away at your profes- sion or trade any longer P Do you have a poor ape- and lay awske at nights unable to sleep? Are your nerves all gone, and your stomach too F Has am- ahead in the worid left you? If so, you well put a stop to your misery. You can do jt if , Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will make you a different individual, It will set things right in your stomach, and 1f theve is any tendency in your family toward sonsumption, sumption has almost geined m foothold in the form of oough, bronchitis, or bleeding at the lungs, it will bri It is a remedy prepared by Dr, R. whose advice is given free to all who wish to write him. . Pierce’s medicines, recommended to be **just us good,” Dr. Wmnn OF KNOWN comrosiTion. ‘Their every i i Mefe wrappers. © Made irom roots without sleohol. Contain no habit- forming drugs. World’s Dispeasary Medical Association, Buflale, N. Y. P72 R, SAEP bk ol e s cxcd S Do You Feel This Way? feel all tired out? Do you sometimes It will set your lazy liver come back. It will purify your blood. dread destroyer awsy. Even after con- sbout & . Pierce, His experience and varied practice, bbing dealer into taking inferior substi- ent printed Witness | DAY LIVELY WITH SENSATIONS | | | | climax in the ton General Oscar Lawler, of Moline, Ill., precipitated a lively debate | during an address at the opening of the | Accuses Attorney Brand, of Deliberate Untruth—Kerby | Contradicts Segretary Dallinger. WASHINGTON, May 18.—A day filled with | Interesting episodes reached an exciting| Ballinger-Pinchot investiga- | when Aseistant Attorney wuthor of the now famous Lawler memorandum, rose wrath-| fully from witness eat and accused Attorney Brandeis of uttering a deliberate untruth. Then after he had b eral members of the committes, yesterday 1 rebuked by se Mr. Lawl withdrew his remark and apologized to| the committee | Mr. Lawler was called to the stand by | se" to explain the clrcumstanc 1 for the pres- | the “def under which he had prepar ident a memorandom containing his opin- | fon on the charges that had been filed b | Special Agent Giavis agalnst Secretary | Ballinger. everal hours had been sumed In the examination of Frederic K. M Kerby, the stenvgrapher in Mr. Ballinger's | office, who was discharged yesterday | because he made public confidential infor-!| mation of the department relating to the| Lawler memorandum Mr. Kerby was called unexpectedly by | Chalrman Nelson soon after the committee assembled In order that he might glve sworn testimony to his published state- | ment, which Mr. Brandeis had endeavored | to have printed in the record together with | the president’s letter of last Kerby Coutradicts Chief, Directly contradicting Secretary Bal- | linger's testimony before the committee, | Kerby sald his former superior knew about | the preparation of the memorandum and that he participated in the conference on the subject. Furthermore, he sald Lawler had told Private Secretary Carr in his presence that he had left a copy of the memorandum with Mr. Ballinger. Under cross examination by Mr. Bran- dels, Mr. Lawler was referred to various requests for document and information bearing on it which the attorney had senl| to Secretary Ballinger through the com- mittee. Mr. Lawler had informed the secretary in each Instance that he had supplied all the matter bearing on the Glavis charges in *“his possession.” “Did you discuss with Mr. vious purpose of my requests No s unday, “arr the ob- “Did you discuss with Carr how you could evade my requests?” “Didn’t you know you were evading—" “That statement is an absolute false- hood by you sir,” shouted the witness, jumping from his seat and facing his In- quisitor with flashing eyes. Mr. Brandeis Instantly appealea to the committee to reprimand . the witness for 50 addressing counsel. Lawler Apologizes. “If my remark has been offensive I with draw it and apologize to the committe sald Mr. Lawler. Mr, Brandels was thereby placated and resumed his cross examina- ton. Mr. Lawler sald he had been asked .by the president to prepare an opinion and that he regarded it as a confidential trusti. He sald he had furnished to the commit- tee all the information he had felt at lib- erty to divulge and did not think he had any right to Inform the committee that such a memorandum existed. Immediately after his return to Wash- Ington from Beverly last September Mr. Lawler sald he had begun preparation of his memorandum. The original draft, he sald, was completed without consulting anybody. When the draft had ben typewritten by Kerby and Massey, he added, he had called In Secretary Ballinger and others one| night to hear it read. “I wanted to be absolutely correct in every statement,” explained Mr. Lawler. He sald no one made any suggestion, ex- cept for the purpose of verification, Mr. Lawler sald he had burned the orlgi- nal draft of the memorandum. “I was confident,” he sald, “that ‘gum- shoe' men had been on my trall for months, and I knew there were no depths of degre- dation to which they would not stoop. I was afraid some one In the office might be corrupted as Kerby has been corrupted.” The “Gum Shoe’” Men. Asked who he thought were behind the “gum-shoe” men, Mr. Lawler declared, dramatically: “James H. Garfield, Gitford Pinchot, Norman Hapgood, & man named Connelly and that man there. “You mean Mr. Brandels? “Yes. He came In later. He's the flower of that foul fiock.” This reference to the champlons of con- servation caused an uproar among the spec tators, most of whom were women, and there was some hissing. The witness sald he gave two coples of his memorandum to the president's secre- tary nd one to the attorney general, and had not given one to Secretary Ballinger, | He produced the original, which he sald he| had obtained from the White House Satur- | day morning, Confidential letters between lelar\'! Ballinger and R. H. Thompson, city engi- ne of Seattle, last summer and spring, were read by Stenographer Kerby to bear out hls contention that Thomson was not a | fit man to be director of the reclamation | service, He sald he had mentioned to Mr. | Brandels at Pinchot's home here last Feb- | ruary that Ballinger had intended to sup- | | He was held in default of $3,000 bond and partisan.” Brandeis Fires B, Attorney Brandis sald that . | much Senator Root had made a personal attack upon him, he thought he should be allowed | to reply. Mr. Root sald he had no 1& jection, but he did not remain in the room to hear the lawyer's explanation | Mr. Brandels sald the president's letter of September 13, exonerating Ballinger | and dismissing Ulavis had been prepared | under such circumstances s to lead to the suspicion that it “was not judicial in | its nature, but was extremely partisan He sald that instead of producing the Lawler memorandum, when he applied for | it, @ procees of evasion had been resorted to. “It Is clear to my mind, said Mr. Bran- | dels, “that the Lawler memorandum was | material and that jt has become doubly | material in view of the cumstances at- | tending its ultimate pr lons Kerby had told the co tee he had not { been accustomed to keep his stenographie | note books and had o told Mr. Carr, but Lad mentioned to Carr that Masscy had | kept all of his. He sald subsequently to | that Mussey had destroyed his note books Mr. Brandels asked Kerby to explain why. The witness sald he and Massey had | been discussing the possibility of their be- | ing called before the Inquiry, Somcthing | was faid about Massey's having kept all | his notes, and Carr turned to Massey, smil- | ingly, and sald, “according to Kerby, ‘Mas- | ey, you had better lose those note books. Massey lost the note books,” added Kerby | significantly i Mr. Lawler was called to the stand and | {denica that the memorandum had been | prepared with the assistance of anybody. | Ho sald that he had merely read it over to Secretary Ballinger and others in his office after it had been finished in order to make | certain that every statement contained therein was absolutely correct Attorney Vertrees indicated that he might want to question Mr. the committee meet witness still was under the hearing adjourned. Darbey Thiclman Caught in Seattle Lawler further when | on Thursday, as the examination when Man Under Indictment in Omaha as Member of “Big Store” Gang Cap- tured After Long Hunt. SEATTLE, May 18.—"Darbey” Thielman, a bartender was arrested by a deputy United States marshal here today on an indictment returned by a federal grand Jury at Omaha last December, charging him with promoting a fake prize fight. Thielman is alleged to have been a mem- ber of the Mabray gang of fake prize fight and wrestling bout promoters, several of whom were recently tried at Council Blutfs, and sentenced to Imprisonment in the fed- eral penitentlary at Leavenworth. When the indictment was returned against Thiejman last winter, he tled to British Columbia and did not return to Seattle until a few days ago. Several years ago | he made a good record as a professional | base ball pitcher. He will be given a preliminary hearing befare a United States commissioner tomorrow. JOPLIN, Mo., May 18—Lute W. Lute Bodlen, Tom Rogers and rested In Webb City last weck on an in- dictment returned by the Mabray federal grand jury at Council Bluffs, la., was iden- titled by W. D. Bedford, a farmer of Bolckow, Mo., as one of the men who robbed him of $60,000 on a rake horse race t, alias | 10", ar- | will be taken to Council Bluffs Thursday. Thielman is a member of a prominent and wealthy German family of St. Cloud, Minn., one of the most highly respected families of that old German city. When | he was first arrested in Omaha a news- paper man who knew him in St. Cloud had a talk with him at the jail and Thielman sald that it he ever got out of this trouble | he would stay clear of such associates again; that he did not realize the criminai | side of the deal when he went into it. He was over-zealous that his family not learn of his disgrace. Thielman is a brother of Jakle Thielman the old base ball pitcher, with Cleveland and then some minor league teams and Darbey Thielman, himself, was a profes- sional ball player, being a member of the Spokane and Seattle teams In the North- western Pacific league, but he was hard to manage and when he got into this trouble was blacklisted for jumping a contract. Thielman was one of the first men in| the Miking games at Council Bluffs. He | himself told the police after they found | they were unable to hold him in Omaha and the Councll Bluffs officers did not try to get him, how much fun they had in “pulling off” the fake prize fight where one fellow with his mouth full of por wine pretended to bleed to death when the | other onme hit him on the jaw. That deal | was hatched In Loulsville, Ky., and en- acted In Council Bluffs, so that the Omaha police had no claim on him. Hyde May Escape Prison for 'l‘imei Physician, However, Must Remain in | plant Director Newell with Thomson ever since he became secretary. The letters were furnished the committee in response to a request by Mr. Contents of Letters. The letters related to a trip to Alaska, which Ballinger had suggested should take as an expert in the summer of 1809, with Generge W. Perkins, of J. P, Morgan & Co., to make some investiga- tion with a view to establishing a ratlroad for the development of mineral lands, Mr, | Ballinger wrote Thomson, he had recom- | mended him to Mr. Perkins and that the matter should be kept strictly confidential. | It appeared from the correspondence that Mr. Thomson had first agreed to go to Alaska, but subsequently had abandoned the trip, because of his desire to be pres- ent at the Spokane Irrigation congress, In the letters between Ballinger and Thomson reference was made to the re- clamation service and the reorganization, which Mr, Ballinger planned and some proposition, which Mr. Ballinger hoped to be fn & position to make to Thomson by September last, Kerby read a letter re- celved by M. Ballinger from 8, H. Geddes of Beattle, under date of April 11 last, in which Geddes wrote he hod told Thomson he would like to see him in Washington i | Brandels. } Thomson | Custody Even Though Case Goes to Supreme Court. Mo 18.~It Dr. B.| KANSAS CITY May | Clark Hyde's attorneys carry his case teo | the supreme court, the physician will not have to ko to the state's prison pending | { action on the matter by the higher tribunal. | | Ho must remain in jail here, however This announcement was made by Judge| Latshaw late today. Karller he had said| the state provided that an appeal did not | |act as a supersedeas, but upon further| Investigation he found lie was in error Attorneys for the convicted man said tonight that it was possible that & motion | tor & new trial, would be made before | Judge Latshaw tomorrow | In case it is der the appeal will be| | tiled with the supr court at once. Alll me | |of the papers for the latter action ace| | prepared. | | Suit for Bolender Extute, | IOWA ALLS, la May IS.—(Special.) | A fight for an estate of $25.00 wus star last evening when a suit was filed in the | distriet court of this county seeking (0 | break the will of the late Mrs. Nora Bolen- | der of this city. My Mrs. Bolender's will | she left the bulk of her fortune, estimated | at $25,000, to Mr. Frank Cowles of this city 48 head of toe o Vice y g _'“l““‘" n sefvice, but |, voung man who had befriended her in| had assured the secretary that he had not " | advancing years, Seeking to reimburse intimated some conversation the two had | ing young man for hia kindness When she a2 el / . was practically alone in the world, she re | rhe committee declined M. Bfandels’ re- | yompered him gemerously in her will and | Quest to have made & part of the roeord | oee him all her property, with the excep- | the statement: (ssued from the White | o0 0”0 VR0 BEEEEY WOt L8 X House, denying theve was any foundation “’Irll‘l\dnl had no Bitimate relaiives and it/ for the Kervy statement. Senator Root is generally supposed that she aimed to| i THE BEE: OMAEA, THURSDAY, \!\Y_J_’»\ 1010, 8 X SR W 5 P e E \‘ ! 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