Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 10, 1910, Page 1

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TART OxE NEWS SECTION PAOES ONE TO mIOWTY, WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebrasks For lowa Fo: Generally fair Showers. r weather report see page 2 s OMAHA, SUNDAY TRADE WAR GBows‘N(fihingpt;) Do But | T IN GERMANY est, Play Go _HUl lt\i} RN * and Grow Light Plaus Perfected for the Work of President Taft During Summer Season at Beverly ®st for Commercial Supremacy | Becoming of Acute Interest. | | AMERICANS QUIETLY WINNING ! BEVERLY, Mass Telegram )—Every important statesman who calls President Taft is first searched at the executive office and all suspicious looking papers are teken from bim. According to the strict o~ders left Secretary Norton here, Mr. Taft is Ye & vacation. There are 1o be aferences. no dictating of state Papers, no reception of delegations and {0 especial attention 1o correspondence |The program at Beverly now consists of §olf, automobile rding social cal STANDARD OIL IN THE GAME!® rresioent Taft will exercise the same |care bere this summer that he 418 less | and meke the same effortis to reduce his Toayee LR Mpoavents ik | N aard it summer after severai | Bribing Employes in Hope of | stremuous weeks he took off four pounds Securing Orders from Pros- |He bhopes to take off at least twenty pective Buyers. pounds this summer. .r. Charles Barker of Cincinnatl, a physical colture expert | Who has had charge of the physical con. {@itton of President Taft during the last |year, is here He w be in charge of |the work of reduc the presidential war of w WS Seard 56 With 81 yoigne Ther Wit long walks sssuming NS00 Bonte hund 1 ANE | age viery, - wtEI I odt Strtops Boms T I S % far the Dplindie| o routiing nif biftie’ Albosge the pres- Soem 1o Be e L NSRS | oty tipe th Mlpin-at 1he B0 M b6 e G 2o Duntattn, SR SN | 1y quigh; o i Tost et vory Semsin s ek SUR MMM | " Prtgont Tatt e soecs slosed MV B ESia lnteor fact BN Vet Beste {11, seagtalh Witch -has been lald down Sons ST the Gertan offictal mal #8- | sor the raducing of Nis welght. He is CTIAL Wrartl and te Mading 16 Wasbwrse | oy vicularty £lad that Dr Barker is is . & "5y the Miul SSESURER - {oearge of It The Ohio shysicis haa where he Uy | planned & trip into the west {contemplated spending the summer, but “ur. Taft was so insistent that he came imperial | 1o Beverly anu cancelled uis western Eovernment s going right after the Ameri- | signe The weight reaucing work has €an trade captains wherever they can be not yet been started :vothing is aliowed to interfere with the president's found. now Protests to the Porte. | vacation. He goifs with John Hays Ham- S8 esoellent Mustration of this @overs-mond and ‘Secvetary Meyer and tades Snental activity is given by the recent @i6- [long automoblle r.es With urs Taft | PSS intpired by “official sources™ which |and te apparently without care. He wi ‘Was transisted to the correspondents here. | enter traluing with the hope of “Coming Among other things this @Gispatch set out back™ a little later. that: Baron Marschall von Bieberstein, the { * German ambassodor to Constantinople, | | M Tepresented to the sublime porte that vor| A WO Rallroad €n $roup would be 10 controvert the mining Kllled ln reCk law agrerd upon by the Turkish govern: ent and the European ambassadors. The | 6 i American state department 1! re- Guested this government to ook inie tne | Conductor and Brakeman Meet Death When Engines Collide at mulated and in substance is most favor. in principle in Turkey except where, b e g ) WATERLOO, la. July 3.~Bpecial Tele- tuter- | gram.)—Two Waterico iwem, David k. With the|Bankson amd T. 8. McCarthy, were killed i & rallresd collision lust night at Free- port, 1%, on the Iilinois Central. July Special German Officials Are Exercised Over | Situation. EMPEROR TAKES KEEN INTEREST Going After American Trade Captains Wherever Found. on { to no co BY MALCOOLM CLARKE. BERLIN. July &—(Special Dispatch to Fhe Bee) e American-German trade | the Turkish government to &TAnt conoes- | slons sought By an American financial | matter. The reply of the foreign office 10 the state department has been for- Waterloo. i ® veieran of the Span- His death caused greai sortew Poputa. |18 this city. thint | Alleged Mabray & zen | mental question 1o be determined, h | serteq, | ministerea in | that which preceded the civil war BRISTOW ¢ TOCSIN Kansas Senator Tells of the Work Performed by Republicans in | Congress, GREAT PROGRESS HAS BEEN MADE | | Corporations Exert Strenuous Eflom’ to Block Legislation. { MONOPOLIES MUCH IN EVIDENCE Party in Power Pledged to a Revision of the Tariff. | | | | INTERESTS STEP IN AND PREVENT Comditions Now Compared that Existed the 0M Dars of Slavery Prior te the war. Kan.. July $-Emphatically the fight of the “procrens just begun, United B Kanses b tals afternoon delivered first public utterahce since Saturday last, when he. | Representatives Murdock and E. H. Mad- ison. all Kansas “insurgents” journe Ovster Bay and held @ three hours ence with Theodore Roosevelt The house progrissives,” said sen- Stor. “have made grest progress They | have practically overthrown the dominion of Cannon and the coteric of men who sur- rounded him. But," ke udded significantly the great work is but fairly begun Senator Brietow's speech was delivered ai the Winfield chuuteuqua. He anaiysed | the tariff and sketched the work of the “progressive republicans” in umending the Talirond bill. There never had been a time | in American hisiory, he said, when greater responsibility rested upon the average citi- | then today. The country had never faced problems more perplexing. The funda. | WINFIELD, declaring th tves” Senator Jose; only States to | confer- | the he as Shall this govermment be ag the interest of the average | the benefit of special privilege “The conflict in American politics today," argued Senator Bristow based upon the same fundamental principles as was The cor borale interests of the country have dom. inated the affairs of the mation as - pletely as did the siave interest in the duys wes, fc | its greatest strength. Comparison s Made. “Just as every effort made for striction of slavery was resisted slave power, sc every effort made tect the people from the injustice corporate greed is resisted b corporations of thfs time. Ty tives of the slave power haq halls of congress and contended for the | Perpetuity of slavery hecause af their nnnn-{ wial interest in ghe fmstitution, { “ADd now the gigantic menopotiex Of this | @ay shave Teprescriatives in the balls of congress, whose scle purpose 15 o promote keep open the opportu- nity which they now bave. to plunder the Amierican pabilic. This was foreibly demon. | strated in the tariff fight that cccurred a of the{ ¥ the great | be representa- | d meats n the L SIX SECTI ONS—THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES. F1 \'E CE “ LET YOUR. LIGHT SO SHINE * DAy PARCRS Local Events as Viewed by The Bees Artist. {T. ROOSEVELT AT THE DEN To Be Guest of King Ak-Sar-Ben Sep- tember Second. MEMBERSHIP I§5 “GOING UP" Sumwon Has Set Twe Thousond Mem- Bers ms (be Mark io Have Whes the Noted Hunter Comes to Omahs. | | King Preaches to His Subjects and Proposes Peace |Utterances Considered the Sfriking that Have LONDON. - July ~4.4(Spectal Cabie- g )—George V sthnds conspicuonsiy today as = hristian preacher. Which has deeply touched and impressed | the religious world. Responding yester- |day to an address from the convecation FOLK BOOSTERS ARE ACTIVE Democratic Presidential Bee Burzes in Missouri Man's Bonnet. | Gamsboe “Sothots thet Ave Adepied Causes Constermation in Ranks ©of the Reoceptive Can- Zaten. 'BRYAN VIEWS T0 BIND LANCASTER ' Democrats at Lincoln Follow Peerless Into the Cold Water County Option Camp. UR OF ORATORY IS NEEDED the Party Places Himself Squarely on Record. {HIS PLATFORM OR NONE AT ALL | | | IBO {Boss of | Threat Takes Starch Out of the 0ld- Time Fighters, N [ONE MaN OPPOSITION J. W. Marley Criticises Record of the Ruler of the &n appeal from Willam J. democratic county oconvention his afternoon emdorsed county option and |instructed Lancaster county's fifty-sevent deleg: % 10 the state convention to vote as |8 unit % & plank favoring county optiom iin the state platform. Two Aelegates Ge- | Clined to accept places on the delegation | thue instructed. Bryam threatened that um Jess o ¥ option were endorsed he would |Dot serve on the delegation. but would |ask some other county to name him Mr. Bryan spoke for more then an hour, end as he burned his bridges Dr. P. L. Hall, T. J. Doyle, Bob Maione. A. V. Johan- #on and other war-horse democrats who have grown gray in the service of the PATtY, oocupying front seats, sat fn sullen |slence and tn that way only expremsed | their @lsapproval, while 4. G. Wolten- |barger and J. L. Clafiin, prohibitionists, {and W. R Patrick and others assisted the | salieries and the democratic county option- |ists in boosting' the speaken One Volee of Protest. J. H. Harley of the ol timers was the jonly man to raise his Yolce in protest |a®ainst this ocutrage about to be perpets {rated on the patry. He talked jomg and {enrnestiy against making county option & {political jesue and he gave & history of the issues and paramount issues which Mr. Bryan had advocated and in which he |had carried the pariy to defeat, but he {Fucoeeded only in bringing down the wrath |of the democrat boss on his hesd and im |#iving him the opportunity to mo over the [pumerous paramount imues, many of ‘which he onumerated as heving heen {adopted by the republican party and written [into laws. Mr. Bryan denled that he was responstble Jfor county option being mn issue in the jeampaign, for a portion of the blame he {Placed upon the Omuha World-Herald, nf which he said: 1 want to find democrats who have {been deceived by the WondeHerald on this dssue. 1 speak of the World-Herald, {because democrats have & right to expect | fuir treatment from their organ. Tts owner is a candidlate for United States senator Leader is Dead| mree’ w—— £ “The republican party in its natio: ¥ Russell D. Herriman, Wanted in| .. g e | and he should epeay the trith in his paper. | Tt should at least be peutral in this fight™ Why He Fights the Brewers. | ST. LOUIS. July 9 —(Special Tele- gram.)—From the trend of events in the democratic fold, 1t 1s evident that forme | Wyen Colonel Roosevell vigits Omaba, ’fieplumbey 2 he will be invited 10 attend & special initistion ceremony at the Ak- |of the northers prevince, contsining as- surances of loyalty to him, his family and the throme, his majesty said ention declared for & revision of the tarify, Council Bluffs, Dies While Ap- somewhat simllar situats | BAN FRANCISCO, July s—Russen D it =it | .;:q eatnt SAE has tome 3 :M;::'Hmzmnu. reputed leader of the Maybray | #t Hamburg with the collapse of the gov- |erowa af race track and prize fight opera- | Smment's case aguinst the Standara O '0T% Gied last night at the Onkiend Hospi- company. This unexpected finsco has jeft |8l Where he was operated on several days Gerzhan business and offici ago for cancer of the stomach -~ s e e i Sinp Bt ot Alemeda county The Hamburg matier began with the dis. |88 for several months swaiting an uwp- charge of an employe, a native {Peal 1o the United States Supreme court Who had served the Neutsche Veouum Ofi | S58in8t &1 order of the U'nited States Cir- Cempany as salemman. The Deutsche | Cult court removing him to Councll lutis Vacuum compary s the lubricating ofl branch of the Siandard's organization in Germany. The former salesman went to DIAMOND SMUGGLERS Women with Four M. dred Thousand Dollare Worth of Gems Euroute frem Africa. i | BERLIN. July $—Smugglers with gia. | monds worth $40000 from the mouthiwest | African fields, have succeeded in evading | enblatt acoepted . the colonial officers at Luderits Bay and ;’m._.m._‘,mmw“'.,“ ot o Borm 11 beiteved tvey | that would have given pointers to some of |27 Aboard & German lner. The govern. | #ts American contemporarien ment, which is entitied to 34 per cent | Ne » Acusatie: v(f the value of the Jewels is watching ail e ""‘: " e thay | YO which armive. The revenue offices e :M:' >y | — u-::::u i | assert that diamonds worth many millions have been smuggled out in recent years. | the habit of briving employes of intending The smuggiers have not been detected, but | are supposed to be women who concesied the stones in their clothing. | Horace Bmerson Deemer. who i mep- | " |tioned as the successor to Chier Justice | |Pulier, has been chief justice of the wu- | preme court of Tows three times, and holds {that position mow. He was made chier | sustice the first time in 18, when be| exteas've hearing, ex ted the|Wa® €irst put on the supreme bench, aga | Ametican concern and gave it & clean bt |!® WM and again in 9, He bad been | of heant {before that a judge for seven years of the | ® company's | Fifteenth lowa district business, it He was bon at Bourbon, & Hitle town i e pewhat of & surpriss 1o see how |morthern Indiana. September 3 1Mk Te much of the mysteries of the ol b‘u.i.vl his educetion he came west 1o lo a ! o8 2 oon Shatl % 1t e BRatend vei-Jond wer sradentsd Bae the law depas URSNEY tevenist Tuent of the state university at Jows ity {in M His marrage to Mise Jeanetie the first time on record | Gikeen cocurred three years iater. xACt facts reganding the | In 1M twenty-five years after gradua- audand's eaormous forelgn |tion, he began o serve his college in the business. It was shown that the towl of |oapacity of & lecturer on speclal phuses of wetroleum products exported from e law, and was made an honorary m United States 1o Couatries |fessor of Jurisprodence. As & legal scholar! -;x‘n-u:l.:d 'Vr:n the year SN, Of |ne nas become very widely known. his two) this huge amoun “Gr - SHGTIN or well over ot 5 sovend many slone the United Sta: 242 In petroleum Products per oemt of this istrivuted by the tions. and “Orclopedis of Law and Pro-| |cedure.” Besides these. he is the author of | & oumber of monogrephs on law subjects, | < and his evilab! for lectures are considered| s the Standard. who' pressment suthoritative. He has been an aetive mem-| — T ate wa eupttmarney. swe- 1SR both the Jows and the Ameriesn Bar| ent . ; he German business i e e G e pest o smocltions aad of the American Politscal| Crude production in the United States~|™d Socisl assaciution | otfice ' Des Motnes. total - | His hawe 3 i Bed Ouk, . (Continued oo Becond Puge) | B2, and T believe that nine-tents | This 1 belleve would have been | more desirous of favoring special inte: | ot Iowa Jurist Who May Sit on Federal Supreme Bench _ | study of the operation of Jury juvestiga-| i} maintaining the princy further stated upon the differ tion at ho Ple of protection ax that duties should be b "ence In the cost of Pproduc- Me and abroad, pius a reasonable | profit to the home manufacturer | “Upon that platform the pariy nd | vyl | won the | he of the | expected | od faith. | done had it not been for the perfidy and selfishness | of certain designing legislators, who were | Tests | ? the peo- republicans throughout the land the pledge to be carried out in go then of promoting the welfare o ple. “Under the leadership of these men stead of revisng the tariff as was ised, Cuties were fized, not With a yview protecting legftimate American ‘ Gustries. or of securing revemve for the | $overnment, but for the purpose of pro- | moling the financial interests of certain | individual conmcerns | Great Work Ouly Started “The great work befare ue is but fairly | begun. This year we bed 1o fight as hard | to hold what had been secured in years | Past as we 212 to get additional legisla tion. To hold what we now have and se- | cure these other necessary provisions e | ihe fight for the future. It gannot be won | Withott the ‘determined support of the | peopie “Our hope is in the intelligent and pa- trictic purpose of the peopie themselves The combined influenves of eriminal sel- fishness and greed are against us. Their | tn- § prom- | (Continued on Second Page | | 1 { | at be m.nuuui . | ment {chargea with sbout Sar-Ben den. Whether he arringe Lo attend or not remains to be seen, 88 ing definite can be learned as 1o the ho or manner of his sming. King Ak-Sar-Be 1 io give serious thought to the advent of the colonel The distinguished traveler has been recetved by rulers of ail lands and Ppeoples; and his entertainment on every one of these occastions has been more mag: nificnt than has ever been tendered another private citizen. And, after September hes come d gone still another such ception will have been given Theodore Roomevelt, and King Ak-Sar-Ben will dem- onstreie that old world mon he i bis class. Membershin Big. G up.” enswered man when asked about the membership. The tolal Is now 112 and still they come Two t members by September the curd int ® to make, fo: it would never do 1o make a smal] showing on that day. Emil Bran chairman of the amuse- committee, left Ssturduy night New Yeork. While there he will confer with the Ak-Sar-Ben booking agent B A Myers, and make sngements for amuse- ments. Sor the fall festival Mr Brandais will get & what is up-to-date the way of amusements, and wil hiing beck veluable suggestions Tomorrow might the 4rm the On Eiecirical club members will be the gu of honor, and will for the first time wun- dergo the “shock” of an evening at 1 den. Eiectrically speaking. when the sixty- five or more memhers of the club have been wmken in es ehnts, will be 000 volts of the Ak- Ser-Ben epirit of boost are no ousand ine on n aha ests true they Woman Iuvelved in Famous Storey Cottom Swindle Fined Five Hunlred. PHILADELPHIA, July § —Broaght to the bar of the United States court in this after she Lad eluded capture for nearly five vears, Sophie Beck. in the famous Storey cotton found victims in all pars States, plesded gullty 1o he charge of using the malls defraud She was = tenced to pay & fine of M and & DAy $30 of the cost of prosecution ’Phone Tyler lOOOJ for all departments of The Omaha Bee This is the Dew switchdoard te) ephone number of The Bee. Get The Bee operator a k for the department you want After 6 p. m. aud before 8 a. m. call Tyler 1000 for edi- torial department, Tyler 1001 for advertising and circula- tion departments and Tyler 1002 for managing editor, swindle, which of the United has uiready begun | for | me of the principals | | ‘“he foundations of nmtions] glory are set in the homes of the people and will |remain unshaken only while the family life of our race and nation is simple and pure. he work of the ch —religious and cheriabie—assumes wach Fear a deeper practical significance. ™ Replying to & wimilar sddress from the convocation of anterbury, the king said 1 desire 10 promote the peace and’ unity of nations, to second all efforts for the alleviation of sickness and suf- fer and to support every wise and well considered scheme for ihe public £0od. 1 am encournged in ail. dhis by | Your good wishes and prayers for God's blessing on all my endeavors and am fortified by the belief that the enas we |pursue in barmony with the teachings of the church will be - achieved only while we seek n falth and humility that perfect standerd of conduct and sacri- fice revealed to Christian men." His majesty spoke in a similar strain Tesponse 1o several owier addresse whole, these utterances are Le the most striking re- pronouncements that haveeman- fram: the .urone in many years vy al rations are welcomed clally at & time when the records of tie divorce courts and the gemeral in- difference anu cynicism of & large sec- tion of soclety ofound anxiety {to all believers vital importance of Caristian pr | {in dec Governor presidentia shoe work was of .noiana, and Mavor Gaynor cutive of to & higher office than he new holds and | y to discuss politics and policies. east of Folk of _ilssouri, is relying upon Willlam J. Brran of Nebraska to nssist the democratic stlence and gum- never put to better ad- ventage than it being used now by the poutical adherents of the former gov- ernor, who wants him to lead the demo- cratic party to the polis in 1912 belleved that the candigacy of Joseph W. Folk is causing some appre- hension to the friends of Governor Jud- son Hermon of Ohle: Governor Marshal of New it s York City In the case of the two governors there no doubt thet the nomination would be gladly accepted. With Mayor Gaynor t is different Many believe the exe- ew York Lity does not aspire is would flatly reject any proposition to ¢levate him even to the vice presidency. Mayor Gaymor has persistently refused He is not in politics and that it takes mll his time 10 attempt to administer the af- | fairs of his city properly The Folk boomers are active in the and in the south. Lon Sanders, the democratic league of Missourd. has been making tour through the New England states interviewing demo- cretic leaders. 1t is safe 1o predict that ..e Folk campaign for the presidential nomination (Continued on Becond Page.) | | | | | | {SOPHIE BECK PLEADS GUILTY ! | Dr. Homer C. House. the Engiish department at the Pera Normal @44 his grade work in the Crete schools | under slrong teachers back in the '$ds sna the early ‘M enmtered Doane ooliege | |20 began at once 1o make his mark in the literary circles of the school. The liternrs society and the oratorical contests and th jooliege paper claimed House for the'r own {and were well justifisd in thelr choice |He aleo was & music “shark” and helped 10 organize the famous “Adelpoian Quar {tet” with which he eventually ~as Most every town end ham) Nebreska He gradustad frem Doane and later went 1o the University of Nebraska (o spe- | clalize in literature., where his studies were warnest and productive. Here he exc admiration for his high degree of orig Wy, After securing his master's degrees from the University of Nebrusks, he taught {for nive years in Kingfisher college Okia- | homa. ~ During the lntter part of his term |8t Kingfisher he beg: preparation {of u text book tu Engiish ure, which work 18 now nearly complete. The book * almost unique in s trestment. In. Stead of weeking to merely make the stu- |dent famiiar with authors and their works, It meeks to anaiyse the effect of a pieoc |of Mierature on the mind of the reade and to 8lscover the source of the sppes! | Another year's work &t the Universiiy | Nebraska in 307 and 108 gave Mr House his doctor's degree from the IMterature dcpartment and with thix preparation he came 1o Peru, end oa the retirement of | Frof. Scarson was appointed as hised of the | Englsh Gepartment w head of the of New Head of the English Department at Peru Normal Mr. Bryan did mot mince matters whes be 1014 why he is now se viclently opposed to the brewers. IHe said the brewers in Olio were able to elect & democratic leg- i and governor though they lost the stional ticket. The same thing ocourred |in Indiune, be maid. and had it mot besn for some republicans who voted for him out | of state pride. the same result would have been attained in Nebrasks. He aid mot know of these things. he said, until his re- turn from South America, because he had been 100 busy looking after national insues |10 study the liguor question and for this {he desired 10 apoiogize to the peopie of the | state. “If you vote down this resolution” ssid Mr. Bryan, “1 will not be a delegate from |this county, but I will ask some other county 10 give me u seat on the state eon- | vention and 1 will carry the fight on Just {the same | Then Mr. Bryan rTecited a Mitle history {to show what huppened when others op- osed bis will. He told of the organization fthe Success league in Omaha, which con- cluded 1o permit him 1o attend the national | convention, though surrounded wtih those | who could keep him from doing any dam-. age. The Success league £ot its candidate end that candidate received many less votes than he did the four years before and four | vears later o Bryan's Recent Record. In his discussion of the isms of Mr. Bryan, Mr. Harley sail i Mr. Bryan hed not advocated government ownership of rafirosds on his return from Burope, he wouid have been eiected presidest. Befors that came the Philippine imiands, benevalent ’nulmlhllun election of senator by the peo- | ple, publication of campaign coptributions, | regulation of trusis, and now the pase- | mount issue is county option. Nome of vese, Harley insisted, were of the impor- jiance of the tariff and it was time $he | party went back 10 safe and sane ground. Tesolution adopted endormed the § vclock closing law and the Shallenberger adming us county optiss and the pi € national and stale conventions 9. When they were chosen delegates Mr. Harley and L. &, ardt refused 1o mccept the piaces om Dr. Hail, ¥. W. Brown, T. boyle and others sccepted after Bryan be did not care what they talked, se oted their Congressman Maguire. W .B. Price and w. Patrick of Sarpy county -opened the speechmaking Maguire and Price ‘\ talked nistonal issues. while Patrick gave an autoblography of himsell and his fight { for ihe peaple ngs’ wt the urewers, whe, he sald, had spent 0000 In his senatorial district 1o defeat him She he Teferred n the staie, and {10 as the rottenest place sell liguor idie- | he said that 35 bLrothels #uily there without paying state or national Noenses. all of which is due 10 the poor way the police enforce the law. Wiile |one man, he sald. gets the rekeots on the {beer s0ld in the brothels, bis own deme. |cretic commitiee had taken this monay jand used it 1o help defeat bim, and he, single-handod and slone, had to fignt ay the evil interasts in Mis Part of the state. Richard L. Metcalf paved the wuy for the Brysn specch wheo he came out flat-footed for county option in the platform, and the endorsement of the work of Mr. Bryan Meioaife dened thmt he was & mollycoddie, becatse be was now for county aption im the platform which he opposed in bis Lo Jumbus speech, bul said the party ie e R

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