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CARRANZA GIVES REPLY 70 ALLIES Willing to Submit International Aspects of Situation to Con- ference. { w " Wil Collins, a miner, were shot BUT NOT INTERNAL AFFAIRS goes Into the back door of grog shops | Pluek It While Ripe. for & moment without & word. How much did it cost you to get the ::‘d“:h“.“nfl srs. Colling, mother of —g— P That Win" the . oudy and tries to drink the whole bunch under | A girl was once granted a wish by a| “Well, well,” he said, finally, “and we | Information? asked Kelly. it oua shot Birotgh e S by il Bomtay e e taneet | the table. 1t s bisger to pray than it | genil, who told ber to walk through a|Wers out there just a short time ago. | *‘Ohe hundred and seventy-five doi-| William, ot VERA CRUZ, BSept. 10.—General | ot “Rilly” Sunday's sermon at the taber- : 155 Bean'e Cinat 48 = 5" 1000108 Spadiivy Claude Johnson, who in turn was ' n-Ameri- | nacle last evening, when he preached |1s to blaspheme; it is bigger to pray than | magic field of corn and pluck the fullest|It hasn't been more than thres weeks, rs,’ replied Sp 5. p and killed by members of & crowd of men Carransa’s reply to the Pa eiially & ‘and women. He | It 8 o be that little scoundrel that walks 'and ripest car she could find and her|has {t?" and he turned to Mrs. Sunday, | *‘Well' replied Kelly, ‘I think that|Snd Hied can appeal was handed to John R.|"¥ v y :&lx‘:{" e the strests blaspheming and sneering at | wish would be granted. The girl walked | Who was sitting beside him at the table. [ Flynt and Gore and I should be made to Youse, Cuiliee tly reported to his Silliman, President Wilson's repre- ";’hr‘n, 1 am talking to the future | religion. It is blgger to mit in & church | through rows of full-earned corn but| “Just lh’l’-‘nhunk- ago,” replied “Ma." | foot Izlr:':lu.' and so they were charged | . 't he ',".d"' purchased whisky 4 . than it s to line up with the bunch at | hesitated to pluck one, hoping to find a| ‘I played ball with the old Chicago |up w e amount. ool 4t O sentative in Mexico, at noon today.|through you as & long-distance tele- bt a0 WOR & g el in | better ome further on. As she walked |White Sox,” continued M. Sunday, “when | “Spalding seemed to be all right when {,’S:‘n:':‘mm":m:n‘:‘:::m, when The text of the communication has '.:t“mo ke o st SRty . Fren Slass gm the ears were less ful] grown and fi-| Spalding was manager, and & finer man | we saw him last,” sald Mr. Sunday, he appeared at the front door, between not yet been made public. Gobatel Srecesiion xlnlu"'col untry for five| We have the greatest nation in the | finally she eame to & row of nubbina. hever was in the base ball business. He | ruptly changing his point of view. “He | SPRECEC B8 L0l Trl o ioeq poth WASHINGTON, Bept. 10.—General minutes stopped all work. The rallroads, | universe, and the greatest opportunities She scorned to pluck a nubbin and walked | Was a high grade man. And he proved | was not just as he had been, but I barrels of a shotgun, killing the youth Sunday Tells Boys Their Names in Italic Letters! THE BE OMAIIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1915. How to Write Tells the Boys and Girls How They Must Live if They Are to Suc- ceed in This Life, STRIVE T0 BE MUCH LARGER Carranza in his feply to the Pan-Amer-| . o ooinry, the machinery of this land ican conferees, it was learned here to- |, .04 y1ii); the banker stopped counting day, will agres to an international as- |, ;\oney: the merchant quit measuring pect of the Mexican situation, but will ', 0 0 rqities and left them unmeas- decline to enter a conference on internal affairs, Carransa's answer, which is expected : o £ g g b 1 3 I suppose he just did It to pass the time ' Pi e gt gy B LN e ey e e st pamser ut | your mind dia not lignt therc; he had|Man on the’team and see who was going | away. He was always an energetio man. in Jefferson ght e e e T to climb. There are five things you need | WTOng. Bo Pinkerton did his detective [ “I'm very sorry to hear of his death: e - contention, 1t 18 said, | o tne that we did not: ferget * to make a ladder upon which to climb;|WOrk and turned in his report a little | he was a fine man. You know he origi- FAIRBURY, Neb,, Sept. 10.—(Spectal.)— "Iu-rnn.. mhh s e eal |22 ’hup-wh‘ g g Wea S Make Yourself Larger, first, blood; second, environment: third,|!ater and then Spalding didn't know what | nated the reserve rule which gives the . g i control of the country and that to enter | ),uch we esem at times to be comme: into such a oconference would have no | .. é effect. General Carransa vl declare, however, that he doss mot wish to ignore the ured, the farmer stopped his plow in the furrow, every student closed his book for five minutes, and with uncovered heads we all attempted to pay a mark of respect and tribute to the man, who y dazed and drunk. We stood still long enough to testify to the world that it matters not to what political party & man belongs, If he tries to make this friendly interest of th~ United Btates, |, petter nation and make better homes. tina, Braxil, Chile, Bolivia, Uru- guay and Guatemals, and for that reason i 1 am glad th are a great many periods in our lves when we laugh, and will say that if there are any interna- |y ... recqll & good many in my life that tional aspects which ean properly be con- sidered with representatives of the Pan- f adequats protection to Hfe and t out of | i : Swanson Mystery Is Not Yet Solved ST, LOUIS, Sept. 10.~—(Special|pigger than the God-forsaken mutt of & 1] fEX HEE . He sat on These suits are tailored by hand. The work is { names ..,".:":-"w g gt By Phlles Dastre. done by experienced men. The fabries include whip- Sep tember Beddlng Sale Louts, happened, and when I ieq but when he moets the right irl. cord, poplins, serges, cheviots and mixtures. The . (FEFT) o B, e 8 e teaeed o the R LT St MY peth, b i styles are the personal selection of our buyer and Prices ?h“ indicate .the advantages of that t in front of a bl turkey | peo 'y o @R Lo B made to his special order and under his supervision. supplyin our winter needs now earth did not trembie, but pel PpPLy Yy Along ¢ame & blg fat hen, and she saidt| roar In every way they are worthy to bear the label— i I wish I could forget 700 Years Given MoKinley. Seventy-five million people In the United States, each giving five minutes, would make over 700 years of service rendered MoKinley., I am glad we did it. lad thers is & Fourth of July, when we uncofl our enthusiasm and testify to the world that we realize at what cost we lald the foundation of the great- ost nation God's eyes ever rested upon. 1 am glad there is an Easter to recall Him that burst through the bonds of death; I am glad we have Christmas to recall Him that was born amidst the malodorous, unwashed beasts in the manger to save us, if we are men and women enough to accept Him. I am glad there is & Labor day to pay tribute to the mgn with the dinner bucket and calloused hand. I am glad we have a Thanksgiving day, when we all journey back home and eat turkey and cranberry sauce and mince ple. As - the world. Listen, you boys, when you go into the world it takes something more than being & student to make a successful man. But a student is & thousand times hangs about the bar- T A LE i | § i it i ! £ : F i H: i I [ THE STORE OF THE TOWN Our Fall Clothing for Men and Young Men and Children Our Exclusive Models and Patterns Men’s and Young Men’s Suits Now, young folk, I want to tell you something in the hope that I can Induce |1t you want you to write your lives in itallcs. loafs in the strects, smokes clgarettes, | to become something in all the world, | and if you can’t become something, you | are a mutt, a mollycoddle, excess bag- gage, and nothing but a mere cipher, ‘This element in us; this hope for some- hing better Is nature clearing the ground, That is why the young man goes west. He i» tired of being a molchill and wants to be & mountain, Branch out and make yourself larger than you now are in character. A midget in body can be turned into financial account in a dime museum. Ringling Bros.' will pay well for a physical monstrosity. pitiful. A woman once gald to her husband: “Willlam, I dreamed last night that I attended an auction and they were selling husbands, and they brought all the way from 80 to $0,000." “Wife,” said he, “the fellows that brought 310,000 were “No, husbands like you sold like me?' three bunches for a nickel.” A midget In mind, and a midget in character is like a carbuncle. You can't look up and admire a runt in mind and a runt in character unless you do it under protest. God wsald to Gideon: “Grow up a mighty man of valor,” He said to David: “You are a man after my own heart,” after he had fought and climbed upon the throne. God likes to see & man leave the cellar and go to the roof garden of life. Now, I'll tell you. The humliity that wants to #it in the shade and sip lemonade and fan and say: “Ob, it's 80 hot,” is less pleas- ing to Him. Peel off your coat, sell it and buy a sword and go out In the world's strite! and drive that sword to the hilt In the putrefied and foul-smelling evils of the world, There are not enough men in the world willing to take off their coats and fight | for Christ. But I'll fight for Him, and T'Il tight hell in Omaha it I have to do! it alone. But I know I've got you back of me. ' ‘They say of & man, he is dead. Is he? What complaint caused his death? No complaint, they say of him. Bverybody Some people leave the world s left 1s their epitaph on the i - H s>, water, but a college professor, with mutton chop whiskers and forty-nine diplomas can't make a horse drink if he 't want to drink. Bullding achools is one thing, education i another. Christ may have died to save your sins, but if you have no desire to be saved you miss Him. You must desire to wears, blasphemes, sneers at religion, it| ¢¢ gy« »” R lI Da H [1a simply because he is gong with eom- B.Ily Sun ay Kecalls ys IHe | pany that makes him do it or bis lobster of & father swears In his hearing A peasant boy went into the Louvre in Parls and looked upon & great paintmg and it incited the latent power in mim and he beca world famous artist. So - .‘:, ....,.,m: A robber, sit|death in San Diego of A. G. Spalding, |it. but only three of the bunch had been “Deadshot Dick,” the ploneer base ball T hold that the boy who goes to #chool | “Deadwood Dick” and stuff like that.|DProught to the atte is bigger than the young lobster that | That would make & robber out of any | While ho was eating his luncheon at noon, |Spalding had finished reading the report | fray here last night sit around and read boy. on. Boon she was up to her arms in|himself a business man as well as a base | thought that It was just because he was weeds and had plucked no ear of corn. 8o it 1# here in Omaha you have nothing to show for it but a 1853 to 1588, and them I was sold to Pitts- | that. He was very much interested in a fow straggling gray hairs, a ragged suit|burgh and after that to Philadelphia. I | big plot of land near San Diego when we o ®0 LVCE "% [ o) ¢ ahots from a whisky breath and character murdered long mgo. So you|hOt race for the pennant, and some of | town lots, but there were no houses built v have got to have a definite aim in life It you find a man on top of the hills| %0 Spalding got one of the Pinkertons, in this world's confliet, you can make up! Billy it was, and told him to watch every of clothes, sand; fourth, education, and, above all, |t 40 With it, 80 he kept it for two or | employer of a player the option on the e you need Christianity if you want to be | three days before he did anything at all. | continuation of the player's services, and | PAIEN in Jefferson county this week y on top of this heap. (Copyright Willlam A Fraracier, nd . mawet 1 morus s | RUSSIANS STRIKE ANOTHER SEVERE BLOW AT ENEMY (Continued from P ered an attack against the sgmmit of at Luttebach. Furthermors, about thirty | $196,610, Hartmans-Wellerkopf, which resulted in thelr winning a foot- | egram.)—The number of pensioners on the | of 10-year-old Margaret hold during the night. We, however, de- livered a counter attack, recaptured the | and amounts paid them during the flscal | here on December 5, 1914, Fountain trotted | prosecuting attorney and clerk of district lost trenches and drove the enemy back to his lne. “Our aviators bombarded the German mines and batterfes in the forest of Non- nenbruck as well as the rallroad station Three Men Killed / and Woman Hurt at Hickman, Ky. HICKMAN, Ky, Sept. 10.—~Three men v manager, was |playing looss. They were Mike Kelly, (are dead and a woman | serfously 2 of Billy Sunday, | “Sfiver” Flynt ana George Gore. When |wounded as the result orw.' .A.MN':H:YI: he asked us what he should do about it. | former county judge of Fulton ocounty. Played Ball Under A. G. Spalding When the newspaper notice of the | was shaking in his boots while he read he read It carefully, and then sat still instantly, and injuring Mrs. Collins. gotting old. It may be that he had had | TRETCE T m;‘,’“m to arrem Joha- some paralysis, but T don't know about . ¢ SO BECR I, ® L ahot the |judge through the meck. Johnson then ball manager, for he made money. You Some of you|#ee, I plaved with the White Sox from a|rememboer one season we were having a | were there. He was going to sell it in |0 o100 "0 1og o spembled. |the fellows were hitting the booze a bit, | when we saw it. make any mora money. sts mé smeasn. | First Gun Is Fired The first gun was fired in the 1916 cam- John G. Rawles, a prominent citizen of this eity, announced his candidacy for sheriff of Jefferson county on the repub- lican ticket to succeed Edward Hughes | the present democratio incumbent. Mr | Hughes' second term expires mext year | and he has stated he will retire. It is Former Iowa Man Hanged for Killing _|ierieet et ok i+ 12| Ten-Year-0ld Gir] | e vu s s sttt cof wo | year. of Fairbury, it is said, will also toss his in Pensions a Year GiVGn NebraSkanS SACRAMENTO, Cal, Sept. 10.~David | hat into the ring for the nomination of Fountain, a church janitor, was hanged | sheriff. % WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—(Special Tel- | at Folsom prison today for the murder | Thus ar, the democrats have not put Millin In the | up any man to succeed Mr. Hughes. The roll of the pension office at this time | basement of the German Lutheran church | offices of vegister of deeds, assessor. Then he called the whole team in and he did lota of other things. He was really read them the report. Every one of us Sundey) the father of organised base ball." bombs were thrown down on the rallroad station at Grand Pre." Nearly Three Million - One.) trenches on vear ending June 30, in Nebraska, was:|to his place on the gallows. He was |court will all need new occupants in thie Pensioners, 13113; amount paid, $2,002,909. [ born in Elizabeth county, Towa, and had | county next year and the comtest prom- South Dakota pensioners, 4,932; amount | served terms in the Iowa state prison and |ises to be a warm one. paid, $342385. the Cherry Hill, Pa, penitentiary, be- Wyoming pensioners, 706; amount paid, | sides having been an inmate of asylums at Mount Pleasant and Clarinda, Ia. Apartments, “fats, nouses and cottages can be rented quickly and cheaply by Bee ‘‘For Rent." the stopped.” he| As the grasshopper tried to adjust ho | 1016 to the craw of the gobbler il Ootton Blankets, size 72x80, $1.33 a pair, in White, i w”w any Gray, and Tan, with fancy borders, very special for hes |1 um here. How blg this annual sale. The THOMPSON-BELDEN STORE The Fashion Center of the Middle West Two Groups of Tailored Suits That command instant attention $25 and $293° THOMPSON, BELDEN & COMPANY, Advance Diplay of Exquisite Fall Millinery Embodying the Latest Ideas Also Original Models of Our Own Designing at Very Moderate Prices m\ - = HOWARD AND SIXTEENTH STREETS Saturday's Specials in Reliable Since 1886, Blankets, Comforts, Bed Sheets $6.00 Wool Blankets, $5.29 a pair, in White and Light Gray, large size, extra heavy with fancy colored borders. Wool Filled Comforts, size 72x84, $3.48, fancy silkoline covers, regular $4.00 guality, Bleached Seamless Sheets, size 81x99, 89¢ each. Our Superior Brand sells regularly at $1.10, 25¢ Scalloped Pillow Cases size 45x36, 18¢ each; made the right way of the goods, and with pretty scal- loped edges, Georgette Crepes In all the fashionable shades— A special value at $1.50 a yard The colors are particularly beautiful, and here are all the fashionable tones, rich, dark hues, also soft, subdued tones, as well as all the dainty even- ing shades. 8ilk Section—Main Floor. from Paris A Choice Selection Saturday of Beautiful Street Hats In all the new and up-to-date shades Knit Goods for Fall Children’s Sweaters, Cape Hoods, Searfs, Leg- gins and Mittens. Women’s Knit Skirts and Sacques with sleeves or sleeveless, white and 152 to $40% Children’s Combination Suits 5% to *15% Browning, King & Co. GEO. T. WILSON, Mgr. HOWARD AND SIXTEENTH STREETS S P —————————————— & at 48, 410, $122 §7 $15 | S " v o s | ‘Thompson—Belden & Co,