Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 26, 1915, Page 2

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

H aene PUUS———— ) »ea Soanet ensnasy PP —— T 2R TOIEY mAASGL R PO T < . NO ELECTION YET BY METHODISTS Choose One More Delegate to Gen- era]l Conference and Continue Their Balloting. MISSIONARIES IN ANNIVERSARY MINISTERIAL DELEGATES. Rev. I B. Schreckengast, University Place. Rev. B. Hosman, Norfolk. Rev, 7. W. Embree, University Place. Rev. U. G. Brown, superintendent of the Omaha district. Although the state conference of Methodist laymen elected their dele- gates to the quadrennial general con- ference of the Methodist church on the first ballot Friday, the cbnfer- ence of ministers has failed on four ballots to give more than four andidates the mnecessary majority for election as ministerial delegates. Rev. Mr. Schreckengast and Rev. Mr, Hosman received the necessary majority on the first ‘ballot. The second ballot failed to elect any oth- ers, and on the third ballot only one minister, Rev, Mr. Embree, secured a majority. When the fourth ballot was counted, Rev, Mr. Brown was shown to have re- ceived a majority, and his name was added to those of the elected delegates. iive_more are yet to be chosen, and a fifth ballot was taken late Saturday aft- erhoon, but its result will not be an- nounced until Monday morning. The five unelected candidates who stood the highest on the last ballots were Rev. Titus Lowe of the First Methodist church, Omaha; Rev. J. R Gettys of University Place, Rov. M. B. Williams of Lincoln, Rev. G. W. 1s of Kearney and Rev. J. F. Boeye of Lin- coln. . Detached Bands 0f General Villa Yield to Carranza. LAREDO, Tex, Sept. %.—Many de- tached bands of Villa soldiers are sur- rendering to the Carranza forces march- ing against Torreon, it was reported to- day by General Alvaro Obregon to Car- ranss military authorities in Neuvo Dth: military advices indicated that the Carranza forces, advancing from three sides against Torreon would en- opunter resistance there, instead of find- previously reported. “WABHINGTON, Sept. 3—Thirty Der- {{|| DR, ROSOLVO BOBO, leader of the Haitian in- ||| surrectionists, who, it is believed, will soon come to a peaceful agreement with the American authorities now holding Port au ||| Prince. ma SUNDAY AND KING AK DIVIDE HONORS g 'w Wm'm..mf ”“O‘-- Fennetin Riddn, & sons are reported to have been killed | thousands of shots were fired in ts of Cananea, Mex., |Munhhomtlot:':kluml::‘e:yi forelgners appear to have | Deople may draw a house ot, oy Wm‘:fimlflmw‘vmnvhowlul;nl:! r _ suto-~ of the store t to, It raer: " i tor mmfi'm:‘vud filthy forces, which arrived at | lucre will have a small part in the pro- i “The Carransa “evacuated No leas than soventy-seven applications :vfillc ot x have been recelved by Charles Biack for that during Dassage apace in the Zeppelin. The Fair Amusement company of New York City engaged the tonneau, or whatever it " Is called, in the balicon for the purpose of dlstributing French soldier dolls, 100 + dispatches, at 7 o'clock In the same day. It is also reported the afternoon thousands of shots were fired in the streets and that thirty per- sons were killed. Thirty American women have left Cananes in automoblles for the §s of the United States and are consequently unbreakable. Parades will be a feature of the Ak- Sar-Ben. Théy will be more pretentious than ever before. The automoblle and motoreycle events will surpass anything contenders. Any bicycle, It decorated, will every budding. genius in the decorative way a chance to display his or her skill. HEach bleycle must be decorated, and when Dad Weaver says “decorated” it means Just what he says. | Arch ‘s New Idea. | — in new colors and gilding will (Correspondence of The Associated Pross.) | be an imposing spectacie, it 18 tn the form . Of & Moorish palace, with gargoyles sup- | porting vari-colored lights, a ocupola of imposing magnitude and seven gutes, the seven ages of man by Which each and every man, woman and = ] Weaver reports that the ! of M'lle Marie is absolutely certain. it by one thought, the people of oW at the Illinols state fair and neighborhood mounted imitation here Monday morning to erect her made of stovepipe on their house tops, Perpendicular track, around which she so that the whole district seemed to Will spced at a rate sald to exceed ninety Lristle with artillery. miles an hour, | Governor General von Bissing made the| Mlle Marie was decorated by President Jokers pay for thelr fun, however, at the Foincare at the Louvre palace, two years rate of 15 marks for each offense, The ' ®80 for saving the colors of the Chas- officlal announcement of the fine accused "¢Urs D'Afrique at Fashoda, but she will HINERS ASK JOHN D. 0 MEET THEM Invite Rockefeller to Discuss Prin- ciple of Contract Rela- ‘ tions. 1 i [HE REFUSES TO ~COMMENT | DENVER, Colo., Sept, 25.—An in- | vitation to John D. Rockefeller, jr., to meet representatives of | United Mine Workers of America | and establish contract relations in Colorado, “If he has the welfare of his employes at heart,” is contained in a formal statement given out to- day by Robert H. Harlin, Percy Tet- low and James F. Moran, committee- men representing the executive board of the miners’ or- ganization in Colorado. The committeemen recently came to Colorado vested with power to decide policles for the miners’ union In Colo- rado and take necessary steps to defend members in any legal proceedings. Their statement expresses tne opinion that | newapaper accounts of Rockefeller's tour {of mines in Bouthern Colorado “will create an erroneous impression in the minds of those unacquainted with exist- ing labor conditions” in those tields. It | recites that in calling the strike two | years ago the Colorado miners sought to | establish the “principle of contract rela- | tions between employer and employe by | collective bargaining; that to establish this principle recognition must be econ- ceded to & bona fide union of mine workers.'’ The statement then points out that the United Mine Workers of America la the only such bona fide organization of coal miners in the eountry and recognized by the American Federation of Labor. The committes takes issue with a pub- lished statement by Rockefeller that the Colorado Fuel and Iron company “does not care whether its employes are union men or not,’”' and says December, this company (Colorado Fuel and Iron ecompany) has steadfastly re- fused to re-employ men who are still afiillated with the union and we defy Mr. Rockefeller to produce from his en- tire working force in southern Coloradc, a dozen men who are members of the union.” The statemen says the “‘miners’” re- presentatives with whom Rockefeller has conversed in the coal camps do not re present the union (United Mine Workers of America), but an organization “created by the head officlals of the company and afterwards foisted upon the miners ‘““To demonstrate the impotency of such an organization to establisn ‘equitable conditions,’ . continued the statement, “we wish to point out that some few months ago the company en- forced a reduction .upon the miners of Fremont county of 10 cents per tom, notwithstanding the fact that the men had been asking for an Increase of prioss.” The statement saye that despite Rocke- feller's recent announcement, ‘“elght or nine hundred members of our orgmniza- [tion”” have been refuséd employment Ly the company, while others have been “discharged on some flimsy, trumped up pretext” and that the elements that led to the revolt of miners in southern Colo- rado still obtain.” Rockefeller Refuses Comment. ROCKVALE, Colo, Sept. 235.—~When of which will be thrown out on each Yohn D. Rockefellor, jr.'s attention was |Harry Douglass is being held for carry- | ascension. These dolls are the product °®lled to a Denver Dispatch stating that [ing concealed weapons, a committee, representing the Interna- tlonal executive committee of the United Mine Workers of America, would invite him to & conference with & view to en- However, 1 have not yet refused to meet anyone, and do not In- be welcomed in the line-up and this glves tend to refuse to meet anyone in the fu-| John Justic ture, ply." Mr. Rockefeller refused to comment on the charges of discrimination contained In the committee's statement. Talks with Unlon Miners. A conference on working conditions be- tween John D. Rockefeller, ir, and a §rievance representative who avowed himeelf a former striker and still a mem- ber of the United Mine Workers of Amer- ica, was an Incident of Rockefeller's wvisit to this camp. Rockvale is said by offi- clals of Colorado Fuel and Iron com- Pany to'be a strong, union camp and a center of soctalism among employes. As soon as Mr. Rockefeller reached Rockvale he hunted up the two miners’ representatives. Louis Carutti Was the first located. Some one asked Carutt! if he was & member of the United Mine Workers of America. “You bet I am" Carutt! replied, add- ing that he'went out on strike tn Sep- tember, 113, but went to farming and fecolved no benefits from the union. You may consider that as my re- the | | X-Ray Will Save Mankind from the | Great White Plague I PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Sept. 2%.—Phy- siclans who have spent years in the [-Iufly of tuberculosis declared today at | the closing session of the nth annual meeting of the American Assoclation of | { Clinical Research at the Hahnemann | Medical college, that the cure evol 'by Dr. Jetferson E. Gibson of Denver, | Colo., retiring president of the associa | tion, is one that in ten years ought to DPatch from Athens says: place tuberculosls among the relatively | non-fatal diseases, | Dr. Gibson mentioned the in his | address opening the meeting and Thurs- day and described it in detail in a paper at today's session. It provides a cure by |adding X-rays, ozone and static elec cure | MEETS WEDNESDAY I;BUL(}ARIAN ARMY MOBILIZING fricity to the climatic and dietetic treat- | | ment now common in tuberculosis hos- pitals. By this method, he claims, the (In healthy, robust persons even before the well known symptoms begin to form | and cures can be effected in advanced ' Out normally, but without cases In remarkably short time. In his paper today Dr. Gibson said: | “It might seem that I have allowed my | enthusiasm to run away with me In atudying this cure, but I think a feeling of gratification, at least, is justified when | T say that out of 767 cases thus treated there have been ofily sixty-one deaths. | T wish to state now with emphasis that | emancipation of the human race from this dreadful scourge. In a few years, when the method {s better developed, it will be a disgrace for a physician to allow & case of tuberculosis of any kind to progress to an advanced atage, be | cause the X-rays even now find the in- ciplent tendencies, even before the symp- toms form.” The following officers were elected. President, Dr. Coleman, New York: first vice president, Dr. Willlam B. Snow, New York; mecond vice president, Dr. Leon T. Ashcraft, Philadelphia. Dr. Kraues of Boston s the permanent Secretary. Alaska Racing Dogs Sold to France for Service in the Alps NOME, Alaska, Sept. % .—Sportsmen here were lamenting today the sale yes- terday of 10 of the best racing dogs in Alaska to the French government for army service in the Alps. A. A. (Scotty) Altan, the noted racing dog driver, will accompany the dogs to France. The team owned by Allan and Mrs, Charles E. Darling of Berkeley, Cal, was Included In the sale, It consists of sixteen malamutes and is one of the most valuable teams in the north, being twice winner of the famous 412-mile all- Alaska sweepstakes race. They are part setter, with a strong wolf strain. Allan has been recognized as an author- international ' presence of the disease can be detected | the X-ray will finally bring about the ! erally belleved in official struggle oventually Wetween Greece Bulgaria cannot be avolded Mobilization is under w t ircles that a and | 'GREEK PARLIAMENT day, pro- ceeding quietly. The people are bewllde ered, not knowing whither it may lead. ¢ | through a severe iliness, is indispc and ‘It is Generally Expected that a State | iy conferences with Premier Venizelos of Siege Will Be Declared | have been postponed for a day. ! in Macedonia. | Bulgarian Army Mobilized. —— | WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—American | | Minister Vopica at Bucharest, also ac- | credited to Bulgaria, telegraphed the | ‘S!n!" department today that Bulgaria's ROME, Sept. 25.—A Havas dis-| mobliization had been officlally an- | nounced “Parliament will be called upon at | STROMSBURG HAS OIL SCARE | | its session next Wednesday not only | [ to proclatm martial law, but to vote| THAT PROVES TO BE GASOLINE upon declaring a state of slege In| oipnoyenirRG, Neb., Sept (Spe Macedonia and other measures the| cial)-stromsburg citizens were excited situation may demand. | this week by the report that a strike of “The National bank will advancel ol had been made alonz Prairle creek fands s t th a | They began to buy up options oh land in unds to meet the Preseat needs. the vicinity, when It was discovered that ‘It 1s reported from Sofia that Bul- |some boys had salted the ground by garian mobilization {s being carried | pouring liberal quantities of gasoline over enthus- the mud, which made fine spurts of flame ; when ignited. fasm Parents Take Body. CEDAR FALLS, Ia., Sept. %.—(Special | Telegram.)—C. W. Canfield of Atlantic, Ia., arrived today, accompanied by two | of his brothers, to take the body of his | Expeet War with Bulgaria. ATHENS (Via Paris), Sept. 25.—Great rellef has been caused throughout Greece by the order calling tor the mobilization of the army, The people apparently are glad to exchange the uncertainties of pol- | son, Roy Canfleld, to Atlantic, Sunday | sured clear title to the land regardless itics for the possibility of war, It is gen- | morning, where burial will be made. | of the court's decision. (5 R || - rfl cooleoalnan flfinflnu ooo Uunfluuuumflmnwfl“mflm[flnflmfln ooonlooo 21 llgl Sll — \ R — T S T ) = g =) s [THOMPSON, bELDEN E L] TE : : : ] =82 | A Silk Special|, The Fashion Center &= A large selection of T striped messalines in hair & SHC | Yine.and ‘the ‘more pro- Middle -=::1 nonnced stripes, all the With il 5 'lg new fall colors. Regular it -t,he arriyal of meg | $1.00 qualities; Monday— the equinox we step —3 . B TE into Autumn. The .-_LE 59C a yard bright, cool, pleasaut .lé T days of a Nebraska E New Kimono | railare before us. 1t 885 | Silks and Satins | ic a time of clothes =] . =IS If you haven’t geen these | Preparation. — Our Fashion Se:- vice hasbeen busy for new arrivals you should do o Monday. The section of the ity iIn the melection of dogs. When Vilh- Jalmur Stefansson, the Canadian Arctic explorer, was outfitting in Nome two years ago, he commissioned Allan to se- lect the dogs for the expedition. Eight Men Shot in Fight at Akron, 0. AKRON, 0., Sept. %.—As the result of an argument, eight men were shot In a street fight here early today. Paul Har- kins, 19, a rubber worker, is under ar- rest, charged with shooting to kill, and tive patterns. goudocouoeolooo The police claim Harkins, Douglass and another man engaged in & loud argument which developed into a free-for-all fight, attracting a crowd. Harkins, the officers basement of & house where Harkins had barricaded himself. 45, was the most geriously wounded. He lost an eye and has a bul- let in his head. ~~— D0 YOU NEED is now complete and offers « fine selection of distine- The Store for Shirtwaists Noted for the newness of its blouse styles which are constantly changing— $4.50 to $16.50 Redfern Corsets In the Newest Models for Fall months searching the style centers in order to present the most choice Fashionable Apparel to the wo- men of this commun- ity. We Present our Offering Confident of your Approval Suits—$25, $35, $45 Dresses—$19.50, $25, $35 Coats—$14.50, $19.50, $25 Skirts—$6.75, $8.75, $10.50 000 Canfleld was killed in the automobile races here Friday afternoon when in the twenty-first lap hia car lost & tire and went over the embankment Eighteen Attorneys Are Charged with ° Misuse of Mails SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Sept. % Three San Franclsco attorneys were arrested today under a blanket federal indictment charging eighteen California and Oregon attorneys and land agents with using the mails to forward a fraud ulent scheme. They are charged with traudulently inducing persons to file on alternate sections of land along the Southern Pacific rallroad from the southern state line of Oregon to Bugene Ore. The attorneys, Franklin P. man B. Cook and W, A, were released on $2,000 bonds. The land involved was the government grants which had stipulated it should be sold to settlers at $250 an acre. It was withdrawn from settlement. The supreme court of the United States recently held that the railroads interested in the fand was limited to $2.50 an acre and that the®™ Increased value belonged to the govern- ment. The attorneys are charged with repregenting that purchasers were as- Bull, Nor- 8, Nicholason, West 0oofjooopoon fl 000fjo00f000 S=m =l Bl p- 14 HELP= FOR THE APPETITE FOR THE DIGESTION FOR THE LAZY LIVER - FOR CLOGGED BOWELS g g HOSTETTER'S To —_———— Commencing Sunday Sep- EENRENU T L Ll e L L L LR L L S e L L L L L T LT Street Car Patrons the jokers of maopting method of ralllery which could only bo disastrous e excellent relations exisiting be- iween the civil population and the a (horities.” Champion British Shot Killed in France LONDON, Sept.25.—Lieutenant A. N. V, H. Ommundsen of Flinburgh, Scotl champlon shot of the British empire, is reported 1o ‘have been killed while fgnt- ing tn Flanders. Lieutenant Ommundsen was winner of ihe chief prizes at the shooting tourneys Bisley, England, Including the took at the meet. Rifle association in member of the In- i..*}:r i : i i ke Al i‘;i r}!‘ i i g il ' be seen In & more sensational act than | #Ven war can produce, when she rides the perpendicular wall of the ‘Wortham uman silo. x te Arrive, Bome of Wortham's animals are now n the city, a pack of African lions, five in number, came In last night and were sent by Dad Weaver to Louls Nash' wood farm, Dad wadvg nerves of his friends, “Kareless" Kennedy, In his death defying, the acme of human ner wizard of the air hair ralsing aot, ve and endurance from the top of the City National bank is known as the most reckless of all per- ment GERMAN SAVINGS BANK THREATENS DEPOSITORS | : E £ 14 t;g < £ ] £ i H Figis i ! ; | ; it i : 11 : i | | ! e ) 5 being considerate of the Will twice each day make his siide for lite| 10 the roof of the Savoy hotel. Kennedy| | & veritable wonder of the amuse- Bishop Kephart Talk_s_to Pastors YORK, Neb., Sept. B—~(Special Tele- gram.)—The fifth day's session of the conference of the United Brethren church Wwas glven over largely to devotional services conducted by Rev, B, T. Wag- ner. Reports of committees on policy and distributions of the reports were also |made. Bishop Kephart delivered an ad- The conference closes Sunday- when Blshop Kephart will deliver the confer- " S e | SPECIAL RESERVATIONS FOR TRAVELING. MEN |dress on the “Minlstry of the Church.” | STOMACH BITTERS It is a tonis, a nd stom- I*Mdl‘mm'. merit GET THE GENUINE 2SR 325 7552525252520 25 2R S Safe Diabetes Remedy In @labetes the nutrition is impaired ~—this results in an excess of sugar in the blood, and the 'fallure of the food to nourish, hence a gradual wasting away while eating well. Symptoms of this disease are in- creased thirst, excess of urine, ema- clation and dry skia often with sweei- I.h“lodh:'d. Glabetes and &t was given up by all doctoi ol Sectesn of my town. 1 gers. 5252525252525 EXTaTiTaT tember 26th, the near stop will be cars will again stop at the far side of street intersections to take on and discharge passen- OMAHA & COUNCIL BLUFFS STREET RAILWAY COMPANY. LTIl T = side discontinued, and | Respectfully,

Other pages from this issue: