Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 20, 1915, Page 1

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News Section PAGES ONE TO TWELVE VOL. XLV-—NO. HILLSTROM TIES DOOR OF GELL AND ATTACKS GUARDS Murdrer of John G. Morrison is Ex-| eouted in the Utah Peniten- tiary at Salt Lake City for His Crime. ASSERTS INNOCENCE TO END Prisoner Rallies After Making As- sault on Guards Who Took Him to Prison Yard. ALLEGED ALIBI IS DISREGARDED ** SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 19— Joseph Hillstrom was executed by shooting here today for the murder of John G. Morrison, a grocer, and his son, Arling, who were killed in Morrison's store, January 10, 1914, Hillstrom's case attracted wide at- tention, having been once reopened by the pardon board at the request of President Wilson on behalf of the Swedish minister. A second request for fruther con- sideration, made by the president, was declined yesterday by Governor Willfam Spry, supported by the par- don board, on the ground that it would be an unwarranted interfer- ence with justice. “Fire! Let her go!" were Joseph Hill- sirom's last words, uttered an instant be- fore the rifles of the firing squad ended his lite at 7:41 o'clook this morning. Al- though he was self-possessed and as- sorted his innocence when he faced his executioners, Hillstrom had a sensational nervous collapse just previously when he tled the Aocor of his cell'at the state prison with strips torn from his blankets and fought the guards fiercely with the handle of a broom he had snatched from an attendant in the corridor. Ties Door of Hillstrom's outburst was unexpected, He retired calmly last night and remained apparently in sleep until early this morn- ing. He arose about 4 o'clock and began to shake the cell door, shrieking as if in & nightmare. The noise reached the out- side guards, who turned in a general elarm, bringing all the prison officers to the scene. The prison physician endeav- ored, with alight success, to quiet him. decided not. te interfere with him until necessary, and he was not distufbed until the time arrived to take him to the scene of the % When the guards Cell, Hillstrom to\uht | broken in two, lnflnl al sharp p“nz on one plece. The officers | tried vainly to get him out of the cell without disturbance, Depity Warden A. C. Ure receiving a slight wound In the arm from Hillstrorp's weapon in the proc- | ess, Hillstrom fought silently un.l hh!fl" J. 8. Corless, for whom he had prn‘\lol.hdy manifested high regard, arrived and le pealed to him, Sheriff Quiets Prisoner. ““Joe, this is all nonsense’ sald Corless. “What do you mean? You promised to| die like a man." Hillstrom Hesitdted a moment and then ylelded. “Well, I'm through,” he said. “But you can't blame a man for fight- | ing for his lite." The blanket strips he had tled to the "™ door were cut, he was blindfolded and led to the place of execution, sup- ported by two guards. He talked ince santly in the few moments that elapsed | between the time of his arrival and the firing of death volley. He asked whether any of his friends were in the firing | squad and kept saying he was innocent | and would dig like & man. His voice was clear, but low. He was quickly adjusted | to the death chalr, and, as the attendants drew aside, Hillstrom straightened him- self in the chair and said “Tll dle like @ man. I never did any wrong in my life, I die fighting, not like a coward. Well I'm golng. Good-bye everybody.” The word to fire was given and the re- ports of the rifles came an instant after | Hillstrom's final words “Let her go!” He died instantly. Hillstrom wore his prison suit. A dark suit had been obtained for him, but the (Continued on Page Two, Column One.) The Weather Fore cast till 7 p. m.,, Friday: For Omaha, Counecil Bluffs and Vicinity ~—Fair, no important change in tempera- Temperature at Omaha Yesterday. Hours. Dev. 113 . a B a a EEBexaane seeEy o carens Comparative Local Record, 1915, 1914. 1913, mz W Gt B | N 49 Highest yesterday ...... xl 1 00 | Lowest yesterday Mean temperature Precipitation w ou w0 rl‘lurfl and D"d lur.l rom the normal: 30 1 0 L 204 | 03 inch | .68 inch 2.74 inches 1.87 inches 363 inches | 1% In(‘hel ney since March 1. precipitation Deficlency for the day Total rainfall since Marc Deficlency since March jency for cor. period, Deflelency for cor. peri Beports from Stations at tion and State 1'. up. Hi S Weather, S "g‘:fl Cheyenne, part tloudy 00 | Davenport, cloudy ..., 4 Denver, part cloudy Jes Moines, cloudy City, clear. part cloudy R T negugsl .w 133. L8 \Senator Weeks in pitation depar- ' { his train stopped, Wy OMAHA, SATURDAY \l( )1 ANING, NOVEMBER 20, HOLY CARPET LEAVING CATRO FOR MECCA—The r=, cent declaration by the Moslems of war against the 2% attributed in large part to the recent religig which have been taking place throughow hammed. The principal feature was e Holy Carpet from Cairo to Mecca. Ph eye-view from the citadel, Cairo, of the just before the procession started. K L udows a bird's. ‘eat square below - ‘QIEW SHRINERS BOW|YEISER NOW FILES KT'THEIR"TEMPLE THOMPSONS NAME One: Hundred and Ten Masons Who' Omaha Lawyer Wonld Put Name of Take Thirty-Se¢ond Degree Are Mayor of Chicago on Pri- " Initiated Into Order. “mary Ballot. . BIG BALL IS HELD AT NIGHT WITHJ)MWS PETITION. FOR T. R Yesterday was a, busy day with the | (From a_ Staff Correspondent.) !nobles of Tangier Temple, Anclont.l LINCOLN, Nev. 19.—(Special Tel- {Order of the Mystic Shrine, a side 'egram.)—-A petition plgned by John | \l’ellure that all Masons who hav {passed the thirty-second degrée are |the secretary of state this afternoon | permitted to njoy. It was th occasion {placing the name of Mayor Willlam {of the ceremonial that follows the]flllfl Thompson of Chicago in nomi- { semi-annual meeting of the Scottish |nation for a place on the primary Rite and the Rork Rite Masonic ,hullot for the republican nomination lodge. |for the presidency. | The fall meeting of the Scottish | The petition recites that there are | Rite Masonic lodge closed Thursday (none more worthy. for recognition \nllht and the 110 men who took the |than Mayor Thompson and that his I thirty-second degree were initiated |rcord for law enforcement makes him | {into the mysteries of the ShrineJjust the man for the presidéncy. yesterday. Besides these, there Mr, Yeiser agked for permission to \are a large number who took the de- | withdraw. the petition filed by him !gree at the Scottish Rite meeflnglln 1012, -for- Theodore Roosevelt, ilast spring, together with a lot of bhaving become evident that Mr. York Rite Masons who were here now | Roosevelt’s idea on the war situation | ! ple and learn the secrets of Shrine- |Dbis petition signers. | dom, Twenty-elght signed the Thompson The work of getting ready for the petition, among them L. V. Guye, J. |for initiation started at 10:% o'clock in the morning when the candidates appeared at the Masonic Temple, Sixteenth Street and Capitol avenue, where they were passed upon by the committee to which their credentials had been turned over. Later in the forenoon they paid in thelr dues and were given some instructions | relative to their behavior at the initla- tion ceremonies at the Auditorium, |Frank A. |and O. P. Harrison E. B, Mockett Stewart of Lincoin. Perkins Says Bull Moose Must Have a Initiation at Auditorium. The premliminariés having been dis-| CHICAGO, Nov. 19.—George W. Perkins, posed of, the candidates were turned!conferring here today with local leaders loose with instructions to be at the Au-|of the progressive party, sald that *the ditorfum promptly at 2:30 o'clock in the | progressfve party must and will have a afternoon. In the meantime the interlor of |netional ticket in the fleld in 1916." the Auditorium had been converted Into| Mr. Perkins, who is national chairman a well appointed lodge room, the lower of the party, will make an address at floor having been fitted up for the ordeal | Kansas City tomorrow and will attend of torture and team work, with the gal- |a “conférence of party leaders in the lery arranged for Shriners who might ! same city. come as spectators KANEAS CITY, Mo, Nov. 19.—Th At the appointed future of the progressive party in Mu | souri, probably will depend on the action to be taken at a meeting of party leaders | from all parts of the state to be held here tomorrow. Delegates began arriving | tonight and parties from St. Louls, Joseph, Joplin, Springleld and several other of the larger cities are expeoted | tomorrow. All day confer eon in honor of George W New York, cha'rman of the | executive committee has been arranged Crack Women Bowlers of Omaha Whothey are and how hour, properly pre- {Continued op - age Four, olumn One.) Omaha; Possibility For Presidency Another presidential possiblity stopped | off in Omaha yesterday, but only while | in the person of Sen- ator John W. Weeks of Massachusetts. | Mr. Weeks was accompanied by Chair- | man Thurston of the Massachusetts state | comittee, who is carrying with him the! honors of successtully maneging the cam- | paign that resulted in the magnificent republican victory two weeks ago. They | are on the way to Denver, where the Senator speaks today, having been the gust of th Hamilton club, in Chicago, { Thursday. Snaor Weeks was met at the| | O.. Yelser, and others was filed with | to become members of Tangler Tem- [are not met with favor of Yeiser and | Shrine ceremonial, which is another name ' C,, Travis, and others of Omaha, and | Ticket the Next Yea,r.‘ ot | # including a lunch- | Perking of | national | b ’ ATHENS 1915—-TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. .| ""PROFESSOR” IS HISSED BY VILLA ATU.S. PRESIDENT Rebel Chieftain Declares Carranca’ Has Deivered Mexican Re- pubiic Into Hands of the Americans, I | | b | | | ‘COUNTRY CAN'T BE PACIFIED | Pxoclmntmn Alscrts Wilson Vio-! lates Sovereignty of Texas, Ari- zona and New Mexico. jTYRANN’Y OF YANKEE REPUBLIC = NOGALES, Ariz, Nov. 19.—A proclamation, attributed to Francisco Villa by Carlos Randall, acting gov- | ernor of Sonora, issued by Randall denounces President Wilson, the United States government and Car- ranza. It refers to President Wilson | as an ‘“‘evangelistic professor philosophy.” It says Carranza | delivered the people of Mexico into | “Yankee hands.” capital of Sonora, has been in progress since late yesterday, according to ad- vices received at Nogales, Sonora, op- | posite_here, by Villa officlals. It was | also claimed that General Obregon, the Carranza leader. was repulsed in an| Imm(zurrmenl near Cananea. | Randal!l declared at his headquarters | {in Mexican Nogales that dispatches ro ceived by him today indicated that Gen | eral Obregon had heen completely routed in the fighting north of Cananea. Throe | hundred Carranza dead were left on tha ‘bl\“ll‘fll‘ld, according to these reports. Hermonilto Sarrounded, General Villa possibly Is directing the attack on the garrison of General Diegues | at Hermostllo, Governor Randall stated, and messages from him sald that the lelty was completely surrounded. Villa officlals wero reported here to have confiscated a conslgnment of cop- per, sald to be valued at approximately $500,000, which arrived at Nogales, | Sonora, today from the mines of the Cananea Consolldated Copper company. One elderly woman was shot by soldiers at Nognles, Sonora, during a celebration last night, during which shouts of “Viva Carranza” were sald to have been made ‘by the soldlers. No one was arrested by the Villa authorities. “Evangellstic Professor' The Villa proclamation was published and posted in Nogales, Sonora. ‘Tt de- clares Mexico: eannat be pacified by ICarranza ! because the people will not |mccept a government forced upon them by the United States, | The proclamation is addressed to my compatriots and the people of the United States,” and reads.in part: “The tyrahny of the northern re- !public places me in a position in which {1t 1s necessary to make known the facts. “We went to the Washington peace !conference in good faith and with the noblo hope, of terminating the war and | (finding an henorable and lasting peace. “Phe Mexican people cannot be con-| Idated by the Carransa government | sol bec Wilson. Dellvered to Yankees. “Carranza practically delivered the en- tiro republic into the hands of the| Yankees, "I declare 1 have much to be thankful | to Mr. Wilson for because he has relieved | me of the obligation of giving guaran- | tes to forélgners,” especlally those who | {were once free citizens, but now are vassals of & professor of philosophy who | has trampled the independence of a free people and violated the soverelgnty of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, by letting their soil be crossed by Carranze troops.” Gets Carrnnsa Messages, EL PASO, Tex., Nov, 19—Villa offl- clals at Juarez sald today their wireless plant had interrupted wireless communi- cation between General Obregon's head- quarters at Naco and General Dieguez at Hermistllo, i { operator in Juarez had ben copying the Carranza communications and the latter officlals discontinued the use of their plant when it became known that Villa wag receiving them. the entente allinnce are being made by Great Britain, France and Russia, with a view to prevent- possible friction between Japan and China and preserving the pemce of the far east, 4t has in Washington. ot be expected to participate in the present war. | VENICE HAS AGA official report t bombs | were successfully dropped by = seaplane squadron on forts in the burbs, the enal, the aviation station, barracks, wes work @ rallway statlo units returned sately. TEUTONIO ALLIE 5,000 a announce captured | Serblans, Beriin | DISPATCHENS est | that more t 50,000 Bulgnrians | mre facing 50,000 Serblans in the Monastir reglon in o Serbl GERMAN AEROPLANE squadron af- b en Pop- six miles from Ypres, in {ITALIANS ARE PRE campaign agal reporting = ment in this sone of operation thelr Rome of | has | The battle for possession of Hermonsillo, | ause “they will hot”accept a govern-| ment forced up on them by Woodrow| 1t was explained that a Villa wireless | EFFORTS TO INCLUDE CHINA in| All the ralding| Woman Novelist Takes Poison in Court When She 1, L you yuu were trylng a women for life; T have taken enough poison to kill ‘"\l\ people,” was the dramatic exclams {tion made by the woll known novellst | Miss Annesley Kenealy, as she threw upon the floor a bottle, the contents |of which she haa swallowed hearing the court pronounce against her, Miesa Kenealy and oarried unconsclous the emergency ward of the court house Later she was removed to the hospital, where the doctors belleve she has o chance to recover Miss Kenealy's suit, which has | before the court for some days, claim for dnml\}.rl against Nov d, 1wl just on Judgement | immediately collapsed was to been was a 10 CONSERVE THE NEBRASKA WATERS| | Big Meeting to Be Held Monday at| the Commercial Club at Luncheon, | i | GOV. MOREHEAD IS TO SPEAK | Another and determined effort is !to be made to get the federal gov- ernment interested in a project conserve the waters of western Ne- braska for use in moistening the igoll for crop purposes and at the !nme time to keep the water from |flooding the lower rivers. A big meeting of all men inter- ested is called for Monday noon at the Commercial club. It will be in |the form of a public affairs lunch- |eon’ of the club, while Governor |John H. Morehead and ex-Mayor C. |W. McConaughy of Holdrege are to i-pnk. | The countfes in which it was first pro- posed to begin this work in Nebraska {are Kearney, Gosper and Phelps. It in {ll proposed to make the first experi ment in this line in these three counties. do Hold Flood Waters, |of the state as well ae ars interested in the movement because they feel it would mean blgger and bet- ,ter cropa for t weotions in which ‘the {flood waters codld be conserved in this way, while at the same time the hold- ing of these flood waters would go a long way toward preventing floods in the lower Missouri and Miselssippl rivers, The plan fs that this scheme should {bs worked out in various counties and |In_various states evemtwally on n very |large scale. Of course, a conservation of the flood waters of two or three coup« tles would not prevent floods, but it is belleved by competent engineers that such conservation of the, waters in the seml-arid counties on a very large scalo | {covering a great area of a half dosen | or more states, would not only insure better orops in those regions, but would be a positive factor in helping to pre- jvent the great floods that each year |devastate the lower Mississippl valley. Endorsed By Cou It is for this reason {assumes interstate, or national impor- tance. It {s for this reason that an effort is made to get federal ald on the matter. The Commerclal club of Omaha last summer indorsed the stand taken |by Gosper, Phelps and Kearney counties |on the matter and lent its moral sup- port to a movement to get part of the | waterways appropriation of the federal | government for such a scheme. The meeting Monday in Omaha is to other big booster meeting along this line, and proper representations are |again to be made to the mext congress. ;Chaplain Reany, Athletic Leader of | the Navy, is Dead NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—Rev Father Willlam Henry Ironsides Reaney, chap- ain of the United States navy with the rank of captain, who died here last night, | was often calied the father of boxing in the United States navy. He also in- troduce other athletic sports among the sallors. The story 1s told | feated Tom Bharkey, welght pugulist, | the plan that he once de- the sailor heavy when Sharkey’'s conduct | at service on board ship displeased the | ~ | chaplan. Father Reaney spent the greater part of his more than twenty years of service at sea, and was chaplain of Admiral Dewey's flagship, the Olympia, in the battle of Manila bay.His last post at a was on board the battleship Utah His body will be taken to Detroit for burial. IS FOUND IN DAZED CONDITION AND SOON DIES SPRINGFIELD, Neb., Nov, 19.—Fred | Brislow, teamster employed by Charles Thompson, an Omaha contractor who is {bullding @ bridge mear here, dled sud- denly this afternoon near here. Heo was coming frem Millard with a load of lumber and was found near the cemetery {by Fred Grossman, acting in a dazed manner and barely consclous. Grossman { went to get help and when he returned |a few minutes later Brislow was dead Nothing 1s known here of his family or connections. The coroner took charge of the body and will take It to Papillion where an inquest will be held | Tommrrow the Best Colored Comics a wholesale | to | Business men and farmers in that part | business men | of Omaha and other citiew in the state | Loses Damage Suit book distributing firm for alleged false and malic statements defamitory of her book. The defendants refused to elr- clate the bock as they alleged it con- | d a libel on & fashionable west end dressmaker whose were do- | scribed as a gambllog den. Miss Ke- nealy averred that the action of defendants deprived her of a livelthood | | a8 publishers now refuse accept her | book ! | Miss Kenealy and her sister, Arabelia, | | are daughters of the late Edward V. H Kenealy, who, In 1573 was the leading | council tor the claimant In the notorious | Tichborne trial Miss Kenealy consclousness this afternoon and was sald to be out of danger. “BLUE SKY’ LAW OF SOUTH DAKOTA YOID Fedenl Judges Sanborn, Munger and Elliot Declare Act Unconstitutional. STATE LIKELY WILL SIOUX FALLS, 8. D, Nov, 19— Federal Judges Sanborn of Minne- {sota, Munger of Nebraska and EI-/ lott of South Dakota, who yesterday |heard arguments on a case involving |the constitutionality of the new blue |sky law of SBouth Dakota, today filed an opinion holding that the law was unconstitutional, The case was Instituted by Wil- “Mam and Harry Morley of Sioux City, | father and son, who were arrested at | Parker, 8. D., on the charge of sell- »ing stock of a Sloux Falls stock yards ‘ company without having first secured authority to do so from the state of- ticers, as required by the provisions of the law, It isexpected the state will appeal | |the case to the United States supreme court, Court in Schmidt Case Excludes Post Explosion Evidence LOS ANGELES, Osl, Nov. 18--Judge Frank R, Willls, presiding in the trisl of Mathew A. Schmidt, charged with the. murder of the victims explosion five yoars ago, ruled today that the prossow- tion could not introduce evidenck. * Ing the McNamara dyn lpimy which related to the events tal prem ses the recovered APPEAL | | | | | Jmnkv‘ a successtul |small portion of thelr country, as ths FRENCH 0CCUPY POINT ON FLANK OF BULGARIANS Britons Hope that the Invaders Will Not Dare to Extend Their Line Further Toward the Oity of Monastir. SERB POSITION IS PRECARIOUS They May Be Able to Make a Stand and Retain Control of Small Section of Their Country. ALLIES RUSH MORE MEN TO EAST BULLETIN, LONDON, Nov. 19.—A dispatch |from Rome to the Exchange Tele- graph company says a telegram to the Tribuna from Athens states that the Bulgarians have occupled Monastir and that the Serbians are in full re- treat. NULLETIN, SALONIKI, Nov. 18.—(Via Paris, Nov. 19,)—Field Marshal Barl Kitchener, the British secretary for war, today conferred with General Sarrall, commander-in-chief of the French army of the Orlent, and left immediately without debarking. LONDON, Nov. 19,—The fate of Monastir {8 not yet known definitely, but there is little hops in England that it will escaps the Bulgarians. There is a possibility, however, that the invaders will not dare to make such an extension of their line, with the French apparently established o their flank. Left In the dark as to the actual | progreas of the Anglo-French in the near east, the British can only hope the entente allies soon have such strong forces there that they will enabje the harassed Serblans to and and preserve a Pelgians did along the Yser. Some sub- stance is given this hope by unofficlal news that the Anglo-French force is now assuming formidable proportions, as well as by hints that Italy is on the verge of ‘jactual participation in the Balkan eam- palgn. The retreat by the Serblans toward the Albanian border is ocausing inerease. uneasiness at ...iens, but the develop- ments there are Interpreted as being not unfavorable to the oceurnd After the blowing up of the Times bullding. The rullng, however, did not exclude books and papers and | [ hotel registers by which the prosecution | expects to connect Schmidt with the Mo- Namara brothers and Ortle B, McMani- Igal in thelr dynamiting operations prior |to_October 1, 1910. The defense opposed today the intro- duction, of photographs of James B. Mc- Namara and his brother, John J., former | secretary of the International Associa- tlon of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, by which the district attorney hoped to have witnesses fdontify the two | men, Counsel for Schmidt insisted that ! the proper way to procure identification was to bring the two concessed dyna- miters from San Quentin prison and have them presented in court. Judge Willls resorved decision, but Ppublioc {8 convinoed closer unity will vall herewfter in' the 'operations of t allled armies and floets. Little news comes from thé ecastern fromt, in addition to the reports that a German attack south of Riga has been repulsed and that ‘Austro-Gérman at- tempts to cross the Styr river in Galicla have been resumed. Serblans Are Retreating. PARIS, Nov. 19.—The Salontki dispatch announcing the general retreat of the Berbs on the mouthwestorn front after the capture of Babuna pass by the Bul- |gars is without offictal confirmation, says !a Havas dispatch from Athens gfled yes- |terday. The only fact established s the evacuation of Prilepe by the Serbs.' Thy bandonment of Babuna been Further objections by the defense were encountered when the prosecution placed | on the stand as the first witness today ' August Braun, a hotel proprietor of Mun- | cle, Ond., Braun was called upon to iden- ' tify a hotel register showing signatures at the time Ortle E. McManigal 1s alleged to have met James B. McNamara, expecteq in Athens military circles for several days, as it was not considered posaible for the Serbs, notwithstanding their herolo defense, to resist longer re- peated Bulgarian attacks, especially as |they threatened envelopment by a move- ment from Tetovo and Kitseve. The Serblans probably will retire to the helghts between Prilepe and Monastir, the inhabitants of which are taking refuge in Albanlan and Greek territory. Large Chinese Smugglers Spend Million to Get Men Into U .8.! SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 19.—The whole- |sale entry of contraband Chinese into this port and the alleged expenditure in this connection of over $,000000 formed the substance of a report by John A. Preston, United States district attorney, and now in the hands of the federal grand jury, according to articles printed in San Fran- cisco newspapers todsy. The report, the nowspapers say, was made in connection with the investigation now being conducted into the alleged con- nection of government officers with a re- cent frustrated attempt to land contra- band Chinese from the liner Mongolis, and the reported landing of twenty others belleved to have been smuggled from the vessel before immigration officlals mearched the ship and found elghty-six orientals hidden upon |t. W, H. Tidwell, special agent of the |treasury department, s reported to have supplied the grand jury with documentary | evidence showing that within the last two years he had repeatedly warned the im- migration authoritics of afleged iax meth- |ods which “left San Francisco open as a | Buteway to contraband Chinese in num- bers from one to fifty on every passenger | vessel arriving from the orlent.” {Germans Take Five Thousand Serbians BERLIN, Nov. 19.—(By Wireless to Say- ville)~The capture of 5,00 Serblans was | announced by the war office today. {UNITARIANS TO HOLD A SPECIAL MEETING SUNDAY A speclal meeting of the congregation' | of the First Unitarian church of Omaha, will be held Sunday, at 1030 & m., in wllllllnn by President Harry 8. Byrne of | \(ha McKinley club and Victor Rosewater, of the Bee, and indicated his desire to m:w an invitation to spesk in Olnohl .no around the holidays, if arrangements can be perfected and made to fit in with other speaking dates. rt cloudy ity, cloudy.. chnr - sxm:saeé ll’.(‘ 0‘ pres |D“I((0fl WELSH, Local ‘}nmuw l | they look in action de~ picted in a fine illustrat~ ed feature story. Read The Sunday Bee ITALIAN OFFICIAL REPORT on the nking of the liner Ancons, out- 1o & Naples dispateh, asserts that the stonmship was fired upon that the while they | | ~with— The Sunday the Parish house, 428 North Fortieth street. The purpose of the meeting is to consider a general plan of re-organiza- tion. The meting that was to have been held at Turpin's hall. Sunday, November numbers have arriveq at Florina, Greece, {but the more well-to-do are going to Saloniki. The military governor of Monastir is reported to have appointed a committee e e (Continued on Page Two, Column Twe.) THE WANT AD WAY 'nl bave & big surprise. 'Illfls it .%::."‘E':.. lfinu'fl-m-mn-luu Omaha this year ay to resch uhvl your R-l }hr fo’ advertise it in the Mfl BALE COL! of 2 3o by by _“_.fl

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