Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 28, 1915, Page 1

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News Section PAGES ONE TO TWELVE THE OMAHA SUNDAY Bi THE WEATHER. Fair e ————— VOL. XLV--NO. 24, ) E—— e OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER SIX SECTIONS—FORTY-FOUR PA( SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. FREIGHT BOUND FOR EUROPE IS BLOCKING ROADS Cars Loaded with Material for Old Lands Strung Over Terminals of All Railways at New York. : NOT SHIPS ENOUGH READY Lackawanna Congested with This Shipping a¢ Far West g Scranton. GTHER SYSTEMS ARE TIED UP| NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—ThesDela- ware, Lackawanna & Western rail- | road, whose lines are choked as far back as Scranton with loaded freight cars it cannot move, today instructed its agents to accept no more freight for export until further notice. | More than 6,000 loaded cars from | the west, all containing grain, feed, flour, copper and hundreds of other | commodities, have virtually turned | SR T LD TIRRD OUT " BY LONG CAMPAIGN Some of the cars have been here for | (flshly days. { Evangelist Asks Trenton Date Be Put Off Week to Permit Cars Are Everywhere. Inquiry at other rallroad offices de- veloped that nearly every road with a terminus here is glutted, with freight cars standing loaded and idle on sidings for hundreds of miles back along the line and that other roads would follow the Lackawanna's lead shortly. Him Rest. For months New York, mouth of the bottle through which pours the great bulk of America’s export trade, has been clogged with freight in excess of the! S 7o = wcilities of the steamship companies at-| SYRACUSE, N. Y., Nov. 27.—The empting to handle it. The movement of | girajn of the Syracuse campaign is the big cereal crops and the unpreced- | R 2 ented demand In Europe for copper, stecl | telling upon “Billy” Sunday and the and other metals used in warfare has famous evangelist today was forced swollen exports within the past sixty |, request permission of the Trenton days to figures undreamed of before, ID | sug . October alone exports to the value of | (- J.) Evangelistic assoclation to approximately $175,000,00 left New York Postpone the start of his campaign on 398 ships. |in that city for one week. Purpose of Check, The intervals between the close of The temporary check to the incoming (he Jocal battle for souls and the Ude 1s for the purpose, it was sald to-| o 0oy gate will be January 2, day of enabling the steamship compa- R nies o catch up in part with tho tratsic |1916. Dr. Clarence Menton, chair- and to permit the railroads to clear their 'man of the Trenton association, con- ings. The TLacka- ferred with Sunday here on the “that shipments billed | (oo e November 27 will be |~ plang for future revivals were well urk { der way today. A New York delegation, headed by Rev. C. L. Goodell of St. Paul's Mecthodist church, will come here next Tngsday to arrange for Sunday's visit to that city. The campalgn wiil probably | onén there early in the fall of 1917, fol- lowing Chicago and Minneapolis meet- ings, and services will be held in Madison NEW YORK PRESSING ITS CLAIM accepted. Warden Who Refused to Execute Man is Cited for Contempt | 8quare garden. PHEONIX, Ariz, = Nov. 2.—Wilpy | Jones, attorney genera! of Arizona, insti- | tuted here today contempt proceedings in the state supreme court against R, B, Oppose Closing Churches. Methodist ministers in Baltimore | cpposing the closing of | churehes dur'ng the Sunday campaiga are | co-operat ng | ? Sims, warden at Florence penitentlary, who refused yesterday to execute Wal- ter Faltin, condemned to be hanged for the murder-of Carl Peterson three years ago at Pheonix. Attorney Generai Jones petitioned the court to direct Warden Q3Ims to show cause why he should not Do executed. The petition sets forth that Warden Sims acted in contempt of court in refusing to carry out the order made September 23 when the supreme court signed Faltin's death warrant. Teutons Denied Use of the Danube by Roumanians! LONDON, Nov. 21.—It is stated the Roumanian government has refused a request of the Austrian and German governments for their warships to pro- ceed along the Danube river in Roumania toward Galataz and the Black sea. It is supposed here that the.request was due to a desire on the part of the Teutonic allles to menace, from Galataz, the Rus- | slan concentration in southern Bessar- there. Today the evangellst announced | that should the attendance be too large for the tabernacle churches will be per- mitted to tonduct services on Sunday {1norhings. More than $6,000 has been pledged in Baltimore toward the necess i sary 30,000 to insure the campalgn. To dute 441,00 have attended services in i this eity, while trail-hitters number 7,833 | and the collections total $20,142.15. Of the | latter amount §735.98 was raised yesterday | for twa local charities. During the same period at Omaha 2,72 I it the trail, but the receipts were $21,- | 676.43. “Syracusans are not stingy with thelr souls, but if Christ came to Syra- cuse he cculd starve.” is “Billy's” com- ment, The Christian Sclentists today took furday at his word. Speaking yesterday lefore 400 soclety women, “Billy” de- clared that he *“liked to be sneered at and criticlsed.” N Sclentist Talks Back. Soday Robert S, Ross of New York, prominent Sclentist, stated: “If it were possible for Jesus to appear among men today, one of his first acts would m:st certainly be to dieclaim all of that which HAUSER TELLS OF PLAN T0 ESCAPE Alleged Murderer Might Have Made Getaway from Wichita but for Omaha Officers’ Arrival. it WILL BE ARRAIGNED SHORTLY That Art Hauser might have made good his escape from i jail it Omaha officers had been a day \ later ip their trip to get him was dis- closed ‘by the prisoner yesterday morning. It seems that {n the roof of the bathroom of‘the jail i a round trap, painted on the inside like the rest of the interior and practically un- noticeable. A trusty who had planned to make his escape by this means, but was to be paroled before he had occasion to try it, confided his secret to Hauser. Hauser had been confined in ‘he Wichita jall two weeks, and acording to the regulations, was entitled to a bath. He had asked for it and recelved the con- sent of the officlals, 1t was his plah to wrap himself in his blankets, enter the bathroom, force the cover from the trap, and with a rope made,from the blankets, slide from the roof to the ground The arrival of Omaha officers the day before the bath was scheduled prevented the at- tempt. . Burns Recognizes Man ‘W. T. Hause, whose home was robbed | by Hauser, and several guests forced to deliver their valuables, came to police headquarters Saturday, with Douglas Bowle and C. B. Burns, who were at the House house party. Burns saw Hauser for the first time and recognized him immediately. “Your watch is down in | Wichita,” sald Hauser. “It was a mighty g00d timeplece, but I had to part with it,” he continued. Hauser further intimated that if he had got away from Wichita, it was his inten- tion to get to the southern border as fast as possible and over into Mexico. “You never would have got me then,” he asserted, f X In regard to the shooting of W. H. Smith, Hauser refuses to talk, merely saying, "“I'll tell my story to the judse and jury.” | ~Although it has not been definitely de- cldea as yet, it is believed that Hauser will be arralgned the early part of the week. He has already intimated that he intends to waive preliminary hearing, and |once to the county jail. “We've got | him,” -asserted Maloney, when asked if he thought Hauser would be convicted of the Smith murder. | the Wichita after being bound over will be taken at| INEW FRENCH LOAN 1S A HUGE SUCGESS | Subscriptions to New Issue of War Bonds Estimated at Four Bil- lion Dollars, GOLD FROM PRIVATE HOARDS PARIS, Nov. 27.—Paul Leroy- Eeaulieu, the economist, estimated |tcday that subscriptions to the new |French war loan may amount to £0,000,000,000 franecs ($4,000,000,- 00, Of this amount perhaps one-half will be eash subscriptions, the re- n.ainder representing conversion into the new loan of earller issues of treasury notes and national defense bends. No official figures are yet available. and other estimates of the total are at wide varfance with that Leroy-Beaulieu, clals of the Treasury department express great satisfaction with the results thug far. Lines.of subdcribers at the bank of France and many other «places today were as long as these which walted yesterday. Promptness with which all classes have responded to the call of Finance Minister Ribot has given rise to many odd in- cldents. A man with the cap and blue blouse of a peasant was asked at the Bank of France what denominations of | bonds the desired. The clerk judge from his appearance that he would subscribe for a 100 to 1,00 francs. “I don’t care,” the peasant responded. “The less paper the better. But give me 100,00 francs worth.” He pald one-tenth of this sum in gold. A significlant detall of the loan sub- {scriptions 1s the Increase ’)ly the Bank of France, coming from private hourds. 'Building Trades Make Concession to the Carpenters SAN FRANCISCO, Nov, 27.—~The Build- {ing Trades department of the American | Federation of Labor annulled today the decision of the department made at Tampa, Fla., several years ago, giving to metal workers the right to make and erect metnl trim and |nstructed its of- | ficers to draft an agrepment to settle a | dispute between metal workers and car- penters, which has caued many strikes and great money losses for years, The action, which wiped out the pre- | {tlon, encountering ne opposition, as they GREECE SLIPPED |OVERSEAS TRUST SOMETHING OVER, | SCHENE REJECTED IS ALLIES' FEAR Hellenic Nation Has Not Abnndoned;smm ALSO TURNS IT DOWN | Dilatory Tactics Recently Giv- | ing Entente Powers So | WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.—Great Much Uneasine | Lritain has informally asked tho e United States it it would unofficially ’ATHENS ASKS A DISCUSSION approve the American Overseas trust |ond the State department has replied Ready to Debate Demands London|that under no circumstances could Had Already Considered |any sanction be given to an organiza- Granted. | tion which would receive preferen- iy {tinl treatment over other American HOPES OF JUNCTION ARE LOST | slippers. LONDON, Nov. {cheerful view of the Greek situation has been succeeded by something in | the nature of reaction, and the State Department Refuses to Ap- prove Plan that Disoriminated in Favor of Some Shippers. 27, aniry and has advised that the plan Lad not been endorsed. It doveloped that part of the plan of London's | a in neutral countries and that a measure o the books of [ jumped too quickly to the agreeable '© the books of the concern in neutral conclusion that Greece would con- jcede readily all the allied demands Although all the forecasts k 4 now realize they could fiot hope to et {speculation regarding Greece's reply | ,orai aasistance from the American {to the entente ministers embodying ' government &o long as their plan ocon- detailed demands of their govern- | templated preferential treatment for one ) Ireece oo security "t of American shippers as against {Sente that Greece guaranteo s LY | others. That feature now has besn aban- |and liberty of action to the ranco- | |doned and a representative of the trust | British troops on Greek soil, continue |is in London negotiating with the British to be optimistic, the latest inMrma- | €overnment to the end that the latter (tlon from Athens «learly indicates !l have no connection with the now |organization that Greece has not yet definitely | Ofricials at the State department made abandoned the dilatory tactics which [it clear that they did not know the de- caused the allies such uneasiness, | 'n's of the new plan and would reserve Judgement until it was lald before them. Want a U nsslon, It 1s now reported from Athens that the imL‘m”‘:.r "(":::'r::‘r‘r:";‘_.""":o:":‘v”;"::. Greek government probably will propose | (i L0 eEe e erely: | that military experts representing the | u(ipulating that the plan would be ac- | entente powers shall be appointed 1o dis- | ceptable if no discrimination gvere prac- | cuss with the Greek staff the démands | ticed, | Which has herotofore been assumed we i RTINSO S0 | satisfactorily answered, | 1 “ The-Bulgarian pperations in the nelgh- Wltness Teus Of borhood of Monastic apparently h w‘! Sale of Explosive bian and allied troops in southern Serbia; | : | hence the use of the rallroads in Greek | . ' t0 0. McManigal Ry that it would not appove such a plan. and | frustrated the hopes of a union of Se: territory to efféct such an union has be- | eome of the utmost importance, British Expedition Wins Big Victory n Mesopotamia Valley LONDON, Nov. 2I.—The battle between British and Turkish forces at Ctesiphon, near Bagdad, which for a time looked like & check to the Mesopotamlan ex- jp-uuon 1a now réported to have been a | success ot first importance, | InformRtion received today is that the |retirement of the BFIISK dfter the cap- ture of Ctesiphon, occasioned by the lack | [ndependent Torpedo company at Port- of water, was only temporary. After the .hum. Ind. This explosive later was used |Turks withdrew In the direction of Bag-'| 8t Peorla, Il |dud, as announced officlally yesterdiy, | The prosecution also produced one of [the British reocoupled thelr former posi- | the infernal machines sald to have been perfected by J. B. McNamara, now serving a life sentence at San Quentin for murder, LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 2.—The sale of nitro-glycerine to Ortle B. Mc- Manigal, confessed dynamiter in the alleged conspiracy to wreck “‘open shop™ bulldings throughout the country, was testified to today by M. J. Moreheart of Portland, Ind., a high explosive salesman, at the trial of Matthew A, Schmidt, charged with murder in connection with the destruction of the Los Angeles Times bullding five years ago. Morehart identified two cans which he '#ald had contained nitro-glycerine, sold |to Ortle McManigal under the f 3 W, MeGraw, on or about AURS B 1010. At that time the witness sald he was in charge of @ branch office of the took possession of Ctesiphon for the second time, ot gold held | British troops at once began the work of clearing the Turkish trenches, which were fllled with deaq or wounded soldlers. The British captured a large quantity of {arms and ammunition, in addition to the {1,300 prisoners, previously reported. | Cteslphon has been the scene of many {fateful battles. The anclent city wag besleged and plundereq a dozen times by |Greek and Roman invaders from the east before the Arabs finally sacked it, Colonel Hirst is Ordered Before Court-Martial NEW YORK, Nov. 27.~Major General Leonard Wood, commanding the depart- ment of the east, has ordered Colonel Robert L. Hirst, Third United States infantry, to appear for trial by general court-martial December 2, at barracks, Sacketts Harbor, N. Y, Colonel Hirst 18 charged with conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline. The accused officer Is a vet- Madison | teran of the Spanish and Philippine wars | Morehart was unable to Identify the in- |ternal machine, but id he had seen one like it. George E. vavis, who tes- tified yesterday concerning dynamite out- rages in the east, was removed from the witness stand temporarily today in order that Morehart might give his testimony. | Davis will complete his testimony later, Troops of Both - Factions Fire Across Border WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.MThe offical report to the War department on' the Nogales affair, recejved today from Major General Funston, transmifting the sub- stance of a report from the commanding officer at Nognles, follows: i - “In the action of November 2, no shots iwere flred by us, except in the return of Moxican fire. This applies to both Villistas and the advance Carranza troops under Colonel Cardenas, who opened fire {on the troops of Tenth cavalry, under | and company L, | Captain . Valentine, Twelfth infantry. The latter company | | | | the trust was to organise subsidiacles | have recaptured Krushevo, in south- countries. Sweden Informed Great Britain | | State department officlals declared to- | day that the Overseas trust organizers | [(TCes soon will bec®me i { | | | | | MAIN SERBIAN ARMY RETREATING TOWARD GREECE Indications that the German Army Under General Von Mackensen Will Follow it Acrdss the Border. BULGARS SURROUND MONASTIR Probably Will Occupy the Capital of Macedonia Before Arrival of Austro-German Forces. | Sweden also has made similar in- | ROUMANIAN SITUATION OBSCURE T LONDON,,Nov. 27.—The Serbians | | v prevailing opinion at the present of supervision wes to be given to the | 8rn Serbia, about twenty miles west time is that the press and public |Pritish government by premitting access | of Prilep, according to a dispatch to the Star from Athens. 27,~~The Serbian an army without a country unles, the French should defeat the Bulgarians, four divisions of whom are said to be hammering at the French lines. Re« ports arrive from various sources that Monastir has been surroundéd by Bulgariane and that they may not wait for thelr Austro-German allies before the entering=o! the Macedon~ fan capital. The main Serblan army, retreating in a southwesterly direction hefore Feld Mar- shal Von Mackensen's troops, may find no rest even In Greek territory, ns It is reported here that the Invaders of Serbla would not hesitate to cross inte Greece. Apparently the German leaders expect the Berblans and thelr allles will await attack In Gre 1t 1s sald these opera- tions will be under the suprema, com= mand of Field Marshal Von Mackensen. Britons Wins In Mesopotnmin, Additiona] reports from the battle at LONDON, Nov. | Ctesiphon, In Mesopotamia near Bagdad, indicate that the British forces won a substantial success instead of suffering a reverse, as first accounts led every- one to belleve, Thé diplomatic representatives at Athéns of the entente powers are stil Actve, their latest effort to settle de- finitely all outstanding questions belng the presentation to Premier Skouloudis of a note detalling measures deemed indispensable for the secirity and free- dom of action of the allled troopss Roumaninn Sltuntion Vascure. sltuation alons the Roumenia frontier, where a great force In said (o have been gathered, 1s still ob- #cure. The display by the Roumanian Publio of feeling In favor of the entehto I8 regarded in London ss an_ indication that the nation 18 in & position to disre~ gard the demands of the central powers. No definite news has been received the renewed Austro-German offenaive in (Continued on Page Two, Column One.) Republicans of Nine States Reserve Hotel Rooms at Chicago CHICAGO, Nov, ~—Hotel reservations for republican delegations from nine states have been made here, it became known today, in anticipation that the 1916 republican natlonal convention will be awarded to Chicago, Senator John W. Weeks of Massachu- setts reserved an entire floor for the Massachusetts delegation; also a suite for himself and suite for W. Murray Crane, former United States senatér. New York, Pennsylvania, 1llinols, Ohlo, Indiana, Minnesota and lowa are among the states for which reservations have been mad Individual reservations included the names of former Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks, James P. Goodrich of Indlana, Myron T. Herrick of Ohlo, Con= gressman James R. Mann of Illinols, members of the Indiana state central committee and Joseph B. Keallng and David Mulvane, who were identified with former President Taft's campaign, Republican national committeemen will meet In Washington on December 4 to decide where thg party's convention will be held. e S and s now in command at Madison bar- | M | racks, Ho was gradusted from West | Nad three casualties. Private Little was | Point in 18% and has been a member of | MOTtally wounded In head, died at v vious settlement whith has caused rfiuch bala. friction, left the entire matter upgov- Allies Continue to i commonly referred to as the mudernl evangelist. There is a reason for Sun-| ‘ Total deficiency { day's opposition to Christian Scientists. | The moment one beging to make a study of the Bible In the light of our text book, | cne loses all taste for the gymnastic brand of religion of which Sunday is such Mrs. Jean Edgerton Hovey, Authoress, Commits Suicide «n avie exponent” | Men fond of athletics attending the Sun- | NEW YORK, Nov. 2I.—Mrs, Jean Ed. | 08y meetings are asking what has be-| rton Hovey. authoress, was found | CO'€ Of Jack Cardiif, the ex-pugilist, who | dead today in her room, a blanket over | Va8 the physical trainer for Billy for sev- | her head, her door lockec and gas pour- [ €'al years. Though no mention is made | ing from a tube attached to a jet. Her | ©f Jack at the Sunday home, the secret hysband, Carl Hovey, editor of & maga- | ‘s out. Jack has changed bosses, joining zine, sald that he knew of no reason why | Evangelist Hepry W. Stough at Buffalo, she should take her life. They had been | rizé Request Made, living apart for some time. | "“BUlly" had the prize graft game sprumg on him toay. A Binghamten, N. Y., man | ’ walked in. | “The Lord told me to come to you, Mr, | Sunday, and ask your ald in the organiz- | | g of a great Bible school,.and as a| storter we want you to create an endow- | nent fund with $10,000," was the greeting » extended. Mr. Sunday rubbed his eyes. | | “Oh, the Lord gemt you, eh?’ Well, old | {chap, He did not say anything to me ebout it,” declared “Billy.” However, the | request for the $10,000 was taken under| “ 41| copsideration { ¢ Turks Win Ground 4| In Surprise Attack| 4 Record. | AMSTERDAM, Nov. #.—(Via London.) 1914, 1918, 1912. | _ A surprise attack by the Turks on the| 31 39 24| Dposition of the entente allies near Ariz 9 - # | Burnu on the Gallipoli peninsula re- . .0 0| sulted In the Turks carrying a material precipitation depart-| gection of the allied trenches there, ac- al ding to an official announcement by . '3|the Turkish war office, received here B } today from Constantinople 4 Bombardment of Turkish position on The Weather For Nel:rnxkal ir, :’ " es nit Yesterday. | Det Comparative Highest yesterday...... Lowest yesterday Mean temperature.. Precipitation Temperature and es from tre ne ormal temperat » 3 o # for the day.. 4 since Normal precipitation Deficiency for the day 3§ ces g Marc 3 | treated in a southerly direction. jin 26.74 inchee | the peninsula by battleships and monitors . Lidinch | is declared to have been without result, Defieiency since March Deffolency for cor. perod, 1914. 3.8 :"‘j":“ one of the monitors being obliged to with- ter " |araw under the Turkish tire. for cor. period, 1912, L. A. WELSH, Lecal Forecaster, Precipitation since Mareh 1 erned by any rule or regulation, delegates said, pending a written agreement be- o | tween the two parties’to the controversy, ]/ which officers were Instructed to draft. The resolution was adopted by a vote of % to 5. It was a substitute for one re- ported out by the resolutions committee without recommendation.. The original provided that the metal workers should {be awarded the manufacture of metal L trim and carpenters the installation of it. -Land Men in Large Numbers at Saloniki/ LONDON, Nov, 21.—Allled troops con- | tinue to land at Saloniki in large num- bers. A Reuter dispatch, filed yester- day at Salonlki, eays that important Brit- | ish reinforcements reached that port on Thursday and were landed immediately, After the. occupation of Pristina by the Austrians and Germans, the message saye, the main body of Serblans re- The blans were unable to maintain their po- sitions in the Katchanik reglon, owing to the greatly superior forces of the invaders. Officlal announcement Las been made | to commanders of the allied troops at Saloniki of the guarantees given by the | Gteek government relative to freedom of action of thelr armies. Winter has set earlier than usual in the Balkans, It is expected military operations on both sldes will be greatly hampered thereby. [CAPTURE OF 2,500 addition Serblans is re| r office today. HAVE the west ing thelr advance southwest Mi ru\'lln.. e i ELESS MESSAGE from Herlin declares the reports that the R | Steamer Zealandia‘ : Sinna Rave betaken Ceartevysk, {n Arrives at New York! Vemsuia are untrue. | NOTWITHSTANDING Serblan NEW YORK, Moy, 2.—The American | vepses the entente allles & stearher Zealandla, Which was recently | ongly are placing o formidable boarded and searched by an officer and | Lo 4u the Balkane. 1 men from the British crulser at Pro- | hacices from Athe greso, Mex., arrived here today and re- | ported having been pursued last n'ght | by an unknown cruiser off the New ! Jersey comst between Brigantine Shoals ! and Tuckers Beach. The night was un usually hazy and the Zealandia ran inside | the three-mile limit and escaped. The Zealandia has on board its origtnal | Serblans cargo of rosin Austro-German Captain Devantier, commander of the | (reops as 101,000, Zgalandia was formerly in the West In- | BRITISH EXPEDITION in Mesopo- dian service of the Atlas-Hamburg-Amer- | tamin is again in of ican line The members of the crew are " almost all Germans, it is sald. re- 40,000 or 45,000 more are on the way, MI-OFFICIAL announcement ®ives the number taken prisoner by and in of the | Bulgarian’ jo ko gnd Municipal Beach and golf links | |the general staff. The court-martial ls the result of an {altercation at Madison barracks jn which | Colonel Hirst was struck in thelface by lan enlisted man of his regiment. The | soldler has since been sentenced to serve {a term of five years in a military at { Fort Leavenworth for assaulting his 1t~up«ylnr officer, Two Men Suspects In Campbell Case (From a Btaff ( | LINCOLN, Neb., N rrespondent.) 21.—~(Special Tel- ted by the German | €€ram.)—Two armed men picked up near thirty day; the Burlington depot being held on suspicion as being the men who shot C | 1. Campbell, the Lincoln contractor, in | Omaha a week ago. Though taken at different times, they a 1 cen stopping at the same rooming house. | One of th who has given different names, first as Mose Furkhart and lastly as Jean Roberts, closely tallies with the degeription of one of the men who killed Campbell. | The Omaha police have been and the men are being held Cmaha officers arrive known to have notified until the i Recreation Board ‘ Budget_is $20,000 | The Recreation board approved & | budget of 320000 for 1916. It Is expected that this amount will be spread over ten playgrounds, public swimming pools at Bpring Lake, Elmwood and Riverview at Miller and Elmwood parks | .The board will recommend this appro priation, within a few weeks when the eity councll meets to prepare the § city budget for next year. ‘ates, flash te Saupe, latter will Private abdomen; Priv, the two {o'clock last night, [ wouna in | wounded in ankle; [ recover. 'Bush Authorized to ' Sue George Gould ST. LOUIS, Nov. Z.—B. F. Bush, re- celver for the Missourl Pacific rallroad, today was authorized to file sult in the federal district court here to recover from George Gould property which the latter |18 sald to hold, provided Gould does not | surrender the title to the property | Ree Bush asked | Bush asked the United States | United States | Circult Judge Adams how to proceed in | claiming the property from Gould, In a petition flled with the court, Mr. Bush sald that valuable real estate in and around St. Louls and Pleasant Hill, Mo., is held in Gould's name as trustee the road. Other property held in Gould's name, the petition says, has been declared by the state elreult court of St. Louls to belong to the Missouri Pacific rallroad. | | EDITOR BRAINERD SELLS | THE HEBRON CHAMPION HEBRON, Neb,, Nov. #2.—(Speclal.)— The Hebron Champlon has been sold by |its owner und proprietor for twenty yéars, | H. A. Bralnerd, to_Arthur V. Wortman {of Beatrice. The change will take place | Decem! 1. MF. Brainerd has not de- |cldea what business he will pursue. He Bays \ | " What our tuture wiil be we know not. The sale came upon us unexpected and as a surprise, and we not had thne to decide as to our future, but wherever we _are we | always hold the m:la of T e . | DAVID BISPHAM GUEST AT UNIVgHSITY CLUB LUNCHEON David Bispham, the baritone singer whe will give a concert at the Auditorium, will be the guest of the University club at luncheon Monday noon. He will -make thirty-minute address immediately after luncheon is served. ‘eek Beginning '.OV. a9 Free Movie Coupon Bee Coupon entitles bearer - E‘r::“ 1&:3::0 CEZ kg 5 named. Prese % th 3 B, T uld rioe of one SV LS00 41 TR “THEATER BEA! ! 16th and Binney. The Home of pigbt when panied by mission. HIPP O DR OME st Fiotures Ob- tainable, This coupon &ood any Good Mondays and Thursdays with one pa'd ticket. LOTHRO SUBURBAN TR

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