Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 28, 1915, Page 10

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EUROPEAN WOMEN | ARE SICK OF WAR Wife of British Parliament Member and Mme, Schwimmer Tell Wil- son of Peace Desired. WOULD NOT TURN DEAF EARS| | WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.—Etforts to win President Wilson's support for & conference of neutrals to initiate | peace proposals in Europe reached a climax today when Mme. Rosika Schwimmer of Hungary and Mrs Fthel Snowden, wife of a member of the British Parliament, called at the | White House with a personal appeal | and word that they bad definite in- formation that the majority of the belligerent nations would not turn deaf ears to suggestions for a neutral | gathering. The women talked with the president for more than half an hour and went away much plemwdt‘ over their reception. though the president had made no promises, [ About 4 peace advocates, fresh from A mass meeting held at a loca! theater, aecompanied the president’s callers to the White House applauding them as they entered and left the See 8 . The presiden to Initiate a peace ®onference or at least to signify that he would appoint a delegate from the United States if.another neutral na- | tion called one. He was told that women advocates who have visited every | rent and neutral nation in B believe from talks with officials abroad | that practical results would follow. He also was Informed that Henry Ford, the Detroit manufacturer, here to co operate with the women, had in his possession statements, some of them signed, from officlals in some of the| principal countries on both sides ‘of the RBuropean conflict, to the general effect that they would interpose no objection 1o the calling of a cofiference of neutrals to make peace proposals. Mme. Schwim- mer, who saw the president several months ago on the same subject and who was ot optimistic then, sald tonisht that she belleved the president was deeply executive offices. | Impressel with the information laid be- fore Juim. dert MWiles No Uromine. fesident 1 no definite ehe added ‘but I think you will hear something from the White | House before very long.” At the White | House it was sald that there would be tatement regarding the call. Up to time the position of the president a8 been that he has heard nothing from ¥irope which leads him to believe that ihe time Is opportuns for him to take any steps. Al the muss meeting today resolutions ferc adopted urging the president to call " neutral nations to appoint repre- antatives to attend a confqrence “‘for stent mediation, without™ armistice dedicated 1o finding a just settlement wtthis confllel.” The resolutions recited Ahat envoys sent by the International fongress of women at The Hague “as- ined from 4he governments of' the ligerent nations of Kurope that they would have ho-objections to the calling X1 & conference of the neutral nations of the world looking to the possible termina- 1or of the war. Mme. ¥chwinimer_presented these reso- lutions to the president and told him that the commen people of all the nations at Wil wauted peace, Atdresses weie made at the meeting by Miie. Kchwimmer, Mrs, Snowden, Mrs, Louls Post, wife of the assistant secre- tery of labor; Henry Ford and ‘others. Mr. Koid's address was very brief, “Out THE OMAHA SUNDAY ' 'BEE: NOVEMBER 298 "1915."'"" '~ e Women of Militant Organization Rebel Against Emmeline Nov Many members of 1 and Political union against the leadership of LONDON, the Wome Emmeline Pankhufst. A largely at tended meoting, under the chalrmanship of Mrs. Elinor Penn Gaskell, unanimously aiproved a long indictment against Mrs Fankhurst In this Indictment those who attended the meeting charge that In using the name of the Women's Soclal and Political nion for politieal purposes, Mra, Pank hurst was acting without authority, “the consent of the members not having been They blame her for falling to utilize the organization for me form of national service during the war, which service Is sald to be In ac ordance with the desire of an ove whelming majority of the members, t asked for or obtained P disregard of which, coupled with Mrs. Penkhurst's complete control of the funds and local machinery, has been vir- toally to disband and break up the Women's Soclal and Political union as a national organization.” They waccuse her of usurping authority and expelling memve:s who differed from | ber, 4n order to stifle opposition to her vill, resulting in the removal from mem- | berehip of almost all the women pos- sessed of influence, pendence of thought where capacity and inde- They declare that controlling funds she has shown cullous indifference to the sufferings of Fin they call upon Mrs. Pankhurst to fssue Immediately n statement showing how the funds have been expended since the war began, They ask Christabel Pankhutst, her daughter, to resign or ex- Vlain her contjiued absence from the country. bullet penertating his abdomen. Culls from the Wire Victor Carlserom, an aviator, completed a_w0-mile flight from Toronto, Ontario, to New York, where. he landed at Gover- nors' Island. The flight was in- tended ns ) test for a new motor and other equipment, W, A Iurpee, head of the weed tirm of Atlee Furpes and company, and a noted horticulturist, died at his country home fn Doylestown, Pa. He was ears old wnd had been in falling health since last July, The Balt & Ohio rallrond has sold to Kuhn, npany, and Speyér and comy $60,000,000 5 per cent bonds, wpany will use part of the proceeds to redecm its $40,000,000 old notes maturing in 1917 and 1918, which are subject to prior redemption. Work on a dirigible war balloon for the navy will begn on December 15 at the navy yard at Portsmouth, N. Y. The alrship “will ba 176 feet long and fifty feet in diameter. Tt will cost $30,000 and naval engineers estimates the work wil be completed in o month, A WELCOME RELIEF o7 the trenches by Christmas and never back again ls my motto,” he said, and tut down, Total of Tornado Dead Now Twenty LITTLE ROCK, Ark,, Nov. 2I.~Reports recelved tonight show that ten pdrsons were killed an1 about twenty-five injured ovl the Hot Springs district in Thurs- Cayfs storm. This, with the ten dead and thirty-six injured mnear Mot Springs, breught the total for the state, twenty dead and more than sixty injured. Like the ten killed near Hot Springs, the majority of those killed in other por- tions of the state met death in the ‘de- #truction of thelr houses by the tor- nado. At Bocaw, several were injured while witnessing o Thanksgtving foot ball §ame. The Baptist college there, the bigh school and nine houses were swept away. Terrible Damage is Done to Gorizia Town! VIENNA (Via London), Nov. 27.—The erowns (§6,250,000), while the loss on pri- following official communication regard- Ing warfare on the Itallan frent was is- sued taday: HIVYWNO LS ST LLIG S &/TLALTLSOH ' 5T See that our Stamp over the neck of bot- tie Is unbroken. Wis., Nov. Ewald | Klabunde, 17 % old, of Barona, died | charges. here today, a om of deer hunting, He fell and his gun was discharged, the ! | vestigation of recruiting and other mat- |by a woman was made today by Don | | was the \‘ rina Quesada, which sailed CROWLEY IS IN PAY |5 otiectice mones tor soran ioes never | COpper Takeen from IANOTTHOE’:I;HKI:ISS:!;‘LSE[(’:RUISER Fom Newr{ 1t News. Va. Docomber carried out. He ugreed, it was charged, . 1914, Valparaiso with coal and othet to blow up a trainiond of norses | Palace 0f Kaiser it | suppiics aofartt " sauad ot “witnesse 0 GERMAN G | British Columbia several months ago, ,t, e NEW YORK Nov pave el o o ils t | collected the money and failed to dy- For Munl 10N8 Us Dr. Karl Buenz and h » ” - P i d W :Mm'w e v - the Hamburg-American line Use The swapper column, * rivate Sleuth, Arrested as ar B — < ey . conspiracy dragged somewhat today - — ’ | BASEL, Switzerland (Via Paris), Nov : aken B te Supplies Plotter, Admits He | GERMAN DESERTER IS #1.—The copper roof ia being taken from | the Eovernment attempting to show that| . FOUEIG K R Is Investigator. i INTERNEDBY THE U. S, |the tmoerial castle st Donsueschingen, | .\ Coiere'to aid Germman crilsers with | s, S Surnhiben was _— N | eture v . ) of war. This roof | ®UPplies than the defendan willing | C last n NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—Heinle Schuits, | facture of munitions o to Slin Brow A gasoline DENTES ANY ORIMINAL ACTS| NPW YORK, Nov. o iteinie s weighs many tons. R e, the government contenda,|JLote, cxplonfon, st the Biade. The SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 27 Charles C. Crowley, tective, arrested by federal officers |ho today and charged with plots to dy- namite ships carrying munitions 0 |y eq on Ellis istand until the ot the allies, admitted tonight, accord- |tha war. Schultz urrived as a stowaway on the ing to a statement made by his at- torney, J. the German consulgte here. He de- |, nied any connection with dynamiting |the division to which he was attached wel operations. Franz Bopp, German consul gen- at times employed him, Brien sala: “Mr. Crbwley had been employed by | the German consulate in San Franclsco | == for several months to get data on the | activities of agents of the allles hero | and in varlous parts of the eountry, He was not, however, employed or connected in any manner with any acts of violence.” | O'Brien said that Crowley during his| @mploy had furnished the consulate with information as to the traffic in muni- | tions, but that he had no knowledge of the use made of the information. Crow- | ley's alleged connection with Lewls J.| Smith, to whom, the government charges Crowley gave money to carry out dy-| namiting ventures, was denled flatly. | Crowley said he dldn't know Smith and denled categorically the government's Consul General Bopp said after he was acquainted with Crowley's statement: “Mr, Crowley has been known to me a long time and occasionally I have em- ployed him as a detective. His employ- | ment has included such work as the in- ters about which there is no secret.” | Crowley was arralgned and bail was | fixed at $5,000, i Officlals sald tontgnt that Lewis J Smith, to whom, it was alleged, money | was given by Crowley to go to Seattle | in connection with the munitions traffic, was “avallable in a city a short distance north of Chicago.” An intimation that Crowley was as-| sisted in his alleged dynamiting ventures | Rathbun, specinl agent of the Depart- | ment of Justice, who swore to the com- plaint against Crowley, but was képt secret. It was alleged by government agents tonight that evidence collected showed | her name from that awful distress after eating can be obtained by careful diet and the assistance of HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS It tones, strengthens and assists the di- gestive system in every way. It is for poor ap- petite, Belchin g, Bloating, Nausea & |that Crowley haa dupea nis employers |man army, was ordered excludeq from the United States by a a private de- |inquiry |to Burope at present he would be im- . A . ‘"""? |"“I‘ "1" p- | prisoned by the British, he was ordereq |t¢mber by the commission having in charge the seigure of metal for govern- ment use and a list of the metals at the | P. O'Brien, that he, Crow- | Holland-American . , . ¢ (Mo sald he fought ley, is an investigafor in the pay of | ., "\ 0\ tie of the Marn |his father and brother had been killed fighting, he sald he deserted, making his eral, sald he knew Crowley and had |way through Belgium and across the { Duten. border | mained in hiding two months, sheltered by a French girl special board of TM;- is not 'hol r|rr;r lnm-- that ...at.«: - at Ellls island today. Owing, |18 been requisitioned ""“l“" ';”"):" wever, to the fact that If he returned |refldence. The emperor's palace in Ber lin was visited the court was demanded. Emperor Willlam ordered that all metals not in actual | necessary use be selzed. It was reported | recently that the huge copper roofs of | the cathedral at Bremen were being dis- | mantled for military purposes liner at L Noorderdyka Antwerp and that the latter battle most of the men in t" t shock, howdver, to find out It's a pleasant shoc! [5¢ troe Willard re killed. After he recefved word that Canadian Troop Saip Arrives. OTTAWA, Ont., Nov -Tt was an nounced trday that the troop ship, Mis- bie, which sailad-from Canada on No- ember 13, had arrived safely in England » trospahip carr men and fifty including all branches of ] At Lille, he re he was | I 5 i I Wor LTI I, . SHYUTIVY), Ea IIII!Iiillllflflllilmlllllllll il Z e ",‘!minmm\lummummlumywm““”‘!' W LMY i I!!‘w‘“‘:,;uvmmmm\!g* il fl W‘:‘;%;;*ii\lw" i%f;i.uuuuw 4 Lo il i 7z o il o i | i | | TN {1 I . rv”’ ‘i"“ (i Il ‘ f. 0. b. 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With seven-passenger body $35.00 extra. “THE SIX OF 16"’ is now being shown by Mitchell declers everywhere 2 Aotot Go: Racine, Wis.U.S.A. Over Eighty Years of Faithful Service to the American Public Mitchell Motor Co. 2054 Farnam Street OMAHA, NEB. 1 | i / ]‘ i “ i il e i ‘ihiwsqnu|um»|\"‘ r i | M il i il f i i Indigestion. Try it. “More heavy bombs and incendiary bombs have “fallen in the town of Gorlzla, which is now being systemati- cally shot to pleces. Dally s number of ghurches and houses are burned. damage done Is estimated at 2 Nats property, works of art and art col- Jections cannot bo estimated.” F'LINGS ON U. S. LAND IN KANSAS HAVE CLOSED DOLGE CITY, Kan, Nov. 2.—Filings on the government forest reserve in five western tounties of Kansas closeq today. There were 60 applications for the 138,000 land has been filed upon Aue to duplicate filings on many of the 3%-acre tracts. The drawings on the claims will bgmade 1 under the direction of rep: sentatives of the government land office Filing money will be re- the losers. and the privilege of land not already taken will be to them, It was announced. Washington Affairs péning of the steel found: York WAS 0 R T naval il office: { | have | under | in the intake manifold? vite an investigation, ‘Phone Douglas 2427, Stop That Knoéking! Increase Your Power 'ARE YOU AWARE of the fact that, ordinarily, a t"ofll‘n quan- tity of gasoline passes through your carburetor unmixed and settles DO YOU KNOW that this unmixed gasoline is sucked into your engine and burned instead of exploded in a power.mpujse? DO YOU KNOW that this results in excessive Oarbon-deposits, with the ultimate “Knocking” and loss of power? DO YOU KNOW that KAR-BO-GO, when carbur®tor while the engine is in motion, will remove all Carbon. deposits in a most thorough and remarkable manner, ' DO YOU KNOW that an engine, free from carbon, will glve you more power, consequently more speed, at a less cost? You only have our word for it, but to prove our claims we in- FREE demoustrations at our sales rooms or by appolntm will mot obligate you in any manner, ¥ fron MID-WEST SPECIALTY COMPANY SOLE DISTRIBUTERS, OMAHA, NEBRASKA, injected through the 2026-2028 Farnam St Kelly-Springfiel Mileage is written on roads—not paper. Kelly-Spring- field hand-made, real-rubber tires and tubes give you that mileage in actual service—not in grudging allowances and refunds on disputed guarantees. When Adjustments are necessary they will be made on the following basis: Plain Tread, 5,000 Miles; Kant-Slip Tread, 6,000 Miles. In Ford sizes, Plain Tread, 6,000 Miles; Kant-Slip Tread, 7,500 Miles, Kelly-Springfield Omaha Company 2064 Farnam St. Joe E. Stone, Mgr, Tel. Douglas 3272, ik

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