Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 31, 1915, Page 1

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| The Sunday Bee is the only !Onnhn newspaper that gives its readers four big pcdes of colored comies. VOL. XLV—NO. 168, OMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1915 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE THE WEATHER. Cloudy TEN P LANSING URGES CONVENTION OF PAN-AMERICANS Becretary of State Suggests to Dele- | gates that Nations of Hemi- sphere Join in Paot for Arbitration. FOR SETTLING LINE DISPUTES | posed Treaty Would Prevent | Shipment of Arms to Revolu- ! tionary Groups. [BULWARK AGAINST INVADERS WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.—Secre- | tary Lansing has suggested to all he nations which, with the United States, comprise the Pan-American union. that they join in a convention for the arbitration of all boundary /line disputes and for the prohibition of shipments of war munitions to revolutionaries. | Secretary Lansing’s proposal, which has | Ithe full support of President Wilson, is belng forwarded by the Latin-American ambaseadors and ministers here to thelr | home foreign offices for consideration. It | 18 regarded as one of the steps in a wide | plan, in which the Pan-American Scien- | | tifio congress mow in session here is a part, for preservation of peace on the western hemisphere and a closer union EVANGELISTS IN BIG MEETING IN CHICAGO—Left to right, Olinton N. Howard, George Casson and Samuel Zane Batten. Evangelists are assembled at Chicago for the first ilcli‘:xfla:{o:iavli; zme&i::.o?oiz :;::gmlz'ld at the Moody Institute under the auspices of the || u N I 'I' En S'l' ATES VIENNA NOTE T0 - GIVEN PENFIELD Austria’s Reply to Last American Message in Ancona Parleys is Being Transmitted to Washington, THREE THOUSAND WORDS LONG | Officials Indicate There is Still Opportunity for Averting | a Break. il’()SSJBII.I‘I"I OF A SETTLEMENT | WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.— Aus- |tria’s reply to the last American | note on the destruction of the liner | Ancona now is being transmitted to |the United States and probably will be before President Wilson and Secretary Lansing within the next twenty-four hours Ambassador Penfield ecabled to- | day that the note from the Austrian | foreign office had been delivered to { him, that it was about 3,000 words |long, and that it was being trans- [lated into the diplomatic code for Llhe cable, of all the Americas, Held as Confidential. The status of the negotiations and the detalls of Secretary Lansings proposal are so far being held as confidential be- twen the State department and the Latin- American chancellories here. Mr. Lansing today declined to discuss it in any phase and the diplomats uni- formly declare they could not dlscuss a matter which was in its preliminary stage nd under consideration by their home reign offices, It became known, however, that soon after Secretary Lansing delivered his Pan-American unity speech before the sclentific congress, in which he advo-|maining on the plum tree in this cated a Pan-American “one for all, and nd will all for one,” he began laviting the Latin. :vlclnlty is ripening rapidly nl iy American representatives to the State | D full grown and ready to pluck in department two at a time and outlining | February. to them his proposals. At the sama| It is the postmastership of Omaha. time, it is understood, the secretary’s John C. Wharton's term expires in public declaration, which suggested that | pebruary. The plum gatherers are all the Pan-American nations should, if | WHO'LL BE THE NEXT| SELLER OF STAMPS? | Said to Be Settled that George| Rogers Will Not Succeed Whar- ton as Postmaster. | MAYOR JIM DECLINES THE JOB The most luscious plum still re- | LEVY IS BIG, BUT BUDGET IS BIGGER City Council Sets for Itself Problem in Finance that Will Puzzle Wisest to Work. FACTS AND FIGURES INVOLVED The city budget, a fearfully and | At the same time in a separate als- | patch Ambassador Penfleld reported that | Americans In Vienna not having certifi- |cates of birth or naturalization, were un- ports for travel through Germany, en route for Holland to embark for home, | Whether this dispatch reflected a staté Convicted by Los Angeles Jury as | of tension o Visnna over the Begotiations : | was not made clear, Accomplice of James B. | Buvey' Neds Miaihie: McNamara. | About the time Ambassador Pentield's —— | dlspatches were recelved Baron Zwied- PENALTY m mRISONmT{’““"' charge of the Austrian embassy {here, after a conference with Count von 30.— | Bernstorff, the German ambassador, went s {to the Btate department and conferred LOS ANGELES, Cal., Dec. wonderfully made affair, is before | Matthew A. Schmidt was convicted at some length with Secretary Lansing. the house. Last August the city council cer- tified to the county board a total of $2,276,602, aivided as follows: Gen- eral purpose fund, $1,390,000; bond | five years ago. interest, $400,000; bond retirement, | tonight of first degree murder as | Neither would discuss the situation. the accomplice of James B. Mc-| Although Ambassador Penfleld is sald to have given the State department no Namara o the blowing up of, the |, op the tencr of the Austrian wply, Los Angeles Times building here |(here were intimations today from high officlal quarters that the situation be- The specific charge was of having ‘!uvoen the two countries probably is in a % SING orel s so. INGI E COPY TWO CENTS. \BRITISH RECRUITING Federal Investigator Begins Probe of Alleged Activity of English Army Officers. CHICAGO, Dec. 30.—Alleged re- crulting of soldiers in Chicago for the British army today elicited an order of investigation from Hinton G. Clabaugh, division superintendent of the bureau of investigation of the Department of Justice. for mervice overseas to be known as the Ninety-seventh of Canada and to be composed solely of men born in the United States. Gets Mennclng Letter. DETROIT, Mich, Dec. 0—An Amer fean leglon recruiting office for the British army is maintained in Windsor, Ont., opposite here. Outside the office 1s an advertisement bearing the United States and British flags, and the flag incident is said to have been the excuse for a threatening letter recently recelved by Lisutenant N. C. Moore, who conducts the office. Lieutenant Moore was warned in the letter, which was malled in Detroit, that unless he closed his office and left Wind- he would be killed Ve are not seeking men in America," sald Lieutenant Moore today. ““We want American-Canadia and we are getting them." Senate Republicans To Attack Wilson Program in Mexico WASHINGTON, D, C,, Dec. 30 —Repub- licans of the senate forelgn relations committee are preparing to renew their attack on President Wilson's Mexican pollcy when congress reassembles Ly ghting confirmation of Henry Prather Fletcher's appointment as ambassador to Mexico. ENLISTMENT CIRCULAR DATA | An enlistment efreular shown to Mr. Clabaugh, and sald to have been recelved by ablebodied young men here, was sald to bear reproductions of the United States and British flags and & representation of Uncle S8am and Jobn Bull with hands | clasped Phe circulars were sald also to have do- talled the formation of a new battalion BATTLE LINE IN SOLDIERS IN GHICAGO BUKOWINA FORTY MILES IN LENGTH Belief Expressed in London that the Russians Have Undertaken i Another Great Offensive Movement, COUNTER ATTACKS BY GERMANS Serious but Futile Attempt Made to Take Russian Positions Near Lake Babit. GREEK SITUATION UNCHANGED BULLETIN, LONDON, Dec. 30.—The Ger- mans and Austrians have begun a keneral withdrawal along the entire front in Macedonla, according to a | dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph | company from Rome, quoting a mes- sage from Saloniki to this effect. | The reported withdrawal is at- tributed to the Russian advance in Bessarabia, the message states, | LONDON, Dec. 30.—Although Pe- trograd remains silent on the subject, { the public is inclined to believe the Russians are undertaking a great of- fensive in Bukowina, near the Bes- sarablan border. | Official Austrran reports, telling of attacks by dense masses of Russian troops, indicate that an important battle is under way. The fighting centers at a point near Toporouts, a small town just within the border of northern Buko- wina, but a simultaneous attack s being made along an extended front, reaching from the Pruth to a position north of the Dnelster, a distance of | about forty miles, | The latest advices state that the Rus- | slan assault is being continued, accom- panied by an equally heavy bombard- ment, Germans Take Offensive, Unofficlal advices from the extreme northern portion of the eastern front state that the Germans have made a seri- better way for the preservation of diplo- matic relations than It was after the | Senator Borah, one of those who in- |Ous but futile attack In the region of first exchange of notes. . tends to lead the fight, sald today that | lake Babit, while the Russians west of ! While there is no disposition in official | the opposition was not to Mr. Fletcher ;::lle K.nn‘r are :l.u"lhllllll d:llut the merger law. 142,000; special | minutes, |Quarters to minimize the cruclal stage | himeelf, who is & republican and much ese 0pposing attacks create a ca levy for fire _,"m‘,n“m st :mw” The jury fixed Schmidt’s punishment at|Of the negotiations or to deny that a | egteamed, but to the appointment of an [situation, as a successful advance by | imprisonment for life, the same penalty crisis prevails, atill officials in closest | o ibagnador at @ time when, the repub- |other would endanger considerable Fy spr:uu, '65,5{)0; hydn{t renu}s,. \apbasd an, James B. Mol mfiouoh with the details indicated today tend, there ls no goy-|Zorces of the defeated opponent, o e in eourt lican senators con! 10 g that there was opportunity for averting e of oo, Thers| Along the e Tt he placsy the s by : $150,000; South Side general fund |murdered Charles Hagerty, one of | and bond Interest for last five|the twenty victims of the Times ex- | months of 1915, as provided for in |Plosion. The jury was out forty-six | necssaary, constitute a united bulwark |3iready congregated in considerable against any unjust invasion or aggres. numbers under the tree regarding slon upon a nelghbor, was discussed In |the fruit with watering mouths and some detail. It was declared the Latin- | getting their step ladders ready. Americans uniformly expressed their | Colonel Charlie Fanning called upon approbation of Mr. Lansing’s statements. | Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock this week Its Technical Form. and whispered honeyed wo in The technical" - proposal was made was not disclosed to- day, but there are indicatfons that it took the usual form of & memoraridum | to the diplomats, and was in such offi-| clal form as could be transmitted to their | home governments as the basis for the action. One of the first elements of the pro- posal, which has for one of its ultimate | “I don’'t know who will be appointed, ! objects the welding of a thoroughly united | but I do know it won't be Rogers.” America, is the preservation of peace on Exit Colonel Fanning, R. D. the American continent. The scene changes to the high-celled It is realized that the chief menaces |office of Patriot James Charles Dahlman. to such a peace are boundary disputes Honeyed words are being dropped into and revolutionary activity. It is pointed |his ears by more or less important re- out that if-all boundary disputes are re- tainers. It is suggested that he would oved to the realm of arbitration and make an extraordinarily good postmaster. 'all the Pan-American nations bind them-' Mayor “Jim" is reported to have risen selves to absolutely prohibit shipments from his chair and to the occasion and, of war munitions to any other than | assuming a Patric Henry - attitude, to established governments, peace among |bave declaimed in words to this effect: the nations themselves would practically | Vothb --and . settlement which, ‘“‘“ up the newspaper plant. * m-“ BB, AN S0d” ol Mon‘f. n H David Caplan, another alleged accom- 4 The o) tion to Mr. Fletcher's con- plice of MoNamara, who was arrested| . "%ee ‘housand Words Lons. firmatien, e Wpublicass sk, il b8 last February near Beattle shortly after |, T1® h“m,; "on‘rl ““l’."";k':“""""'; made the vehicle of a fight on the ad- Schimidt had been taken into custody In | gicute in offictal quarters ia that it either | MIRIstration's whole Mexican policy. The New. York, is in jail awalting trial also containg an argument over the facts wltl: republicans are opposed to recognition of on the charge of having murdered Charles the possibility of an offer of arbitration | *1¥ Sovernment in Mexico without pro- Hagerty. j@ettiement of disputed points, or that it | Vision for reparation for the many Amer- | communities could have levied as inde- R T e —— offers evidence which Austria presents as | ican lives lost and the millions of dol- pendent organizations. In other words, OVBI‘ One Hundred newly discovered and as supplementing |1ars of property damaged in the revolu- the city commissioners took advantage { .y or modifying the officlal statcment by |tions. By some the lives lost are esti- of the limit in fixing the levy. With an Vessels on Brltlsh | the Austrian admiralty upon which Sec- | mated as high as 160, expectancy of $1,30,000 in taxes and an * 2 PR, 70y pman bl o { s of nations and humanic Shipping Blacklist oGl British lines, the chief fighting seems to be confined to the Vosges, wnere in the reglon of Hartmans-Wellerkopf the French claim to have made a succeasful’ advance. Berlin officlally minimizes thiy success, but doea not deny it wholly, Macedontan Position Unchanged. Nothing has happened to change the, Macedonian position, but it is generally belioved that any advance into Greek territory must be made by the Bulgarians,, the opinion being that the Austro-Gerw mans cannot spare enough troops for & serlous attempt against Salonlki. Domestic tension in England over ths compulsion question has been greatly re- lleved. Speculation continues concerning the method which 1s to be adopted to reach eligible unmarried men, a majority agreeing that the Derby plan of attesta- tion will be extended for this purpose. Eastland Officials Released on Bond CHICAGO, Dee. 30.~Loecal federal offie * of these would esteem it a great favor if Senator Hitchcock would pluck the plum and drop it into the hat of Colonel George Rogers. The budget is made from the general purpose fund. The amount of $1,560,000 in- cluded in the levy was made in this man- ner: $1,100,000, the charter maximum for Omaha proper, plus $200,000 ‘for South Side and Dundee. The merger law pro- vided that when making the levy the city commissioners could add for the annexed areas such amounts as those Nothing Doing for George. Senator Hitchcock is reported to have turned and to have responded with dignity and wormwood in these historic words: “I would not accept the position of be assured and the attention of all the | postmaster if it was offered to me." American nations could be devoted to R i what Secretary Lansing expressed in hie | Nqturally his friends stood in awe and speech as working out thelr destinles. | admiration at the spectacle of Mayor retary Lansing based his charge of viola- setimats of R misodlianacis; eoles, and domanding & disavowal of the act, | ET6NCH Occupy i umiaoners bave. o eece. punishment of the otficer responsibie and Turkish Isl g The city comptroller, however, has re- [ (LONDON, Dec. #.—(Delayed by Cen. |"eparation for the American victims or urKis IS and n duced that total to 315478 by eliminat- |sor.)—Great Britain's blacklist of ship- | "}O there were more than twelve. e o o it Pink now shows the names of 102 ateam. | 1t Would not be out of Keeping with the the Aegean Sea Rethantee Whoses bis Pkl ers, with a carrying capaclty of 30,000 | bruetive of nations JERINA - Gaaben With the general fund up to the last "’.‘r‘;'! it 14, punlienddl to. sukde ‘Briban‘|of it Z‘Ei’.‘".m.’.m.fi Tn.l:l:::: PARIS, Dec. ®.—rrench troops have notch, the departments have ulubl::l!;.'d shippers from using. the veasels, whioh In any event, observers of the workings | gocupied the Turkish island of Castelo- ;:;h::tu] r;om;hy:n-:r:mu:‘m"-p: are suspected of trading with Great |°f QiPlomacy here see manifold oppor- | pizo (Kasteloryso), in the Aegean sea, be- The Omaha general fund for 1915 ap-|° ©f belng German owned. B Keotis e I’n"‘n realm of dip. | Of Adalia, according to the morning pa- | The blacklisted vessels owned in neutral || " ‘ \ # l"' pers in Parls. The possession of Ca: countries are apportioned as follows: | lomatC disouesion until & way for settle- | yori0 40"y naval base 18 characterized | proximated $1,00,000 and the last logis- lature raised the limits on the fire, po- Warmer Weather R el oy Bl ey and Snow Promised | been offered to the mayor and is not at |all likely to be offered to him detracted | somewhat from the sublimity of the | scene. Still, it was striking. It is suggested by some of the faithful " KANSAS CITY, Mo., lice, funds to the extent of which was included in the new levy. library, street lighting and park The problem before the city commis- sioners is the distribution of the general $130,000, all of United States, 11; Norway, 38; Sweden, 87; Denmark, 8; Spain, 1; Holland, 4, and Braszil 3. The American vessels are the Alla- guash, Ausable, Genesee, Hocking, Kan- \ ep th . {ment is found which will keep the rela- | 10T &8 & Hat tions between the twe gountrics unsev- ered. Bombm Castelorizo 1s a small istana of Asiatic Turkey, lylng Asia Minor, seventy-five miles east by oft the south comst of | clals were informed today in & message from Grand Rapids, Mich., that six of the elght officials indicted In connection with the Eastland disaster had given | themselves up and had been released to- Dec. %.—Rlsing | kakee, ~Manitowoe, M rea v 000, donte L A b [mumee, Seneca, . south of Rhodes. It has an a of eleven | aay in bonds of $5, temperatures, with prospects of snow in |that it would be a fine thing for the job [fund of $1,534,873. The superinten Winneb W i 0 h 000, Kansas, Nebraska and this section of [to be offered to Mayor “Jim” publicly [of the Mre and police departments al- wf"“ Pago. Winneconne and Meusexe n tton S lp square miles and is inhabited mainly by The detendants are to appear January lege that by reason of Increased pay and Greeks. 3 Missouri, prevailed today. In Arkansas |and officially in order that he might de- | before Federal Judge Sessions in Grand also the mercury had rises from its 10w | cline it. more men in these branches of the serv- | AS & number of the Swedish and Nor- point of yesterday. Trains entering Kan- | rfhis, however, has its disadvantages in sas City from all directions were running | {he eyes of those who may shake the close to thelr normal schedules. At Kan- | pjum tree because the mayor might ac- sas City the mercyry stood at 22 degrees | qop. this morning, an ascent of 10 degrees in | the last twenty-four hours. | The Weather | Forecast till 7 p. m. Friday |, For Omaha, Counell Bluffs and V: w—Partly cloud. Temperature From an authoritative source, also, { comes the disturbing word that Senator | Hitchcock may not have the appointment |1n his power. Which would make Colonel | Fanning’s experience a sad illustration of {love's labor lost. | Senator Hitcheock will leave for Wash- | ington in time to'be present when the roll lelnity |y "called in the senate next Monday Yesterday. Plead for Fanning. Late yesterday afternoon a committea of twenty business men Wiited on Senator Hitchcock to speak in behalf of Colonel nning himseif for the job. Fanning has retofore turned a deaf ear to all who even suggested that he should be con- sldered a candidate. Frank Ransom was the chief spokesman of the committes and he set forth in glowing terms the fitness of Colonel Fanning for the posi- tion and the debt the d(manr.fi;c party owes to him for his years of labor in its rbehalf, u! Delay Arrest of Re_g._ Buchanan WASHINGTON, Dec ar Omans Hours h Comparative Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday . 2 Mean tem) ure e o Precipltation Vi T e TR ‘emperature an: tion ~depar- tures from the -m.'f“" temperature Excess for the day. 83, | 30.—Service of the Deficiency since March 2 ' 39 warrant for the arrest of Representative Nur:s\ vre'clvlu!bn M8inch Frank Buchanan of Ilinols on the in- Reticlency for the G inch - giotment charging conspiracy to foment 11 since E o L g A 8 inches trikes in American mugition plants was Def oy o 1914 3.4l inches held up today while Department of Jus- B.6inches (jce officlals considered whether Mr. Bu- | Reports from Stations at 7 ¥, M, chanan, &s a membef of congress, was .a"'v'e“.?.‘.‘r‘.‘" “mi:" m:.:;. Rain | immune from arrest. (Cheyenne, clear . % — cloud: 32 | | Denver, partly cloudy % “%|DRY CONVENTION WILL Dodge Gty cloudy B el BE HELD AT MINNEAPOLIS North Platie, clear i6 o Ouelia, Sloudy <.+ - ® | CHICAGO, Dec. 3.—The prohibition na Rfl‘mfi“’df-i‘f] s 2 01 | tional convention will be held in Min Sloux City, cloudy... % 00| neapolis on July 19, it was announced to Vi 10 ‘4 | day by the prohibition national eommit tine, partly cloudy. 10 O hdleatds trace of precipitation. - below gero. tee, which is in session at its headquart lf A. WELSH, Lows! Forecaster. ers here. ice in South Side nexation, an additional sum of $35000 is necessary over what those communities apd Dundee since an- would have pald under the old system. The legislature increased the salaries of the firemen and policemen which will acecount for some of the in- crease. of Omaha, ‘The Welfare, City Planning and Recre- atlon boards are new adjuncts to the municipal machinery and each wants a bite out of the ple. Every departmen is | asking for more employes, increased sal- aries, or both, Sunk by Mi Dec. 3. — The LONDON, Norweglan steamer Rigl, of 1912 tons, from Charles- ton for Gothenburg with a cargo of ol cakes, has been sunk by a mine. The crew was saved. No Evening Bee on New Year’s Day Subscribers will be erved with The Daily Bee on Satur- day morning. | LONDON, Dec, 9.-The labor party to- ! day called a general trades unfon meeting weglan steamers are small trading boats, operated exclusively i the Baltic, the exclusion from their chartering lst will not have mueh effect. The presence of many overseas freight- ers in the list, however, is skriously bampering shippers. Members of British Commission Chosen WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.—The person nel of the international commisglon which will represent Great Britain and the United States in any dispute whe:y arises under the treaties negotiated by former Becretary Bryan soon will be an nounced formally. George Gray of Delaware, as previously | announced, will be the national member | for the United States Domicio Da Gama, ambassador from Brazil, will be the non-national member for the United States. Great Britain has chosen Viscount Brice as its national member and Max Koreski of the fmperial Russian council ber, Fridtjof Nansen, the celebrated cx- rplorer and former premier of Norwuy, | | will be the umpire. ! 8ir Charles Fitzpatrick has been chosen !from Canada, Sir George Houstoun Held from Australin and W. P. Schreiner from the South African umion as British colon ial representatives Labor Will Discuss Draft January 6 for January & to consider the govern- ment's proposal regarding compulsion for single men. It was announced this evening that Pre mier Asquith would introduce in the House of Commons on Wednesday next & bill dealing with compulsion, ito Bordeaux, on November 17, And American Joint | NBEW YORK, Dec. 80.—The steamer | Bankdale arrived this morning from | Bordeaux after a tempestuous voyage, in | which the cattle fittings and ralls were |carried away and lfeboats lifted from their fastenings. On the outward voyage when 750 miles from that port, & bomb cxploded in No. 6 hatch. The explosion was distinetly felt throughout the ship, The cargo, con- sisting of cotton, was set cn fire and the blaze raged until it reach i port, When it was finally subdued. A!l the cotton in the No. 6 compartment, consisting of 200 | bales, was destroyed, | Cable dispatches receive! here on No- vember 26 from Bordeaux rlated that the Bankdale had arrived there with a fire in its hold, and that an incuiry was being instituted. No mention vwus made in the {cable dispatches of & bomb explosion on | board. s its non-national mem- | | LONDON, Dee. 30.—The lludapest cor- respondent of the Post a letter pub- lished today, states that the old enmity between Austria and Hungary has burst into & fresh flame and thut cven the pre- tense of unity, which had cxisted, has disappeared since the t when the Austrians offended the iiungarans by removing the Hungarlan (ag from & tortress at Belgrade. The serlousness of the present quarrels, the correspondent says, are instanced by the parliament activities of the inde- pendence party, which, despite the en- (reaties of the premier, have been airing the Hungarian grievances. Herr Ur. manecsy, & leader of the indebendence party, in a‘recent fiery speech declared that the advantages galned in the wa were largely due to German generalship and Hungarian bravery, and added that Old Erfiy Between Austria and Hungary Bursts Into Fresh Flame | Austrian communications always slighted | COOK GOES T OHELP THE Sergeant H. J. Cook, formerly of the police force, will leave for Nebraska City this morning on a misslon as pleasant as Cook s the survivor of the original mem- bership and will be the guest of honor at the celebration 1o be held tunight. She wrote to ner son that as iy Was present with her on th eoriginal occasion, she would like to have him with her to- night also. Sergeant Cook was 2 years old when the church was founded. FHe Iis now a grizsled veteran of two andsixty, while bis mother is 83 had nothing to do with them. If every- one had done the sime amount of work | and shown the sam: herolsm and sacri- tice as the Hungailans, they would by this time be enjoying peace, Urmanczy sald. Although the Hungarians bad won | the praise of their arch enemies, the | Italians, he sald, the Austrians had shown no appreciation and they had to face con- tinually the brutal behavior of Austrian officers. The speaker continued to recount some of these ivstances, remarking that the the acts of Hungarian herolsm and that Austrian officers’ deprecated and in- sulted the Hungarian troops. Count Tisza, the Hungarian premier, in defending the Austrians, replied that | petty tricks of humiilation had not been | committed by anyone in Austria, byt by BAPTISTS IN CELEBRATING | it i unique, He goes In response to an invitation from his mother to join with | her in the observance of the sixtieth | anniversary of the esiah first | Rapids, when proceedings to cause thelr | removal to Chicago for trial will be bes sun, [ THE wanT AD wul —) All Rights Reserved. T tried weal hard to land a But found Don't look But make & list from Bee Want Ads, A»In‘u-i-nhu Save time and work, when you are looking for by eon-um-f tha - W, COLUMNSE" of TO- DAY'S . The best jobs are always offered in - ourself well informed elp Wanted” colummns * THE BEE, Keep ¥ Ly reading the “Hi everyday. subaiterns, and he would see that they lAuurhn generalship and martial spirit | were reprimanded, THE OMAHA BEE,

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