Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 15, 1916, Page 4

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MERCURY IS RISING | Mrs. Hauser and Child at Trial of Her Husband, IN THE SOUTHWEST Temperature Generally Ten De- | grees Higher in Kansas, Okla- i homa, Missouri, Texas | WIRE CONDITIONS KANSAS CITY, Mo, Jan. 14 Passing of the high pressure area to the upper valley Great lakes region today is bringing relief to the southwest from the cold wave. The mercury t¢ mine degrees night, a Kansas and Oklahoma, and western Texas the reading reported to the local’ weather bureau gener- ally higher yesterday IMPROVED Mississippi and rose from four in Missouri over little more in while in northern were ten degrees than Snow for M Slowly rising temperatyr creasing cloudiness that may bring snow in Missour!, Kansas and the north ern part of Oklahoma were predicted with In At Kansas City (he mercury stood at |T% degrees below zero at & o'clock this morning Four and a half hours later it had risen 10 the zere mark. Des Moines reported 16 degrees below zero at 7 a. m.; St. Jo peph, 10 below: Concordia, Kan., § below Dodge City above; Fort 8mith, Ark 16 above, and Corpus Christl, Tex., above Wirel conditions were much Improved and tfhins were resuming normal sched- | ules. | | p Warmer at St. Paul, ST. PAUL, M., Jan, 4.—Gradually | i the Rocky vising (emperatures throughout the ecen- tral nprthwest siales today brought re- 1l from the intense cold of the last two days &nd enabled railroads to resume normal service In the Twin Citles the temperature was ‘17 degrees below early today, as com- pared with 31 below twenty-four hours 4‘ previously. ! Cold Wave Reaches Atlantie. | WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.~The cold wave has ronched the Atlantic states, although not I full force, over the north section and cold weather continves westward to mountains, although with a considerable rise in temperature west of the Mississippi river. Four Helow at Chlcago. CHICAGO, Jan, 4.<The cold weather which! has prevailed in the middlewest for the last thirty-six house, continued today, but the wealher bureau preducted # highei! temperutures before night. In this city at My momelers in the Jowntown istered 4 degrees below xero. Rallfoad traffic t of. Chicago. ia #till far from nor! although reports from {lowa and Minfesota, where the most [serious trouble was ‘encountered from fhe storm, state that conditions are Imum.vln[. > HAUSER'S NERVE A8 TRIAL Page One.) aw—the presumption of Ingocence 'till. it i8 proven. And 1 most firmiy and sincerely beleve that no son can say Arthur Hauser's gullt has n proveh, beyond question of a Goubt! by the case which the atate has made. | “Codnsel for the staté has asked you it you are going to'turn Hauser loose upon |this community, Gentlameri, the av n 18 not the interest of the com- munity nor of Hauser's family. Hauser' life ig not wofth wmuch. He Ia only man, fike the rest of ue, Hé may have | sinn He has sinned. | “‘You should forget the interest of the community, the ¢ity, the state, his old . his’ wife, and his daughter, But #ince | counrel - for the state has men- v the - effect of the result of this trial, jlet me say a few words concern- ing those on whom a convieition would bear hardly. i r Baby, “Arfhur Hauser has a little baby there, lying In her mother's arms. By _ her #de sits the man's aged mother. tme when Arthur Hauser lles whether in a prison yard or in eot ther- rict res- | oman and she will marry and be- mother. When some one asks 'Who are you? she will answer: ‘I am, the daughter of Art Houser, who was gplectrocuted for murder, the first man fo sit in the deathchalr in the state of Nqfi ko, I “In Kansas where my home is they | have abandoned (he death penalty, but you heve it in Nebraska and It you be- n-v.:’lumur Hauser is gullty of this murdér, 1 tell you to send him to the death! chair. & tlemen of the jury, where were | you the night of October 16. 1. was in the sgnctuary of my home with my wife and baby. 1f someone said I was some- wherd else how would 1 prove where I wab. I'd have to call that loving wife. | That is what Hauser did Urges Jury (o Belleve Wife. “What is tp protect you iIf your wife i» to be belleved when she vomes on stand, unshaken and says you | were With her. 1s she not to be belleved | eyen If her testimopy Iy not corroborated? | “Bul in this case there was corro-| boration. Hauser and Mrs. Hauser sald | the laundry was delivered the night of | the nfurder, 1 went to the laundry com- | pany jand they told me ‘No.' 1 came back ;and said: ‘My God. Hauser, are| you lying to us’ He sald, '‘No.' | Chatles A, Linter, driver for the Chicago | Laundry company, called to the witness atand’ by the state to refute the alibi| \ Mrs. Hauser, the bandit's wife, had | 10 establish for him, broke down | at last minute and admitted that his | vash ‘record H to the Hause: home on October 1, of the murder of the late the Woodmen of the World . - - s 3 l“ » | to clear th showed he had delivered | i | most dramatic scenes ever staged in an Omaha court Court officials leaped 1o thelr feot, rap ping for order. Judge English threatened room, and In a second order Hauser and his, Jaw. yers were jubllant, and state's counsel were correspondingly downcast. Lawyers on both sides sald that in previous con versations Linter had refused to admit that he deliversd laundry to the Hausers on October 16 Index Card Leads to (limax. An office index card for October 15, In advertently brought into court by Linter. led to the climax fense seized it, found that It showed Linter had called at the .Hauser home had been restored | Attorneys for the de- | | for articles to be laundered on the day | | | bofore the murder, Introdiced it in evi- dence, then asked Linter whether his cash book did not show a delivery on the following day The witness examined the book and found the entry “IL did deliver laundry there on Octo ber 16," he sald A moment's questioning by the county | attorney falled of results, and court ad- Journed for the noon recess Mrs, Hauser had testificd her husband | was home with her at 9 o'clock the night of the murder, and that she got the money from liim with which to pay Lin- ter when he delivered it Mirs. Hauwer, by her her hushand for evidence, repaid the kindness and af- tection which, she declares, he has lav- | ished on her and their baby during aff the long serles of desperate crimes of which he is accused. Her devotion to him s manifested by her evident hap- piness at being with him and by her willingness to do whatever he desires. She didn'€ want to have her photograph taken, but “Ull ask Art,” she said. YArt I8 willing.” she sald next, and photographs of her and . the baby were taken, Mrs. Hauser conversed more than half | E #n hour with her husband before siie testifled, during a recess of court. Then she was called to the stand. arried Eleven Yenrs, “M me 18 Mrs. May Hauser," she testified. I have been married to Ar- thur Hauser eleven years on February 4, We came to Omaha on October 1 and left October 21."" “Do you remember the night of Oc- big, important cannot work One efficient warrin, a vial of cod liver oil every day because fa show how wonderfu ments sickness. Preparedness thing to fighting soldiers. A sick soldier with vigor any more than you can work with energy when you are weak, tired, almost sick. g government is giving each soldier Is this not convin against sickness is OMAHA, | i | | | | r-reaching experi- it increases the calories of human energy and gives them strength to prevent winter 1 cm1 proof that yow need it at this season to enliven your blood to prevent sickness? SATURDAY, | tober 18 | "1 ao. Yes, sir Who was w My husband » Where wers At 2117 Webs* Saturday you know where you were?’ d my babe." r street from 5:30 o'clock merning fix the date nndeyman Came st intil nday How do ye 1 “The laundrymar Also Arthur and 1 down to bu Nine. going t. Arthur o'clock, to go aid, ‘1 baby out were believe it best & tonight, beca it What laundry he Chicago la Vho pald the 1 dia nd s m I went band wnd 1 Mrs the ore p of M the kitchen where T aving cards and got it here told of and Mrs. O rooming golng into get fetors of house, to Lida Hauser, who, she 0 in there, wearing only a Mr petti- oat Crozier 10lus testimony remembered the inci of it. Mrs her after the ut Haby's Clothes. M:s. hauser further established 1} alibl by testifying that on 16, undid the and sorted out what she had sald he ient, but did not fix the Arth sorted date the evening October she package clothes needad for the bady over Mr. Ha put nd 1 froned that night and morning irons for m * ghe sald. “Then up about 9 o'clo we retired got Sunda County Attorney did not crosss Magney examine the witness The laundry driver had admitted some times worked late Wenther Man on Stand witnesses for the defense wer Frank O'Connor, who testified of meas uring distances at the scene of the crime Colonel 1. A. Welsh, weather forecaster who told of the condition of the weather the night of the murder, and Dr. A. F Tyler, who lives near the scene of the crime, and _whose testimony was intro- duced in an‘effort to impeach Miss Grace Slater, eye-witness of the Colonel Welsh said: “A to my records, it rained from & 2 the night of October 16, and from 7:30 to 8:3). A total of .18 of an inch of rain fell that night.’ The forecaster said .03 of an inch of water fell between 9 and 9:30. The murder was committad at 10 o'clock Other Dr. Tyler, who lives at 119 Lincoln houle- | vard, 250 feet north of Dodge street, said he saw a man and woman on the oppo- site side of the strect from his house shortly before the time of the murder They turned afd went south to Dodge street. A moment or report of a pistol,” said the physician.” Did you see anyone after that?" “No, sir,”” sald the witness; not until the crowd gathered." Miss Slater had testified she and Smith did not go north of Dodge street. Linter, the laundry driver, was called in rebuttal by the state to disprove Mra. Hauser's statement that he had delivered laundry to the “Wilsons,” as the Hausers called themselves while living in Omaha, on the night of the murder, He first testified that he made only two trips to 2117 Webster, where the “Wilsons” were living. “I was there the afternoon of October 20 and the morning of October 21, said. A few minutes afterward came the break” in his testimony which was fa- vorable to the defense. Read The Bee Want Ads. It pays! 2 Cod liver oil is scarce and high-priced this season and many inferior grades may ke offer . But remember that’ SCOTT Sistheone EMULSION - If you are subject to colds, throat or | are easily , rundown or have thin bl take Scott’s Emulsi n at once. If your ward in growth, frail or anemic, nothing pleasant to used in One food and ‘kiem e At any drug Imitations It is prescril may a sickness. store—Start it to-day. ! offered ood, you children are back- will do them so much good as Sco#t’s Emulsion, and for girls and women in home or business it is nature’s great strength-builder. Scott’s is not a “secret” medicine. tonic; it contains nothing It is a rich blood- by physicians and liberally which guarantees pure cod liver oil—free from alcohol and drugs. troubles; if you should | and is two later I heard the | { { | | | ! he | | i | JANUARY | | | { 5y e RS WA L SR AT SR Sre 15, 1916 San Antonio, Tex.; Miss Blla Red- | Sloux City : mond hospital on Generals RoAriguez | ons ronact; 5. b Redmond; | thopme. naa ‘ . | Wayne, and Mrs. L. C. Harnly, Lincoln. | Bioux City for some i and Almeida Shot | runerai ‘services were held this- atter- | benerit. e noon ms EL PASO, Tex., Jan. 14.—Generals .lnu‘ Theodors Thoms. | entty astiior of ¢ & count He wa Rodriguez and Almeida, were executed 2 |a na f pla d was year &t/ Madets, short after thelr arrest : WBST POINT, Neb., Jan. 14.—(Specia 3 S s according to a @ispatch received by the | The death of Theodore Thoms, jr | - . Mexican nsul fram General Jacinto esident f Weat Point, occurred a Andreas G. Garcia, Mexican consul, de- | FL clared today In answer to a formal Ir ‘ . . et e st creaionsr e | R@medy Prescribe Mex run down Villa and his bandit b e | SEAT RABIRS y Many Doctors Frank O, Peterson. WEST POINT. Neb., Jan, 14— Special) | Compound of Simple Laxative The funeral of Frank O, Peterson took H!'b' Prove’ Ma‘l place from St. Mar rch, West Poi b on Wednésday morning. Rev. A Efficient. Klemenz, assistant pastor. celebrated the | 1\ (ol requiem mass, the funeral sermon beln& |, o0 wrihune, makes the sesertion tha preached by Re F eitz, pastor M | practically everyone some time Peterson was Iy settler of the Bell| 5ipor yuffers from constipation ' Creek nelghborhood, In Burt county. near | qouie “oee g ™0 ot or condition in Oakland, settling there forty years ago.| s, He leaves a widyv, three daughters, Mrs. | ) ngest'on of stomach wa i e John Seeman and Mrs. Lawrence Seemen | powels is evidenced In varlols of West Point and Miss Mary, at home; | poat tatioh of foul stom da also three sons,’ Joseph, Gustave and|aick headache, languor, all indicate co Otto. The decenscd was 68 years of age fatipation, and call for prom ttea and died of heart disense. | no X o relieve the pr i dis N Katherine Redmond ) tor A1s0 to avold possible dise TECUMSEH, Neh.. Jan. M.—(3pecial.)— | that follows neglect of this importan Mrs. Katherine Redmond, a resident of | function Johnson county since 1870, died at her catharti 1 io! purgs home in Crab Orchard on Tuesday, Jan- |tives should not be employed, as thesc ary 11. Her busband., John R. Red- ! 8fford only temporary relief, while the MR. CHAS. SCHELL mond. died more than ten years ago.|®erve to shock the entir sten ada, Mis: writes that he found relief She fs survived by the following chil<| mild laxative such as Dr. Caldwell's | himgelf by using Dr. Caldawell's Syrup dren: Mrs, D. J. Turner, Gridley, Cal.;|Syrup Pepsin ls far preferable and Pepsin and now keeps it on hand for fan M A Crab Orchard; Mrs, | NOW y generall 1 and pre- j) A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's 8yrup W. H. Doolit oma, Wash.; Joseph | scribec many doct ree from | pepsin should have a place in every Redmond, Colby, Kuan.; Miss Madge V. |ODPiate or narcotic dr acts casily and family madicine chest. A trial bottle car tedmond, Kansas City, Mo.; J. L. Red-|Pleasantly, without griping or other pain 'be ubtained free of charge, by writing to mond, Crab Orchard; Dr. F. H. Red-2nd is a safe, effective family remedy. Dr. W. B. Caldwell, %4 Washington St., Mr. Chas. Schell, 132 Church St Gr nticello, Illinois. [ RSO Convincing Evidence —1is evidence so clear and so force- ful that none can gainsay the point. That is just what is offered in Sam Peck and Stein-Bloch clothes—Convincing Ev- idence of Clothing Superiority, splendid value at regular prices, when in a sale comment is superfluous. Suits or Owvercoats $12.50 Suits or Overcoats, now. ... .$ 025 $13.50 Suits or Overcoats, now. ... .$10.256 $15.00 Suits or Overcoats, now.........e......$11.26 $18.50 Suits or Overcoats, now. Le...$13.60 $20.00 Suits or Overcoats, now. : .$156.00 $22.50 Smnits or Overcoats, nOW........,.......$16.76 $25.00 Suits or Overcoats, now....... ves..$18.75 Suits or Overcoats, now. .$22.60 Suits or Overcoats, now. .$26.25 Alterations Without Extra Charge. Shirts on Sale— $2.00 Kinds, $1.50 Kinds, $1.00 Kinds, In such excellent materials as Rice Cloth, Madras, French Print and Mercerized Oxford. BISON & TRHORNE 1516-18-20 FARNAM STREET. AMUSEMENTS, AMUSEMENTS, AMUSEMENTS, AND THEATRE BR i90 Last 2 Times| The Distinguished English Actor | Mr. Cyril Maude | 1 P.M to 11 OONTINUOUS BOYD ous LAST TIMES TODAY Henry W. Savage's “Excuse Me” A Pullman Car Pleasantry of Berths and Mirths. A PATHE FEATURE Metro Pioture Service Fresents the Bminent American Emotional Actress, EMILY STEVENS In the Film Sensatio: “The House of Tears | “OMANA'S FUN OENTER" Dally Mats., 15-35.500 Evengs., 15.85.50.750 BLUTOR" Mosical i misamansst . Nootasiise 1| PAASEIVY Globe Trotters Jusical | Prices, 10c and 20c. “IPP 15th and Harney. D. . || ¥rank Hunter's Blackfaceism: Frankie Rice's (m- 8089, | o rvonctions: Lester & O'Hay 1 the . Concert Orchestra | Bhotch "’ oneTrenchen:” oyt airtieid, 1 . | -t o LAST TIMES TODAY [ e Yok Dbt B Bronst e '8 B o Y D‘Aebl_r:’. '%OA'; | Ladies' Dime Matines Week Days. » TUESDAY, | Sat Nite and Week 11:00, 13:30, 1:40, 3:00, 4190, 5:40, 7 120 4 9:40, 0th Century Maids’ The Funniest Play Ever Written | Today g Z NEW g Tonite =S A 230 KRV GE20 | LGS |North Brothers Stock Co. OSCAR . FIGMAN Omaba's Best Theatrical Bargain, 25¢ to $1.50 “THE SPENDTHRIFT” xd Lower Floor Seats at $1 10 Cents, 85 Cents. Bagland's Famous Stage Beauty GDIS“IGF COLLIER “TONGUES OF MEN" THE BEST OF VAUDEVILLE Matinee Today, 2:45 Early Curtain Tonight, 8:15 Next Week Again—Two Stellar Feat. :ns:mly:mmmnu‘ GET THE HABIT, Phone D. 999 for Reserved Seats, Continuous 11 to 11, Let The Bee get you a good job. “Situations V;an'ted" ads are free oy

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