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THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1916. 5 Several more automobiles ap- | Felix Lake, whep he went there te ars || HEROES FROM DIFFERENT PARTS OF UNITED KINGDOM—Scotland, Ireland and FIVE MEN LYNCHED = In the ail, The negToss were rushed |(hah ‘e of tnoss n tie RS ENIE RN SOUNDS ALAR MS Wa_les are represented in this picture of three British heroes who have just received deco- out, bundied Into the machines and |and all were arrested jater : : :;tlons from King George for valiant military service. The picture was made just as the BY A GEORGIA MOB o el nead to s the lxndning | Shetny County Biomews vy $peakers Attack Wilson's Foreign stof:edm:,;n (v;ere leaving Buckingham palace in London, where the king personally be- in aimre a1 4 been | HARLAN, tu., Jan 3.~ (poclal)—Gi Policy and Say Army and Navy ¢ decorations, firl:’:d’" ;‘f“:;\ “;{ A‘_"“;‘""“-‘ l"‘ e county citizens found the hodies of | day at the family home on West Court | U(t!‘l‘] Innde ulte_ | Sher re J“gl‘l . “ e men hanging I1n one Mimb \\1'\!\% street, after an (liness of several months. y q to the Same Limb. Il view of the road. Apparently they | He was ene of the best known men in 1 be rung up and then became tar- the county. e came here with his wife who had taken them en in 1576 and settied on h 18 now known as the lace. Several years ago | He {s survived by chila the farm wh and two ‘WOOD WANTS BIGGEST NAVY: ‘JAIL I8 ENTERED BY A RUSE tims were of one family Frank Fisher home he moved to Harlan WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.—Attacks lon the administration’s foreign poli SYLVESTER, Ga, Jan X negr Felix 1 nd hla three sons lcies and ‘ | | ere taken from the jai and Ma The fifth was Rotus |4 widew and five childr The funeral cies and pointed references to “the | { Dy & Ivoching party. They were being & will be held at the Methodist church here lu“" state of unpreparedness of the| Id ar suspocts fn connee fon with th was killed at the home of 'gui;rday afternoon at 2 o'clock army and navy" and the awakening oy ',‘(,,\I':””_ = . (SRS o Ty oy - ———— — S O - jof public opinion on the subject of Hthe Qutborilieg -Bellevy they Have ¢ mdequate defense were features of | P e ey s R g Healthy Old Age addeedoss by prominent apeakers 6. | fall lr.. thine c: save him . ner ‘ Saveral automoblles appearsd at s /day before the National Security Inst night, overpowered the § league. took the elx nogroes and started n An arraignment of the foreign poli- letes of the administration was made by Henry A. Wise Wood, chairman of | ward toward Sassor, Te | Bherlff Moreland is buried | | &e The mob brought to the L county, where ——— i1 n newr | Simple Remedy Promotes Health L By Overcoming Tendency Brings Happiness | bound and gained entrance by | y ' the conference committee on national | telling the shorift they wanted to place to Constipation : . him in a cell to save him from lynching defense, New York. ! S g 08 g Pl 2 B ol i o Advancing yoars impair the aotion’ of ! o v releascd the negro aid | gha vital organe. Old age should be tl No Forelgn Polley. | g oy b4 reateat happiners, bat good 3 “It may be said with accuracy tha | or fifty -w acting with nre e ry Constipation should § we have no forelgn policy at the mo (Slon, took the flve ne s from the jail . it s ofien the direet ‘\ i ment." he said. “With the destruction | jand sed away. in sutomoblica herlth ‘of our citizens while upon forelgn mer * The nex ! 8 were bolng held in conne Headache, belching, billousncss, bloat chant ships or upon our own merchar lon with the killing of Sherlft Moreland | drowsiness attor cating and other avmp- | j Ivessels, we pffer no armed interforence, | " o, county during the Christmas hol' | tams of constipation can be readily re nor do we offor armed interferenca whon | bt S ; eved by the use of a simple laxative 2 | Starkvi'le Is a haml e miles from | ¢ 1 1 1 lour citizens, while upon foreign soil, are | Teesburg, the county nd sold in drug s‘ores under the J ' Gestroyed, thelr wives and children out- | party out e ey | Juve ot Do Ouleweilw Symp Py b ¢ raged their property confiscated PArty cut « wires leading north | " Bristol, 1412 Geddea A Ann o ! from Sylvester and the fato of the Arhor, Mich, who le 88 vears old, saya i |Furthermore, it is.to be doubted whether | negroes was not definitely known until | “pp e s Eydes Yonuta 1o O Rett . at the moment we are willing to enfores | hours after th had beo o ¥ o # { hours after they had been lynched yemedy 1 ever ussd for conatipation and by armed intervention such of our do- | about 10 o'clock Inst night eritf wave have & bt of It in the house mestic policies as are inimical to the in- , A Potta and his faller at Sylvester | o when 1 feel tb need of it} It never ‘»-\»Jx terests of foreign nations. He sald thers were awakened by four or five men, who Glanppointe were, however, certain {ndicationa that {announced that they had captured a | Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin ls a mild MR, J. K. BRISTOL we are about to experience a nation negro and wanted to place him In Ja'l [laxative preparation, poeltive in its effsot, wide reaction of public opinion which | T v admitted bearing & negro [ncting enslly and naturally without geip- | for fifty conta a bottls. A trial bottle of b cannot fall to crystallize into a national | !baund with ropes. Buspecting nothing the | ing or other pain or discomfort. For over | Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep R | v v n rup Pepsin can be ob. epivit, finding expreésion ih & definlte officers watched the men ag they calmly |a quarter of a century It Tas been the |talned, free of chargs, by writing to Dr. { jcode of policies dealing with forelgn af- {1oosened the bonds. Suddenly the visitors standard household remedy in thousands W. B, Caldwell, 4 Washington 8t., Mon- fairs, in order to sustain which the | seized the officers and took the keys to lof homes. Drugglsts everywhero seli it |ticello, Tlinoks | United States, it need be, wiil declare war, g - Wants Blggest Navy. Mr. Wood gaid tie United § formulate a naval policy that would bear the full brunt, it necessary, of a coali tion of powers, He advocated a naval polidy that would “maintain at all times in the Atlantic a force superior to that of Germany, in the Pacific a force su yerior to Japan; protect tie Panama canal agamst capture or destruction by land or sea, or injury by air" “The present machinery of our govern- ment is utterly unfitted to deal with our ates should | COL. HYSLOP, BREAK RECORDS AT ST0CK YARDS Run of Live Stock First Five Days GEN. LIPSETT. the prospects of at least 200 cars for Saturday, which will make the new record week run well over the 3,000 mark. Not only has the week's record on total cars of live stock been brokem, but with \ i | CoL. LLOYD. \ " —\ | | i Escaped Convircixtsr Steal Arms from Rai}read Station major problems,” declared Charles G the heavy run of hogs that has been run- Curtls of New York, a prominent manu- of Week Surpasses Record ning during tho last week the five davs' | ypprim ROCK, Ark, Jan. $1.—Con- facturer of ship turbines. “Congress | Made Last Y. total has very nearly equalled the record | yiots who escapsd from the state penal should follow the advice of the general bl woek's run on hogs, which was made o gt Cummins, sixty-five miles from board and adopt its program without de- lay. The co-operation of the ship buill- ers should be enlisted and both private and government yards should be put into condition to build all the warships nece sary with the greatest possible rapidity. vy Department Has No Brai orge Von L. Meyer, former secretary of the navy, declared “the fundamental defect of the Navy department is that it has no brain,” no competent military organization charged with the prepara- Mem of the fleets for war and with their @onduct in war and in consequence the navy is being buflt and administered on a peace basis and Is not being effi- clently prepared for the war service, “We add to our difficuities,” he con- tinued, “by being the only civillzed na- tion that has not a budget system.” He urged the fortification of the Panama canal and the additional protection of it by the navy, a definite naval building RUN OF HOGS IS VERY LARGE Records in the banner year, 1915, have already been broken at the Omaha Unfon Stock yards. Compila- tions yesterday fat the office of the company show that the previous big week’s run of live stock, made during the week ending October 16, 1915, has already been surpasfed this week. During October of last year all former -records for one week's re- ceipts were broken, when 2,814 cars of live stock were recefved at the local market, but this record was of but short duration, as for the five deys of this week there has already been received 2,854 cars of stock, and during the weei ending when a total of 1408 cars, or 102,784 head of hogs, were received, The five days of | the present week total 1,364 carloads of hogs, or 101,00 hend, and, as the Faturday receipts are principally hogs, every in- dication points to the establishment of a new record for a week on hog receipts. General Lewis Carpenter is Dead PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 2l.—Brigadier General Lewis Carpenter, U. 8. A, retired, dicd here today, aged 77. He entered th army as a private in 1861. Aftgr the war he entered the regular army and retired after thirty years of service, General Carpenter commanded many forts on the western frontier and saw much service fn varfous Indian wars. February 17, 1912, here, Wednesday night, last night robbed the depot at Moscow from Cummins, and secured arms and ammunition shipped to a hardware store at that place. Twenty-three convicts es- | caped. Only four have been captured. Becauge of fear that some of the mor? | desperate members of the escapsd band | may have secured guns, the half hundred guards searching the woods have ho(‘n; given ordcrs that Leo Blount, convieted | of murder; “Blackie” Willlams and ; Charles Owens, also murderors, be taken dead or allve, Five of the twenty-four men had been captured without resistance upon their part by officers to noon today. Rewards for “Blackie’ Willlams alone | are said to total $15,000 in a half dnlnw, states. He was a member of the Frank NMiller-Willlam La Trasse gang and has still to serve a thirty-two-year sentence for murder in Kansas, { Ark., fifteen miles | BhG S Oar Most Important Clothing Sale of the Season Starts Tomorrow This Town Has Never Wit nessed Such a demonstration of good merchandise selling. Never before values that youn such startling ow find at our great Half Price Sale All New Seasonable Goods No Job Lots program, abolition of useless navy yards, necessary increase of personnel with the intrease of tonnage, establishment of a national councll of defense, prompt or- zanization of a naval reserve of over 000 men, and creation of & navy gen- eral staff, American Merchant Marine. P. H. W. Ross, president of the Na- tignal Marine league, advocated ‘“an American merchant marine owned by Americans, manned by Americans, and at the beck and call of our government.” Henry Woodhouse of the Aero club of America declared that by spending $%,- 000,000 the United States could be made fifth in acronautic equipment and still would Lte ranked by Great Britain, France, Germany and Russia. The back- bane of an merial naval reserve could be | created, he said, for $5,000,000 by increas-| ing the army and navy equipment and Miss Mabel Boardman of the executive committce of the American Red Cross, mbde o plen for support in the organi- | zatlon's part of national preparedness—| yeadiness to care fe- those who suffer in defense of their country, War Department is Drawing Plans for Army Mobilization WASHINGTON, JB: 21.—Comprehen- sive plans for use of the railroads in| mebilizing the army are being drawn up | No Odds and Ends Orchard & Wilhelm Co. 414-416-418 South 16th St. 1 B8 e\ Every Garment Fresh and Crisp From the world’'s famed and best tailors— “Kuppenheimer” AND ¥ | , “Society Brand” Suits and Overcoats Worth from $10 to $50 || R $5 $25 FURNITURE RUGS DRAPERIES If You Want a Bargain in Furniture Read This! A miscellaneous lot of furniture—and it’s thoroughly good furniture, too—that we have priced to close out QUICK. Come and see it! It will bear close inspection. $39.00 Golden Oak Dresser, colonial s $55.00 Flanders Chair, with genuine $ scroll design with large mirror. ... 19.50 leather cushion seat and loose back 20.00 $54.00 Golden Oak Dining Table, $20 00 ; $27.00 Fumied Oak Chalr, leather $13.50 TO by Secretary Garrison in co-operation| 54-inch top, S-foot extension..... | gqu:}, i,"?,l,l,ml,;m(.:‘a‘kl ; with a committee of railroad officials || $30.00 Solild Mahogany Rocker, Mor- 515 00 {£33:00 Pumd O $10‘50 : headed by Fairfax Harrison, president of So0n 18attan 2aas R4 DASK v s> . = 8 P S e | $39.00 Square tube brass bed with 2-inch upright the Southern railroad | 24.00 Fumed Oak Rocker, leather . ither singl Secretary Garrison announced today | $ PR ey ) R s $1 6.00 E:H;:l?l‘:z:. fillers, either single $19.50 . v & that the committee has been authorized | ) A, § 1 e [EETTTRR S B S t d O 1 by all railroads to give him full informa- | !2:.(:0 Chair to match, $16.00 | SB;.'X.;:\ (30;111‘?;:;:;1‘3"'::ue Tube Brass $35'00 oys ul s an oa s 8- | 0P o e en s niikasanae essnsan , 3-6 Uah to supplement that sleesdy 1n Pos: i} ¢ 'o5) ‘Sattee tn maich $8.00 Full Size White Enamel Metal $3.50 Suits and Overcoats.......... H::\':mw‘r’»'rkm«: x.::I‘l‘\)r\ew‘:viufoll::-f:denx wil- | f-or ................. vesesenes 2 -50 | Bed for .....co0000040 St dasada $4-00 $4.00 Suits and Overcoats son’s suggestion that full information is $13,00 Fumed Oak Stand Table | $6.50 Full 8ize or Bed, white enamel $6.50 Buits and Overcoats ch . or Vernis Martin, for $7.60 Suits and Overcoats. .. necessary for mobilization of the na- £0 IOBAER & oo ossiiesbios ey AR | , or Ve Martin, for ...... SoNgohe . ! Y i $8 50 2 O tion's resources. 14| $125.00 Spanish Leather Davenport, $75 00 $6.75 White enamel Bed, $3 38 | 8 s 0 Suits and Overcoats. . . The president has discussed the ques- goft, luxurious cushion seat...... . Y e Y. e . | 10.00 Suits and OV;A;?;‘-A .fiilvn'u’[fl.' tion of industrial preparedness with all | p : p the members of his cabinet . 0dd Suits, Russian and Sailor Blouse Styles, grays, browns, e exceutive committes of the Ascct-{]| Pillow and Upholgtery Squares o i RUGS blues and novelty mixtures, sizes 2% to 7 ation of the Military Schools and Colleges of Vel D gy (o - Whittall Rugs, Bundhar W iltons, Hartford Sax- |}! years, worth $5.00, choice now. asked the house military committee today Remnants of Velours, Damasks, Armures gy Rugs. st Nedeced Prices Now-~but-not laver, I it 650c Bradley Knit Mufflers, all colors, each. to give the forty-two private institu- about 24 inches square ‘.m-],‘ = ’solf{”;lLfirfr?xri.;mfien‘x(?:vpo;i{l.:!“ savings: S “ J bo0c wmtul('?p« e : avbabsRn tions in the association better facilities w 55. 8 s Boidaci oot X (Winter Underwear 20 per ceat Discount.) orth up to $7.50 a yard, $60.00 Whittall Anglo-Perslan, 8-3x10-6..$43. for training their 10,000 students to be- g 4 slan, x . . $13.50 ( " \ . gpemnen gy o § Saturday only— $48.50 Bundhar Wilton, 9x12....., | ] B Temea” st the Maw Fork Each 19 $20.00 Croes Seam Axminster, 93i2. | UNDERWEAR REDUCTION, a d froi e schools I i 76 o y § 50 quality Unions.. o g Rrsdiorisn sl o WINDOW SHADES $17.00 Dundbar Wilton, 4-6x78 ? 81450 _ $450 quality Unious... laid down at West Point, and were fitted shades, odd sizes and lengths from 32 to 42 353»93 Brussels carpet made ru .. $12.50 $3.50 quality Unions.. 10 become second leutenants of volun- fj| inches wide and up to § and € feet long. ;ei"éo fifl:!ll'rhlngmb Hug.’ 10-6x12........862.50 $3.00 quality Unions teers. He asked that the government issue . - ody Brussels, 11-3x16 . $45.00 $2.60 quality Unfons. . $22.50 Bundhar Wilton runner, 3x15 v-‘lfl.M , $2.00 quality Unions. $10.50 Sanford Axminster runner, 3x12....8 7.50 i 4 o $1.60 Heavy Cotton Rib B $1.00 Heavy Cotton Rib . Cotton Rib Shirts or Drawers..... anee b60c Neckwear.......... .35¢. 3 tor $1. (Black excepted.) modern rifles and equipment to replace the obsolete weapons now loaned and also tents and eqippage for fleld traln- ing GATE IN IMPERIAL DAM GIVES WAY LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 2L—A gate in the diversion dam of the Imperial Val DRAPERY All Grueby Pottery at HALF--- A beautiful pottery for holding garden flowers, Prices $1.00 to $12.50 SECTION. A large number of choice articles have been selected from our stock and put in this sale of Bric-a-Braoc, #3.75 Fulper pottery tea sets, $1.90 #5.00 Fulper pottery tea sets, $2.50 $2, $3 and $5 Ivorex Placques, ley Irrigation system, went out last | o s e i dar o at HALF at $1.00, $1.50 and $2.50 break in the levees, according to advices 2 B B I e ————————— ——