Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 23, 1916, Page 7

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE 23, 1916 7—A ] = L e — — = = TEN PUuoh. ARE (,remhton Sfudenh “’no IuRe Lead FISKE'S LETTER [b : ?'. , 0 ek o o i e b K i o1 0 D T T@lvgraph Cnu ipany CHASING BANDIT| ~ Parts In College Play Friday Night| gNT 70 SENATE i . oniprmmrsir | 00t Race Resuis Ynion Pacific Big Reward for Ell] \Dllf[ ZJMEP y [ o ——‘— y '_W ) Man Who Robbed Passengers ' |Secretary Daniels Says Document e dally he [ e that he had nel W. F. Cody (Buftalo Bill), writ RUTTE. Barr { Was Placed on Files of Navy aced the seation on file & from Ponca City, Okl., where Telograph | | [ plcsadbls | \‘/ 543 Dan Without His Knowledge ey | Koo Cobbad A RAKa i By hdCopselpndippint ot g B MAKES GUARD PAS3 THE HAT| Jonallen” |\ axES SOME TART COMMENTS g Sttt o Bk Dol B e e M Bt e S | Ke ” Al tmes, but 1 | 1 Bill explained that this feature wi mall for a second offense, but he eould RAWLINS, Wyo., April 22— (Spe- | WASHINGTON, April Secre e 4 et el i et et o Weplbe e e, An Avtoak siawinkid ! cinl Telegra Fen posses organ- | | tary Daniels transmitted to the sen t nigh W8t night are { d i P fay combing the | niles okt between Cheyenne | and Green River in a search for the lone bandit, who yesterday held up | ate today his response to the Lodge | resolution adopted April 12 calling [ upon him to submit a letter from the ilm\‘ general board dated August 3 and robbed forty-three passengers on 1914, and & communication from { Unfon Pacifie train No, 21, together | ‘Ituu Admiral Bradley A. Fiske, then i with Guard Dudle short distance 1.mln for operations, dated November ¢ wish to announce the arrva 1Iro™pring é west of Hanna. In a general way | [ 9, 1914, The communications were . : Sto \‘ of High Grade Pianos, such a m,- matehless Stein tagPposses are working yodey the i [ described [n the resolutions as ward way, Weber, Hardman, Steger & Sons, Emerson, McPhail, ‘,“,"',‘,,"",‘.‘_'“yl,‘“' . ,"‘ b ,’_,fl” Felh Lo “I‘,f“,“"",‘,,A,"“‘r‘ atglee ‘“\'“,“\' e ; ‘ Lindeman & 8ons and our Sweet-toned Schmoller & Muel [ ment frst ntioned publicly when Rep ) - ler. These are instruments that we have sold for vears IPour of the posses in the man hunt | resentative Britten asked Mr. Dan f and can recommend i oevery particular are organized by the sheriffs of Lar jels to produce them during his ex THE PURCHASE OF A PIANO amie, Albany, Carbon and Bweet-| amination before the house n ater counties, These are the coun- | | committee recently and he refused % e e s Pl il | 2 . n lifetime investment, o vou must consider first of all ties that the Union Pacifl PRsHe Dewey and Viske 2 . L : through between Cheyenne and | Kearch of the flles of the Navy deg the standing of the house you deal vith, Second, the quality of the piano, which means (ireen River. The other posses are | ment and the general hoard falled the tone, action and durability, and most of all- - the best for the least money made up of citizens in ||n»v-m,.u.m; disclose, however, a h lette v The House of Sehmoller & Mueller make a specialty of Pianos, and owing to our " ¢ the » and’ of plains the weneral board as that ment cities along the line and:of plai 4 immense purchasing power, are in a position to give the piano buying public more value men, who have come in to Join in the he rosolution, aceording man hunt, encouraged by the reward Phnlels. A leiter from Admir for their money than any other dealer in the middle west. Also, we are in a position to i ag ), e rewar( president of the hour ntaining 1 : 4 i of $6,600 that has been hung up by AL quote the most liberal terms of $5.00 per month on a High Grade instrument the Union Pacific company for {he Admiral IFiske's loite nrefi In our exchange department you will find some exceptional values in used Pianos at arrest of the bandit " ,‘m’:\ e ll‘ s g very low prices, To the men whe s 4 . conta # the fant f this I Sty e i EXCHANGED PIANOS e hecessar } nderstanding bHeing yaat » $500 Whitney, Square 150 Bchmoller & Mueller, Upright $ hat & settlement will ade later or & $460 Kmerson, Upright p‘,, ; 00 Decker, Upright % Five lllllulull Men l.. u....r e s : $200 Root & Son, Upright N $400 Hackley, Upright F. J As a resuit of the armed f of clone i,"""‘,:““,”" - : $500 Knabe, Upright ' $275 Segerstrom, Lpright [ y W0 motnted men who are Acouring the | L ]“' % - . e £450 Fleger & Sons, Upright $460 Gramer, Upright ountry for ' distance of 400 milex fic et abde di . aniig $300 Ludwig, Upright $260 Bradford, Upright % R 4 W B i ebe $450 Sohmer, Upright : $1,000 Chickering Grand % gk bl SN R 19 A DRSS 00 Kimball, Upright $1.100 Steinway Grand F 2 would indicate that today Wyoming Perhaps this is not letter continues, “and n FREK hl'fi”l,»—l""ll SCARF—FREE LIFE INSURANCE nder martinl Jaw EMBRANDT STUDIO PHOT inder martinl ores 0 the fact that our navy has never sition L kot o daiing HEhe Sac It g} Planos for Rent, #3550 per month=Hix Months' Rent Allowed on Purchase Price In addition to scouring the countr to fight n werlous enemy; certainly no ither side of the rallvoad for a distunce | imrl o AR BRIEF CITY NEWS | e sy e e | S chmoller & Mueller Piano Co. staff fa taken In order to capture the bandit “Townsend’s for purfln{ Goodw.” 2 . Tart Comment by Dinlein L1818 ¥ e B » Middle West it he should appear during duy or night | TAEWUng Fixtures—iirgens-Granden L() P]ant a Tree Coonaaitar S s loitar i 18111818 Farnam St I'he Stelnway House of the ot wnd attempt to board a train In an of- | Difmond Engegement Riugs, Eduolm. Danfels In his communication f fort to get out of the country Have Root Print It—~Now Beacon Press Arbor 'da ebraska’s own day, was h The bandit, who is described as a tall handsome youth, boarded the traln nt | TeEelcos to Dano==The Pagalco club|observed in a quiet way throughout the irecley, Colo. After n conversation with [WHI hold g dancing party at Cham fty. City Commissloner Hummel wmm‘{ train's stenographer, ho wat down |4cademy Friduy evening many young trees in tha parks, Carter | with Train Guard Dudley. After an [ “Today's Movie Program,” clasaified | L. oo iyt Mg 1 hour's conversation, the man drew two | section y, 17 mppenrs In The Bee b ¢ i Ui adringdas revolvers and compelled the guard to | EXCLUBI Y. Pind out what the va | Humme rted Arbor duy observane his hat before the passengers, who |FlOUs moving picture theaters offer early In the week [ d with hands in the alr. About $200 | Andirons, Pive Sorsens. Sunderian City and county offices were generally e lre 48 gathered ifi the .obsmvation car | For Mate—ity wnd 6% city and farm |elosed and banks, of course, observed the Sh red at ( mortgages, J. H, Dunmont, Keeline Bldg w which declares this to be a legal holl At the entrance to the second sleeping | Use “Tex-Tile" Bhingles Sunderlands day. car, a brakeman and James Sherlock » st s g conductor, faced the robber, Sheriock| X#ep ¥our Muney ana vaiuavles in the | 1t "”""”‘ oner ’ “y“}l ::‘"':“‘:“""‘ hesitated & moment to raise his hands, | American Sufe Doposit Vaults, 218 Boutn |0l clothes and went Gu ' ‘e £ an il and the bandit fired. The shot went wild, |37th Bt Bee Bidg, Boxer rcnt 8100 for T i Sta s 4l . [ In the sleeper the brakeman was pressed |¥ months, Open from 9 s, m, to 6 p. m o g o b | & with thoughts of the significance Into service and anothier §200 waus dropped | Ak-Mas-Ben Comumittes to Mest-—The | .\ ", ng many of them remembered | . . . into the hat. hustling committee of Ak-Sur-Hon, San When the collection was finished, the |#on's member-getting phalanx, is to hold n,‘:-’ i’”f n o practical w : robber handed the guard & watch.|a meeting Tuesday noon, Api) %, at the y HEN you take your Shoes off tonight do this: ~—PBear your weight on your right Foot and, with- out lifting it off the floor, press it forward and back- tutes that he ut his home plaited & There's the watch 1 got on my last|Hotel Rome. A luncheor will glven holdup and which I promised to return|in connection with the business meeting v;n.-;lnn:e,“,);r sld "”IIY you n} -|m-|: m::vlv: Theosophical Baster Hervice—"Tho le(‘l Sult Agalnst the train, get o here, otherwise, I'll| Bearet of Happiness' will be the subject i of an I“,»yh»“luv ire by Burd . Miller thc Od(lnwald Put %0 to Rawling with yo hical hall, sulte 70 e bulld The bandit who robbed the Unlon Pa-|a¢ 7 ’ i in 0ff Till October "ward firmly. Then observe that only the bony and muscular Structure of your goot moves forward and backward, while its Sole stays fized on the oor, That demonstrates the rolling motion of flesh and muscle, the cific Overland Tamited at Corlett Junc-|ing, Bunday evening st § « tion April 6, promised the porter who col- | wijch the ‘eternal question’ of the pr lected for nim on that occasion that he|uibility of happiness w ne s b, h g e . / f would return a watch he hid taken upon|to live in s world of nd wtill d Press.) | elastic Cushion quality which reduces friction in walking, and prevents his next explolt transcend it, and the method which April 10.~The slipping (backward, forward, or sideways). : ; ft supplies that CLING quality, which gives Traction without As the train slackened spced for the|makes It possible will be shown Edson tunnel, the man dropped to the i ——— ! ground, and ran In the airection of the : T ]1 f 3 ‘M TYAOQ ) V4 Robbers' Roost” country in the Hlk ltn‘;bb(:fi €l o 2 mountain region v Odenwald, charged with a viola- The robber. i betieved 10 b e man| SLTANZE REmMATKS lon ™o “residoni Wiksons neutraiity Who, April 5 last, held up the Unilon proclamation of August, 1914, until Oe \ Pacific Overland Timited near Corlett Of Anna Stuhk tober. The case was set for trial in the Junetion, Wyo,, and on February §, per ederal court here for April 20, Department. of Justice, Washington, has obtained a continuance o* the libel suit It protects the Bones and Sinews of the Foot against the Wear and Tear of action, as a lubricant protects Metal moving parts, while providing the wonderful *‘Barefoot”” hold on slippery surfaces. . That ROLLING MOTION, then, is the ideal aimedat in thisClingy, Bpringy, and Stretchy black "Barr,foot" Rubber of 1916 Goodrich Tires, the Hamburg-American line formed a nilar exploit near Green e In Ma 1915, the Odenwald, after hav Hver AW In aarch robbed a| A coroner's jury has returned a t Nea wabnad ithorities . . . pa the Oragon Short L that Anna Stullk, 20-year-old Bo L port, at t to sall with ( s SnCosn e Tt 0 1D e ip Il ok tired ONSIDER now the means by which many Tires have been Jeffers Arvives On Speclal Train, |sane asylum as the result of fnanition iy pinibis i i Traction,~i.e., by means of a ‘‘sand- OYBHNE. oo ALAh o Seacs : o bow. from. the’ guns at %1 | given maximum Traction,—i.e., by means of the lone bandit who last night hela | th® cause of death given in the t arning blank shots were 1g- | papery’’ texture in the Rubber of their Anti-Skid Treads. 1 and robbed passengers on Unjon Pa~ | cAte lssued the doctor in ¢ re it after the olid whot the hip | Every time the Brakes are put on, to make such Tires grip the Mn Noo 21 noar Hunna, Wyo } case at that clty topy Frind Toss g "“"H'I‘_‘""‘ "" road, the relatively hard, unyielding, and comparatively brittle, texture oo Tetcars iy, by, Generl | Degptie the finding of ¢ : Bra s oRABDS: s e of the Rubber in their Treads causes these Treads to grind away on the Ir. Joffers reached the sceme .o |mony offered at the inquest wa 4 aniy v days before the Ger pavement, to WEAR OUT fast at the point of contact. b morning after a | thAt Erounds for holding of t alder Kronprinz Wilhelm en The sudden efficiency of their grinding-Traction also tugs so n fron ) Iy B MR : wd HABpeR ROME A0 DWEI “"l’" sharply on the Rubber Adhesive between the layers of Fabric in Tire as esomlils R TR Toom N | Laind, Tik Rowavsr, 'Weh of : . Al and provisions and . There is little “‘give’” to them = just as there is little ‘‘slide’” to al train from Cheyenne earried |the testimony that her fat had ¢ Wlwo were them, } 1 cowl i ne, and that the girl's wo ] ard exsel, At about the | So, th»{ gain Traction at the expense of Mileage. BUreit. Fhe fw e o et g Kprorslyiont) Naturally such Tires require a great BULK of such Rubber in 2 i kneass ) e i g Mgl order to deliver reasonable Mileage before worn out. e ta port T And, therein they differ radically from GOODRICH '‘Barefoot’ wibin i fo ires, { P‘I itish I'“'\\ [n ' S Because, —the Safety-Tread on Goodrich Tires is made of ‘‘Bare- R.\”ll‘ 0” 'Hu, is cteheambs o t foot-Rubber,’’ a new, and exclusive compound which discards all un- skl 1 who has i \ o Hoe necessary whitish '‘frictional’’ ingredients that are heaviest and inert, }‘(ll“ ‘H](m;;\g “(l . as proved by its lighter weight, ERE is how it acts in Automobiling, = ~When the weight of the Car bears on this clinging 'Barefoot-Rubber'’ Tread, and the power is applied to go ahead or reverse, the wonderful stretch in the ' Barefoot’ Rubber Sole (or Tread) of the Goodrich Tire acts as a sort of Lubricant between the Fabrie Structure of the Tire and the Road, Then, the Barefoot-Rubber ‘“Toes, " of the Goodrich Safety-Tread Tire, CLING to the pavement (instead of grinding agamat it), in such manner a8 your Bare Foot would eling to a slippery surface honet Grind, and so, with the minimum of Frictional Heat or Wear for mum Traction, Goodrich *'Barefoot- Rubber' is now made into G FARRIC Tires, == Goodrich Bilvertown Cord Tires Goodrich Inner I | Goodrieh Truek Tire (Goodrich Motor Cycle, and B | as e Calebvraia well a8 into Goodrich Rubber Boots, Over-Shoes, Soles and | M) f The Celebrated (ot & Sliver of it from your nearest Goodrich Branch, « valer, v ( ~ reteh it thousands of times, but break it you ean't . i (,uhlu}c[[ Mowers That's the Swif that GOODRICH Black-Tread 1 A fe of, \ and Others, - All Sizes and Prices. OODRICH “BAREFOOT” Tires Jas. ‘dortcn & Son Co. . Q“\"‘:’_\ 1511-13 Dodge Stroet L o Arm———— o " ot

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