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0 < tion About Bandit Framed in Broad Terms. w ne on Overland T4mited No, 1 in this reward, and such a jon of the money, tually certaln that ltigation will arise Many May Sha of the fugitive any person I running will Carlisle down blood wa money Overiand Tdmited, reads pon _eonviction of the person Bachus and Charles Herendon of Lara mie, but the Union Pacific's reward of- for did not relate to the mere capture bat is se worded that who In any way assisted have ground for claim to a portion of the They reward offer, which {asued the day after the robbery on IN ROBBER REWARD Union Pacific’s Offer for Informa- LITELY T0 RESORT TO COURTS CHEYENNE, Wyo., April #.—(Special.) «Interest in the case of Willlam L. Car the confessed robber of passengers thres Unfon Pacific limited trains, I8 turning from the self-complacent priso- to the complicated question of the division of the reward of 3,000, which will become payable by the Unlon Pa- eific upon hs cenviction of the robhery There are #0 many persons who expect to share variance of opinion regarding an equitable divis- that It appears vir- . The actusl, on-the-grou t-the-in stant ecaptors of Carlisle e Oeorge who on April 4, 1916 held 1up and robhed pas- 1 of the Unlon, sergers on train No between eifie roand company enne, Wyo., and Corlett yo. sald rallrond company of five thousan will ¥ those who such peraon so convieted tieipating in his arrest formation leading (o ich Arrest Omaha Anril K 1016 CHARLYEAR WARFE, General manaeer, Unlon Pacific Tal road company Others Gave Information, by Hachus and Herendon, there w b his capture highly complicated. Actual peace nccording to a ruling by general's office in another cane employes of the Unlon Pacific pervice department are not, under i the 1'nlon Pacific reward WAR CHIEFTAINS OF TWO NATIONS (Continued from Page One) Extension of the American Girandes and probably further, the International boundary. ory—a “southern zone,” iz for American troops. lways 1o the expeditionary force. was helleved that irances that nds had_heen eradicated, —_— Help Your Liver—It Pays. When your live lls. You will feel better. Only 11 druggists. —Advertisement Summer School to The construction of the $000' acle Chey Junetion PRy 5, 000) r by par- or funishing in- At the time of the arrest of Carlisle ® In the fiald scores of persons who had been senrching for the fugltive and who, in one way or another, may have supplied of Information eventually leading to Therefore the matter of apportioning ithe 17nion Pacific reward, and the lara mie county reward of 8600, an well, ;l fioars, much ax Rivers, are not entitled to share In the Laramie county reward the sttorney while apecinl the risjes of the company, entitied to share MEET IN JUAREZ line into [Mexico at least as far south as Casns Relegatior to the American military duty of policing a “‘northarn none' #isting of the territory Aireciiy seulh Policing of the remainder of the terri- by the Car- | The co-operation 1n handling of mup- | Granting of the use of the Mexican On the acceptance of these conditions the Americans 'would agree not to penetrate farther south than & line to be agreed on and that they would consent to withdrawal ust aa moon as they would recelve as- the Villista and other gets torpld and stom- ich acts queer take Dr, King's New Life e Continue at Omaha building for the University of Omaha will 0t interfere with the work of the sum. ner school seasion the Iarger numbe o lLield ampletion of the new structure Frow the hool entollment pro to Bt of the attendanc of the classes are present inquiries isen At present summer, will have a than the currioulum The padagokionl depar itfered this lder range orrasr seasions. t Redick ball, in which to will not he torn down until the summer surpasy Re of (Ve expecied inrease, the studies nieh of pent. in which the largest Increase is xpeoted, will be enlarged by the add [lon of severnl new Instructors. The emistry wnd blology departments 183 be Incroased While college work (s to be the featur it the summer sehool, academle work is no meAns to ba dropped. A spscial rnn My embracing wiar to that of the loc e he offered With the exception English departiment Wity will remain for the sl high sehaol of Misa Gorde Al the pres M perio & Meadnehe ® 15 nearly always st ' ol sk niden. Mis. A, 1 Jiier, N. Y hendaohe - viain » n fow weeks " ] ool Ady This dise e, Correet (hat Neadache may Kast Roch writos aused by 8 badly o " when | beman ia Tablets 1hres oriaey ealih v ) N e by Waahingtou Affairs riisement Bt waate inte \h Senl B previsione fur b genln amd for & e whed upder fode g Wt reh o Tinel A e year TR Y ST w » r e Mk NNy g vorabic o s ¥ . lina Ahar Raea ¥ [\ . e Ve i | Nt under the supervision of Pear: ¢t inatructior \ Aused by & Por Ihe Misaiasippl am Bacramenie o aeihe werk | o o We repart | 1a | | | avenus, to hold ran In zig-zag fashion for r the would-be in the street Joke. ity It 5o startied him that for the time | Boia Run! M He hasn't any Pritchard, 14 Iast night, when a man Mr. and Mrs. Pritchard p In the vicinity of their own home F W Ing his advice, Mr, Pritchard y & block | just as gun,” cried Mrs, | North Thirty-first | tried wife's finally reachind his own door hold-up disappeared of the man bushes on the east wide Mr, first Pritchard told the police that at he thought the hold-up merely a but when it turned out te enl he was helpless, [is family had been | LANSING DISCUSSES INTERNATIONAL LAY Becretary of State Bays After War Application of Principles Must Be Readjusted RESULT OF ;EW CONDITIONS WABHINGTON, April 30,—''The present titanic struggle of the great empires of Kurope has shaken Inter- national law to its foundation,’” Bec- retary Lansing declared here fc night at the dinner of the American goclety of International Law “There is coming a time, a tims which will begin with the restoration ¢! peace to this suffering and war- slek world, when we will have to re- adjust our jdeas as to the rules of International law, 1 do not mean the principles of that law, for they are immutable, founded as they are on Justice, righteousness 4nd hu- manity, “I mean that the applieation of principles to new conditions will give us| new riles which have never before heen recognized or even concelved by the na tona of the world and which cannot, therefore, he now Invoked by belligerant or neutral The Chief Canne, If | was awked what was the chief caume of the new conditions and changed methods of land and naval warfare, | would unhesitatingly answer the inven ton of the Invisnal combustion enkine It has made peacticable the automobile the submarine, the neroplane and the dirigible, It has made surprise almost | impossible on land and it has vastly in orenned the possibility of surprise at sea ‘The change of conditions which this in. vention, aided he telephone, the wire- | Jess and the camers, has brought about | in comparable only with that which was | wrought by the invention and use of | gunpowder, These new conditions offer | to the student of International law a field of speculation which is at once al- tractive and aifficult, “I mean by ‘difficult’ that, however | ardent the student may he, he must go very slow'y or he will lose his bearings He must be a philosopher rather than a legalist, He must scrap-heap a lot of the | old ideas embalmed in layers of prec- edent and re‘urn for lght and (nspira- tion to thowe eternal -principles which must guide nations in their relations with ons another If liberty and Justice are to be exalted in the earth. The Unehn Standard. “It {8 the unchangeable standard of these fundamental principles which In the rock of salvation of international law | and whatever code of rules as to the| conduct of war may In the future be formiated by the natlons of the world | must find a sure foundation on that rock | which Is imbedded deep in the consclous. ness of modern clvilization.' In concluson Becretary lLansing puid these this tribute to former Hecretary Root, president of the soclety “In the new fleld to which we will turn our attention and which [ pray God #oon be open to us, | hope that the ty may coniinue fo have as Its president the wise statesman and pro found thinker who for the last ten years has given so much of himself to the so- clety and to whom In very large measure our present proaperity Is due. With his commanding Intellect and lofty ideals to guide us, we can advance with the full assurance that we are treading the path which will lead us to the height GRANDMOTHERS TAKE PART IN MILLER PARK SCHOOL PLAY of the A play in which all the members cast were mothers, xrandmiothers and in some cases greatsgrandmothers, was pre sented by the Mother's Cirele club at the Millor Park school Friday evening e production, which was called “The District #ehool,” was Witnessed by an audience of more than (0 peopls, The Mother's Cirele club cloared over $100, The members of the cast were coached by Mra John W. Evans Wike business men alwaya The Hee adveriising columns PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS, t Filiy e . \ fenat . ' . k8 \ [ Mitaburg . v . [ b was dwola - . R e hgaged aiking ahigs in W whish W I8 feared would s tromt B wh At paid in tor ag . | Pritchard's side, | #een in any town with the population | randum in my THE MANY WILL SHARE | Wife Tips. Off to Her Husband, | Highwayman Has No Weapon| RECEIVES GERARD downtown the and just returning when the hold-up occurred Shortly after their arrival at Thirty first avenue, they noticed a man walk ing ahead of them down the sidewalk In the direction which they themselves were going. After they had almost pleted the first block the from the car the man turned an couple, ['pon the holdup p hand n front of hix Intended tace and told him to throw up his hands evening of journey came toward the renac which he did until his wife's cry, when he ran, Mrs, Pritcharl was not mo lested OMAHA IS FASHION CENTER OF WEST City Takes Rank with World's Metropolises as Home of Smart Btyles. EASTERN WOMAN AMAZED BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, MAY 1, 1916 KAISER WILHELM [ | American Ambassador Confers with Emperor and Other German Leaders. NOT KNOWN WHEN REPLY SENT BERLIN, April United States Ambassador Gerard was received in audlence by Willlam last night and conferred with other lead ers of the empire been given as to when the German reply to the American note will be ready, except a hint contained in a Berlin dispatch to the Cologne Ga zette, which sald “The consultations at great head- | quarters probably are’near a con cliiston, * The visit of the American ambassador was designed | to permit him to consult with per sons in authority there over the sit uation, their final decision also will be communicated to him there” Statement Bmperor Vo Intimation has It iy assumed Misunderstood, A woman writes from New York: “If the apparel and women's wear advertised | The Tageblatte explains this moriling In Omaha measures up to the publiiity | that ite statement that the baslg fea given to it, siirely your city I8 one of tie | tures of the answer already havd been most fashion-favored in this country.” settied war misunderstood The paper It doesn’t take an expart Lo ses that the | asserts ft meant only ‘- way that a draft publicity given Lo style 1s extremely con-|of the answer had been made, but that sorvative in its estimate, Much has Leen | & decislon had not yet been reached. The anid about New York's Pifth avenus, | wording of this morning’s statement in Michigan boulevard and Btate street in | dicates clearly, however, that there wasf Chicago and various other streets in other cltias, but Sixtesnth street in Omaha to duy mirrors an many of fashion's newest 1ypen In proportion to the population as any other ety in the world, In the tentatirants and hotels, and gathered around the evening (estive hoards, the smartest gowns, dresses, waists and wraps find auch a full presentation of the siyles that fashion, in its most critieal mood, looks on and. smiles, Rivals World Caplinis, A visit recently by a millinery expert (o the various show rooms and hat shops of this oity prompted her to make this statement: I have been through the atellers of Paris and the continent; it Lan been my privilese to ses the re sultant efforts of the master milliners of this country, in New York and Chi cago, and | have traveled the country over gathering the inapiration here and thera for ideas In millinery; my first visit to Omahs was productive of one great big surprise newest L looked for an nssemblage and dfs-| 9ormans will stand united behind the plays correlative with those of the | *PPeTOT smaller towns in the United States. 1| mp, qistinction between navy yards found some of the most superb examples of mililnery It has aver been my privi- loge (o look upon. Not only has the iIn #piration of the master deslgners of the world been reproduced, hut greatly to my surprise 1 found a greater number of brilllant, original conceptions that would do credit to the master milliners oven of the old world than 1 have ever approximating that of Omaha. I can, with perfect honesty, place this memo- notebook, ‘Omahs, the central city of the middie west, and the ity eentralizing more brilliant millinery ideas than any other town of its aize in the United States Ultrn-Fushlonable Ntyles, Bho in the estimation of many peo ple, simply convey the idea of praetica blifty, but Omaha engages the attention of manufacturers, designers and style ex- perts all over the country, because of the murprisingly great amount of the very finest shoes sold here. When the newest buckles and the snapplest designs make thelr first appearance anywhere in this country, they are seen in Omaha imme diately, Style does not stop at the door of New York or Chicago~It hastens to this wonderful city of the middle west with the speed of & “Mercury.” There ix avery valld reason why the women of Omaha should buy everything they need in Omaha. The day has long wince passed when a trip to any other city le anything but superfluous. The best that the world produces shown In (ts wonderful shops. The fact that rentals are lower than thoss of the Inrger citles enables merchants to sell the best of everything at lower prices than would provall in the smartest shops In Iarger cities, “Buy in Omaba' 1a a slogan which every woman should tie to, It means perfect satisfac tion and great economies GERMAN PRISONERS DIG WAY OUT OF CAMP Alberta April 3 - 8ix it was learned today, | detention camp hers by ery [ any of the LETARRIDGY German prisoners escaped from the tunneling a passage four feet under| ground and 110 feet long, leading from | the bunk house nder the compound | fence, 1o the canter of th adjoining the eamp The men city nurseries used implements stolen from the kitchen for tunneling Further detalls regarding the escape and the oharges against the prisonsrs were not permitted by the censors | SKIN TROUBLE DISFIGURED FACE Went All Over Hands, Skin Very Red and Burning, Lost Rest. Could Not Put Hands in Water, HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAPAND OINTMENT My shin bagan 1o get rough and peeling 1 wens all over my face and hands and o Wy nevk, and svery e | wosdd wash | ook e shin o My in A-u very rod Al baraieg 1 and | hadd 10 seruieh and 0 W @ e v At | b . pont ah wight, and | 1 nas A/ ey e s v J & Cos day | P & Ousd AR L e Sonp and Dintment o O NN vorsiament. | Aot bovaM & Bt of Cutiowrs Otntament and Vhen & cabe o Ustiowrs Mg and o weing e St & Wk my fee tvgen o ge oo, | W 1wt ahond e cabem of Catkous S | ol bwe hoase of Oladmest asd | wee | howimt Mawalt Bdwaed Potodd, Wt Cioombam Ave, Chbonge 1L, Sagh. 10, 1010 Sample Each Free by Mall Wan » Nis Y A e e r.l.l.uvl P, 1, .0:4 Wt Liruag it (e 9w o . FIe—— [TON no misunderstanding on the part of the readers, but that the Tagebiatte an error yesterdny, ‘Thero s no ecomment in the press upon the sitis tlon except from the pen of Count Krbst von Reventlo, who still appears to he lieve A break with United Btate fnevitable Sees Blination Grave The official organ of the Hansabund the organ of the commercial interest refers to the gravity of the decision to be reached. It ways the representatives of commerce, Industry and trade belong ing to the Hansabund nare certaln the question will be decided with *the dis passlonate care which the situation de mands, but are equally certaln that Ges mnde yirtuaily E‘Date Set for the Graduation at the ot " Il give a read » secure Pr ) mposed of % everal se 1 will lose Bellevue Academy ; Several extra i q | several of 108t prominen The Belle academy and Unfon High'to the regular commencement exercises, | N fchool activities n graduation of | chool commencement this June will be Prof. Puls will deliver an address on, ~co™ - T Blart, Karl held distinet from any connection with| “Men Wanted The exercisés will be | Branstad. . Flo Weller and Robert the final exercises of Bellevue college, | held in the new college gymnasium. Sey- | Volker. The J senfors follows: Principal Albert Share has announced. | mour Smith, who will be graduated from | yrandall Blart oy F AR The preparatory department will stage | the academy this spring, will deliver an | Maude I Hover tJ. Meany A nepar ommencement and the nor- | oration. Randall Biart, also a member ‘\'lrlu.v D, Short ur L. Smith mal department of the college will unite | of the gradusting class, will deliver an 11‘,7,‘.1-‘,‘,,-\,“;" Deusen t D, Walker Q ound for the vice indeed ! doctor knows And from the heart, from long experience how Sanatogen helps whenever it is a question Up 1o heen re aid the treatment t grew to 19,750 and now almost 23,000 such letters total g are ¢ T i in theix marka! tion of the ae Sai of toning up 1 patient, 1912 some 15,600 ed from el hysicians g g le at our various offices, nty-three thousand letters from practisin, sicians acknowledging the good Sanatogen has .fi practices, or even in their own families! A re- ble tribute-—~yet these letters indicate but a frac. 1l number of physiciar commendatory lett ho used Sanat. ribed, In 1914 this phy- one who recommend wgen, for naturally most doetors cannot take the time to report their expericnce of Sunatogen. And 50 also with laymen : The letters from Col. Henry Watterson,Sir Gilbert Parker, fohn Burroughs and others, telling of the invig oratin, effects of Sanatogen are but an ccho of what thousands of others daily experience. 8o you yourse work, worry or illness ind nerves get out of wlance, resolve not to “forget your Sanafogen.” Grand Prive, Intornational Congrons of Sanatoge everywhere, in sizes from $1.00 up maywell take the advice If and when —through over- your body Medicina, London, 1913 n is sold by good druggists, Col. Henry Fat terson, the editor, writes 1 could not have regained my vitality without Sana acting upon SAN A T O GIE N many's Aianity ax n nation and its free dom to use all wenpons of defense would be tully regarded The Hansabund hopes, however I dociared, that an honorable and penceful understanding will be reached, but that If such a solution proves imhpossibI® s #nd naval statfons fs based upo parison of thelr equipment rather than their strategle importance ENDORSED 21,060 for the “Text Book of Sanatogen,” giving full and statements from eminent medical authorities on it PHYSICIANS e inlrrnlinz # tonic_an % !zl not prepared. and Chemical ment to prepare industry for the national pay and will accept no pay. Engineers are doing, NAVAL WG aRERATIoN wiTH Tus Aunn Tar A o Sovewy o Coon B o Aw an Daavprens Tor Awrnican Commonr S ENGINERRING SOCIRTING DUILDING \"‘;\lll!lllll N lmlllllmllfllll‘l_!'ifilmlllllllllm!iilllll@w Tur Awan 'TE i’fr.,f‘ i e defense. wan Rociery o Muicwamica an Iamvorwrs o0 Buovovaws wey W OWEREY 3 TH STRERT, NEW YORN T HIRTY thousand American engineers are ' making a card index survey of American in- dustry so that it may be prepared for its vital part in defending the Countryif 'need comes. The past eighteen’ months have taught us here in America what lack of industrial preparedness has meant to some of the countries now at war. had the ships and they had the men; but when the hour struck, their factories were not able to furnish the colors with arms and shells and powder. Their factories were ~ And our factories are not prepared. But it is not enough to draw a moral. In the United States five great Engineering Societies — Civil, Mining, Mechanical, Electrical have pledged their services to the Government of the United States, and are already working hand in hand with the Govern- They receive no All they seek is opportunity to serve their country, that she may have her industries mobilized for defense! All elements of the nation's life — the manufacturers, the business men, and the workingmen — should support this patriotic and demo- cratic work of the engineers, and assist them cheerfully when asked. There can ‘be no better national insurance against war. The Associated Advertising Clubs of the World, representing all advertising interests have offered their free and hearty service to the President of the <United States, in close co-operation with these five Engineering Societies, to the end that the Country may know what the I'he President has accepted the offer. Engineers have welcomed the co-operation. This advertisement, published without cost to the United States, is the first in a nation-wide series to call the country to the duty of co- operating promptly and fully with the Engineers. CONSULTING BOARD OF THE UNITED STATES These® nations facts concerning Sanatogen and including actual signed i upbuilding value in many ailments, This book h‘:u. Write today for it to THE BAUER CHEMICAL CO., g, Lrving Place, New York, The O A | Facininne IR