Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 13, 1916, Page 11

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P . EDITORIAL J_ _PAGES ELEVEN T0 TWENTY VO XY NO. 283. E ()MAHA DAILY BEE. Call Tyler 1000 Talk to The Bee onnected Bee. ou Want tc or to Anyone With The OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 13, 1916. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. WOTHERS WILL BE HONORED SUNDAY Omaha Churches and Other Organ- izations Plan Observance BARON READING, Lord Chief Justice, will Ppreside when Sir Roger Casement, the Irish rebel and German propagandist, comes to trial in London. I MORE JOBS TIED UP BY THE STRIKE Striking Laborers Hold Meeting at Washington Hall—No Violence PROMINENT FIGURES IN BORDER CONFERENCEThis picture shows General 0b- | l'VANN RETURNS regon, at the right, and Consul Garcia, the Carranzista representative at El Paso, at the left. 7 FROM WASHINGTON Garcia is reading a communication from General Carranza to General Obregon. Has No Comment to Make On the Protest He Filed Against the of the Day Reported Rates. WEAR FLOWERS IN MEMORY CONTRACTORS MEET TONIGHT WOULD BE EFFECTIVE MONDAY In the Young Men's Christian as Everything all tied up, and n E. J. McVann, manager of the sociation lobby there is prominently prospect of anything better,” said a traftic bureau of the Commercial displayed that next Sunday is and that » placard as a reminder Mothers the occasion | day an ap propriately titting one for writing a letter or sending flowers, or both, to her who 18 every young man's best ce. Other exercises in observance of the o the Keeley institute, Section of Canal Act Attacked bv the Railroad Upheld PHILADELPHIA, May 12.-/The United | Btates district court here today dismissed the bill of the Lehigh Valley Rafiroad | company, which sought to restrain the Interstate Commerce commission from enforeing its order divorcing the raflroad from it Interests in stegmship lines on he Great Lakes The rallrond had heen granted a tem- " Thursday night, gave the 5 )fl) #ay Will include the sending of flowers SNOW IS FALLIN(: IN WYOMING | The farmers of Nebraska got fust what they had for a rain that been looking It was thorough drenching all the way from the Missour! river out to the Colo rado line, the state did not fare as well, there was not a place in that area, accord- ing to the morning reports to the rallroads, that did not get rain, *asked about | tlon that the matter would be cleared up | south half of the state a| While the north half of |, representative of Peter Kiewit & Sons, contractors yesterday when the strike of laborers There are only two or three carpen job here (the and only ters working on thi First Presbyterian church) on a ne buflding Lahorers Hinve FMopes. A few dozen laborers were gathered Ir Washington hall. While Matthews would not tallk there appeared to be an expectn | this week | Some appeared at the headquarters to #ign up for the union Four or five laborers were present from Chicago, Matthews told them, and told his rdinates to that all such persons would be and If they tell others cared for wanted to go back to Chicago their fares | would be paid. He urged his followers not to do anything rough. It was reported that the mechanics on club, has returned from Washington, filed a petition with the commission aeking a passenger rates applying from Omaha, Kansas and 8t. Joseph to practically every destination east of the Missis- where he Interstate Commerce suspension of City stabblog affray took place monoy ho could get out of it, Thelr col- ection methods in somse instances have | been shady Rawling, there to begin his life term of imprisonment. Then he lost his nerve and | broke down everal months treated by Dr. O, Myers | before Judge Wakeley The case came up Bee Want Adm serve hundreds dail D ’ e ——— 5 < e —— Spring Clothes of Super-Excellence HOLZMAN, Treas Raflroad crop exy the winter wheat localities were clo. erts nssert that while had not suffered on ac count of a lack of rain, the fields in many se to the danger line the bullding at Sixteenth and lfnrmml would go out if the contractors tried t put any nonunion laborers at work. It rumored that there would be a §or was For Men and Young Men friend « few carpenters on the Idalia apart- | There will be general observation ments, which we are also putting up Ipp! river et of the day in Omaha Sunday The on Thirty-third and Dodge streets | The petition involves the tariffs of w=astors in the different churches will We hid-Lorty divesmenrat work ] the Burlington, Great Western, Mil- preach on themes appropriate to the on the Idalia building yesterda waukee, Rock Island and the Wabash occagion, and the voung people will aid the nformant including railroads. be reminded of their obligation to twenty laborers, This was the last nanager of the traffic bureau of on¢ who never forgot them of the big jobs in the city where any mmerelal club had no comment to be iaborers in any number were at that he “flled the petition ‘ ir r work. But about 4 o'clock 250 men waiting resoits Methodist church, T nd Daver e tansdis e o b s ] the petition for suspsnaion o t in ; ! ery passenger fare from 1 vy et ! ’ Ihey looked ugly and we quit | river to the onstern part of o Question of Demands {he United States and Canada, ineluding The tsunderstand | both rallroads and steamers ng in reg b v de The tariffs hecome effective next Mon nd. T wit & Bons' reprementa dny. but it they were suspended would e occasy f gess, #u p anted recognitior cenno o b offective September 2 rintender i r Clafr, first Ivance of 40 per eent | stan 1 Mabel half fe all s e et e, Shady Lawyers Are dent; Miss 124 an tar ‘ declare the demand i 4 ‘ May ¥ : o iatthows. the lesd Referred to the Bai e, librarian; Kthel 1 fattie Hut the stri} rofused to talk, but oth 3 rt, LA dalek and yrence Hood “ ¥ sald the men earning cent ) o5 ’ it PR Wi d t“_w"”, & H'”Wm"”“""”” s '":m:; : . . Attorney McGuire of the Welfars hoard ent of boys; Frances Broc rintend. BARON READING) % nasked for -, p ’Eflm E Sexa recently had oceaslon to observe ques ent of giris; Mr Charles horis. The demand of 40 per cent advance GENLAAL, Oflu 24 6 CONSZID Efl /Nfi,hbm i tionable methods of several men who ter; Miss Helen Sturgess, piatilst; Katl s preposterous,” sald the Kiswit & Sons’ «| operate as Iawyers and who have not ‘ : ' : ' 4 ted to the Bar association ki e sl ey Sioeatantar N5 giichi: aAVANCS: WS N, ¥ C ;d f F Y been admitted to th o ROk ke A NEBRASKA G e R egro Convicted of PATTERSON SAYS TRAN ive-Yoar-0ld GHrl |me muw s ven rerered o mar: o Sasiaesktatiing tiodaras o Mot A-revranantatiVe. ot Tibs: Baldon Brask tabbing 1o KL ROBBER LOST HIS NERVE itte mond. Young, mecretary of the . OWRA i oon under the auspices of tha Woman's | There seemed to be only & faw Machan- | [n twn hours & sure had been drawn. | UNIOn Pacifio {s back from Cheyenns, e e S e 1 bolleve it is time to call thase pa i Christlan Temperas Dot A GV S g A B & ¢ i had been drawn, | wpo006 ho went to nasist in the prosecu. | J1ArSaret Bald sod ears foggers to account,” wald Mr. McGuire. { i bt Al ot Half o (he Btats Bt i Per | aah e hvts Hieth o d and naccepted, and Willlam | jon of William Carlisle, the train robber, | NOrth Fifteenth street, was bitten on the | iwe same neroas an instance ur‘“ M\:(l\‘n = i . Tish. LR O (e i Tonry, colored, was convicted ecord| He asserts that Carlisle continued to |left arm while she playing with a | ¢ ¢ up nd of a case and working | %0 1o the he of Miss Jose o Tisher, fect Condition hy Heavy Down- or ald all the | ha 1 14 v 1 recor [ aking up an invalid, 1408 South F nth street, | ¢ v y n the Sanfo there was nothing | time of stabbing Abe Binger with intent| M@nifest the spirit of bravado until he | dog belonging v nelght The dog | it for all ke could and then guing over to § with flowers and to conduct & song serv pau: golng on, where a start had been made | (o kil The was put on the train to bo taken (o |way ordered Kkilled and the girl iy being |the Other side, obylously for all the i porary injunction restralming the com-|my.y segert that the rain has dissipated | ference there sometime today mission from enforcing the order aganst |\ ‘ro0r nnq that the grain will now| *“We have to pay more for our food 5 . ' A the L h Valley continuing its interest |, o apogq nt a rapld pace snd moroc for our clothing and other HP OVerWhel d ¥ ? pans; o 4'1;.-,.;;”]" wan on Lhe UeS:| Northwestern indicate the rainfall in the | ton hall, “It's time for the bosses to glve \ jon of making the injunction permanent, s e on of making the inunction permanent | SO IS (10 T I D e maner Store’s supreme values in hand-tailored clothvs at ‘bl 5, $20, $25 heavy, continuing during most of the night. An Inch, or more of precipitation eport om the following statlo The rallroad had attacked a paragraph f" reported from the INIRE N ne in the southern half of the state: Ruio in the Panama eanal act which empowers | |/ SN e e the commission to permit operation of an | Prownaville, Table Rock, Wymore, O¢ existing specified service by water if ft | Superior, Red Cloud, Republican, Orleans and McCook OMAHA UNI STUDENTS 0BSERVE MOTHERS’ DAY Mothers' day was observed at the Uni ity of Omaha at noon with a ape the powers conferred by congress, ourt said, the is significant. 'Thousands of men have compared our values and reached the conclusion that these superb Rochester, —~ Extr;value Tt was not against the public Interest. The . d . prog given jointly by the Y \ttack was made on the ground that con- ""'”"l """]" “"""; falling “"“ e ::" Men's and Women's Christian associs N Y ghould enacted standards to | central and northern portions © "* | fon oc olos were given b, Dl havs ectecs Mg Bhe Vel o, vice fivdx v ., journeymen tailored garments, which the co should conform |#tate when atation agents sent thelr | y.,i, gratton and plano numbe; ed with th ad done all that was Retrial of Case Results in Much Smaller Verdict Y Al of A damage sult growing out SUPERINTENDENT OF THE TEAM TO VISIT NEBRASKA GOSPEL THREE TOWNS WORB( l(‘\ LOSES Sult AGAINST CAR MPAN 1n contentlon | ports indicated fror of snow Temperatures out in the state, ac to rallroad reports, 0 degrees nbove zero. School Board Makes Money on Old Paper Tha Roard of md JENSEN SUIT L LEROY LIPS OMPANY AGAINST WADE IN ORPORATE oy s of o ot e cemnt o e e v i v e (| | D€SE clothes made to sell around $20 to ranged from 35 to POLICE NEEDS DISGUISE POLICE FAIL TO AID HIM, S0 ZELLER GOES TO JUDGE [.( AFFOLDING two inches |that fow realize $35, are the best investment they can make at--our prices--$15, $20, § He \ing In t of thair m s of the university wore u'). lessen the burder hers All male stu $15, $20, $25 Unequaled at $20 to $35 Elsewhere, [ — / earnatione, b rerved the o AlitfleCareand aslon with red and white was three DoWonder for airand Skin le Fach Free by Mall \ | Wi Men's $1.50 Shirts at $1.05 Largest Showing of Manhattan Shirts s TARTED Bates Street and Yorke Shirts Bottom' Gehl Wbrogh OLBANING OF BAANNETA WILES LAUBE AND YRAVEYS A sPROIALTY Dresher Bros. DYNRS, DAY CLEANERE HATTERS ANG FAILORS \ FARNAM v TELBPHONE PYLEW M SORN A AWAN SO M- W O BRAN $10, §15, $20, $25, Whatever your needs, we'll serve you best— Business suits, sport suits, club suits, lounge suits, the clothes that add to a man’s success. “Hard-to-Fit” Men This Is Your Store $30, §35, $40 groatest Rig [ tall-men stout out spring suit 18 Men's $1.00 Shirts at 65¢ O¢ to $5.00 31.00 Union Huits 75¢ ittle Paul: Panz) wask:aliond % : A See the rich silk mixed worsteds, homespuns, Phsrian A: Bry alrman of the sup flannels, serges, tweeds, in stripes, checks, hool t a has gathered e ll Cum plaids, n)‘vrp];mln, invisible plaids, browns, : : : o thah §10 ; ’v,} [ P T} blues, grays, oxfords, leather shades, soft ; ¢'the Rehoslis s ted greens No end to the rich new weaves and i ’ LI al Azl |

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