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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 1, 1916. 9—D REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE Small Tracts of Land 5 ';f Money in Fruits We have several small tracts *+5 miles north of Council Bluffs .postoffice which would be ideal ‘for fruit, at $65.00 to $100.00 per acre. One tract 30 acres with about 700 apple trees; 12 acres broken, $75.00 per acre. on easy terms. Will sell on Let us show you. ‘ J. P. Hess Co. Phone 3344. 123 Pearl St. 1,560_Aére Ranch $13.00 per acre; situated in Box Butte County, Nebraska, 18 miles from Hemmingford; good, black loam soil, fairly level, nearly or quite all suitable for farming, now improved for stock- ranch; 5-room house, two barns, 2 wells, windmills, etc. This is a place that can be made to pay for itself in two years and will make the man rich in ten years who buys and handles it right. Half cash will handle it. No trade. 220 Acre Farm $125 per acre, six miles northeast from central part Coun- cil Bluffs, on good road; n o buildings; about 100 acres under plow; 150 acres or more suitable for cultivation; 25 acres tim- ber, much of it oak. A good place for stockman or general farmer, and the cheapest farm so near Council Bluffs and Omaha. McGee Real Estate Co. 105 Pearl St., Council Bluffs, Ia. Neb: 2 Lands. DOUGLAS AND SARPY COUNTY. 80 ACRES, good improvments, good lo- cation; $140 per, only §3,000 Mar,"1, bal. 5 yrs, G5 per &ent. A BARGAIN, 10 ACRES, several thousand . dollars' worth of Improvements, ideal, location, maln road, handy to city and car; price | §12,000; your own terms. 80 ACRES, well improved; 16.miles of Omaha; conélderable alfalfs, orchard, etc., only $80 per, $500 cash, $2,600 Mar. 1, bal. b yrs: 30° ACRES, IDEAL laying farm; im- proved; goodlovation, 1% miles to sta- tion, 14 miles of Omlhfi $150 per, extra ; easy ternis. 160 ACRES, valley, A PRODUCER; 2 miles of good town, less than 20 miles of Omaha; $130 per. 30 ACRES, improved, 5-r. house, barn, cc®. crib, buggy shed; well laying; R. R. | station, 16 mileg of Omaha; ONLY $3,825, $3650 cash, $1,600 Mar. 1, Bal. terms. A GOOD BUY. 120 ACRES;: handy to town; good land but rolling; dandy stock and general farm; slight {mprovements; $115 per acre; $4,000 cash, Bal. b yrs., 6 per cent. 160 ACRES, upland; well laying, good Incation, a producer, $135 per. 150 ACRES, DANDY, upland, well im- proved, $130 per acre! 160 ACRES, within 7 or § mliles of Omaha; well Improved; $152 per. 60 ACRES, GOOD, but small improve- ments, 6-r. house, etc.; 8 miles of Omaha; 45 acres good alfalfa; §115 per, 40 ACRES, good. location, fair improve- ments, entirely ‘hog tight, some alfalfa. Price $150;per, % cash,Bal. 5 yrs. 160 ACRES BON TON farm, improved; $176 per.; %' éasy money. 120 ACRES, upland, 1 mile of good town; slight. improvements; $100 per. A DANDY Imp. 10 acres, dandy 20 acres improved; good 18 acres, Improved; 17 acres, well Improved; 43 acres. fine im- provements; SEVERAL good 40s and 50 acres, etc. 'ALL WORTH THE MONEY. ALSO a dandy % section and NUMER- OUS OTHERS. LET US SHOW- YOU THE GOODS. ORIN S. MERRILL COMPANY, N. E. Cor. 23d and M S8ts., South Omaha. 1,665 acres.,near -Wood lake; cuts 400 tons hay; running = water; fair ~bulldings; fenced; this is In the big hay country and this ranch 18 priced to'sell; $12.60 per acre; terms. . THOMAS CAMPBELL, Kéeline “Bulldirg. 150-ACRB Improved farm in Valley county, braska. Three miles to railroad town. Will take $3,000 in Will leave Box 176, Price, $60 per acre. city property or merchandise. 300 on land, balance’ cash: d, Neb. 160 AND 80-ACRE Johnson county,” Neb. farms, well dmproved. A bargain (n im- proved 50 in Sarpy county. STEWART, 216 8 17th TOR SALE—160 acres imp Cuming county. Neb., priv right R O Herkheimer W TOR SALI—For $16 per ncre, cash, my Im- b oved 290 aeres adjoining: Ericson,” Neb, W. A. Olive, Indlanola l_n ‘A BARGAIN— $1 (one) per acre will buy §40 acres of state school land in Loup county. . Write owner, R. W. Ludwick, 1 | | FARM AND RANCH LANDS FARM BARGAINS 800 acres Hughes County, S. Dakota, all one body, lays fine, all tillable; 450 acres in flax, fair house, barn; lays one mile east and five miles south Blunt. Price $27.50 per acre. A real snap. Land sold for more money, but must sell at once. 320 acres, Kearney County, Nebraska, seven miles north- west of Axtell; all under cultiva- tion; fine, black soil with clay sub-soil. Price $20,000. Good terms. 480 acres, Monona County, Jowa, one and one-half miles from Turin, five miles east of Onawa; has two sets of large im- provements; nearly all under low. First class Iowa land. rice $200 per acre. Land will carry a $45,000 mortgage. Will lelel income or ranch, balance cash. S. O. Nordquist 322 Neville Blk., Phone Red 3143. 'WOMEN FOR HUGHES TRAIN' READY 10 G0 Details of Itinerary Will Be | Left to Be Arranged at Each Stopping Place. SPEAKERS OF EXPERIENCE New York, Sept, 29.—(Special Tel- egram.)—The genius of occasions is to have something to do with the de- tails of the five-week campaign in twenty-cight statec for Charles E. Hughes, republican candidate for pres- ident, to be carried on from the wom- en's campaign train which will leave the Grand Central terminal at 11 o'clock next Monday morning for a tour of the country, Although an absolutely clock-work itinerary has been worked out by the woman's campaign committee of the republican national committee and the woman's committee of the National Hughes alliance and train committees, composed of a large number of wom- en, have been organized in cities along | the way to receive the train speakers and co-operate with them in their campaigning, no hard and fast sched- ule has been made out as to speeches. Can’t Be Done by Recipe. In a general way it is known which women are best fitted to speak in cer- tain parts and on certain questions. But although this is the first time women have ever got together to help elect a president of the United States or to enter in any definite and sus- tained way into national politics, they know that campaigning is not the sort of thing which can be done by a recipe written out beforehand. Much has been left to the local committees, who know their people. Curiouslv enough the women who are to go on the cam- paign train are with few exceptions not women who have talked for suf- frage. The exceptions are Miss Helen Todd of California, Mrs. Rheta Childe | Dorr of New York and Mrs. Ray- mond Robins of Chicago. The other women, although all suf- fragists, have not worked as actively experience of the last month, particu- larly, I believe the most important thing for women to do is to secure the enfranchisement of their sex, and my profound conviction is that the unfranchised womea of the country will be more quickly released from political bondage under the leadership of Mr. Hughes and the republican party than under Mr. Wilson and the democratic party.” From New Yyork the campaigning women will go first to Albany, Other cities to be covered are Syracuse. Rochester, Buffalo, Cleveland, To- ledo, Detroit, South Bend, Chicago, Rock Island, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo St. Paul, Minneapolis, Fargo, James- town, Bismarck, %diles City, Billings, Helena, Butte, Missoula, Spokane, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Sacra- mento, Reno, San Francisco, l.os An- %eles. San Diego, Phoenix, Salt Lake ity, Pocatello, Boise City, Cheyenne, Denver, Colorado Springs, Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, St. Joseph, To- peka, Kansas City, St. Louis, Indian- apolis, Louisville, Cincinnati, Colum- bus, Wheeling, Pittsburgh, Harris- burg, Baltimore, Wilmington, Phila- delphia, Trenton and Newark. The tour will end at 5 o'clock in the aft- ernoon of Saturday, November 4. Making Elaborate Plans. An extremely enthusiastic response has greeted the announcement of the coming of this train. A large num- ber of cities to be visited are making elaborate plans for its reception. In mxnr places mayors and other city of- ficials are joining with the republican candidates and committees in local arrangements. To speed the campaigners on their waiv), Mrs. Payne Whitney is giving a_breakfast at the Hotel Plaza in New York on Moncay morning to members of the tiain committee, speakers and organizers. Mrs, Charles [g Hughes will be the guest of honor. After the breakfast there will be an automobite parade to the Grand Cen- tral station, where tne women cam- paigners take their train, COURT T0 DEGIDE RAIL RATE CASE Three Federal Judges Take South Dakota and Nebraska Suits Under Advisement. for it as they have for the immediate relief of social conditions of one kind and another. They are Miss Mary Antin, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Miss Helen V. Boswell, New York; Dr. Katherine B. Davis, New York; Miss Mary E. Dreier, New York; Dr. Katherine P. Edson, Los Angeles; Mrs. Maud H. Elliott, Newport, R. I.; Miss Maude E. Miner, New York; Mrs. Henry Moskowitz, New York; Mrs. Nelson O’Shaughnessy, New York, and Miss Harriett Vittum, Chicago. Experienced Speakers. They are all edberienced in public speaking, all uscd to having convic- tions worth talking about. This is not a suffragists’ expedition, but | something bigger. The- women on | this train are not going simply be- cause Mr, Hughes has come out for the federal suffrage amendment. They have reasons of their own apart from the issue of votes for women which make them believe that Mr. Hughes is the best man to further the social reforms for which they work. It is a representative trainload. As one of the women said today: “This is no ladies’ holiday, This is no stunt to keep women in the public eye. It wouldn’t be possible to finance and manage a five-week stunt nor could | we get the sympathy and co-operation of the women of the country as we have done if we were not sincere in this thing or if we had only one rea- son between us for thinking Mr. Hughes the right man., This is the culmination ‘of “he social interests which women have had for years in expression of women's political inter- ests based upon what they believe to be the best way to the social better- ment they are after.” Not Personal Issue. The party will be joined at various points by women who cannot go all| the way, but who will go through their own state, making speeches and working with the women from other parts of the country. Nor can suffrage, so far as that en- ters into the campaign, be considered a personal issue, even by those peo- le who are wont to consider it so. fary Dreier, who gives suffrage as a reason for her campaigning, has national and social reasons back of it. She says: ; “I believe that the time has come when working women throughout the country should be qualified to use WILL SIT AGAIN MONDAY Sioux Falls, S. D., Sept. 30.—(Spe- cial Telegram.)—Both the Nebraska freight rate case and the South Da- kota express rate case came up today before a court of three federal judges in this city and the hearings in both cases were concluded late this after- noon. At the conclusion of the hear- ings the court announced the cases would be taken under advisement. No indication was given of any pos- sibility that decisions would be an- nounced in the near future. Court took an adjournment until 10 o’clock Monday morning, but whether de- cisions will be rendered at that time is unknown, the three judges having nothing to say as to_this. After. the hearing in the South Da- kota case was concluded the court called upon B. W. Scandrett of Oma- ha, assistant counsel for the Union Pacific railway, to open the hearing in the Nebraska freight rate case, which is similar in nearly every re- spect to the South Dakota express rate case, state rights being: involved in both cases. He outlined the action taken in the different phases of the case up to the present hearing in the Nebraska case, the railroads are asking that the Ne- braska State Board of Railroad Com- missioners be restrained from enfofc- ing rates-other lhan‘ those prescribed by the Interstate Commerce commis- eion. ' The question of state or federal ] P A ! jurisdiction ‘was i i ] different groups. This is simply an 'p‘, i A involveds i ctodavie earing. The court which heard the cases was made up of James D. Elliott-of \the South Dakota district court, Judge John E. Carland of Washington, C., former federal judge of South Da- kota, and Judge Thomas C. Munger (of the Nebraska district court. Atlantie Smothers Audubon, Atlantic, Ia., Sept. 30.—(Special.)—Atlan- tic High hool defeated Audubon High school, 81,to 0, Friday. Coach Marshall's team looks as good as last year's cham- plonship team. Captain Wilken and Burke starred for the Atlantic team. The schedule for the season Includes Shenadoah, Red Oak, Council Bluffs, Ha"lan and Villisca. Ashland. Blanks Elmwood. Ashland, Neb., Sept. 30.—(Special.)—Ash- land High school won the first game of the season today by defeating Elmwood High school, 69 to 0. The game was played in a high wind, but there were few fum- bles. Long runs through a broken fleld foatured the g S Ghee to Help Coach. Milton P. Ghee, jr., Is helping to coach | | BREMEN LIFE BELT - PICKED UP AT SEA | Preserver Marked With Nnmel of Submarine Daily Ex. pected is Discovered. NEW AND NOT LONG IN SEA Portland, Me., Sept. 29.- "\ life pre- server marked “Bremen,” the name of the German submarine freighter which nas been generally cxpected to arrive at some Atlautic coast port for the last week or more, was picked uj on the ocean side of Cape Elizabeth today. The name "Bremen” was stenciled in black letters two inches high on both sides of the buoy. On one side of the canvas covering was printed a small crown. The bucy was picked up at a small | place known as Maiden Cove by a | 10-year-old lad, Frederick Lakeman of Vestbrook. A number of other persons were n2ar-by at the time and saw the boy i pick up the object from the beach |near the water. Buoy Photographed. 1'he buoy was taken tc a newspaper office, where it was photographed. and examired by many seafa ing men Over the small crown ou the buoy were the words “Shutz-Marke," meaning patented, ur trademark. Be- neath are the words 'V _ Epping- Hoven, Wilhelmshaven.” This indi- cated, apparently, the name of the maker. The preserver seeme. to be new. and apparently had aot Leen in the water a great length of time. It was stained with oil.. An officer of the coast guard cutter service, who ex- aimned the buoy, said that if the pre- server had been thrown overboard by someon* who thought to pla’ a prac- gicl:l joke, he had done a very good iol The preserver was well made, and the lettering and the ink used were of the best quality. Fisherman Sces Submarine. Westerly. R. L. Sept. 29.—A fisher- man at Pleasant View, near Watch Hill, overlooking Long Island Sound reported tonight that he had seen, with his marine glasses, a large sub- marine proceeding iv the direction of New London, where the German submarine Bremen has been expected for more than a week. It then was twenty-five miles east of New Lon- don, and showed on its mast a bright white light above a gieen light. These lights, according to the ob- server, were the ones he had been told by Captain Robinson of the tug Westerly would be carried by the German submarine, which the tug some days ago had been ordered to look for. The submarine was unaccompanied and displayed no flag. The observer, who professed to be familiar with the appearance of American submarines, which have their base at New Lon- don, said that it was of la different type from any he haa seen, The boat was about two miles off shore and was going at a moderate rate of speed. The sea was very choppy. Officials Undisturbed. New London, Conn., Sept. 29.—Of+ ficials of ‘the Eastern Forwarding \.company, American agents for the German line: of submarine merchant- men, were undisturbed today over the report that a lite preserver marked "Bremen" nad been picked up off the Maine coast, When asked.if the rrcser\'fl:r imght have belony;ed to the long-expected submarine, Captain F. Hinsch said, “Impossible.” He added that it was unlikely that the Bremen's preservers would be marked in the manner. of the one found, No submarine has been seen in the waters adjacent to New London at a late hour tonight. Officials of the Eastern Forwarding compary and the First Benefits Are Paid to Striking Traction Workers New York, Sept. 30.—Officials of the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employes :))&gln today the distribution of a'$35,- | strike benefit fund among the street car men, who have been on strike here since September 6. Ac- cording to the figures given out by the labor leaders, each man was to receive $5. The fund came from the headquarters of the association in De- troit and the organizers “aid a simi- lar amount will be dic uted each week. Efforts to organize a general strike in support of the car men suffered a check today when the 900 brewery workers who quit in response to the general call returned to work. ANDERSON TALKS T0 MINDEN MEN Congressman From Minnesota, With 8. R. Barton, Deliver Telling Talks at Rally. DEMOCRATIC WASTE, TOPIC Minden, Neb., Sept: - 30.—(Special Telegram.) — A very enthusiastic meeting was held by the republicans this afternoon in the assembly: room of the courthouse, at which Silas R. Barton, and Sidney Anderson, con- %ressman from' Minnesota, spoke. arton only said a few words, but was cheered loudly. He has made many friends and is a sure winner in this district. Democrats are found everywhere who propose to vote for Barton in the coming election. Sidney Anderson made the telling speech of the afternoon. It was a winner from the beginning. His ex- planation of the extravagance of the democratic party was a wonderful contrast to the apologies made by Congressman Shallenberger the day before. Anderson showed how the democrats had spent into the hun- dreds of millions more than any re- pubiican administration and he de- ducted the extraordinary expenses of the Mexican disturbance, to which Mr. Shallenberger the day before triedrto charge all the extravagance. The general feeling in this county is good for Hughes and the entire republican ticket, Sidney Anderson lgoke at a special meeting at Axtell this evening. Former Nebraskan Finds Hughes Strong During Trip East (From a Staff Correspondent.) Lincoln, Sept. m.—(S&eciaL)— Jesse S. Newton, a former Nebraska republican residing at Wymore and Omaha, but now residing in San Francisco, was at republican state headaulrleu today, calling on his old friend and political co-worker, Jesse V. Craig of the :gnk s’ bureau. Mr, Newton was on his way home from a visit in New York Gity and took some extra effort to learn of the political ‘conditions in the east. He states he found. very little Wilson sentiment 'either in the cities or among the farm- ers of the eastern state. There was a great deal of criticism about the present democratic admin- istration favoring the south so strong- I{. and now appealing to the voters of the north for support, Hughes is very strong, especially in New York state. In the west, where Mr, Newton re- sides, he states that Hughes is strong and that he believes the west will give him splendid support. . Scott Wreckin, company, agents in this country of the German line of wundersea merchantmen, claimed they had nc knowledge of the early approach of a German sub- marine. Banker Short $200,000 Is Convicted on One Count Fort Smith, Ark., Sept. 30.—T. W. M. Boone, president of the defunct American National bank, which failed here with a shortage reported by bank examiners to have been over $200,000, was found guilty by a jury in the fed- eral court here today on one count of an indictment charging falsification of a report of the bank's condition to the comptroller of the currency. Attorneys for Boone, who has been on trial for several days, announced | " Funeral of Admiral Vreeland at Washington Washington, Sept. 30.—Funeral service for the late Rear Admiral Charles Vreeland, U. S. N,, retired. were held here today. The pallbe: ers were Rear Admirals Hugo Oster- hause, J B. Milton, Charles J. Bad- ger and N, E. Mason, retired; Cap- tains Philip Andrews and J. H, Oli- ver. Interment, with full military honors, followed at Arlington Na- tional cemetery. Admiral Vreeland died at Atlantic City Wednesday. Drys Enter Kansas Today. Denver, Colo., Sept. $8.—A rousing bringing to an end the prohibition tonight closed the far we: f the dry campaigners, who left 0_three weeks for the Pacific ‘l‘h, train will r Kansas tomor- d after a week's campaligning In the political power in behalf of them-| ne Dartmouth squad. He is one of the it B LR LA ming In the selves and their children. Out df the Green's former star quarter backs. the case would be appealed. day night. 1 aE0 'NeN ur / : ;tranded bd o Conyright, 1916, Tnternational News Service. [d [ B I d L[] L2 e e e oo Y ) v e ey I —— ’ | BEEN A SEND your name today. Receive offers trom land owners, agents, everywhere. UNITED REALTY ASSOCIATES, Jollet, 11l Wyoming Lands. WYOMING homesteads, will locate you on cholce 320 acres for 50c per acre. Frank FARM D W WANTED-—S8tock farm to rent with priv. {lege of buying; would like near a section of land, with two houses if possible; give full particulars; can give good reference. Address Box No. 489, Rockwell City, Towa WANTED—To hear from owner of good farm for sale; state cash price and de- scription. D. F. Bush, Minneapolts, Minn FARM WANTED—To hear from owner of farm or unimproved land for sale, Write now to G. K., Box 344, Olney, Ill. Horses—Live _Stock—Vehicles 402 Ganter BI Lincoln, Neb, 120 AND 160 ACRES—12 miles from Omaha P. O.; within ¢ of Benson and elec- tric car. NO TRADE., Per acre, $160. TOHN N. 111 SOUTH 15TH. 150 AC 0 acres broke. Price $33 per acre. W. T. Smith Co, 914 Clty National Bank Bldg. Omaha, Neb. South Dakota Lands. FOR SALE OF EXCHANGE—4{80-acre im- proved corn, cattle and hog farm in South Dakota. J. C. Jensen, Mitchell, 8, D. . Wisconsin Lands. UPPER WISCONSIN—Beat dairy and gen- te in the unfon Settl tor sale at low prices . excellent lands for st Ask for booklet 36 on Wisec isin raeing Central Land Grant, state acres wanted If interested in fruit lands. ask fur book- let on Apple Orchards Addrees iana Com. missioner Boo Rallway, Minneapolls, Mina. i For Sale. LIGHT horss, harness and top buggy, as good as new. Walnut 3466. 49th and Martha, FOR SALB—Narej welght about 500 pounds, 0. J. Smith, 27th and Madison St., South Side City. South 1135 i3 'm horse, welght 8 POULTRY AND PET STOCK YOUNG TADPOLES 106 BACH. They ara scavengers and will keep your fish globe In clean, healthy condition, MAX GEISLER BIRD CO. DAMAGED WHEAT §1.25 a hundred, A. W, Wagner, 801 N. 16th. DOG _CROUTONS, new complete dog food; makes every dog healthy and strong; con- venient and economical. Sample free for dealer's name. Dealers wanted. Crouton Mfg. Co., 1119 Hopkins, Cincinnati, O, AN ITS ASLL T wAS COMIN GoT AN | NELLT ACTOR- O-\/-A-H - 70 ME i CRANK WINS VOTES- IN WEST NEBRASKA Range Men Are Coming Into Republican Fold Almost With One Accord. FINE RECEPTION IN SOUTH (From a Staff Correspondent.) Lincoln, Sept. 30.—(Special.)~How a republican speaker braved an audi- ence of cowboys at Allia-ice this week and succeeded not only in 9uietin¢ them, but winning votes from' Wilson to Hughes, is the story brought to Lincoln today by a traveling man who ha‘“encd to be in Alliance. e travelingman, hearing that W. L. Crank was to speak at a polit- ical meeting, happened in about the time the fireworks were scheduled to start. A noisy crowd of cowboys con- tinually interrupted Mr, Crank at the start of his address with shouts for Wilson, but the speaker refused to be confused and continued. The noisy ones grew quieter and before Mr. Crank had finished speaking he was reeted with a round of applause rom the Wilson men. Range Men for Hughes. Crank made votes for Hughes among the range men in western Ne- braska, the travelingman declared. “I have been out in the state for three weeks, constantly speaking,” said Robert | W, Devoe, republican candidate for attorney general, at the state headquarters this' morning, “and I have found only one republican who I knew was a republican who intend- ed to vote for Wilson. “We got a splendid reception in the southern part of the state and found sentiment strong for Hughes all through that territory. There was a big crowd on hand for the meeting at Geneva. Hebron brought a splendid meeting and the rally at Beatrice dur- ing the Gage county, fair was excep- tionally pleasing. Rally at Beatrice. “We took 1,000 Hughes buttons with us to Beatrice and the supply was exhausted long before the meet- ing was over. John L. Kennedy, Con- gressman Sloan, Judge Sutton and I spoke on national issues. The after- noon meeting did not appease the en- thusiasm and we spoke again at night at a big rally, “At Cortland we found the repub- lican outlook especially bright, and Hughes gaining every day.” “The campaign will start for us next Monday,” Secretary Beebe said today. “That doesn’t mean we haven’t been busy, but watch from now on. We are gemnr all of the encourage- ment one could wish for in the re- Eqr!s reaching this office, and it looks righter every day.” Stevens Found Not Guilty. Tecumseh, Neb, Sept. w.—zpecill Telegram,)—‘-The case of the state versus Arthir Stevens on an alleged illegal sale -of intoxicants closed in the district court here today., The jury found Stevens not guilty, kb, Escaped Convict Caught. Beatrice, Neb., Sept. M.—S‘Special Telegram,)—Sam Bive who es- caped from the Nebraska state pen- itentiary last July, was arrested to- day in the railroad yards by Chief Hayden and-lodged in jail. ‘Vlrden Fenton was notified and wired that he would be here tomorrow after his man. y Villa is Reporte At Cusihuiriachic With_SEa,ll Army Field Headquarters, Ameri - nitive Exp:dhq)on in Mexi'::r '§:£t.P23 —(By Wireless to Columbus, Sept. 30.)—Francisco Villa, 'wit ;‘)0 men, is at' Cusihuiriachi hing C, . | town west of Chihuahua City, accord- ing to reports at field hentfqulmu tonight. The last reports to head- gunrterl placed the bandit leader at anta Clara ranch, thirty miles east of Namiqui If Villa has'moved to Cusihuiriachic, it would place him 200 miles frcm the nearest American troops. Reports concerning the outlaw’s movements, however, are being stud- ied and checked in every way g)r fear that they are being inspired and that Villa instead of moving south is go- ing north, as he is reported to have threatened. One theory to account for moving to Cushuiriachic is that he hopes to secure supplies there. He was re- ported in recent advices as needing clothing and farage. 4 No movement of Carranza troops toward the Cuihuiriachic region are known at headquarters, Wilson, Roosevelt and Taft to Speak At Indianapolis Tndianapolis, Sept. 30.—Thousands of red, white and blue pennants, flags and thousands of yards of bunting have heen strung all over Indianapo- lis in preparation for the Indiana cen- tennial celebration which begins Monday, October 2. and continues to October 15. Many noted persons have been invited nndy have accepted invi- tations to take part in-the program. Amoug .them are President ilson, October 12, to review the motor pa- rades, which come from twenty-three state roads and join in one procession; former President Taft, October 6; former President Roosevelt and Dr. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard university, October 13, and others. All will give addresses while in the city. Speech Here Non-Political, But to Read Between Lines New York, Sept. 30.—(Special Tel- egram.)—The president is already planning his speech to be delivered at Omaha, October 5. It will not depart at all from the determination president has:made to keep away from open partisanship in addressing non- partisan auidences, but his hearers will be able to read very plainly the position of the administration on pub- lic issues, particularly the ones. ' with which Mr. Hughes has been dealing. Persistent Advertising is the Road to, Success. the |