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-t sk P Best results, Cheapest rates. BEE WANT-ADS _lc per word. VOL. XLVI—NO. ASQUITH RESIGNS 147. AND ASKS KINGTO MAKE LA CHIEF Sovereign Summons Secretary for Colonies to Palace, Fol- lowing Announcement Premier W/ Quit. DAY OF BIG EXCITEMENT Prime Minister Urges Monarch to Have Colleague Form Ministry. RESIGNATION IS AUCEPTED London, Dec. 5.—The resignation of Premier Asquith is officially an- nounced. It is understood that Mr. Asquith will advise the king to entrust to An- drew Bonar Law the formation of a new ministry. King George has summoned Andrew Bonar Law, secretary for the col- onies, to the palace. The court circular announces to- night: “The court circular announces to- night: 2 The Right Hon. Mr. Asquith had an andience with his majesty, the king, and tendered his resignation as prime minister and first lord of the treasury, which the king has sbeen graciously pleased to accept.” Day of Great Excitement. The premier’s decision to resign and advise the king to summon An- drew Bonar Law to form a cabinet was taken after a day of extraordi- nary political activity. There were constant comings and goings of the political leaders between Downing street and the various government de- partments. Mr. Asquith met several unionist leaders in consultation, in- cluding Earl Curzon, Lord Robert Cecil and the earl of Derby. Noticeable absentees from this con- ference were, A. J. Balfour, who is ill; Andrew Bonar Law, J. Austen Cham- berlain and Walter Humlong. Meets His Supporters. Later in the forenoon the premier met his supporters, including Vis- count Grey, Lewis Harcourt, Edwin S. Montague, the marquis of Crewe, Reginald McKenna, Walter \Runci- man, Lord Buckmaster, H. Samuel, | Lord Reading and Arthur Henderson. The meeting lasted for more than an hour and it is su[;poscd that Mr. Asquith explained that he was faced by almost unsuperable obstacles to the reconciliation of the conflicting interests and intehded to tender his resignation. Almost immediately the premier drove to the palace and had an audience with the king. Resignation Not Accepted. Lloyd \George's resignation has not been accepted thus far. Became Premier in 1908. Herbert Henry Asquith ™ became premigr of Great Britain in 1908, suc- ceeding Sir Henry Campbell-Banner- man. Mr. Asquith at once began a policy_ of reform—parliamentary, so- cial ahd constitutional—of a radical nature, aided by David Lloyd George, with whom today he apparently is at odds. Shortly after the outbreak of the| war the liberal cabinet of Mr. As- quith hegan to be assailed by its political) enemies, mainly on the con- duct of the war, and particularly with regard to the naval branch of the British forces. So bitter was this campaign that on May 26, 1915, a coalition cabinet was formed with Asquith, however, retaining the port- folio of prime minister. Origin of Situation, The present political crisis in Great Britain apparently had its origin in a similar situation, especial- ly on account of the government's postponement of consideration of the British air board’s demands for fuller powers to meet the situation created by German air raids of England; the recent change in the command of the British fleet by which Vice Admiral Sir David Beatty was made head of the grand fleet, and especially Lloyd George's demand for a smaller war council, which should have pow- ers to act independently of the cabi- net, * Mr. Asquith in parliament made a statement that there was trouble in his cabinet and that he had asked King George to permit a reconstruc- tion of it. Just how it was proposed e the ministry was not stated, | For Nebraska—Fair; not much change in temperature. Temperatures at Omahs Yesterday. Hour. Deg. p. Comparative Local Record 1916, 1915, 191 Highest yesterday [TRT Lowest yesterd: 3 Mean tempei Precipltation . 00 .00 .82 Temperature and precipitation deparfures from the normal: Normal temperature Normal precipitation. Defliciency for the day.. 03 inch Total rainfall since March 1 7 Inches Deficiency since March 1 1 inches Deficiency for cor. period. 74 inches Deticiency for cor. periog 4.04 inches ports From Statior at 7 P. M, Station and State Temp. High- Raln- of Weather, 7 p. m, est, fall Davenport, clear 42 60 .00 Denver, clear 48 00 Des Molnes, cl b .00 Dodge City, clear. 46 60 00 14 14 00 40 00 (s 45 00 clear T 00 y, pt. cloudy.. 44 50 00 QAR e 2 ix 00 Sheridan, clear. 15 00 Soux City, clear. . Valentine, clear. 50 100 i the British 1,200,000 and the Italians | yesterday has i Pope Benedict 6 . Meteorologist, L. A FALL-OF CAPITAL OF ROUMANIA SEEMS CERTAIN' Petrograd Says Attempts to Check Rush of Teuton Armies Has Been ' Unsuccessful. e GERMANS ARE NEAR CITY Il}vaders Cross -Railroad Lead- ing from Tergovistea to Bucharest. MANY PRISONERS TAKEN The fate of Bucharest apparently is sealed. The Teutonic advance to ward it is going on unchecked. manian attempts to stop it having been ‘unsuccessful. This announce- ment is made in the Russian official statement today. On the Macedonian front the Ser- bians are following up their victory | in the Grunishte region and have| captured the village of Stravina, three! miles north of Grunishte, au‘nnlingI to a Serbian official statement. The| Bulgarians are reported retreating| northward, apparently having evac-| vated and set on fire the village of Zovik, two miles northwest of Stra- vina. The French and Serbians are announced by Paris to have made progress also within the bend of the Cerna further west, north of the vil-| lage of Paralovo. | A Copenhagen research society is reported in a Berlin dispatch as esti- mating the total losses of the entente powers during the war at 15,100,000/ men, of which the Russians lost 8,- 500,000 men, the French 3,700,000, Rou- 800,000, the smaller nations making up the remainder. Russian Official Report. Petrograd, Dec. 5.—(Via London.) | —The Roumanians have been unsuc-| ces¥ful in attempts to check the Teu-| tonic forces on the roads to Ploechti and flucharc§1, says the war office in today’s official statement, which also says: “Roumanian front: On the Molda- vian frontier, in the valley of the| River Trotus andMsouth to the valley | of the River Dovtian, engagements | are still proceeding. We again cap-| tured a range of heights, but the| cnemy is showing stubborn rcsistancc: and attempting to restore its posi-| tion by counter attacks.” o German Official Report. Berlin, Dec. 5—(By Wireless to| Saywille,)—Renewed Russian attacks ift the Carpathian forest§ and along the line of the Transylvanian frontier were made yesterday, but did not gain the slightest success, it is announced officially. Teutonic troops recaptured lost positions. “In’western Roumania the Teutonic troops are pursuing the defeated Rou- manians on the front before Buchar- est. They are across the railroad leading from Bucharest to Tergovis- tea. In the Danube lowlands Russian attacks were repulsed with heavy losses and the number of prisoners taken has been increased to 12,500. The statement follows: “Front of Archduke Joseph: Re- newed Russian attacks on Capul and northeast of Dorna Watra and in the Putna Trotus and Uzul valleys were * withcut the slightest success. Simultaneously German and Austro-| Hungarian troops recaptured by storm and hand to hand fighting a height position lost during the pre- ceding fighting, which was an im-| portant one for us. After these en- gagements, of which some were very violent, there remained in our hands on the Verchdebry, south of Tartar pass, more than 100 men and five ma- chine guns, and on Mount Nemira, in the northern Oituz valley, 350 prison- | ers and eight machine guns. | “Army group of Field Marshal von | Mackensen: The Ninth army during the pursuit of the enemy broke the | resistance of the hostile rear guards| and crossed the Bucharest-Tergovis tea-Petrosita railroad to the east- ward. “The Danube/army after the vic- tory gained on the lower Argechu| against numcrically superior forces, | followed the retreating enemy in this | sector. In the victory mentioned the | 217th infantry division took an es-| pecially glorious part. “The left wing of the Danube army fought its way beyond this sector. The ecasterly wing in the Danube| lowlands sanguinarily repulsed Rus- sian_attacks. “The number of prisoners reported ncreased to 12,500. To | the number captured by the Ninth | army a further 2,000, and to that of the Danube army 2500 men havc‘ ' been added. The prisoners last men- | tioned belomged to twenty-two in-| fantry and six different artillery reg- | iments. major ‘engagements.” | OMAHA, WEDNESDAY PRESIDENT GIVEN their teeth. CHEERS WHEN HE Executive Reads His Annual Message to the Joint Ses- sion of Congress at Noon. \ SUFFS TRY A DIVERSION Banner Hung Over Edge of | Gallery is Quickly Pulled Down by Page. RAIL LEGISLATION FIRST What the President \ Puts Up to Congress || The law for the reorganization of the Interstate Commerce com- mission and the enlargement of its membership. An amendment to the media- tion law providing for the investi- gation of disputes between trans- portation companies and employes before’ strike or lockout legally can be attempted. A law to permit of combinations of manufacturers for the purpose of entering into the field of for- eign commerce. The amendment of the Porto Rico act, to grant extended privi- leges of citizenship to residents of the island. An amendment to the corrupt practices act to regulate the ex- THE TOOTHBRUSH ~ MURDER HIS WIFE: MORNING, DECEMBER 6, . T 3 ' SQUAD. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE 1916—TWELVE ‘PAGES. OBSERVING DENTIST WEEK IN CHICAGO—One of the features of the week devoted to || the instruction of mouth hygiene was classes in “tooth-brushing” held at the public schools. The photograph shows children of the Franklin open air school being taught how to clean THE WEATHER FAIR SINGLE COPY .TWO CENTS. SHIP CARRYING 25 AMERICANS SUNK BY SHELL Italian Liner Palermo Tor- | pedoed by Submarine Oraft Off the Spanninsh Coast, it Is Reported. t Notels ete., Ga o Ura News N i e i, |YANKEE DIES OF WOUND | o ’ Vessel Carried No Passengers But United States Horse Tenders. it GUN CARRIED FOR DEFENRSE N Madrid (Via Paris), Dec. 5.--The ¥ | Ttalian steamship Palermo, with twen« ty-ive Americans on bhoard has teen ;(nrp('(ln(‘(l off the Spanish coast. R | One sailor, revorted to be an Amer= | ican, was wounded by a shell and died in a hospital at Palafrugell, Spain; | where the survivors were landed, I'hree others were seriously wopnded by the torped ! H The Palermo, 9,205 tons gross, 3 sailed from New York on November | 15 for Genoa and Spezia. =4 Carries No Passengers. Ot Fiarm SERVICE M’DAN[EL D]D NOT 'Women Hoist Suffrage Flag While o sl T o S ‘Nm'vmbu 15 for Genoa and Spezia iand was last reported as passing Gib- President Is Addressing Congress ila: o Novcnber 2. 1r carried o | date of November 28. penditure of money in elections. A law (already passed by the senate) for the promotion of voca- tional and industrial education. Full Text of Message on Page Two. Washington, Dec. ~When Pres- ident Wilson appeared before con- gress at 1 o'clock this afternoon to deliver his annual address the demo-' ENDS A SENSATIONAL CASE was marked by a woman crats and many republicans united in a great demonstration to felicitate the president upon his re-clection. William Jennings Bryan, and most of the cabinet, occupying resgrved places on the floor, led in the demon- stration, which was prolonged and noisy. In the gallerics Mrs. Wilson and women of t cabinet joined in the handclapping. he embassies and legations were in- terested spectators, Galleries were packed " when mittee, walked briskly into the cham- | ber amdtook his place at the clerk’s| e desk, manuscript in hand.. He \\a?}ll o'clock thegnight of July 14 She foreed to wait while-the demonstra tion went on. Everybody rose, while | ing regained consciousness. Two and some of the re-|her three children asleep in an adjoin- the democrats publicans “joined in cheers and ap- plause, Wave after wave of shouts swept the chamber until Speaker Clark pounded for order. The president smiled and bowed and as the demonstration subsided | began the reading of his address. As he began reading a, huge yellow ban- ner bearing in black letters the words “Mr. President, what will you do for woman suffrage?” was unfurled over [S JURY’S VERDIGT\YeIg)W Silken Banner of ‘‘The - = ause’’ Flutters Down on St. Joseph Prosecutor Ac-| Heads of Solons. quitted of Charge of Kill- ing Mate After Men Out Two Hours. |TORN DOWN BY PAGE sident today suffrag coup in the galleries—the first real show of organized militancy in the Woman Found Beaten and capital—and by a great demonstration i 5 Whi of congratulation to the president Dycl;ghln Helr RONO’{:I‘ B ile upon his re-election, in which many iliren Sleep Ne y. Washington, Dec. 51" Wilson’s address to congre In the diplomatic| galleries representatives of many of the | prgsident, escorted by the usual com-| Mrs. Harriet Moss | republicans joined with the demo- e CHARGES AGAINST FOES| St. Joseph, Mo., Dec, 5—Oscar D. McDaniel, prosecuting attorney of Buchanan county, was acquitted by a jury in the criminal court here tonight | of the charge of having murdered | McDaniel, his! The jury deliberated for two hours, died within a few hours without hav- Two of !ing room, had not been awakened, by | the murder of their mother. | Story of McDaniel. i McDaniel's story of the events on ! the night of the murder wag that he was summoned up town by a decoy telephone call about 11:15 p. m. and irrturnqd home at midnight. Te en- | gaged in a pistol duel outside his resi- | dence with an unknown assailant who | hid behind a tree, he said, and then| | going into the house to obtain another | (Continued on Page Two, Column One.) Dr; Millener Gets Patents on His Two Wireless Device After ten years of nerve-racking work Dr. Frederick Millener has s cured what he started out to get- patents on “Atennae and supports therefor for use i wireless tele- graph and telephone systems” and “Apparatus for wireless transmission of energy.” The two patents of Dr that have to do with wircless, as applied to railroads, have been re-| ceived and bear the patent - office The doctor is greatly pleased over his success in securing the patents, and, while for | the present he will do nothing in the way of installing the wireless sys tem on railroads, the hope of his life is to live to see the day when trains all gver the country will be handled by wircless instead of telegraph or- ers. . Light Contrac Likely to Carry By Three.to Two Omaha yesterday voted to sustain the cantract offered by the Omaha Electric Light and Power comp to the city, and which the municipal ownership advocates opposed, The majority in favor of the con- tract was large. . Returns from half the precincts in the city indicated that “In Dobrudja there have been no|thé contract had been sustained by ! a vote of about 3 to Denounces Aerial revolver with which to continue the | | fight found his wife on the bed room | | floor dying, her head in a pool of | blood. ‘ i Enemies occasioned by his work as | prosecutor were accused by him and | his friends as being guilty of the | erime. A grand jury was called and | McDaniel was indicted for the crime. | The election November 7 resulted | in McDanicl's defeat for re-election, | although a majority of the candidates on the county ticket of his party were vofed into office. His trial began November 13. | crats. ' : After acknowledging the prolonged cheers and applause which greeted his entry to the hall of the house the | president launched into his addr reviewing recommendations for rail- road legislation, a corrupt practices act and had passed to his mendations for a broader government for Porto Rico. He was just about to begin a sentence: Carries Suffrage Banner. “The present laws governing the jslafid and Fegutating T%u passengers, _hu( had on board forty<" seven American horse tenders. In ad- suffragists sat smiling_and unper- | dition to horses it carried a general [ directly turbed, watching the effect. A diminu- | tive page raised on the arms of men under the gallery grasped the edge of the banner and snatched it down. President Wilson, attracted | by the stir, looked up from his read- | ing and apparently taking in the situ- i ried to where the women were | fringement of the rules of the house. recom- | ¢ tights and | rivileges of its people are not just” | when over the rail of the gallery, where sat a party of women suffrage leaders, there fluttered down above the heads of the amagzed assemblage of senators and rep ntatives a silken banner of suffrage yellow, bear- ing in great black letters the inscrip- tion: “President! Wilson, what will you | do for weman suffrage? The suffragists said was their protest against the presi- dents’ plea-s¢ith congress for broader suffrage for the men of Porto Rico, while he did not mention their own cause in his address. As the banner rippled down, the JOHN D. ARCHBOLD, OIL KING, IS DEAD BE KILLED IS SAFE Capitalist feller Organize His First Trust Dies at Tarrytown. Millener | Santa Fe and the WeStern Unlon VOte Tarrytown, N. Y., Dec. 5.—A noted Bonuses to Toilers;figurc in the world's petroleum in dustry was removed today when John of | Dustin Archbold, capitalist, president New the York, Dec. 5.—Directors Atchison, distribution equal to 10 per cent of | Various other enterprises, o a year's pay to all its employes in | home here after a two weeks' illness the service of the system for at least two years and whose annual com- I pensation does not exceed $2,500. Directors the Western Union Tele- graph company at a special meeting today voted a bonus to employes re-| ceiving less than $2,000 a year, 7 per cent of their annual salary to those receiving less than $1,200 and 6 per pendicitis. this morning. patient had been unable to receiv proper nourishment and members o his family recognized last night that the end was near. Mr. Archbold js cent to those receiving between $1,200 and $2,000. Messengers will receive $25 ea Pres dent Ripley of the Atchison,! widow; a son, John F. Archbold of | Thomasville, Ga., and two daughters, M. M ., and Mrs Van Buren of Newport, Mrs R. Armra D. Saunderson T(»]v(‘:\fl &] Santa Fe railway said to-|of Lyndhurst, England. day that the amount to be distributed : . | was estimated at about $2,750,000. He | NativelcliOkiio: said that the railroad, especially since | the mfluence of the European war Mr. Archbold was a native of Ohio |and was 68 years old. In carly life had been “fully felt,” has enjoyed|he was an oil refiner and buyer in It was in recognition of this perity. that led the directors to make the | distribution, he said. Bombardment of Open Cities Food Taken from Rome, Dec, 5.—(Via Paris.)—In his allocution delivered before the secret|and even young boys taken from their | consistory here today Pope Benedict! denounced the aerial bombardment of open cities and condemned all those | who, he said, had defied the laws of | God and man in the present war. The; pope said: “It is well to recall, aside from the laws of God, that if even the law of | man was obeyed at present peace and prospefity would reign in Europe. | If we neglect or disdain laws and au-| thority discord is the sure result. This is the highest social Jaw. 1 result of ignoring this law\ we see every| acts committed in defiance of the laws of God and man, peaccable citizens homes to fight amid the tears of wives and mothers, we see open cities and defenscless inhabitants exposed to aerial attacks and we see by sea and land nameless horrors. ] cannot but deplore again these crimes and condemn all those by whom they are committed.” f The pope concluded his remarks Nebraska Cold Stora_ge Houses Lincoln, Neb., Dec. 5 .—Large quan- tities of foodstuffs have been with- be drawn from Nebraska cold-storage warehouses and shipped east within the last two months, according to fig- ures given out today by Food Com- | missioner Harman. There has been a notable reduction in the stored-up with a prayer that, as the new code|supply of meat, eggs, dressed poul- of canonical law would mark a more|try and miscellancous meats. October tranquil epoch for the church, so also| 1 there were in Nebraska warehouses the time might come when the spirit| 6,638,981 pounds of cured meats. No- what appears to be an abnormal pros- | western Pennsylvania and in 1875 he | became associated with the Rocke- and of the ‘increased cost of ]ivmg?f““” interests, that continued until his death. He became president of the Standard Oil company of New | Jersey shortly after the dissolution of | the "trust” was ordered by the United States supreme court, | Mr. Archbold’s death followed an illness of less than two wecks. He | was operated upon for appendicitis November 23 and for a time seemed to rally. Later he suffered a relapse and the five physicians attending him decided that blood transfusion must resorted to. Mr. Archbold’s chauffeur volunteered as the subject | (Continued Three, Column Three.) B1ackst;ne Managemefit Assumed by M. W. Walls ‘.’\| a meeting of the Blackstone Holding company today M. \W. Walls was appointed manager of the Black- t A 3 of law might again be respected in the | vember 25 this amount had been re-| stone hotel, taking the place of I'rank- principle of right violated in Europe, | world and bring harmony and pros-|duced to 2,884,100 pounds, or a reduc-' lin V. Moffitt, whose resignation was perity to the nations. tion of 85 per cent. | accepted at this meeting. | coat today, kept time and gave the afterward it Who Helped Rocke- | Qharles Elmendorf, Said to| | "|ILL LESS THAN TWO WEEKS | pAuGHTER IS NOT STOLEN ment with breakfast today. Topeka & Santa Fe of the Standard Oil company of New | ja, | store of survived by his |day aanounce the killing of Emeliano ation at a glance, smiled broadly and | without hesitation or interruption | turned his eyes back to his manu-| script and continued his address tg| its end without further demonstra- | tions. Policemen and gallery guards cur ated, hut contented themselves with watch- i v, as if to ]vrcvcnl, a fur-| ral When the joint session was over the | suffragists filed out unmolested by the police, who said they had no orde other than to prevent any further The banner remained a trophy with the sergeant-at-arms, Plans Well Laid. As it turned out, the women had their plans laid with precision and | sprung their coup almost on the sec- ond idently; in _possession of an advance copy of dress, they had timed the document at | the speed they expected he would read and anticipated he would reach the Porto Rico section in eight min- utes { Miss Mabel Vernon of Nevada, who | heckled the president here at his American Federation of Labor speech last July and who smuggled the ban nersinto the house gallery under her qgnal for the unfurling of the banner, | Before the police could get to the gallery the suffragists’ press agent! was busy handing out “canned” re- ports of the affair replete in detail, giving the names of the militants and mterviews with-each ‘ MAN REPORTED T0 — Have Been Slain at Chi- huahua, Is Alive. the president's ad- | Ly I|ed the activiti cargo. The ship was armed, it was said here at the offices of Hartfield, Solari & Co., agents of the Navigazione Generale Italiana, owper of the ’alermo. It carricd two three-inch rifles mounted aft. “These guns,” said Mr. Solari; “were carried for defense only.” German Subsea ' Bombards Port in Madeira Islands .~ New York, Dec. 5—News of what is believed to have been an attack on I the Portuguese port of Funchal, Ma- deira islands, presumably by a Ger- man subndarine, was received in a cable message today by the firm of Salinger & Magnus, embroidery im- porters here. The message said that the offices of the flrm there had been damaged by shell fire to the extent of $1,000. £ '1::1& message, cvidently censored; “Out of danger, No one was hurt. | Damage caused by shell fire, We © have claimed damages to 'the extent of $1,000.” w _ Mr. Salingey, senior partner of the firm, said that yesterday he had re- ceived a letter from the junior part= ner, Mr. Magnus, who left Funchal on November 24. The letter describ- ¢ 3 of German subma- rines in the vicinity of the Madeira Islands, Mr. Salinger said, and for this reason he was quite certain_that the attack on the town must haves. been made by a submersible. “Our establishment was damaged because of its proximity to the cable and telegraph office, which must have ‘been one of the points of attack,” said Mr. Salinger. Y Chicago Dieters Gain in Weight On - Thirty Centsa Day Chicago, Dec. 5. —Dr. Jol;xn Dilt Robertson's diet squad of six men and six women completed the scien- |tific part of the two weeks' experi~ They | were weighd after this meal and the- » S T | figures showed an average gain, on a Ll Paso, Tex., Dec -Chailes El-|diet estimated to have cost but Jittle mendorf, the American repc rted ki”l‘d’y"‘o"‘, than }‘:U FIEI“'S a dz)’, of ?‘32 haabua G s ey pounds each. he squad weighe at Chihuahua City, is safe, ac rtlrrllllg!’llvs P adetNeninb eyt bcganzand to a message received from him to-| he (otal today was 1.8%0.75 His daughter, reported captured | “The exact cost will not be known Railway company today authorized a|Jersey and officer or director in | by Villa, is at Clifton. Ariz., and was | il after dinner tonight,” Dr. Rob- died at his |not taken by the bandit. |ertson said, “but from tentative fig- t was reported here today that it| yres compiled I believe the average was the daughter of Jose Bovi ; 0, an i av subsequent to an operation for ap-|[talian, that Villa carried away. | expenditure per day for each of the eath came at 4 o'clock, For some hours the CF i members of the squad will be about {Y""”’ Buettner, a forcigner, in |30 cents. I consider the experiment ihuahua City, at the time of the at-| ;"¢\ cags” ack, telegraphed friends he was safe | nd that the big foreign wholesale sore ot whien e s manager v Shortage of Sugar Is Killing Babies Messages from Chihuahua City to- Enriquez, uncle of former Covernor Ignacio Enriquez A Chinesc agent in Juarez received a telegram saying many Chinese and other stores were looted and “siwty Chinese were victims." Other foreigners who were in Chi- | London, Dec. 5.—An investigation as to the increasing infantile mor- tality in Berlin has established that the rising death rate is due to an in- sufficient sugar allowance, according to an Amsterdam dispatch to the The huahua City at the same time Villa| Exchange Telegraph company. entered were telegraphing relatives | dispatch says that it has been de- here today of their safety. | cided that each child born after De- German Consul Max Weher of | cember | shall receive an additional Juarez arnounced today he had re-| half pound monthly of sugar. ceived nothing from Carlos Ketelsen, | e acting German vice consul in Chihua- | === City, who was reported to have | led. | Enriquez, who was repasted to have been killed during the battle, was a weth known lawyer in the state | of Chihuahua. His nephew, Colonel! Ignacio Enriquez, was formerly gov- ernor of Chihuahua state and was last reported to be chiel of staff to! General Obregon, minister of war. S A small ad in the Domestic column of The Bee will secure the maid or cook you have been seeking for so long. Concord Club Will Hold ; A Special Entertainment A special entertainment and holi-| day joll tion will be staged by the Omaha Concord club at the monthly | night meeting and dinner at the Hen-| sha rathskellar Thursday evening| " ) at 6:30 o'clock. Several surprises of 1 a novel nature are in store l|'(-r Con-| Call T?/ler 1000 cordians,' according to the ~pcci.’|ll entertainment committee in cliarge ul'i TOda][ / You are as close to The Bee Want Ad Dept. as your phone is to you. the program.