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The Omaha Daily Bee Advertising is the Life of Trade TH tBrtmgH Th 8m to your cni Mtntca, jrtmr oonpetttofa cnstarasrs, Jton Bosathla. easterner, THE WEATHER. Fair; Cooler VOL. XL11I NO. 213. OMAHA, THVUSDAY MOTCNING, APRIL 2, VJU- FOUKTEKN PAGES. On Train and at Bote! ITtwa standi. So. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. I ABOUT ONE HUNDRED MILLION CAPITAL OP ALL RESERVE BANKS Figures Made Public from National Banks Responding to Last Call of Comptroller. THEY ARE IN GOOD CONDITION Statement Shows Them Prepared to Meet New Law's Demands. SURPRISE TO SOME OBSERVERS Gain Instead of Curtailment Loans and Discounts. of , INDIVIDUAL DEPOSITS INCREASE One Hundred nnd lilRh ty-Four Ap I Ajlcntlonn Have Ileen SIndc Since the Currency Act , AViib Signed. .WASHINGTON, April 1. The new fed- elal reserve bunking system will start vlth a total authorized capital of about 100,000,000 for all reserve banks. This fact became apparent tonight when figures wero made public from all national banks responding to tho last call of tho comp- troller of the currency, made March 4. ! Tho total capital and surplus of the '7,194 national banks reporting was given at about $1,78S,000,000. Under tho reserve net each national bank must subscribe 6 per cent of Its capital and surplus to tho capital of the reserve bank In Its district, and 6' per cent of this total would be about $107,000,000. There wcro only 7,43 national banks who signified In the legal time their Intention to enter the system, iso tho total 'would be somewhat reduced, but the .entrance into the system of state banks a"nd trust companis will tend to off- WCl Ull?, UI1U 11 IB pUBBIUlU UlUk Willi II1VD-3 institutions figures in the capital of all reserve banks will be near 1110,000,000. Anthorlred to Demand the Rest. The actual working capital of tho re serve banks may only reach half this amount, f6r the. law provides mandatory subscriptions of only three sixths of the total 6 per cent. The reserve board, tho machine which will direct the system, however, - is authorized to demand the payment of the other three-sixths. The statement today shows national banks In excellent condition to meet tho Cemands ot the new. law. Soma observers were surprised by the fact that loans and discounts have Increased instead of being curtailed. Loans and discounts on March 4, 1914, amounted to $S,3o7,635,S9S, a gain ever January 13, 1914, the time of tho last call, of 1S2.1;,98. Subscribing banks, muit begin payment for their reserve bank stock thirty days after the announcement! .of the district and reserve cities, and It was believed in sotne-'qiarterai, that today's statement might show a decrease in loans and dls counts because of this impending an nouncement. Bank Shoirn in Shape. The loan and discount Increase, taken together with the fact that individual deposltis increased In the same period by more than $39,000, was said to be the best indication that tho national banks are' in shape to meet the demands of tho new system. According to the statement, the re sources and liabilities of .the national banks wero $tl,6$4,497,260 their capital stock, S1.1S6.4S3.120. and thetr individual deposltis, S6,1U,32S,437. Their reserves were put at $1,547,692,375, an average of 21.62 per cent and $17,529,430 above the amount required by law. The 'cash in banks decreased since January, 1914, about 114,000,000, but Increased over April, 1915, about 180,000,000. During March ten new banks were au thorized to begin business and since the urrency act was signed there have' been 181 applications for conversion Into na tional banks or for entrance into the new 'system as state Institutions. JIIH Falls Into Itlver, PARK RAPIDS. Minn., April L-Under-mlned by high water, a flour mill at Osage toppled into tho river today and is a total loss. The damage is estimated at $15,000, The flood Is sweeping down Straight river, carrying away bridges and fei'ccs. and 'flooding the low lands. The bridge and approach of the new state blshway have been washed away. The Weather forecast till 7 D. in. Thursday: For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vicinity l'airj sugniiy cooler. Temperature nt (maas Yesterday, Hour. Vex. t a. ni.. 44 6 a. m 44 7 a, m k a. in b a. in 10 a. m 11 a. m 13 ro 1 p. in 2 p. Ill 3 p. in. ...... 4 p. m 5 p. in a p. in....... 7 p. m 8 p. m Comparative Local 'Record. !4. la' '19' Hlehesf yesterday SI 71 49 37 ivi vesterday 42 43 31 fSSn1!:::::::: T .CO . l.i4.eiaiurc and precipitation uepai- ltrfcn nt'tr. the normal; Normal temperaturo ij i.'v.m. for the day. tor me uuy..... Total excess fclnce March 1 49 Normal precipitation ui inch Deficiency for the day 06 Inch Total rainfall since March 1.... 1.52 Inches Kxccss since March 1 07 inch Excess for cor. period, 1913.... 1.68 Inches Kxccss for cor. period, 1911.... 1.(0 Inches lienor! from Stations at 7 I'. SI. fetation and Etate Temp. High- Rain- of Weather. i P-m. t'heyenne. cloudy M Denver, pt. cloudy. 62 Dea Moines, cloudy W Dodge City. Pt. cloudy.,.. 64 l.andor. cfcar 4 umaha, clear K Pueblo, ilear.. 60 Rapid City. Pt. cloudy.... K fialt Lake City, pt cloudy 5& Santa Ve, clear 68 S.ierldnn, cloudy...... Houx City. Pt. cloudy.... 44 valonllne. clear ott est. fall. 52 64 c: 71 ss II 4 St 62 6 SO .03 .00 .00 .00 .00 T .00 .at .00 ,.00 .00 .00 .00 62 T indicates trace oi precipitation. L. A, WELSH, Local JfVjrecasttr. REINFORCEMENTS FOR PEDS Relief Column Under General Maas Threatens Villa's Rear. HERRERA IS SENT TO MEET IT General Carransa Inform Foreign Consnlts thnt Reports of the Fall of Torrron I Pre mntun. nULLETl.V. JUAREZ, Mex., April l.-At 1 o'clock this afternoon General Carranza, through Roberto V. Pcsquerlra, gave out a state ment to the effect that tho federals still hold tho general barracks and two smaller barracks In Torrcon, This indi cates that there have been no material changes in military positions In the city in several days. uuiiiiirriN. JUAREZ, April 1. All Juarez waited expectantly, nnd with et-mo anxiety today, for definite news of General Villa's posi tion In his attack on Torrcon. Reports received by General Carranza here late last night Indicated that fighting still was In progress, and no idea was ob tained as to when the relative positions of the rebels and federals would change. General Carranza today seems confident that his military chieftain will conquer tho federals under General Refugio Ve lasco, and tho fact that heavy reinforce ments for tho federal leader were said to bo closely approaching Torrcon did not serve to shako this confidence. It is tho general belief here that both armlds aro so worn and exhausted by their long and hard fighting thai the present action lacks much ot the virility which marked tho robel conquest and tho federal defense of Gomez Palacto. A telegram from Gomez Palaclo to Gen eral Manual Cliao at Chlhuhhua was copied here. It is said that a train of wounded left Gomez Palacto at 2 o'clock this morning and added that at that hour fighting continued. Miguel Dlebold, Mexican federal consul at 131 Paso, made public a telegram from General Joaquin Maas, the federal com mander reported advancing to the relief of Torreon: "Reported fall of Torreon untrue. Deny all such reports." The message was dated today and pur ported to come from Saltlllo, Just cast of Torreon, by way of Eagle Pass, Tex. It was rumored hcrovthat one of Maas' troop trains was destroyed by dynamite at San Pedro de Las Colonias, a railroad station between. Saltlllo and Torrcon. Rebel Hold the Ontposta. CHIHUAHUA, Mexico, April 1. Official statement, given out at rebol military headquarters at 10 a. m. today, said that tho rebels occupy Gomez Palaclo, Lerdo and some of the outskirts of Torreon. The federals have fortified themselves In some of the strongest buildings In the last named city, the report adds, . , - The federals, among cither defenses, are occupying a big hotel on the plaza, while the rebels have mounted guns a few blocks away In the market hpuoe. x rom time to time tne rebels nave pene trated into varlbus parts of the city at great sacrifice of life. Whether fighting continues today was not stated at headquarters. Recently both sides have been cannonading spas modically and desultory rifle fire has been 'almost continuous. Numerous trains carrying supplies of all kinds leave here dally and tho hospitals are full. That the fighting haa been the most sanguinary of any modern revolu tion in Mexico is admitted. Reinforcement for Federals. JUAREZ. Mex., April l.-Interest in the situation at Torreon, where the great battle ot the revolution remains unde cided, became acute today with the news that General Villa was called upon yes terday to meet a new enemy In the form of federal reinforcements coming from the cast. The new column reported marching to the relief of General Refugio Velasco, the federal commander at Torreon, waB said to be under the oommand of General Joaquin Maas and to number between 4,000 and 6,000 men. 10 meei mm it was reported that Gen eral Monclovio Herrera was detailed by General Villa, and advices that an en gagement had begun were hourly ex pected. General Carranza today Informed the American, British .and Gerrhan consuls hero that reports of the fall 'of Torreon were premature. Queer Kind of "Pure" Election Held Over in Council Bluffs rrom. Tuesday' Council Bluffs nonpareil From evidence which deeloped In tho afternoon yesterday all recorda were broken In municipal elections In Council Bluffs In what has every appearance of having been a widely extended and sys tematic plan of employing political "workers" at $2 each. Whether or not votes were purchased thin newspaper will leave to the reader and to the authorities to determine. It gives the circumstances as they devel oped. The Council BlulXa ofhee or the World Herald seems to have been made at least one of the paying offices for the workers. Aronrrilnir tn the statement of C. L. West. 25 i the manager of the World-Herald Coun- .filcHB.utf.ott.ee.... consented Sunday evening to pay out to woruers a sum or ! money given him for tnat purpose, and i . ....... certain m 0f money -- ----- : ... from J. J. Hughes, one ot tne managrrs of the democratic campaign. Also that he was Instructed by Mr. Duff to pay men who presented cards signed by any one of the names furnished him, 12. Mr. West did this aa a matter ot ac commodation, he taking It for granted that the men presenting the cards were "workers." Iloir Many Were PaldT The Nonpareil has no recotyl ot the number ot workers paid through this office. But the number must have been considerable for there was an overflow. Three men with the magic cards ap peared at the Nonpareil office, two doors souts of the World-Herald office on Pearl street The first man didn't make his meaning clear, but finally gave the TO PENSION WIDOWS AND CHILDREN OF VETS OP LATEWAR VOTED Aid for Dependents of Those Taking Part in Spanish, Island and Boxer Affairs. LOWER HOUSE PASSES BILL Measure Carries, Two Hundred and! Seventy-Six to Fifty-Four. WILL REQUIRE $2,600,OC Twelve Dollars mommy lor mat ' of Honorably Discharged. MONEY ONLY FOR THE NEEDY Inquiry Among Cninpn of "Old Sol dier" Shovra Aliont Fonr Thou sand 'Women to "Whom Pro poned Act Wonlil Apply. WASHINGTON, April 1. Pensions for widows and minor children of the offi cers and men who served In tho Spanish war, the Phlllpplno Insurrection and tho Boxer uprising In China, would be au thorlzed by a bill, which passed the house lato today, by a vote of 276 to 54. Tho bill would grant $12 monthly to the widow of an honorably discharged soldier or sailor and $2 (two dollars) monthly for each child under 16 years of ago, provided that the widow shall have mar ried tho soldier prior to tho passage ot the bill. The. pensions are to be limited, however, to widows without means of support otthcr than their dally labor and an actual net Income not exceeding $2M a year. An inquiry .among the camps of tho United States war vetrans Indicated there wore about 4,000 widows of men who served In the Spanish war and the Phlllpplno Insurrection. It is estimated that an appropriation of $2,600,000 will be required to pay the pensions. Postal Employes in Omaha Get Good April Fool Surprise The first day of April brought a pleas ant April fool surprise to nearly a score of postal employes in Omaha and the substations of tho Omaha postofflce In the form of promotion with Increases In salary 'amounting to $100 a year for caoh person who was so recognized..- ' Each quarter of the year employes of the ' poaUldepartiiient her who hav shown special ability and merit in their work are rewarded with this Increase In salary, -which la termed by tho depart ment as' -"promotion." The Jitter carriers who were so re warded are: William Bcal, John A. Grimes, Frank A. D. Jones, Ernest U. Kauffold, Edward E. Leigh, Oscar F. Nelson, James G. Nlcklen. Other employes under tho civil service through tho postal department who were rewarded for their services are: Cecil A. Bacon, Albert J. Boro, Earl B. Clajk, Earl Gaumer, Miss Mary H. Horn, Leo W. Kennebeck, Edward B. Moore, Miss Clara A. Peterson, Frederic Jk., Rttter, Henry B. Suchy. GRAND ARMY VETERANS JOIN SPANISH WAR POST LACROSSE, Wis., April 1. The entire membership of the two local Grand Army posts was taken Into honorary member ship in the Casbcrg camp, United Spanish war veterans at a banquet and joint meeting last night. More than 100 former soldiers attended the banquet and lis tened to the toasts which emphasized the common alms of both orders and the fraternity between them. Under the arrangements, which were ratified by both orders a month ago, this being the first instance of tho kind in this state, and which was formally carried out last night, the Grand Army of the Republic members, without af fecting the status of their own order, ...V. J'. . . ml0o v. vtiu jvuujiOl order. Information that he had been directed to the World-Herald office. He. was ad vised that he was in the wrong place and directed to tho proper office. Later on two other men called with the same tallsmanic cards, a plain round cornered business card with two good sized holes near one margin. One ot the men was prevailed upon to say what ho wanted. Messrs. Claude Cook, night editor of The Nonpareil; B. W. Whlttler. city edi tor, and W. P. Hughes, managing editor, were in tne office at the time. Here is the conversation which took place with this visitor as taken by Mr. Whlttler: I was in the inner office, talkintr to Mr. Cook, when I notloed through tho glass partitions a negro come In at the door. 1 went out to meet him, and as I did so Mr. Hughes came from his pri vate omce. ine louowing conversation ensued: "Something?" I asked. The negro extended the card and said, "la this where you take care of this?" I took the card, noticed that It r-ad the two holes punched, and Mr. Hughes reached and took It from me. "What is It for?" asked Mr. Hughes. "Well, they said to bring It here to th6 World-Herald, office and you would know what it waJ." "Yes." said Mr. Hughes, "that is all right, but what Is It for?" . "Well, they said you would know," said tho negro. "How much Is It?" asked Mr. Hughes. "Two dollars," said the negro. "Where did you get it?" (referring to the card). ' "They gav It to me when I vot4," said the negro. ' "What is your name?" 1 "Wells." "What is your first name?" said Mr. (Continued on Page Two.) A "Pure 3 3 THEY SAID I YOU WOULD KN Drawn ' for The Bee by PowelL ANTIS TAKE AN EXCEPTION Those Opposed to Woman Suffrage Protest Mrs. Elliott's Views. MRS. CRUMPACKER ANSWERS Leader Declare that Visitor Ma llclonslr Thrnut at Other Camp aa a Snhslllnle for Ileal Arnnmenl. The antl-suffraglsts 0f .OjJUh m greatly wrought uVover-a statement at tributed to MrSj MaudHowo" ElITott, a w'omftn suffraitfef -leader, Irj 'v-nwsp4per Interview TUesflay. Mrs. J. W, Crum (picker, representing the National Asso ciation Opposed to Woman Suffrage, speaking for Its leaders, tA well as tor thu 6maha women Identified wjth the as sociation, makes emphatic protest against the language used by Mrs. Elliott, and said; "It is not a trifling matter for a lafly to visit a city for a day, and aa a total stranger, to give, expression to such as sertions directed against the good mo tives of the ladles of this city who are taking part in the anti-suffrage move ment. The name of these Omaha ladles ara of themselves enough to refute the scandalous allegations found In the news paper Interview attributed to Mrs. LI llott, In which she makes statements that aro unworthy of any woman. No woman residing In Omaha would dare to make such assertions respecting Jhose who stand sponsors for the anti-suffrage movement In this city. Their high stand ing in the community will commend tho movement to all, for they are ladles who take part In the campaign upon the con viction that the contention of the lead crs of the anti-suffrage association Is (Continued from Page One.) Cruel Hoax Played bnrUnemployed Men CHICAGO. April l.-A cruel first of Aprlt joke perpetrated by some person unknown to the police toaay causeu a mob of more than 600 unemployed men to congregate in a cold rain in front of the Boo line freight' terminal. Before tte men could be made to understand that there was no basis for tho Teport that the railroad wanted hundreds' of workers, the mob surged against tho steel gates, breaking tho locks and poured into the yards shouting "We want work"; "Give us the Jobs." It took the police reserves nearly an hour to clear the men out of the yards. The perpetrator of the hoax will be sev erely dealt with, It was said. If he can be found. Some one gave out the tip among the hundreds of unemployed men gath ered along West Madison street In front of the employment agencies. The National Capital Wednesday, April 1, 11)14. The Senate. Mat at noon. ' The Panama tolls exemption repeal bill ram from the house to awalt'sxtlon. Senator La Follette announced he would disclose efforts to Influence the Interstate Commerce commission In the eastern rate case. Senator Kenyon called for a report on what employes of the Department of Agri culture, it any, are employed ty tne a ; . cm r f I llsteLCOUNCIL BIUFF5 ft I I mm 1 Lidi v,hj ;,v lira svh i i hi i II i i rii ar LUr" . i rw1 . " n i i Rockefeller rounaauon. Recessed ai 4:30 p. m. to 11:W p. ni. Thursday, The House. Met at noon. Legislative, executive and Judicial ap propriation bill waa reported. Public lands committee continued hear ings on the bill to provide a leasing sys tem tor mineral and oil lands on the pub lie domain. Indian committee heard claims ot the Mississippi Choctaws to be enrolled In the Choctaw nation. Pension appropriation bill, carrying $169,000,000 was taken up. Passed bill to pension widows and minor children of officers and men who served In the Spanish war, Philippine insurrec tion and Boxer uprising. Adjourned at 5 p. m. to noon Thursday. Election" ill Council I 1 i I c OMAHA WORLD HERALD COUNCIL DLUrri OFFICE Cashier A, 0. Felt of Superior Bank Will Be Tried in Omaha A. C. Felt, former cashier of the First National bank of Superior, who Is Under arrest here on an Indictment for misap propriation ot the funds of the bank, will be tried In the Omaha division ot the United States district court. Instead of tn Hastings division, where the indictment was drawn. The 'stipulation foi1 the- removal oMW case from the Hastings to the Omaha division waislgrfea ;by; jbUtf;(ct Altoriftyf F.s H. Howell, f6r the United States, and Bernard MeNeny of Red Cloud, attorney for Arc. Felt. The-arsurnetU. was ari proved by Judge W, H. MUhger.i nnd the order made tor the transfer of the case to the Omaha division. Although It has boen repeatedly stated that Felt would enter a plea of guilty, no such plea has yet been formally brought before the United States district attorniy here. Crimes Against Women in St, Louis Are Increasing ST. LOUIS, April l.-Crlmes against women have Increased almost 100 per cent In St. Louis since the board of po lice commissioners a month ago abolished tho segregated vice quarter. This Is In dicated In tho police records ot tho last month, published today. Since tho resorts on Lucas avenue were closed complaints have been coming In from all parts of the city thut the former Inmates of the segregated quarter aro In vading tho residence and business parts of town. I'ollco investigation has dis closed that many women are now active In manicuring and massage parlors. A resolution now before the lower branch ot the municipal assembly calls for an Investigation ot the sudden In crease in the number of these massaco parlors In fashionable residence quarters In a raid on a newly established mani curing parlor in a South Bide residence block a few days ago the police found four women known to have been driven from the segregated area. Heath Tells of Sale of Oats Plants and of Fire in Fort Dodge CHICAGO, Aprlt l.-Sale of the Fort Dodge, la., and Jollet, III., plants of tho Great Western Cereal company to the Quaker Oats company In 1911 was toM of today In tho hearing hero in the gov ernment's nntl-trust suit against the Quaker Outs company. A. C. Heath ot Fort Dodge, formerly a director of the Great Western company, but now put of the oatmeal business, told of the transfer. On Christmas day, shortly after the sale, Mr, Heath said, tho' Fort Dodge plant was discovered on fire. Mr. Heath said that he hurried to the building and discovered that In the part where the flro started the automatic sprinklers had been turned off. Mr. Heath said that during his director ship In the Great Western that company failed to tako advantage of an oppor tunity to purchase WtyjOO bushels of oats that were needed to fill Its contracts at a time when the purchaso would have taved them from W,000 to $80,000. Prohllia to Have Dally Orsan. SPOKANE, Wash., April l.-Dr. How ard A. Russell, founder and general man ager ot the Anti-Saloon league, announced hero today that a national prohlblttrr. dally newspaper will be established In Washington, D. C, In the nesr future. Capital of $123,000 has been assured, said Dr. Rusioll and a plant has been ob. tallied. Bluffs THC QiVS VORKtHS is hiumt! LAYS DOWN LAW TO ARMY British Offioers Must Put Duty Be fore Everything Else. ONE EXCEPTION IS MADE Commanders Whose Homes Are In Ulster May Leave nea-lmrnU Temporarily In Case nt .Operations There. .LOpOff. Aprn.lr-Te,, first Jil of 'Premier ' Asqulth IrPni new. capacity as secretary or state for VarT'-Wa'slo clear il the mystery aurroundlng ihb Instruc tions glveh by the. war office to General Sir Arthur Paget, commanderlnchlet in Ireland. Sir Arthur was summoned to London to give His chief a personal account ot tne orders ho had received and Issued, and as a result of the conference Reginald McKenna, the home secretary, who is acting aa leader of the houhe, was able to Inform the commons today that: "Tho only question Genenll Paget put or Intended to put to the commanding officers. In Ireland was whether they were ready to put their duty before any other considerations, it was not Ms Intention that this or any such question should be put by the general officers to their subordinates. General Paget Informed tho general officers of the promise given by tho sec retary of war to officers whoso homes were in Ulster to permit them to with draw temporarily from their regiments In the event of operations becoming nec essary In Ulster and re requested the general officers to find out Immediately the number ot officers who would with draw on this account. The Irish commander-in-chief was asked It any officer who could not claim this exemption would be allowed to re sign and replied that the result ot any refusal to do their duty could only mean their dismissal from the army." Man Under Heavy Bond Given Permit to Go to Canada NEW YORK, Aprlt l.-Albert Freeman, who Is at liberty under $150,000 bail- pend ing tho outcome of his appeal from a ftvo-year prison sentence for using the malls to defraud investors In mining stockn, obtained fTom the federal court today permission to leave the country, provided he could get tho consent o. his . bonf ncn. Ilia attorney explained that Freeman wished to go to Canudu In connection with certain mining urop erty. The action of the court Is unusuaJ, inasmuch as Freeman's offense Is not extraditable. He was convicted with Julian Hawthorne and- Dr. William .1. Morton, recently released from the At lanta penitentiary. Lawyer Sent to Sing Sing for Forgery NEW YORK, April l.-Augustus M. Price, for thirty years one of tho most prominent lawayers In Brooklyn, was today sentenced to serve from two and a half to five years' Imprisonment in Sing Sing, after pleading guilty to forging a client's namo. Price's summer homo Is one ot the show places of New Bruns wick, N. J. He was democratic candidate for district attorney of Suffolk county In 1911. Chester A, Snider, Cattle King, is Dead KANSAS CITY, Mo., April l.-Chester A. Snider, at one time known through out tho southwest as a cattle king, died of heart disease at his home here today at the age of C4. Qf late years he had not been in business. Mr. Snlder'a father, Andrew J. Snider, was a leading cattle man In the old, Indian territory. w5) i CAPTURE DOUGLAS Name Nine Delegates Who Go to State Camp at Hastings of Modern Woodman. REGULARS IN THE MINORITY Magncy and Styer Favored for Dele gates to the Toledo Meeting. TALBOT REGIME IS. DENOUNCED Omaha Favored for Place of Hold ing the Triennial "athcring. HEAD CAMP OFFICERS GRILLED Present Mnnnorenient of the Order DralRiint.Ml nn Mnchtnc Rale nntl Jlniicj- I, nod for Political Pnrpnnes. neleaate. Charles Grau, Bennington, 4113. J. W, Goodheart, Omaha. VX. J. V. Harnett, Omaha, I'JJ. P. I Dcvol, II. & M., 915. H. II. Htyer, Magnolia. 1S3J. Louts Kaapcr, Nebraska, 4771. A II. M unlock. South Omaha, 1095. J. J llrccn, Merchants, 40fS. Alternates, Janicn McTear, Klk City, 164S. A, Hold, Omaha, 1 William Nollman, Omaha. 130. C. U. Sutton. Roqk Springs, 66M. tames O'llnin, H. & M, 913. V, 8. Tucker. Florence, 4105. .1 Onodeck, Nebraska. 4771. li. V. Crevlston. South Omaha, IMS. 11.' S. Armstrong.. Benson 3954. Recommended for delegated to tne no, tlonal camp: ueorgo a, Aiagncy anu u. it. siyer, Altarttncs: J, J. lirecn and A. II. Murdock. Douglas county's convention of the Modern Woodmen of America held yester day Bftcrnoon at Odd Fellows' hall In South Omaha, elected nine Insurgent del egates who will go to the stato camp at Hastings next month on a Insurgent plat form to which they are bound by Ironclad Instructions. Going further the convention Instructed Its delegates to recommend Gcorgo A. Magncy and B, II. Styer ot Omaha to tho state convention for dele gates to the head camp, to be held June II at Toledo, J. J. Broen ot South Omaha and J. W Barnett of OmaliH, two of the leading In surgents and accredited with tho reputa tion of being most radically opposed to tho higher rales nnd the Talbot regime, were chosen delegates to the stale con vention next month, but Brccn'a chances tor deleuto to tho head camp were de feated by tho united, force ot the mod erates and tho higher-raters, who en dorsed iMagntiy and Styer. peach camp fell Into line for Magney, who polled nearly every ono of'the ITT votes of the i convention. The convention was electrical with the play of tactics by both sides. Nelsdtv. W Pratt ot Omaha appeared 16 be the chosen spokesman of tho higher raters, although Charles Witt ot Omaha had to be reck 6ned with also. Tho high raters, as they were called, played no small game of obstruction, but fought every step of tho way to make t l;o overwhelming majority realize the Im portance of each step In tho election of tho delegates and tho selection ot the platform which will In a great me&suro influence the voto of the state at the natfona! convention In June. Hreen Temporary Chnlrman. 3. J, Breen, well known as the head of tho South Omaha lodge welfare com mttteo, was chosen temporary chairman of tho meeting, which was called to order b Clork Earl Cox ot tho local camp. P. V Devol of Omaha waa chosen temporary secretary nnd Earl Cox appointed assist ant secretary. Without further delay com mittee on credentials was appointed, com posed ot.Kndros, Grau, Crevlston, Noll man and Hubcr, Tho committee reported favorably on all credentials and the tem porary officers of Iho convention were made permanent. Dr. M. Dunham, Louis Keeper, Gcorgo Kleffner, A. U.' Andrews and J. Fcddte wero appointed to draft resolutions. While they wero in the anteroom Chairman Brecn addressed the convention on the pleasure experienced by South Omaha in entertaining the delegates. George Mag ney responded. Ho Twitted the chairman on tho atmosphere of South Omaha, but bespoke fairness, honesty and submission to the. majority will of tho convention. A, H. Murdock urged harmony and the necessity of working together. The con vention was In no mood for talk, it wanted to, work. Charles I'nltt of Omaha moved that nominations for delegates to the state convention be made while the resolutions committee was drawing up its report. Chairman Brecn ruled him out of order and Unltt appealed to the .convention. A vote was being taken on the appeal when the resolutions committee returned Insurgents Klert Delegates. Dr. Dunham, chairman of the resolu tions committee, made his report and rec ommended the Incorporation of three ad ditional resolutions presented by the Elk (Continued on Pago Two.) Easter Presents It is a pleasant custom to re member your friends and rela tlves by little presents on this day of rejoicing. If you road In Tho Bee the advertisements of our leading shops, you will find sugges tions for numberless little gifts that will gladden the hearts of old and young aliko. The In genuity ot the manufacturers has enabled the retailers to place before you dainty trifles that by their beauty and fresh ness convey the spirit ot affec tionate greetings. You have only to read the announcements contained la th.o advertising columns of The Dee to perceive your many op portunities for procuring charming tokens of remem brance. 9 4