TTTE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. JANUARY 3. 1911. Russian Lion Makes First Public Appearane in Omaha Tonight at Auditorium JOHNSON PICKSJOT WINNER 'Champion Jack Look to Monohan aa the Next. TALKS OF HIS HARDEST BATTLE rrrilrr Hniiili I nrtrr Moiling Trim Una U Ithnnt Wnlor for a Pars of Tea Hollars Foot Rail Hairs I P Thla Wffk. It ths Clilrano Tribune which gi't "Jsrk" Johnon to drsrrlbr- the hardest flKht he ever hud In his llf-. anil Johnson did not stipulate that the match with Jef frie belonged to that Imcs. I'mbably It didn't. Here Ik wha Johnson did say: "I have bein nxki'il to nay a few woru concwnlnK the hardist battle of my career. ( "This battle took place In Galvrston In ! ths month of AiiKUHt. !, hi twcn myself and a negro flKht'T nameil John I.ee.' "I v will never forKet that firtht. It took lac - In a field. In tho hot sun. and we could not net any walr even to rinsv our months with. For seventeen rounds we battled In the hea'. when I knocked him out. I received for IhW fight the sum of $ifl. : "Some ten or twelve yeura ftiro when I wag quite cleve.r In the boxing line, I tried to get a manager, but could not. After 1 became noted men from all sldfs tried to get the position, Including 'Tom' o'Uourke. "When t took 'Sam' Fit Jipatrlrk for man ager every fighting 'fan' In America and othsr parts of the world knew that I had beaten all the goid men. So no one can aay that 'Sam' Fltxpatrlck made me a champion, and furthermore. It makes no difference how good and how shrewd a tnanngir may he, the fighter must have talent and ability to beconii a champion. "Zeke" Abr.ims has looked out for my af fairs In San Francisco for quite a few years and we have always been friends. "i huve made a careful study of boxing and today I do not think there Is a man In the world who knows the game and can execute It us veil i I. 1 am willing to de fen the charrpionohip c-f the world against any , man tht public, may select. pro1dlng tny end of the urse is enough to warrant doinu so. I have alto a great man In Walter. Monahan, and 1 believe that he Is one of the many who will make good. I hops some day sooner or later he will take iny ilace." Then Mi'iiahnn was easily outpointed In a alx rcund "no." , You never tun be sire. Base Ball Manaaters. ". A St. Louis Newspaper sums up the basle ball managerial situation this way: "A manager with the personality and the brains will win." Might add the play ers. They are slightly essential, for peron' alltles will get run down at the heel and brains will become fizzled and scrambled If the weather la hot enough, and the team bad enough. Alaar o Weather. If New York had about ten Inches of ica from the first of November to the mid dle of February, It's safe to say. that Oothan would be one of the greatest hockey centers of the World. Ther la no winter game- which seeuis to have so much rasclnatlon for most of the young folk. The only chance to see It is at an Indoor rink, and there Is yet to be paid a- visit to -, the rink that some youngster In the crowd has not expressed his disappointment that the city Is not blessed with more ponds and more Ice. liven that crude old game of shinny, which waa played years ago when "Tom" nd the other fellows were not so "slow on their pegs" as they are now, could bring out half the neighborhood whenever word waa spread through the town thathe Ice was thick enough to "bear up." Foot linll Kales Attain. This week the foot ball rules committee Is to gather around. Very likely the mem bers will do nothing but consult, and It Is .not probable that any gnat changes will be mado this year, no matter what the consultations bring forth. It is quite true that there are many per sons who do not think that the forward pass Ik an ornament to the game, but that point may be waived for another year's trial. Some of tho young folk cannot get over their baket bull training. Indoor Sport Season Opens First of Year Tri-City Indoor Base Ball League Will . Offer Series of Games This Week -Others Want Games. With the advent of the first genuine cold pell on January 1, the Indoor sport sea son waa fairly opened up. Vp to date the attention of the sporting world has been only half-hearted because of the outside Interests, kept alive bv the continued warm Veils. Omaha's Stove league opened officially Naw Year's day. Brother Dave la chief boas and manager and he has an able as sistant In Captain Hill. Anyone who will discusa sporting topics, whether he knows anything about them or not. Is an eligible member and welcomed. The Trt-City Indoor Haae Hall league will bold another series of games this week, probably at the Young Men's Christian association gymnssiuin. The local teams are training tor some out-of-town games. Hastings, Neb., wonts Hill Phlpke and his Oniahas up there at once. ar,d Lincoln has . team lined .up ready to play. Ths Im perials of Council lilutfs, one of the fast autdoor amateur teams, has lined up for the Indoor game and has sent a challenge to all of the members of the Tii-Cliy league. At the Omaha Racquet club the finals of tho tournament will be played Monday. E. Crelghton Is one of the entries In the finals, and the winner of a match to be played off between Colpetser and Yates will be 'the opponent vt Crt-ighton. The winner of the tournament will afterward play "Spike" Kennedy, the present holder, for rhamp'onship honors. The new granCitand being erected by "Pa," Rourke was Just put beyond the danger Zone before the cold wave tilt the Vinton lark. All the' cement work that comes In connection with the ground was In and hi lust week and now the upper work can be pushed along no matter how Ould 11 becomes. riraa hawkt Oat lapoal. IJS ANiiKLKS. Cal . Jen. i-Jiin Flynn cf Pueblo knocked cut Tony Capon! of Chliaso In ti e ninth round of a scheduled twsi.o -round bout st Vernon today. Flynn utaeighed Caponl tenl pounds. I)tr Kin gwlmralagr Mare. TACOMA, Wuh . Jan. -At the mid winter rrxatta of ths Ta'oina Yacht clu'i today Phillip Denny won the PO-)ard swim ming rac, liich was contested In the lll.il u' Iiursl sound. Pirates Will Make LongerSpring Trip Schedule Calls for Eight Garnet in Little Rock. Memphis, Dayton, Chattanooga and Columbus. PITTSHfRO. Jan. 2. The spring train ing plsns for the Pittsburg base ball club calls for n more strenuous period of prep aration thnn has been attempted In pre vious seasons. The team will report at West iiailm. Ind., on March 7 snd the spring i.chidule calls for eight practice games In Little Hock. Memphis. Chattanooga, Co lumbus.' and f'ayton. O. The team will remain at West Paden t;ntll March 17. when It will depart for Hot Springs. Ark. For sventeen days it will be at Its training quarters at Whlttlngton Park. On April 4 the club will play Its an nual game with the t'nlverslty of Arkan sas at Little Ilock. There will be one game at Memphis on April r,. and beginning April three games wiil be played at Chattanooga. On the Oth and 10th there will be games at Columbus. Spring exhibition series will close at Dayton. April 11. the day preceding the opening of the national league. Iowa Collegians at Indoor'Work Track Men Busy in Preparation for Coming Meets Des Moines College Adopts Conference Rules, Basket ball and Indoor track work will begin at all the smaller Iowa colleges 'this wek. All the schools will have Indoor track teams this year and prepare their athletes for the outdoor season. Coach Chalmers at Des Moines college has organized a new plan, starting the foot ball class now and keeping It up during the eohool year in preparation for the next seaon. He announced at the beginning of the basket ball season that the rules of the Missouri valley conference would pre vail this season Instead of the Young Men's Christian association rules, which have been used heretofore. Home of the schools of the conference named may be played this year. Orake university will start Its basket ball and track work this week. Coach Hackett having put out his notices Monday night. Track work under .Coach Griffith and a foot ball class under Dr. Hobbs will be started with the basket ball season. The Drake men have plans for entering an In door team and taking a few of the honors at the national Indoor meet In Omaha In April. 'At Highland park practice went on stead fly through the ordinary vacation week, as no vacation Is, given there and a num ber of fast players developed. C00LEY TO GO ON THE STAGE Former Owner of the Towrks Team Tells of the Snccess He Had at the Game. Dick Cooley, former Louisville manager, who with old Kd Delehanty, Lajole. Flick, MeFarland ar.d , Monte Cross gave the Phillies ,one of the best teams they ever had. Is ' getting ready to produce a Vase ball ct in vaudeville. Cooley Is married, and his wife, who is a clever singer, will be Included In the act. Cooley, who, yrars ago, hud a reputation as a pretty wild boy, lias settled down and Is now a bus!; nesslike man. He sold his Tnpeka club laxt .year and says he has $25,000 to show for tils four years In Kansas. "Hut I never worked so hard In all my life as I did In Topeka." said Richard talk ing to a friend the other day. "I played first base find wasn't out of the game a single ofay. Think of It, I had a town of 40,000 up thefe bucking cities like Denver and St. Joseph, and when these clubs started to put In thousands of dollars to strengthen their teams I decided It was time for Richard to get out. Well, I sold all my good players during mldseason. get ting about tll.OOO out of these sales. Then, at the end of the year I sold the franchise and now I have 123,000 In bank ready for the first good opening I find to buy an other minor league club. When you have a bank roll you can do something, and 1 never felt more Independent In my life than I do today." There are many more players like Cooley; In fact, every ambitious player whuse big' league career Is drawing to a close Is beginning to branch out as a minor league club owner. In many Instances (layers who were never regarded as good busiiu-ss men go out and make good In these minor league ventures. EVENTS OX HlMMi THACKS C hester Kraa Wins New Year's II s u dlcaa at Emeryville. OAKIiAKU, Cal., Jan. I. in the presence of the largest crowd of the season, Ches ter Krum won the New Year's handicap at Emeryville today. Port Johnson made the early running, but waa headed by Hpcllbound In the back stretch. Chester Krum closed fast and outgamed Spell bound and beat him a neck. For the fourth time In fu'jr years O. A. Hlanchl won the first 3-year-old race of the year with a youngster out of Levant C. He was rep-rt-sented by Oakland, a Bear Catcher colt, which bioke the track record of 0:3iV for three furlongs, running It In 0:31V Sum mary: lirst race, seven furlongs: Uraxton I Aichlbald). 7 t ) 1. won; Ada Mnulu i(.ii.es), ii io a. srcoiul; Anna May (Up hn, to 2, third, i.mr, 1:.'.;S. I 'urt-ington, t.tsaro, French Cook, Hick hen (1 . Tltlls and John J. Rogirs tir.lHhrd aa namd. .-cond iuce. live and one-half furlong: Likely Dleudonne uilassi, 7 to 2, won; 1'iu.f ot l.lsmoie (Callahan). 7 to 1. xc- ;oml; Thistle Helle iB. Martin), I to 1, third, lime, Roy Junior, k-lf.n lieau. Binocular and Teins link finished as named. Ti.ird rac', three fuilong: Oakland (Aiciiibaldi, to 1, won; Amos (Glass), 2 to 1, second; Lem lisle (Uarner) to 2, third, 'lime. O.WV Pico. I'enang, Derfllnger. F. L. Proctor and Hitnct Conrad ftnisned as named. Fourth race, mile and an eighth. Xew Year s liaiioicnp: Chester Krum (Mentry) IS to S. uon; Spellbound (Archibald), 3 to 2, second ; Arasee (Ulaas), ( to 1. thlid. lime. 1:5m. Fort Johnson and Duke of Ormonde fin ished as i.amed. Fifth race, one m.le: Lotta Creeds (Callahan), t to 1, won; Crex iKederlsi, 10 to 1. sxrond; Responseful tTaplln), J to 1, tidrd. Time, 1 A Alliimor, lioggs, cdviin T. Fryer, Court Lady and Masts finished aa named. bixin race, six furlongs: Home Run tTaplln). 7 to i, won; captain John (Men try . i to 1. second; Dacia tCalialiaui, 10 to 1. third. Tim-, p.lJV Kiuiiia U.. Rosey l-oisey. Ureal Caspar, Busy Man, Winona Winter and Henry o. finished as named. DEATH RECORD. Iter. Dr. Morris Klarald. CHARIiOTTK. N. C. Jan. J. Rev. Dr. Morris Kincald, pastor of the First Pres byterian church of thla city and w el I known throughout the north and south, died at his home here today after a brief lilcess. He had been pastor of this church for four years, coming from Honolulu. RUSSIAN LION HERE TONIGHT Meets Jess Westcrgaard at Audito rium with a Handicap. DES MOINES FANS ON HAND Followers of the ftame Are Amlont to See llarkrnsramldt and! Look for laterettlng A nnonnremeats at Hlaaslde. Seventy-five or more wrestling fans will be on hand from Des Moines to see the big Hackenschmldt-Wesergaard match to be held In the Auditorium this evening. The Bunch of fans Is said to be leading clt liens of Des Moines doctors, lawyers and business men all of whom are Inter ested In Westergaard and protid that he Is a Des Moines product. All Is ready at the Auditorium for the two wrestlers, a twenty-foot ring built and Sandy (irlswold procured to referee ths bout.. The preliminary men report that they are all In shape for their meet. Ueorge Miller having arrived from Kansas City Monday night. Tollver, who will be Miller's opponent, has been training care fully, as he realizes he Is up ngalnst some thing strong It Is confidently expected that several Interesting announcements will be made from the ring before Hackenschmldt and AVestergpard get together. Jack Curley will probably announce IIuckenchmidt as the world's champion, now that Qotch lias retired absolutely. The . possibility of Mahmout challenging the Russian Is an other of the announcements that many of the fans are expecting and worrying about. Mahmout In the last year has had con siderable hard luck, due chiefly, many think, to bad management. He had three or four managers, each with different Idea, and aa they are all making matches at the same time he doesn't get to wrestle at all. At the present time he is still In Chicago and doing nothing but light wrestling work to keep himself In trim. j A few early birds In the Des .Moines K ... i j ii v n i i r n Li ' 1 1 1 i r a, i r- nrviai iS that the mighty Russian will have his hands full to put the Iowa wonder down twice In an hour. Westergaard, they point oilt, weighs 218 pounds by the statement made by himself and that he Is In th finest condition he has ever been. When he tackled Hackenschmldt In Chicago he weighed 199 pounds at the ringside, which Is fifteen pounds below his normal weight. ! The Injured ankle of Westergaard Is now perfectly good, says Thorson, hlsmanager, and he expects his man to hold off Hack enschmldt from even one fall In an hour. "Cy" Young to Quit the National Game Many Tans Will Regret the Depar ture of the Veteran from the Diamond. - So "Cy" Young Is to be given kls uncon ditional release by the Cleveland club and wilt go back to the farm In Tuscarawas county, from which he came as a young man. . It was a long time ago, as ball players go, that Young began his career on the diamond. There Is no ball player who has been less affected by his surroundings than Young. He Is the same simple, big-hearted, well-balanced man that he was the first day he started away from the farm to see if he could earn a little money ;n the na tional pastime. 1 Year after year ho has pitched for pro fessional teams with nothing but conv niendation ringing In his ears, and he is more modest now. If anything, or If he could be, than he was when he started. - Bane ball to- him not only has been a means to a good livelihood, and he has saved much tl at he has earned, but It Is an occupation so highly esteemtd by him that he frequently said he knew of noth ing i f which a man could be prouder than to give his bent efforts In its behalf. Unlike some pitchers of , renown, he did not go tluough his long career without be ing a member of a champlonehlp team. ! When he was with the Boston Americans they won a pennant, and when he was I w.lh the Cleveland club lie assisted In the games of one season when Cleveland beat Baltimore for the Temple cup. There will be more than one base ball "fan" over the big circuits who will bs i-oiry that he Is to retire. His genial fuoe will be missed from St. Louis and Boston. It was only last summer that the "fans" of New York , showed the high honor In which he Is held when they applauded him vigorously as he was leaving the field. THORSON TOUTS JESS TO WIN Manaaer of Westeraaard Bays the Big; Dane Is In the Prima of Condition. Oscar Thorson, manager for Jess Wester gaard. who is to wrestle George Hacken schmldt at the Auditorium Tuesday night, came to Omaha early Monday morning on a delayed passenger train and In gleeful mood. Thorson believes that his protege will take the rubles from the Russian when they tangle Tuesday evening, "Jess," he raid. "Is In Des 1'olnei, training. He Is In much better condition than the last time he met Hack, although he won then. When he wrestled Hack. In Chicago December 7 he was sick and eight pounds under weight, lis had lost eight pounds In his match with Dr. Roller two nights before. He now Is at his normal weight, 21 pounds, and la In fino condition. This weather should be conducive to a lively match. One feels as It they could wrestle a bear after being out a little while In this wind. West ergaard will come to Omaha Tuesday morn ing." Hackenschmldt did not arrive here Mon day morning. A stack of mall Is awaiting him at the Rome hotel. LIKES AMERICAN FIGHTERS Sirs. Pries of Australia Kays Our Pol llata Are Perfect tiea llemen. One Australian woii hii has been to look at the exhibition of the American boxers. She knows athletics well uud she teems to have taken quite a fancy to the young men who have traveled from the I'nitt-d States to thrt so itll seas. Her name Is Mrs. Sarah F. Pries, and In discussing the merts of boxers and athletes In general Mrs. Pries says that the Ameri can boxers have proved themselves to lie perfet-t gentlemen In every way, and would hardly be taken for men of their profes sion. Rav Hronson. "B1IU-" Papke. "Jimmy" Clabby and "Hpcamore Johnny" Thompson all come In for compliments from Mrs. Biles. Mrs. Pries further stutis that ratter n from their American rlsltors. who have set an example ti at will always be remembered by Australian people. Our boys seem to be making a hit National Commission Meeting Will Be Short Chairman Says Entire Proceedings Will Be Over in Ten Minutes to He-elect Orricers. CINCINNATI. O.. Jan. i-fnless some thing unforseen Intervenes1 the meeting of the National Base Ball commission at 10 o'clolk tomorrow will break all reeords for shortness of duration. Shalrman August Herrmann shortly before departing for Blaughery lafcind, here the meeting will be held, snld: "The entire meeting will be over in ten minutes." . The commission will hesr tho report of Chairman Herrman nnd Secretary Bruce. Following this. President Lynch of the National league, snd President Johnson of the AeniriCan league, will meet and re elect August Herrmann of Cincinnati, chairman. This will be followed by the re-election of Secretary Bruce. President Herrman's report Is expected to deal with the question of allowing play ers to play In the winter months, but no action Is expected at this time. President Ban B. Johnson of the Amelcan league, accompanied by Chairman Herr mann, departed for Laurghrey island this afternoon, while President Lynch of the National league, Secretary Johnny Heldler and Barney Drey fuss, president of the Pittsburg club, who constitute the National league schedule committee, motored down tonight. President Johnson will assume the role of the entire schedule committee of the American league. SIX PERSONS ARE KILLED IN WRECK IN KENTUCKY Victims Are Four l'assenaers Who Were Riding; on Pilot and Two Trainmen. ASHLAND, Ky., Jan. 2. 8ix persons weie killed In a wreck on Miller's Creek railway, near Vanlear, a few miles from Paintsvllle, Ky., last night Of the victims four were passengers and the others trainmen. The latter were rid ing on the pilot of a locomotive. The dead: WILL LI AM AKKHS, brakeman. Cattles burg. Ky. JOHN WORLEY, conductor, Iouls vlllo, Ky. L. O. PINSON. Vanlear, Ky. F. K. Fl'QATH. Vanlear. Ky. LF.MCKL MILLf, Vanlear, Ky. L. A. SMELTZER, lronton. Oi The accident was caused by a collision between a locomotive and three coal cars of a mixed train which broke away while the accommodation was coming down the branch line to connect with the Chesapeake & Ohio passenger train at Vanlear. On the return trip the mixed train collided with these cars. VAUGHAN MURDER TRIAL . BEGINS AT LANCASTER, M0. Prosecntlon Asks for Continuance Be es a se of Illness of Principal Witness. LANCASTER, Mo.. Jan. 2. Mrs." Xtrna" P. Vaughn and Dr. J. T. Hull of Monroe City, who are accused ot poisoning the woman's husband. Prof. John T. Vaughn, appearedybefore Judge fihelton tbls afterj noon for trial. . .Tha prosecution filed affl-, davits with an application for a continu ance and the defense asked for a dismissal of the charges. The affidavit related to the physical con dition of Dr. Paul Schweitzer of Columbia, who examined the viscera of Prof. Vaughn. Dr. E. C. Clements of Macon testified that because of a growth on Dr. Schweitser's eye. he thought the chemist would never be able to testify. Dr. Schweitzer Is the state's mairl witness. Arguments on the motions probably will take up the entire afternoon. SUN FISH STOPS A STEAMER Story of a Deep Sea Catch that Beats Inland Alarratlvea "to a Frnssle. Few maritime experiences have been re corded stranger than that wiilch befell the Fiona, a twin-screw steamer belonging to the Colonial Sugar Refining company of Sydney, New South Wales. When the Fiona was off Bird Island, about forty miles north of Sydney Heads, on Its way from the Clarence river to Sydney, a little after 1 p. m., all hands were alarmed by a sudden shock, as though the steamer had struck a solid substance or wreckage. The result was strange and remarkable, for the port engine was brought up "all stand ing." The starboard engine was quickly stopped and a boat lowered and sent to Investigate. On getting under the steamer's counter the boat's crew were astonished to find that a huge sunflsh had become securely fixed in the bracket of the port propeller. One blade was completely em bedded In the creature's flesh. Jamming the monster firmly against the stern-post of the vessel. It was impossible to extricate the fish at sea. so the boat was hoisted on board again and the steamer proceeded on Its passage to Sydney with the star board engine only worktng. On reachlng Port Jackson the Fiona was anchored In Mosman bay, where all hands were set to work to remove the fish. After much difficulty, and with the aid of the steamer's winch, the sunflsh was hoisted clear and swung on beard. The Fiona then pro ceeded to the sugar company's wharf. The fish waa put on the company's weigh bridge, and found to weigh two tons four hundredweight. The measurements were: Length, ten feet.; across the body, six feet; across the body and fins, fourteen feet; mouth, eight Inches wide; dorsal f.n, four feet high and two feet six Inches across: anal fin. three feet six Inches; and the caudal or tail fin, twenty-two and one half Inches long a hhort fringe-like stump. The Jaws were comparatively very feeble, but well adapted for masticating its food, which principally consists of minute pelaglc matter, Crustacea, and small fish. The skin in color was shazreen. and the texture that of the elephant. The naturalist to the B.ard of Fisheries of New South Wales, Mr. David G. Stead, who closely examined this specimen, stated that It was perhaps the largest ever killed, and certainly much larger than anything hitherto recorded or known of in Australian waters. Wide World Magazine. ARMED PEACE IS EXPENSIVE Coat of l'.aropan Armies aad Navies fur Quarter featarr Tnrrnty Mur Millions. PARIS. Jan. I Kdmund Therv. the French economist, figures that the ina'n tenancu of Furoue's armed ptace footing in theast twenty-fie years cost H5 0O). francs, approximately S!"9 000 0UO O 0 which Involved an Increase In the publlo I debt of the European states of from 1UYC0).- 0OJ.C01 to rl.0O.0uo MM francs and rons.antlv excluded from productive industry lai.WI officers and 1. 100,000 men. Kennedy Re-Chosen - School Board Head R. V. Cole Elected Vice President at Organization Meeting Com mittees Named Soon. Alfred C. Kennedy was re-elected presi dent of the Board of Kducatlon at Its reorganisation meeting after four new board members had taken their seats last night. R. V. Cole was elected vice presi dent. No other business was transacted by the board after the reorganization. As Is customary the board met first with the retiring members In their seats. Foms ordinary claims were allowed and a hand ful of other business wns given attention. The board then adjourned. At 8:15 o'clock the board met for reorgan ization, with the new members, W. T. Bourke, George Cott, Jacob L. Jacobson and Millard F. Sears occupying the seats vacated by the retiring members, Messrs. F. B. Kennard. Paul W. Kuhns, J. C. Lindsay and J. II. Vance. It wns agreed that the officers be nomi nated by Informal ballot. . On the ballot for president Mr. Kennedy received seven votes, Mr. Cole four and Grant W. Will iams two. Mr. Kennedy having received a majority of the total vote a motion to instruct Secretary Burgess to cast the en tire vote of the board for Mr. Kennedy was carried and he was unanimously elected. Similar action was taken for Mr. Cole after the Informal ballot, which re sulted as follows: Cole, ten; S. P. Bost wick, one; Grant W. Williams, two. Mr. Kennedy snld he will announce his appointments of committees within a few days. FAITH A SPUR TO SUCCESS An Incident of the Early Hays of Telegraphy and Enthusiasm of Theodora Vail. The recent election of Theodore X. Vail as president of the Western Fnlon Tele graph company was but an Incident In one of the most active and successful of American careers. In another sense. It was a natural sequence In the progressive order of events. Mr. Vall's cousin, Alfred Vail, was a co-worker with Mors and won a fortune as his share In the famous patent. While he was experimenting at Morrlstown, N. J., the lad Theodore was making toy lines of his own and learning the alphabet and how to send messages. When he went west to make his fotune he entered the regular service, but pres ently found himself In Washington at the head of the railway mall service. There he was found by Gardiner O. Hub. bard at the psychological moment In the development of the telephone. The prac ticability of the new device had been fairly well demonstrated, but the promoters lacked money and the creative and execu tive capacity. Where to find these essen tials was the puzzle. "One morning," says Casson In his "History of the Telephone," "the Indefatigable Hubbard solved the problem. 'Watson,' he said, 'there's a young man In Washington who can solve this situation and I want you to run down and see what you think of him.' Watson went, reported favorably and In a day or so the young man received a letter from Hubbard offering hlrb the position of gen eral manager at a salary of $3,600 a year. 'We relrv" Hubbard said 'upon your ex ecutive ability, your fidelity and unremlt ting zeal." The young man replied in one of those dignified letters more usual In the nineteenth than in the twentieth century. 'My faith in the success of the enterprise is such that I am willing to trust to it,' he wrote, 'and I have confidence that we shall establish the harmony and co-operation that is essential to the success of an enterprise of this kind.' One week later the young man, Theodore N. Vail, took his seat as general manager in a tiny of fice in Reade street. New York, and the business began." Harper's Weekly. VIEWING LIFE IN FAR EAST Why America Most Play the Game of Diplomacy In the Orient. Price Collier, whose articles about "Eng land and the English from an American Point of View" created something of a sensation on both sides of the Atlantic, and were accepted In England -with surprising good nature and appreciation of the au thor's evident fairness, will begin a new series of articles In the January number of Scribners. They will deal In a broad way with the great problems that confront the west and the east, with a special view of what England has achieved In India. The first paper. "On the Way to India," summarizes with clearness the changes that recent events have made In the rela tions of all of the great nations In the east. America can no longer sit Idly by and watch the game of diplomacy from the vantage-point of a disinterested ob server. "Americans, must accept the responsi bilities of the new situation whether they like them or not. They may not shirk the trust imposed upon them, whether for the present or for posterity. The Washington dictum of 'no entangling alllanoes" Is a thing of the past. We cannot play the game single-handed." The author well says that next to our own affairs those of Great Britain are of most importance to us. His comments on some recent acts of our State department will be read with interest, espe cially In view of the constant rumors of probable trouble with Japan. There are some most Interesting facts given with regard to England's national business policy; "she is taxing time and taxing energy the most cruel of all forms of taxation." In India Great Britain has a population of ,j0.O00,O0O and there Ilea her greatest problem. The one Insistent and constant Impression the east makes on the western mind Is that "here we are Journeying through a world where the best r t'S'f Hi'jffjff the high .Y,!w5-lAVi Ef The wonderful nutritious value of Clarke's .V'?'" 'Via urc yc an ts enorrnous 6alci have made n' ' f us llc arcst distillers in the world. Not in a J j given territory,mindyou; but of the whole world. txh Bottled in Bond 100 Proof tffiW rS y -v..s.Ma r. ft riff Urnc & rnmniMv niit!iir afaa .. . t j r t, v of us, no matter what our education and experience, can only grope about." As In the author's former articles, there Is here a most remarkable array of facts presented In a way that gives them vital signifi cance and an unfailing appreciation of the picturesque contrasts In oriental life. The Bible, the Arabian Nights, the Odyssey and Iliad, Virgil. Herodotus, and Xenophon these are among the books of which yon think on going there and to which you wish you had devoted more time. GETTING NEXT TO THE GRAFT Publicity Cnta Into the Profits of Tipping- Trust In Nf it York. The profits once garnered daily by the one-man monooly In the big hotels and restaurants In the "Lobster Palace" dis trict of New York has dwindled percep tibly In the last few months, according to one who should know. The authority for this Is a man who has been In the employ of the "tip trust," part of his duty being to receive and audit the cash turned in by the uniformed boys who are employed to squeeze coins out of the gullible publlo. The falling off In the dally receipts from this source of hotel and restaurant graft began some six months ago, when the i publlo discovered through the newspapers I that the uniformed boys who check your hat and coat don't get the coins that the , patrons give them, but that the money goes to a man who pays for the privilege of keeping the boys In these places. For several years this trust In tips reaped a fine harvest. The person who conceived It and put It In operation gath ered in profits at an astonishing rate. Be ginning with only a few boys, he soon found his Industry growing to a point where he could advantageously employ scores of them. Every boy represented an asset In the traffic. If the boy turned In less than $5 a day he was not looked upon as fit for he trade of making the public stand and deliver every time it entered a hotel or restaurant. The inventor of the monopoly was an Ingenious person. He realized that for the boy who checked the hats and coats there was great temptation to pilfer part of his day's plunder. Not infrequently the boy would take In as much as 110 a day. To assimilate a share of this seemed so ridic ulously easy that something had to be dona. There was no way of removing the temp tation. But there were other ways of getting at It Ha tried several plans, one of them being a system of rewarded espion age among the boys themselves. This worked well enough until the boys got to gether and decided that the rewards for turning reformer were less profitable than striking dally dividends on their own ac count. Then the tip monopolist hit upon the in genious plan of putting every boy In a pocketless uniform and that solved the J problem. The boys had to be content with the S3 or S4 a week wages allowed by their employer. The employer has always exercised the greatest care and caution In employing boys for this business of making patrons of hotels and restaurants pay toll for wear ing hats and coats. He wants only those who are endowed with a wistful look which seems to say: "I am the sole support of a widowed mother and seventeen hungry brothers and sisters." Put that kind of a boy at the hotel coat- and-hat room and who would have the courage to check his property and not give away a dime? 'I'd be glad to give you a dime for taking care of my hat and coat while I waa at din ner," said one prosperous looking man on leaving a Times Square restaurant a day or' two later, to the uniformed boy at the door, "but I won't do it because I happen to know that you wouldn't getfhe money." Apparently he was only one of a good many thousands who take the same view of the situation. New York Times. Francis Joseph JSot Herlously III. VIENNA, Jan. I. Emperor Francis Jo seph, who yesterday was compelled to forego the usual New Year festivities be cause of a slight indisposition, enjoyed an undisturbed night and arose at his accus tomed early hour, which is 4 o'clock. After attending to his correspondence his maj esty held private audiences as usual. A Guarantee cf Business Prosperity The Persistent and Wise Patronage of The Bee Advertising Columns. EL TELLO CIGAR The Cigar which, if you Once Smoke you will Always Smoke Ask the man who smokes them. S for 25 cents aad ! cents straight according to size McCORD, BRADY CO. ' DISTRIBUTORS Omaha, Neb. From the beginning: wc have particularly to family trade, on account of mcdicnaI qualities of this whiskey, 3 C'us Bars and Cafe ASK FOR IT . PEORIA, ILLL0I3 .Mrr Wfc di. Mw In thm world SUICIDE IN GRECIAN COURT Man Arenseil of Mrlllna- Dlplrttn Kills lllmseir nnrt Womiili Mmhtrntr, ATHENS. Dec. 31.-(Speclnl f,, The IV- M. Vlr.andlous. an Inspector of nnMo'ii was brought Into n magistrate's, ro ut a charge of trafficking In university c plomas. He committed enlcMe by sho. inn himself with a revolver. The I.mT rt also struck the magistrate, wounding I seriously. HYMENEAL MrfJnlre-lsehrtte. KANSAS CITY. Mo., Jan. I. R. p''-. i atlve Bird S. McUuite of the First m'-.b-homa district nnd Mrs. Ruby Maelicttc daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Rld;e way of Kansas CMy, were married Ith this afternoon. Mrs. Machette was :i widow. Mr. and Mrs. Mctitilre left for Washington following the ceremony. Pcterson-I'helits. Miss Bertha Phelps of Sioux City, daush ter of Frank Phelps, and Mr. lingo Peter son of Holdrege, Neb., were married by Rev. Charles W. Savldge Sunday after noon at t at M2 North Seventeenth streo: The attendants were the bride's Ktstor. Miss Minnie Phelps, nnd Mr. Clinton CoM of Holdrege. tattt'ks-l.rr. M ss Vera A. Lee, daughter ot Ar'hur N Lee, and John N. Mattoi-Us were married by Rev. Charles W. Snvidtre nt his ! i dence Sunday morning at V Sri' ,t'K In Best Society Every woman of social ex perience knows that no matter how formal her recep tion or card party may be, there are always some of her guests who really prefer a cool glass of good beer to any other beverage. These women keep Pabst Blue Ribbon in tho house, for they know that while their guests have varying tastea, Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Beer that i liked by everybody. Pabst BlueRifcbon The Beer of Quality cost a little more than ordinary beer but it is worth all it costs. A bottle of Pabst Blue Ribbon is not only good to look at, but the beer itself has a delicate i.nvor and rich, smooth taute that is sure to delight Made and Bottled Only by Pabst in Milwaukee Telephone for, a case today. The Pabst Company 1307 Leavenworth TEL. Douglas 79 A 1479 AT ras sa or tms Rib Asaaw- Hotel Loyal Opposite the Post Office OMAHA Fire-Proof European RATES Rooms without Bstb. f 1.0s and With Hsih S1.M sad up. TO-NIGHT . Ej catered s H t .Nfl Mm sr I ''. aMaVf. m su I I F1 IfstAaV i I ,i Iff Ufa VilrL ) Mi i? i Pi aft .m-M M Sf,'" 4S t JV b