Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 18, 1915, Page 4, Image 4

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    TJIH BKK: OMAHA, TIIUIUSDAY, FEBKUAJ.Y-18, 15)15.
Bringing Up Father
Copyright. If', lnUrnatlo.ia
Hews It "Wo,
Drawn for The Bee by George McManus
1 I HAVrTcORFn A. Aa 1 r , I .ftiAFRAiDTO ( f PCRHAPt THEf I WE WANT TO j Yl ) -n DlMTC HELLO Jl Y
ITS OAWW?FAM?S . ' "U JUDS??RJ ULDtitL HT.QOT EE WHAT TOUM , . ($1 MOORE- 'r WHAT AROO f
j 2jT
WHITE SOX CREW
.' SPEEDSFOR WEST
Clarence Bowland Gives Out Infor
mation Harry Lord May Ee-
tarn to Falo Hose.
WICHITA GETS TWO PLATE ES
Ban Johnson Says
Federal League Will
Die Within the .Year
BAN FRANCISCO, Keb. 17. "We feel
lire that a rrar from now there will be
nt such a thin as the Kederal league."
Thua did Ban Johnion, president of the
American Iraa-ue. exnress hta opinion here
yesterday of the triangular major league I NO NEW YORK CLUB THIS YEAR
ball situation In the east.
FEDS WON'T FORM
NEW ENGLAND LOOP
Independents Will Start Season Sev-
eral Says Before National or
American Leagues.
That Harry Ixird, third corner gufcr
rtinn who flew the White Box coop last
year and deserted base ball, h&a found
tha call of the eiwnglrs too much for
him. says Clarence Rowland, new man
ager of the pale hose. Rowland said
yesterday when he. and hla gay your
Fox passed through Omaha that Iord
wanted to come back and might be seen
at the third atatlon on the Stock Yards
teatn thla year.
Twenty-five athletes and as many re
tainers, the last consisting of a few
wives of the players, some F&olfto Coast
league talent, newspaper men, fans and
friends of Cotnlskey. Comlskey and Mrs,
Comlskry are already on the coast and
will meet the Sox In 'Frisco Saturday,
preparatory to taking- In the exposition
sights before embarking for Paso Robles
for training.
Kddls- Collins,, famous keystone, and
friend wlfe wer8 ln tne Party. Collins
ana Rowland agree they will agree like
twa turtledoves thla summer and bring
home a pennant to the South Side park
In the windy village. The Box are a
bright aggregation of athletes, and all
look like they possessed more than av
erage Intelligence. Most of them look a
little fat, but Rowland says they will
look far different", about month j; from
today. -
tf Mar Rater Game lllasaelf. . f.
iThat he might go In the gaana ' an ring
a ptnoh and Uke a place behind the bat
Is possible, says Rowland. Rowland la
a catcher and says he can make a pretty
troH bluff at the iob In case his re
ceivers should all become incapacitated
i One f the most Interesting members of
the Hoaa party Is Johnny O'Neill. O'Neill
la the original demon fan. He la TO
years of age, but the liveliest umpire
baiter In seven statea. He has made
very training Jaunt with the Box athoe
MOT, the year Oomlskey'g . nea Invaded
Mexico- la the baaa-age car reposea one
perfectly food uniform, regulation Box
reimlla. which O'Neill proposes, to don
danlv and work out with the athletes.
.. Mr. and Mrs. Pi Reurke were on hand
to areet the Box. as was Arthur Met
The players who are traveling on the
BDnwlal In addition to Rowland are:
Pitchers: Eddie Clcotte, Rob Russell
Bill Lathroa. Kd Walsh. Urban Fnbwr, H
Jasper. Mel Wolfgang, lid Klepfer
a.ltt. IntTMaAA ....
catchers: Ray Bchalk, Tom Daly and
"V.- I M.var.
lnfleldrrs; Kddie Collins, Buck Weaver,
n,...ii mi ark bursa.- Bunny
Bergen -M- tiromwlco, nowart)
President Johnson and Charles A.
Comjskey, owner of lh Chicago Amer
icans, with their wives, are here on what
they termed "strictly a pleasure trip,"
but thev had several things to say re
garding base ball.
Tilers has been no demand for a third
mnjor league," President Johnson oon-
Unued, "as the receipts of the Federal
league have proved to u. About all they
have accomplished has been a general
Increase In salaries.
I do not believe the project of raising
the Class AA Issues to the standard of
the major leagues will be brought up
again this year. Personally I can not sea
what good could come of such action.
Had the step been taken the Pacific
Coast and International leagues would
hate been elevated as well as the Amer
ican Association. '
Hussane and Olson
On the Mat Tonight
Toueslf Hussane, Bulgarian cltlsen ol
Omaha, and Bull Olson, cltlaenshlp not
known, will mix on the mat at the Kmk
theater this evening. Mr. Olson says he
Is champion ef Bweden and Hussane says
he Is champion of the universe, which In
cludes Sweden, so a merry battle may
We expected. Charley Franke has books
a counle of keen preliminaries and says
the evening card will be well worth
lamping.
Hrtef. Joe
Baker
im --juninv. jsreiun, . ? .
, . . . . . . i .. V,Alii.a 1.11. . Tiafrn.
miu...if .W "RfUi, berry OhvtH
Hippy (Cn.: , ,
Johas'Onl a big six-foot right-handed
t wirier, Joined the traveler hm. m
Rnottr BcrosKlns. Jack Kournler, Joa
IWii. Kuhn and jOthcr membora- of .the
box will join the squad In California.
r ' tlsWll Slaae AtfclMe..
Frank Isuell Is one Western learuer
who la brlna-ina his men Into line, lsbell
announces he has signed -Richard Henry
Hreen. Vander Veld. Thomas. Hartford
and Museer. " '-
Joa, OTtourke, who pastlmed around
Mtrond base for Wichita last year, has
taken a grouch to the national board
O RAurka says he had a contract ta
majnaare and play with. Wichita this, year,
but that he was subsequent! notified,
his pay would be but onohaif -the stipu-
atlon In the contract. It Is said O'Rourke
probably will be declared a free agent.
However. Wichita should worry, as
Branch Rickey ,. yesterday . presented
Wares with two Intlcidcrs,: namely, Wil
liam Hollander and James RitU-r.
BALTIMOHK, Feb. 17.-James A. Oil-
more, president of the Federal league,
who passed through Baltimore tonight
on his way to Pluehurst. N. C, announced
that the proposition to place a minor
league in New England had been tem
porarily abandor.ed.
He explained that he had received a
report from his league's New England
representative Just as he was leaving
New Tork, and that on the way to Balti
more he had conaldcred it.
Ollmore'a Terms.
At the meeting held In New Haven sev
eral wecka ago, Qllmore said, he told the
New England club owners that the Fed
erals would be willing to furnish better
ball players than tho people on the pro
posed circuit had been accustomed to
seeing and that the league would agree
to pay SO or 80 per cent of the salaries !
of these men, but that the New England
club owners would have to finance their
own teams.
Since that meeting, Qllmore stated, sev-
eral of the New England magnates had
come to the conclusion that they would
be unable to back clubs at this time be
cause of conditions In the financial world.
T Beat Resrnlars.
NEW YORK, Feb. 17.-Before leaving
here tonight for Plnehurst, N. C, to Join
President R. B. Ward of the Brooklyn
Federals, President Gllmore of the Fed'
oral league announced that hla. league
would try to get an early advantage over
the National and American leagues hlj
Vear by opening the Federal league season
several days before the other major
league openings.
T was HMUrit nn authnrltv trwtnv that
NOT COMPETE OUTSIDE the Federal league haa abandoned any In
tention of coming into New York City this
PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 17. Members season and that there would be no trans-
of the University of Pennsylvania track fer of franchises other than that of Kan-
team WW not d aiiowea a compete ror .ny io , ,
any outside organisation during the col- j Secretary John A. Heydlcf of the Na-
leglate term. This, addition to the unl- tlonal league nnound today that ha
erslty's eligibility code was announced I had received the slgnea contract or um
today by Tr. R. T. Tail' McKenxle of the I plre Charles Rlgler, this completing the
missions, schools snd churches through
out the country, with the privilege of
propogating Budahlsm; that mining con
cessions conflicting with existing con
cessions at Hanang, Tayeh and Plng
slang ahall not be granted to other for
eigners If a Chlne-Japaneee company,
hereafter to be formed, shall disapprove;
that certain railroad concessions from
Nanchang to Chao Chow Fu. from Nan
chang to Kuklang, from Nanchang to
Wuchang, and from Nanchang to Hang-
chow, shall be gTnnted; that foreigners
other than Japanese shall be excluded
from future railroad, mining and dock
building concessions, unless Japan shall
give Its consent.
"HOME RUN" BAKER
QUITSBASE BALL
One of Batting Kings of Diamond
and Star Third Sacker of Macks
"Back to the Land."
HE WILL RETIRE TO HIS FARM
Highlanders
tionals.
and the Philadelphia Na-
Three Counter Proposals.
It Is learned that China has made three
counter-proposals respecting that portion
of the Japanese demands which con
cerns concessions In Manchuria, Mon
golia and Khantung. The Chinese gov
ernment also has signified Its willing
ness to make a public declaration that
China ahall never cede a port, harbor or
Island to another power, but it has de
clined to pledge Itself to that effect to
Japan.
The Chinese government also has ex
pressed Itself as willing to discuss any
demands which it does not regard as In
fringing upon its own sovereignity or as
affecting existing treaty rights with
other powers.
The status of the negotiations is now
rather clouded. Two opinions prevail In
Chinese government circles, one that
Japan wJH press for its demands In full
and the other that Japan cannot insist
upon any stipulation beyond the eleven
set forth In the communication to for
eign governments.
Radio Messages -Sent
Without Use
; Of Aerial Antennae
PENNSY TRACKMEN CAN
faculty committee.
The new rule, which becomes effective
at onoe, waa suggested by the Athletic
association because of the difficulty
caused recently by the fact that "Ted
'Meredith waa registered with the
Meadowbrook club for outside competi
tion. Meredith has been permitted to
chariga hi registration aqd none of the
members of the team I affected by the
rulings.
The new ml will apply only , to track
an tteld athletics. Golfers, tennis players,
league's staff of umpires for 1915.
CHINA REJECTS
JAPAN'S DEMANDS
Continued from Page One.)
Britain, France and Russia, Is under
stood to- contain only lven demands.
substantially as follows:
In relation of Shantung. Japan asks
tK,t rViina (r,n,f n it all Hh and
oarsmen . d participants In --.other I . ,..., (., h ...
branches of sport at the university will
stlll.be allowed to' compete for 'crubs.
LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL ' '
...'.(.v. .WILL PLAY AMES FIVE
AMER, Ja..".Feb. lT.-8peclal.V-Uneoln.
Neb., high school, 1914 basket ball team.
Will play the Ames High five hi the state
college gymnasium Friday evening. 'The
Nebraskans are on a tour of Iwa.-whlrh
ends In Iowa , City. Three games to be
Played In the state. - Tha.Amus .High
team, since-losing "Bill" Davis, forward.
all-state prep quarterback, after the first
game was played,. Is In a ', strain ,of
mediocrity, having woa no games of im
portance to -date, but haying lost, most
of them heavily so far.
MIuDFORD, Mass Feb. 17. Experi
ments conducted by the Wireless Society
of Tuft's college have shown. It was an
nounced today, that radio messages may
b transmitted and received without the
use of aerial antennae.
The results of the experiments, the an
nouncement says, may work a change In
the use of wlreleea apparatus made
ready for use within a third of the time
required for setting up 'the areial equipment.
During the experiments the best re
sults from the use of the ground antennae
were obtained when the receiving wires
were laid In a direct line with the trans
mitting station. Two ordinary wires,
ninety feet In length, were found when
stretched on the ground In thl smanner,
to be sufficient to receive messages from
points from fifty to seventy-five miles
distant.
PHIL.ADEI4PHIA, Feb. 17. "Home
Run" Baker, star third baseman of the
Philadelphia American league base ball
team, has decided to retire from tho dia
mond and will not appear with the team
next season, according to an announce
ment made here tonight by Manager Con
nie Mack at a dinner of the Philadelphia
Sporting Writers' association. '
Back te e Land.
Baker last year signed a three years'
contract with the Athletics. Mack stated
1 that the third baseman Is not dissatisfied
with tho terms of this contract, but wants
to devote his time to his farm In Mars
land. Baker Is less than 29 years old and has
been a member of the Athletics since 1908.
His batting average in that year was
.307. He was the hero of both the 1911
snd 1913 world series with the New York
Giants.
In "lamp Agralnat Braves.
In 1911 he knocked home runs In two
game at critical periods and ln 1913 he
put the ball over the fence In the opening
contest Last year his batting average
for the season was .336 and he made
twelve home runs, but, like the other
members of the team, appeared to ba In
a slump ln the critical series with the
Boston Braves.
More than too dlnera were present at
the dinner, which was gtven In honor of
Tjirrv Lalole. who returns to the Athletics
after an absence of thirteen years; who
Bill" Donovan and Pat Moran, new man
agers, respectively, of the New York
Captain Mitchell
Must Explain His
Criticism of Army
WASHINGTON. Feb. 17. -Secretary
Garrison today Instructed Brigadier Gen
eral .Scott, ililef of staff of the army, to
call upon Captain William Mitchell of
the general staff to explain published
reports attributed to him on the unpre-
paredness of the United States for war.
Captain Mitchell was quoted as having
said that "it would take the United
States about three years to put an army
o( 1,000,000 trained men In the field and ln
that time an enemy could take and hold
our American seaboards."
Secretary Garrison said he considered
Mich utterances, if made public at pres
ent, injudicious and improper.
FRUIT JOBBERS WILL
MEET IN MEMPHIS
LOS ANGELES, Cal., Frb. 17. Mem
phis, Tenn., was chosen today for the 1916
convention of the Western Fruit Jobbers'
association. No date was set. ,
DEATH RECORD.
Brigadier General Goodale
WAKEFIELD. N. J., Feb. 17. Brigadier
General Greenleaf A. Goodale, U. d. A.,
retired, died today, aged 75 years. He
entered the regular army in 1866, after
serving with a volunteer regiment ill the
civil war, and was retired in 1903.
Baker Testifies to J
Talk With McAdoo :
About Shipping
WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 Bernard ML
Baker, a Baltimore steamship manager,
told the senate committee inquiring Into
charges of Influence against the adminis
tration ship bill today, that to per cent
of the German-owned liners laid up in
American ports were unfitted for tha
service the bill contemplates and that In
all his conversations with Secretary Mo
Adoo he had so far excluded those ship
as unavailable to the government that
the possibility of their purchase never
was discussed.
Baker added he was satisfied Mr.' He
Adoo acquiesced in that view. Describing;
his connection with the shipping bill, Mr.
uai.?r saia ne met Decreiary aigaow
when the latter called a conference of
business men soon after the outbreak of
the war. He had conferred with Mr. Mc
Adoo on the shipping bill and ocean
1 reign t rates and discussed tne availa
bility of ships Included in a list submitted
by a Boston ship agent which inoluded
none of those owned by the large Ger
man lines.
When efforts were being made to -get
Americans out of the war xono. Baker
said he asked Mr. Slckel of the Hamberg
American line to advise Mr. McAdoo.
Slckel refused, he said, until assured that
no proposition to buy steamers of that
line was contemplated. Slckel said he . had
orders to entertain no such proposal.
HYMENEAL
BEATRICE. Neb., Feb. 17. (Special Tel
egram.) John Barton, of Lincoln and
Madge- J. -Casey of -Salt Lake City were
married here today by County Judge
Walden... - . ?. ...
MEADE WOMAN KILLS CHILD
AND ATTEMPTS SUICIDE
STURG1S, S. D., Feb. 17.-(Speclal
Telegram.)-t-Mrs, Robert Wllhelm, resid
ing at Seal, , Meade county,, yesterday
kUted her . child and then attempted , te
Uke her own life, iut , failed. Sheriff
Skutt will bring the woman here.
MAGIC CITY-FIVE WILL
PLAY COUNCIL BLUFFS
MOHA TRIES .TO STOP;.
. GiBBONS-M'GOORTY GO
MILWAUKEE. - Wis.. Feb. lT.--Mlke
Oibboua of St. Paul and Eddie MoOoorty
of Oshkosh. matched to btx'ten round
at Hudaon on March t. will hava ta post
pone their contemplated seH J, if a com
plaint filed with the Wisconsin Btate Box
ing Commission today Is sustained.
Rob Mol:a, local tutddl . weight, filed
the ! crouplalnt and has asked the com
mission to prohibit the up-stale club from
eon'iut-t'jir any boxing shows.
Uts ground are that the Hudson club
violated the commission rule lo failing
to! pay him his-sharc of tha roiwtpi 'Of
the Mdha-Gibbons fixht on December .
. South Omaha High 'school and Council
Bluffs High hoo will clash' In1 a ha
I ball gsino next Fiidsv . evening on the
routn I'maiia rioor. .The game Is ex-
pevted1 be one of the fastest yet played
on 'the Magle City battleground and . a
large crowd Is expected.
ratton a flippers are . peeved at two
things:- First, their defeat at the hands
of the Nebraska CUy five last Friday;
ana. second, the flippancy with which the
Iowa five are carrying their chests at the
present time. All of which will go.to
make it a good game. No preliminaries
will be ployed and the contest will Vpcn
at s:u snarp,
' a. Htrw lats-sacax. .
There are so-called "hooey and tar"
preparations that cost the dealer half as
much but sfel! at tha same price as the
original end genuine Foley's Honey and
Tar Compound. We never offer these
Irulutloas njl .substitutes., WencwQU
will buy Foley s w ne never you need a
rough IE you ouc use it. people
tern long distances for the true Foley's
-fr thirty yovrs the leading remedy for
coughs co Ida. croup, wbouplnf cough,
t-itatbtal.aad, lri.pe ougha bold by
hli dcaiers eter) br. Advertisement.
F.klaad Wins Matra.
UKATKH K Ni.li fc-jh it
Telrsranv) Clark tklund,' a Kansas
riii-r, won rrom rrd Noor-hlr f
Cortland, Neb., laal nlilit at 1'1,-krrell in
et-auttii ra la The first in ttiiitv-flva
......uira anti ,11s p.-iuiui in noven mlnult-a.
Yaar
Praaaat Aetlaa Will
Caaah.
wiis jew lusvovery will stop
your Ctough. The first dose helpir Good
for children. All druggists. . Adver
tisement. '
I r part ! Orders. -
WANiiMmiN, rb. 17. (Special Tele-
ra.i-nrori pensions granted: Jo-
"I'iiih v. ADimti, rem. us; Martha A
Haley. Brock. 111!.:, CWra II. Kherlx.ndy
risiikeiman, Jti; Mary A. v Overturf,
'inana, sis.
Il.-lrn M. Ham and Miss Nellie K.
(Kiira have ben aitlnted demit y .!-
l-re of the Third Iowa Internal revenue
many, and requires cnina to consuji
Japan on all matters previously agreed
upon between Germany and China In the
province of rinantung.
China Is to agree not to alienate or leasa
Shantung or any part of tha coast on
any pretext to any foreign government.
and similarly no island near Bhantung
Is to be leased to' any foreign power.
China la asked to grant to Japan tha
right to construct a railroad from Klao
Chow to CM Fu.
That certain cities In the province of
Shantung shall be opened as treaty port.
Mast C'uaaalt Japan Often.
In Southern Manchuria and Mongolia
the extension Is asked or the terms of the
lease of tha Kwang Tung (Port. Arthur
and Darlen) and the Manchurlan and
Mukden railroads.
In the same region Japan asked for
the acquisition by Japanese of the right
of residence and ownership of the land
grants and mining Ights.
ln the same region of Southern Man
churia and Mongolia the following Tour
requests are made. These requests will
all relate to Mongolia and not to China
as a whole:
Before granting railroad concessions to
any third power, cnina must arv 10
consult Japan In advance.
Before endeavoring to obtain capital for
loans from any third power. China must
consult Japan.
Befora choosing any foreign political.
military or financial advisers China must
consult Japan.
The transfer of the management and
control of the Cliangchln railroad is to
be made te the Japanera. . .
China Is obligated ot to alienate or
lease aay porta or bays on any lsiana
near the coast of Formosa.
Many Addlttnaal Btiplatteas.
Among the stipulations said to have
been originally represented by Japan and
which are not Included In the memoran
dum aa handed to certain of tha foreign
legations, are the following
That It China employee foreigners as
controlling advisers la polica, mOttarr or
financial departments of the entire coun
try. Japanese ahall be preferred; that
one-halt of the ammunition and arms
hereafier used by China must be pur
chased from Japan, otherwise an arsenal
must be ratsbltshed In China employing
Japanese experts and materials. That
Chi 11a must grant to Japan the same
privilege., a ohr nations to establish
Mather Saves Baby front Direnslsg,
YANKTON, Feb. 17. (Special. )-Mrs.
Charles Vlck, missing her 4-year-old son.
ran outdoors, noted a broken top to a
curtem, looked down and saw her little
boy floating on top of the water. With
a shriek the mother -plunged down Into
tba cistern and grasped her boy. Neigh
bor were close at hand and soon had
tha little boy and his mother safe and
unharmed. v '
Diseased Olocd
Calls for Hdp
V
sanaamaBBBna a
NthirVa Wfflintr Workers at
Always at Your .
Service.
'4
If It la ersruia. pimples, bolls or worse
your safeguard Is 8. S. S., the famous
blood purifier. It Is always lined up to
attack diseased blood. And It always does
the work. It does the work after disap
pointment, after alleged specialists, mer
cury. Iodides, strychnin, arsenic and other
destructive drug thst have reaped a bar
vest of mistakes sad left a host of Invalids
guetslag a to whst U to coma 8.8.8.
Is aot suck a drug u the cupidity or Ig
norance of maa would be able to p reduce.
It Is Natures wonderful contribution ta
our necessities. It Is wonderful because It
caa aot ba Imitated ; raa aot be made any
ether way than te assembls Nature's prod
acts and produce what a host at aea know
as ft. B. H., the world's greatest medietas.
Tber are people everywhere tbst bad aa
aid nor or ulcer thst defied all the salves
kaowa. A ad yet 8. B. ft. takta lota the
blosd Just naturally put into that old nor
the lea) en la that auid new tisane, new
esh, and covered l,t with a nsw coating of
healthy skla. Get a bottle of R. 8. 8.
toasy of asy druggest aad b oa the way
te perfect blood health.- But beware at
substitutes.- For special advice consult tb
nedlral department, Tb Swift Specide Ce.
li (Swift Blag.. Atlanta. C.a. It la fra
asd bas helped a multitude.
Hughie Jennings
Manager of Detroit "Tigers" tayt
MAfter a red hot finish in a ball game
a pipe full of Tuxedo makes victory
sweeter, or defeat more endurable.
Ee-y.h forTuxedo."
"Come on, boys Smoke
Up! With TUXEDO!"
"Ee yah! That's Hughie
( Jennings battlecry, out there on
the coaching line by third base.
Hes one or the pepperiest, gin
geriest men in baseball ; always
up on his toes, rooting for dear
life, making those runs come in.
Want to get some of that old snappy feeling yourself? Smoke
Tuxedo, same as Jennings does. It'll boost you right up into
the zingdooey class of fellows who are always on the go, full of
vim and good nature, piling up success.
ails'-'
aV I
I
If :-;'
I ""TSi -i j
ATVAV v AV Vf j AV ; s y
Th Prfct Tohacco for Pip and Cigartttm
Tuxedo is mild and wholesome.
Thats why all these athletes use
Tuxedo. Itcan't bite your tongue be
cause the famous "Tuxedo Process
has removed all irritation from the
natural leaf what you get is the gentle,
mild, Kentucky Burley, rich and fra
grant and wholesome.
" Ee-yah 1 " Get some Tuxedo today
and get that happy feeling.
YOU CAN BUY, TUXEDO EVERYWHERE
Sc
Caavsnient. glatain
wrapped, asistura
prut potsca . . .
is) Tim HumHon 4bc ana1 40c
Fswisas Craaa Tut m f
with (oU lettering, I I If
carved ta fit pockat VW
In Class Humidor 50c mnJ 90
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY