FORECAST CITY ThurMla.' : Partly cloudy, mth scattered EDITION thunder fthouere; not milch change In temperature. vol. 53—no. i6. v. ^•"5;c«!rSPl omaha, Thursday, july 5, 1923.* 5;1"VIv,r1z.-,,.,l',,l ».”»> TWQ cents ■■ c::rL^'w,’, JACK DEMPSEY RETAINS CHAMPIONSHIP - •) -- Death Note Is Defied by Sleuth Samardick Nabs Three on Rum Charges July 4, Date Set for His “Ex ecution."’ Women Among Arrests That being the parting shot from "Don't send me posies—" Hob Samardick, federal prohibition agent, bn left Central police station at 10 Wednesday. ^ Thirty minutes later the police blotter registered the name of Albert Vyskocil, 1234 South Thirteenth street, charged with violation of the national prohibition law, and the ar resting officer was Samardick. Samardick, recipient of a ‘‘death ^>!*ite” a week ago, in whlch-'the day of his assassination was set for July 4. met all tfueries with a sly grin, flashing a bundle of search warrants. Among the places raided by Sa mardick after 2 Wednesday morning was the residence of Lydia Ulrich, 2115 North Sixteenth street. Week’s Kffort Knds. "I had been trying to get her for more than a year," said Smiling Bob. “Only last week one of my men succeeded in getting a purchase on the^ place. "When he spent only 14 In her place the agent was ridi culed for stinginess. "Why,— my customers spend 150 at a visit here.” she told my agent,” Samardick said. Samardick arrested Vera Nester. 2504 P street, on a charge of illegal possession and sale of liquor. Others Arrested. Other persons taken in under the Samardick swoops of the night be fore the Fourth were John Blzzar, alleged proprietor, and Dominio Para, inmate, at 410 South Tenth afreet; Joe Fillipl, soft drink parlor, 1014 South Tenth: Frank Chenowath and Stella Smith were taken na inmates of the place run by Fillipi. Carmel!la Grandenette and wife, Fanny, 2427 Pacific street: Se bastian Augalius and wife. Hose, 2409 Poppieton street; Angelo Far rano. 2254 Poppieton street; Ira AI fio, 1321 South Twelfth street; Tom King, proprietor, and Sady Tody and ^4ohn Murray, inmates, 1205 Wil liam street. Springfield Cops Charge Strikers Riots Break Out in Massa . chusctts City—Several In jured in Clashes. .Springfield. Mass., July 4.—An ex fens',ve riot broke out at 1 this morn ing in the vicinity of the Springfield exchange of the New England Tele phone and Telegraph company, when a gang of 2,000 men strike sympa thizers were chatged by a dozen reg ular police and and more than 100 military police reserves. At 1:30 there, hod been three arrests. The riot followed several demon strations and fights between strike sympathizers and reserves In which bottles and flower pots were thrown and the officers showered with ex ploding cannon crackers. The entire command of police reserves was called to the last of the smaller riots just before 1 and were on hand with drawn clubs when the charge took place. The strike sympathizers were lined up across the tVorthlgton street i^r ttacks from the police. The rioters ^. I'p Karly and Shaved Himself— —Mail Light Breakfast i f ■ : AU A08A*d] I Times ) I// / * --- - -- - --- ~ - ■ ‘ ■■■■»* — ■ ■*■■■■ .r , . , mmJ Train Stop* 10 Minute* to Allow Him a View of Grizzly Mountain All ft'&MT. ] ^Mrr Tue I Traill Slop* at Mnaquil* Crrck to Vie«s Vi'l i ndfTeloprd ild< rin se ( Inner hnciner. t A. M. Typhoon Wrecks Chinese Houses Heavy Damage Caused l»y Storm —Many Drowned in Canton River. By (imlalnl Press. Hongkong. July 3.—A typhoon last Monday at Macao. 35 mile* west of here caused the sea wall In front of the military cltlh to collapse, wholly submerged the dike in the inner harbor and partly I inundated Praia Grande Several Chinese houses collapsed In the storm, killing three Chinese. Several seaplane hangers were wrecked and a few seaplanes slightly damaged. Many week end visitors from Hong kong were weather bound. Canton suffered only minor d.int ages, a few trees being uprooted along the sea wall. Occupants of sampans In the Canton river, how ever, fared less fortunately aa the wind capsized their vessels and drowned many. Telephone and tele graph poles at Macao were blown down over a large area. The typhoon did little damage here. Ferry service betwen Hongkong and Kowloon, a few miles north, was suspended when the storm threat ened Dr. Egbert Is Released on Bail Over Protest special Dispatch to The Offish* nee. Hasting*. Neb July < —Dr. C. I. Egbert, under sentciU'c of IS year* it hard labor for the murder of til* *on-ln lnW, was released on 410.000 bail yesterday, over the protest of County Attorney Walter Crow The supreme court allowed a writ Qf error Monday and Ordered the dis trtct court to fix hall for the prisoner, though bail hnd previously been te fused A night session of court was held Monday hut the sureties offered failed to qualify. Other sureties were brought In yesterday and accepted. The prosecutor (tied objection* tAit Judge Dtlworth overruled them since the supreme court had ordered hall Dr. Egbert accompanied a brother to Lexington. Neb. Omaha Bee First ^ ith Returns of Biji Prize Fisrlit p p i f irst Extra Out Three Minutes After News Is Rereixed - -Thousands of F’a l»en> Sold. Did we beat em? j Ask any of the hundred* of fight; fans who were downtown at the end of the Dempsey-Gibbon* tight' The Omaha Bee* first fight extia.l carrying the new* of the decision,! reached Sixteenth and Karnam streets j at fi:02 p. n».. just three minute* after the news wa* flashed over the wire* Herbert Muagrave, 2319 Pinkney street, wa* one of the first to pur chase an extra edition carrying the decision. Harry C. Hough, adjutant ] of the Douglas county ’ American | I.egion po*t, was another of the first purchaser*. Both are willing to tes tify to the decisiveness of the beat. Hundred* of The Omaha Bee exysns were sold at Sixteenth ami Karnam and Fifteenth and Farnam atreet* Dotena of The Omaha Bee newsies had •old out entirely hefora either of the ; other Omaha paper* made it* appear ance. At * second Omaha Bee extra hit Sixteenth and Farnam streets. ■ arrylng a roundbyround story of tha tight And still no ether pap«r had reached that intersection. M. P. Ferrell. 512 South Twenty first street, was ^tie of tlie first purchasers of this second extra. The first Omaha !>mly News extra did not arrive at Sixteenth and Far nnin streets before 6 12. and the first World-Herald extra mads Its appear ance at fi '-’n Thousands of The < tniaha Bee . x true were sold before either of the other papers made its appearance It was one of the ^iggeat beats In news paper history In Omaha, and again demonstrated that The Oinslm Bee serves with speed as well as with ac curacy IVt«* McMillan Kdcahcd. Cleveland. O, July 4 Pete Me Millan. oulfilder. young brother of Norman McMillan of the Boston Americans, who joined the Cleveland Americana after graduating from cot lege has been unenrwIltlouaPv re leased This is the month of Spending in order that savings may be made Melntosh. the most famous of all Advertising managers. »*«>'« that duly on# of the best month* of spending to make savings. 1***1 July there was more than $120,000,000 spent by the merchant! of th# country to tell of the bargains'' offered in the great July Clear anre Hales. If yoti weie one of those who profited Inst >« »< then you will I # among the first to profit again this year hut |f > on have not yet learned the lesson of "economy" from thee*" groat nH'-i^pn- mixer tlaements. |f»t us suggest that you read carefully iml regularly all the ads fr»»'n ill ihe store*. otnahe merchant* will u*« The Omaha Hee tonslairntly U*«u your ‘eye" peeled for the things to wear, furniture for the bed room, kitchen living room or any nth^r article* ' on ma x need It PAYS tn »ead Advertising regularly. T-J Leviathan Sails as Thunder Rolls Giant Liner Starts Maiden \o\agr ns (’. S. Passenger < arrier in Hea\\ Rain. Hr \««ocint*4! rr»*» New York, July 4 —lie flag droop ing beneath a sudden downpour of ram, while passenger* huddled be- j neat ft canopied decks, and airplanes circled the thutuler-ricked heaven*, the Leviathan eased from it* pier today and set for on its maiden voy age under the auspices of the United States shipping board The giant of the seas slipped its cables at 10:01, eastern standard time, end committed itself to the flotilla of tugs which persuaded It odt into the Hudson, and down stream. The storm broke just as the Lev ia> than cast off and the skies, glower ing all morning, darkened. Lights were shedding a faint glow from the ports From beneath a sea of umbrehts and hooded taxicabs the cheers of thousands of person*, assembled on the wharf between Forty-fifth atrcct and the tig vessel s pier, went up at the sailing. Rand« played, whistles tooted and hells clanged through the river mist llarltor craft, poking cau tiously toward the liner to get a i loser view, churned hastily away, their whistle cords tied down, a* the huge craft boomed the long tignal for right of way. Oamage Suit VgaiiM Man \f<|uiltetl of Shooting ini IH«palch In Th# Omaha H+* I’lAttxmouth Neb. July 4—A« an aftermath of the resent acquittal of Ilerli tVittoti. Burlington shop etn ploye. of the criminal charge of shoot ing with intent to kill. In district court here a couple of week* ago. Torn RaMc striker, who was shot by Cot ton last November has filed suit for $ SO ,000 damages agnm*t t'otton sml the Burlington railroad In his peti tion, filed by Organ ami Delitala. Omaha attorney*, the railroad coin patty Is named as t,-oi/ur*' Plan on Tahir Hi Intol I -OHdon, July t.—Prime Minister Itilduin told a i|iteMkiiter in ihe blithe of loinnioit* today lie win per frrtl> billing to ht on the table of the house the tenth of the \tnerh an proposal aakiug lor tiottm to M’iif outside the three mile limit ship* at leged to be engaged in smuggling in foxieatmg Ikitior, pro\ hied the run s» nt of the I fitted states eon Id be obtained. Step* o ill be taken, it b Mated, to obtain tliia rouaent. Title Holder Is Given Decision in 15 Mauling Rounds With Gibbons \ _ Challenger Lasts Full Limit by Playing Running Game Against Man Supposed to Be Greatest Fighter in World—Outcome Surprise to Dopesters—Re sembled Coyote and Greyhound. Loser Is in Position to Demand a Return Match By DAMON RI M ON. t'ni rental Herrin Miff t «»rr#*«»p*>n»l.’nt . • Itingside, Shelby, Mont., July I.—A little Indian papoose stood wide eyed in an ai*le this afternoon as Jack Dempsey, hea\yweighl champion of the world, chased Tom Jiibbons, his challenger, ’round and ’rpund for 15 long rounds under a blislering Montana sun. Perhaps the child thought it was some strange new game being playe< by these naked white men, and in a manner of *-]»eahing so if was. I* was a game you might call “coyote and greyhound’’ for want of a bettei name. tjihbons was the coyole .one of the wisest, fastest and shiftiest animal*, of the plains on which this game was played; Dempey the greyhound strong, speedy, alert, dangerous. --i--ssfuily defended his title here today. "My only regret is that Tommy wouldn't mix it more in the last five or six rounds I wanted to slug It with him and put my present day punch to a real test. Rut Tommy used hi* ring intelligence and just ran from one clinch into another. And when he wasn't doing that he w as footing it around. "They used to say he was a smart fighter. I'll add my testimonial to that. And I want to say that in addi tion to being smart. Tommy is game and courageous, and certainly one of the tough- st men to hit with a solid blow that I've ever fought." Wants Another Chance Tommy Gibbons said: "JAdt Dempsey s greater physical strength, coupled with his greater wrestling ability, beat me this after noon. "I went Into the thing thinking that it was to be a match under Marquis of Queensbury rules, hut I wasn't in there very long bef-.re I cot the idea that it was a Graeco Roman. or catch as catch-can. For Dempsey, every time we fell into a clinch, roughed it to the limit, twisted and turned me and did about every thing hut flop me on the floor. "Dempsey may lie the great hitter that his boosters claim, but lie didn't Impress me this afternoon And this great marksmanship they talk about —well, it wasn't so conspicuous Dempsey did hit me solid elow« on the chin and also on the body—but he nevei even staggered me "I'd like another shot at him. with wrestl.nc tdles more or 1 -s barred. 1 learned enough about Dempsey and lus style of fighting this afternoon to make ms certain that I can whip him." Five Die in Vi reek on Santa Fe Line Score* Injured When \a\ajo Flyer Jump* Track Near Dominpo. N. M. H% International hews Mvirt Albu l — The joint Amerthen and Mexican contmiselons <>n recognition of Meglco adjourned their sessions today to take v>art In the Fourth of July celebration stages) to the American oniony. Material progress mbs made oxer i xht In the exchanges of xirs» be ISien the i oinntlesion. Amr ..an i .-inntlsstoini- Charles It Warren is still hopeful that the txxo bodies wilt t* brought to the same viewpoint le saidmg properly rights, alxottt which veow Ilium's the hoi»e for re. .'x nil loll Th« sessions will be reeumed | Thursday morning. Sunning, twisting, doubling. Gin bons the coyote-got safely home if cover at the end of the long chsse panting a little, bleeding a liittle—bu safe. He lasted 15 mauling, tearing rour.d; against the man supposed to be the great'st fighter in the world, wher the world had said he could not las, more than eight rounds at the most He showed his teeth in rather t grim smile as Jim Dougherty, the baron of Lelperville." a very tir'd and much dishelevel man, lifted Dempseys right hand, signifying that Dempsey still retains the title ol champion. Trots Home to Family. Then Gibbons, no longer the coyote playing a dangerous game, trotted home to the little green-roofed burga low just a short distance from ths yellow pine arena ;n th» hills wh'c« his vv.fe and three little boys were waiting for him. The small Indian papoose was gain ered up by its mother, a fat woma’ in a dirty dress, and carried out o: the arena in the wake of a long Urn of bobbing war bonnets, worn by the braves of the Rinckfoot tribe, for t!:• white man who gave whisky to the Indian long ago. today gave his re>: brother prize fighting. The Indians sat huddled together in one section of the arena rlose to the ring, watching the fight, a sploti h «-! bright color against the dull yellow of the pine bowl. For a time ihey were quite then as the fight went on they got excited. They were ail Gibbons, roo* ers. and now and then the warwhcop of the Blackfoot. a piercing |r-^ drawn cry. echoed across the arena when it looked as if Gibbons had an advantage. Crowd Kchoes Veil. Twenty thousand people, half of them admitted free at the last m.r.uie to swell the crowd at the most colos sal financial failure in the history of modem boxing caught up the war whoop of the braves and re-echoed it with the high treble yell of the west ern cowboy. They had come to see a slaughter, to see the quick knockout of a man the New Yoik state boxing commis sion once ruled was too small for ths great Dempsey, a man 34 vears old, lighting a champion six years young er and fully 20 pounds heavier. Instead, they saw one of the great est battles of recent jears in tbs prise ring. Gibbons was sentimentally v :; t favorite for the reason that he was (Dim to r»«e Six. t olumn FighCl ^ nod Refuses Extension of Time for l and Taxes n» Awrnlrd Trees. Manila. July 4 —There nil' be no free extension of time for the pa> - merit of iand taxes this year, as in the past. Governor Genera! Wood de. vlared today in reply to s tenues front the Intel :ot department for »u extension The governor general *a;d ' It would he s great injustice to the government and to the people to grant extensions without penalties. The government needs the money and must have It If important ac tivities are to he carried out. It would not be fa.r to those who al is.adv have paid their taxes ;n the face of had conditions if others were granted an extension of time l Manuel Quezon, prescient of the Philippine senate, ha* declared he will fight for an cxiens on of the tax payment pcrlovt. owing to the hard nmes n souse province* and in this stand he has the support of virtually all the member* of the territotial cabinet Nevada Supreme Court knocks Out State Dr\ L.«u llano. Ne\ , Julv 4 —Nas i u w«i> without a state prohibition law today as tha result of a decision by tha state supreme court handed down at Carson City yesterday, dev-la ring un constitutional tha state dry lawr pass ed at the last session of tha legis laiure. Th* court based its ruling on the relation of llte t.tle of the act to the contents of it. I he Weather Fc*i SI end Mg a? ‘ n !Vi • tin Temgerilwa. Mtfheat 44. *> me*» »« tm NU|t ?4 TaU- danu«iy V |*« Hr'arttf HumMio rin'eamcv * ti ** n»»cr : y v* *t rnhiiuliMk'b Ib'hev ami HumlrMMhg Ti"»' e uoal niu# JfitMim I, def»v4enr> . t* Vmpemiitre* * a * A l»l. . ' .* A m T* * A 11 ■ r; * a m ’ * A m \\ I HI « » - j m <1 I' m . . M * ••• m «v m .. * V m , *|| 4 •' rr ...ii.k . *' J r w .u V *h