Says "Buds' cteri “ROUGH” CHAMP FULL OF SCIENCE He Always Wore a I.avalll.rr of Non-Skid Chains. CopyrtKht, l»2t. Hsar Sir: • Jf®w I*. J! tlmt tho llouirlitotm Hump « ^2r«SKs catcher's Zuvrk ‘"‘e ,hB th,,mb» of « ■ X? bobo V,r burled hi* noM In a hen T.r,ile W, "ri,r.r <-|nk burled that norn or his In tlx» cuiiyhn. 1tL "tY C»ink fl^ht out In Denver In IMS. The Inventor nf the Lily cup got hi* Idea from I,Ink « Jaw. <’an,B *" ■ Bunch the Rough town chain n was Judy. Yours. banomiH nr iio ImiiAnn*. FRANK W. MORRISON. * _ ('hirsgo. SOME folks think that Gink was a referee because he was al ways the third man cut of the ring. He was such a favorite in Rough town that the ambulance clerks al ways carried him out on their shoul ders. When Tex Rickett.v promoted that big contest between the cat and the canary (link fought the semi-final. His opponent was Jim Corbett, a paying teller from the Wallop Exchange National hank. The Roughtown champ started to deal out the slow poison in the first round. Corbett started to look for a neutral corner in a round house. Corbett slapped Gink so hard that Heinz changed his number to 58 in stead of 57. Gink came right back with a slam that made the 20-Mule Borax people add 30 more donkeys to their wagon. Then Corbett changed his tactics and Gink stopped the fight to put on bis neckklace of non-skid chains. Tf the ranvaa had been a Turkish prayer rug. Gink would have won the bobbing championship. Gink was a radio fan and always listened In on the canvas. This fight was stopped by the referee who was a bug on rarp porcelain and had hopes of buying Gink's jaw cheaper by (he piece. Ater this fight Gink offered a big reward for his teeth and got most of them back. Then he Rtarted in to train for Leonard. But Leonard al ways refused to meet him, ns he knew Gink was no marionette. Sonic folks think that the Rough town hoy got his rep playing with paper dolls. That is wrong, be cause Gink had a set of tin sol diers. Tex Ricketty has posted a forfeit in a hollow tree and is willing to hack Gink against Firpo or Demp sey. Especially Klrpo. There Is a tele phone booth In Rouglitown that will make a natural arena for this fight. Is the world going to lay back on its hinges and see Firpo claim the marbles when Gink is ready to lay lown his toys and meet the South k American challenger? All Gink wants is justice, provided he has a friend on the jury. I’aul Slimpson, Omaha sandlot pitcher, who joined the Boston Nation als this spring, lias returned to his homo in Omahn. where he will r«^ main until fully recovered from an injury. Ho will report back to tlie Braves as soon as his physician will permit. Wonder If we will ever hear of Shel by, Mont., again? They only had onrf bank in the town and It went ’’broke.” .lames J. Corbett, former heavy weight ehamplon, was operated on for apendicltls In a New York City hos pital and is reported recovering. ♦ The Minneapolis club of the Amer ican association has signed Howard Brinda, right-handed hurler, who was leading the Dakota league pitchers In games won and lost up to the time the league went haywire. limmy Murphy in New York. New York, July 23.—Jimmy Mur phy. American automobile racing driver, arrived in Now Tork today from Los Angeles en route to Milan, Italy, where he will participate in the European grand prlx September #. Murphy won that race in Icemans, France. In 1921. Murphy was suffering from blood poisoning in the left knee when he arrived today, but It was expected he would be cured by the time he reached Europe. Ho will sail on the Qutanla Tuesday. How to build up your Weight TO be under weight often proves low fighting-power in the body. It often means you ar« minus nerve-power, minus red cell* in your blood, minus health, minus vitality. It is serious to be minus, but the moment you increase the number of your red blood-cells, you begin to become plus. That’s why S. S. S., since 1826, has meant to thousands of underweight men *.nd women, a plus in their strength. Your body fills to the point of power, your flesh becomes firmer, the age lines that come from thinness disap pear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel it, too, all I over your body. More red-blood- _ cells 1 S. S. S. will build them. 8. 8. S. It told at all good drug it or ,a la two tint. Tht larger list it more economical. World's Best plood Medicine miinpiapiBBMsi 1 EDDIE’S FRIENDS_ The New Man Takes the Party BVQie! I'lLTAHE i "Wat cue x p^s-sed }$x^ iajAo is that k iuw AnJWwA'V ?- i tW/aj Me. a'Mk’es /S LllZ/lJCr OUT Of= , rap T V/OELL, ELBERT, X C22SC2 MAP A < >7 rot, rust, split. I lean only wear away- and there’s ^■7 little actual wear on a roof. Nothing to compare with the wear on a road, where asphalt gives long service. The thick butts, with extra heavy coatings of asphalt, give thickness where it is needed, where the shingle is exposed to weather. Three attractive, non-fading colors— tile red, sea green, blue black. Fire resisting. Beautiful on mansion or cot tage. Sold by lumber retailers everywhere. You can tell WinthroPs by their shape and their trademark Samples and information upon request. Address Dept. Z. Beckman-Dawson Roofing Co. Ill West Jackson BIvcL, Chicago, III. P.ctarfM .1 III, ud D.troit, Mich. Exclusive Dealers in This Territory. Complete 1 Stock Carried at Our Omaha Yards i UPDIKE LUMBER & COAL CO. ha Gregory told the writer that the race would soon tell on his club. Whether Denver's doubleheader vic tory over Wichita yesterday means the downfall of Wirhita is a question that can be answered after the next two weeks of play. World's Pole Vaulting Record Broken by Hoff By Associated Press. Christiana, July 23.—Charles Hoff, Norwegian athlete, yesterday broke his own world's pole vault record of 4.12 meters with a leap of 4.21 meters, or about 13 feet, 9% Inches. Merchants and Ramblers Win. The Florence Merchants and the Florence Ramblers emerged victorious In their games played Hunday after noon at the new Florence ball field. The Merchants trimmed the Joint Rentals by the score of 16 to S, while the Florence Ramblers walloped the Nashville club by the score of 13 to 0. Sherman Merchants Lose. The North Omaha Ramblers de feated the Sherman Avenue Mer chants, 14 to 1, at the East Elmwood park diamond Sunday afternoon. Kelly, hurling for the Ramblers, al lowed the losers only four scattered hits and struck out 10 batsmen. Lakeview Park TONITE Annual Midsummer Dance Contest C«*h Priiaa for But Wtltieri, On* j Stcpp«ri and Fo* Trttten Rough-Hewn Dorothy Canfield | (Continued From Yesterday.) KANOrSIH. Nwlr Crittenden. a typical, red-bliweled Ameririm ycmth, lives with his parents In I nlon IIill, a village aear New York city. Millie attending preparatory school, anil later ( nlnmo'a university, he takes ah active part lie all kinds of athlrtlrs. In France. Marise Allen, a year or two younger than Neale, lives with tier Amer ican parents In the home of Anna F’.teher garv. a French woman. Marine's father Is foridgn agent for an American liasf ness firm. Jeanne Amlgorena Is an old French servant In the Alten family. Marine applies hernelf diligently to the study of music and French and wins a prize In a inimical contest. While away visiting. Marine's mother seen a rlia friend killed h> a full from a high rllff and dies from nervous shock. Hack In America. Neale enters his junior year at the university anti takes renewed Inter est in his studies anti In football. Tho second half began with an ex change of punts. Playing behind the Cyclopean Mike. Neale hadn't much work to do on the defensive, but once Mike was boxed out on a straight buck. Neale shot his'body in to plug the hole ami turning caught a bony knee in the back, right over the kid ney*. As ho lay on the ground gasp ing for breath, he could sen that he hadn't even *tnpped tho play. It had gone ovpr him for two yards. Oh. Moll! What was the use? How his back ached! He got up shaken, feeling very sick of himself, not meeting anybody's eye. While T’cnn was kicking goal-, Neale sow Biffy come bounding out from tho sidelines, "I'm to take Crit tenden's place," ho reported. It was like a blow in the face. And he had earned it. Neale walked to the bench, took a blanket, looking care fully away from the sub who held it out for him, wrapped himself up, forced hi* face Into Its usual expn s sion of impassivity amt watched the game. It was not much to watch: Columbia badly up in the air. Pennsy getting stronger every minute. Ho dreaded the post mortem at the football house, and took as deserved Andrews' verdict, "Crittenden, you were a total loss. I knew you meren't much of a defensive back, but I didn’t suppose a whale like you would let a skinny little runt of a Penn sub ride you bark five yard* and dump you on your tail.” The next day h* sat all through the game on the edge of the subs’ bench, his big muscles quivering with readi ness to respond to an order to Jump Into the -game, his heart stek, sick within him because the order did not come. Nobody so much as looked his way. There ha sat, a big, useless lump. v\ nat s tna matter wnn me; lie cried out behind his Iroquois mask of Insensibility, 'T’ve got the strength. I've got the speed. Am I a quitter?'' Then the nucleus of what was to be come Neale hardened Itself against this easy, inverted sentimentalism, and small as the nucleus was. It set "You’ve Got to See Mamma Ev’ry Night” The popularity of thi* tuneful, self-starting foa trot is spreading like an epidemic. If you want the finest version of it ever played, get tha Columbia Record, by Vbo Georgians. “You Tell Hor—1 Stutter” i, the encore number on the other side. At Columbia Dealer, A-3657 75* u II Columbia Graphophoae Co* Your Invitation Krug Park takes great pleasure in Join ing in and seconding the invitation of The Omaha Bee to all its readers to the big Omaha Bee Family Picnic at our Park Wednesday, July 25. There will be free rides, free attractions for everyone —magnificent prizes for the winners of the contests. Come, bring your lunch and have a good time. TAKE A DIP in the purified water of Krug Park Pool. A Sand Beach to romp on. SPECIAL (both afternoon and eve* ning)—55 • foot leap by Diving Horse ridden by Omaha Girl. DANCING—Starts at 8:30 P. M. N N O O w w Print. I..I l .nl K«in.lH »iH-»«r In an original act, Omaha ■» I intll •Om of th. W..I’ . .5>r**"‘*t ——A Musical Iraat Lupino Lane in “My Hero” A Comedy tf Errors Rialto Orchestra Kinngrams awasMOMr -THEODORE KOSIOFF ftlCARDO CORTEZ RORf RT CAIN vjja. ©EBB tF [ JANE NOVAK |EjlEI31 Kj With John Bow»r» LaS 5 ^ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS GRAND, * • • IKlh and Hinnry kniherine McDonald in “MONEY. MONTY, MONTY VICTORIA • 24th and Tori "Coolaat in Omaha*' J. Warren Kerrigan in •THE COAST OF OPPORTUNITY" inself to consider the matter In Ju dicial. objective Judgment. Neale went over his football for the last week as though it had been that of another player. "I did quit in the Penn game. But other fellows have had a slump and pulled out of It. And since then, by God, I've played myself out in every practice. I've given all there was to give and then some!” He held up his head at this. And yet, If he wasn't a quitter, what was the matter With him? "Biffy isn't any world beater. Tat he must be better than I am. or Andrews wouldn’t give him my place. Andrews Is square!” He said that with the accent of the mystic who affirms that God is good; and It was very much the same sort of cornerstone In the house he was building to live In. Along In the second half, Atkins (the grad who had discovered Mikei, stopped his caged tiger prowl up and down the side lines and dropped into an empty space beside Neale. "Look at that!” he cried suddenly. "Did you see that?” Neale had noticed nothing In par ticular—just a general tangle of brown and blue Jerseys. “I don't think they gained.” he said. "Great Boott, no! Haven't yon any eyes? They lost about half a yard. The Brown left half tripped over Mike's legs, but if he'd been a foot further out, he'd be going yet. Mo Fndden was suckered.” He looked around sharply at Neale. "If you could use your head like that, you'd be worth something to the team.” Next Monday at practice Atkins came and stood behind Neale (the :bond selling business never seemed to exiRt for Atkins during football sea son). To Neale, as he played on the scrub, Atkins poured out his accumu lated tactical lore, the wisdom that choked and strangled him because he was no longer allowed to put It Into action. Seizing on Neale, whom he did not know personally at all, he forced his way Into Neale’s attention and held it fiercely on the business of playing football intelligently. "Have a look! Have a look! Sec ondary defense finds the play before It stirs out of its tracks! No, you shouldn't have tried a tackle that time,” he yanked Neale to his feet, "they were too bunched. I made Just that hr^ak In the Princeton game in '99 and I’ve never forgiven myself. If you'd spilled the interference, your end would have got the runner. Watch the ball! don't run In till you know where it is—and then go to It! Jtomellmes you can tell by the back's eyes, give themselves away by look ing where they're going to go, but an old hand will cross you on purpose. The knees are safer, mostly they lean n little just before the ball goes back Got to use old head! Bill Morley him self couldn't stop a play If he didn't know where it was. Ah’ that's the stuff! That was just right—not too soon or too late—and see how easy It was!" Bay after day the Wail street bond hruker wrestled with Neale's latent acuteness and forced It into action. With shame, with praise, with re proach and enthusiasm, he drew out of Neale more than Neale had dreamed could be there. If one—even one—of the teachers of English or Greek or chemistry or economics had taught Neale as this semi-illiterate, wealthy young barbarian taught him . . . ! If Neale had given even a tenth as much attention to any of his courses , , , ! Neale clambered up over himself, raging with hope: up over his first realization that there was infinitely more to thia problem than he had ever supposed: tover his next, that he lid r,*t knew even the rudiments of the game he had thought he knew so well: over his occasional glimmers jf understanding, why he failed some tnu-s and auceeeded at other times; 'over an increasing percentage of suc cesses. ami finally stood, a little giddy with the new height, on the peak toward which Atkins had urged him, where he waited clear-headed, strong, confident, behind the tackle, hoping the next play would cornu his way. The play did come his way. The varsity tried out against the scrub its new delayed pass from close for mation. To the left ii worked very well. But when they trlM it to the right, Neale dropped Rogers for a loss, three times in succession. The look on Atkins' face was glory. The next afternoon Neale was back on the Varsity and Biffy on the scrub. There was a pang in his beatitude, a painful moment of generous dis tress when Biffy camo up to con grstulute him. The two hard faced, frowsy-headed, gum-chewing young savages gripped each other's hand In sn Inexpressive silence: and each saw deep Into the other's big heart as he was rarely, in all his life thereafter, to look into any other human being's inner chamber. rsirry carried it orr spienduuy, iseaie thought, hut he couldn’t fool a man who had ju«t been there himself. He felt sorry for Blffy. He remembered to be sorry for Biffy till the whistle blew for the Annapolis game. CHAPTER XXVII. After the Thanksgiving gome, a great peace, a lying-fallow time, a period of unconscious adjustment and assimilation of all that mass of ex perience. He killed a lot of time discussing things in general with Gregg, reading Gregg's books. He fell especially hard for a worn volume of poems and ballads. For six weeks he was con vinced that Swinlmrne had said the FORDOWNERS | Install the Speedwell Oiler and Notice the Difference Perfect Lubrication for Fords *>old under bank guarantee. Keeps the motor from overheating No more burned out hearing*. scored cylinder* and pi*tons. Increase* motor power. Speedwell Oiler Co. 1918 Douglas St. Omaha, Neb. last word, a blighting word, on »thle*l values. Tnen one day he noticed that his favorite credo, "From too much love of living, from hope and fear set free ' could be sung to the tune of the well-known extremely coarse and eery urpoetlcal song called. "Some die of drinking whisky, some die of drinking beer," and ft occurred to him suddenly that, when you thought about It, both expressed the same philosophy. It vVa* disgust ing! It wasn't argument—but Just the same it somehow put a crimp is Swinburne! He went back to his his tory and economics. But you couldn't stew over your books all day long; he drifted more or less with Billy Peters’ Innocuous, evening dress, dancing fussing set. For the first time Neale began to wonder about himself, to wonder what sort of a human being he was any way. that he didn't seem to fit in really, with any crowd. (Continued in The Morning Bee.) “Too Much Slow Paper” Causes Bank to Close Hi nryetta. Okl , July 2J.—The First National bank of this city closed Sat urday with an announcement bT the directors that "too much slov paper" had made the step necessar^. The bank is in the hands of a na tional examiner. It was capitalized aj >50,000 and had deposits of ap proximately $1,200,000. It is the oldest bank in the city, haring been or ganized in 1901. .j EAT IN COMFORT At the Henihav Cafeteria It !• tha Coolatt Cafeteria m Omaha BEATTY’S Henshaw Cafeteria Hotel Hmhew LOW FARES EAST Unusually low fare round trip tickets on sale daily via the Chicago & North Western Ry. to the mountain, lake and sea shore resorts of New England, the Atlantic Seaboard and to New York City, Atlantic City, Boston, Toronto, Portland, Me., Montreal, Buffalo and Niagara Falls. Liberal return limits and favorable stopover privileges. East trains at convenient hours make direct connections in Chicago with all lines East. Thi* afford* a splendid opportunity to tnjoy a sight-wiag tour or to visit your friends in the East. For full information apply to W. J. Smith, General Agent 1201-3 Farnam St Tel. ATlantic 7356. ' w w-— - 3{erefr Kouf/ • The vital interests of the people of Omaha are interwoven through the “Want” Ad section of The Om*ha Bee—a little reading between the lines and the story is complete. These ads reflect the ambitions and hopes of men in business—of the occupants of the thousands of homes in the city—of men and women in nil walks of life. When a man needs a clerk—or his wife needs a cook - when an other person wants to sell his car or buy a home—when someone else wants to recover a lost ar ticle or sell a piece of furniture— Omaha Ree “Want” Ads boar dnily witness to the changing needs in the lives of these people In addition to this human inter est there is the keenest sort of business interest for the person who knows the saving of time and money that results from the regular reading of pmaha Bee "Want” Ads. I