' Jf V THK NORFOLK WKHKIA' NKWS-.IOl'KNAL , FRIDAY. NOVKMDER 24 , 1011. l | IN FREDDIE WELCH CHAMPION WILL MEET TOUGH NUT. ENGLISHMAN IS VERY SKILLFUL In Order to Win Cadillac Doy Will Have to Knock Him Out or Have Him In Distress at End of Twenty Round Deut to De Held In Frisco. Atl Wolgast , tlio champion light weight , has ono of the most trouble Home problems lie has yet faced be fore him for Thanksgiving day , when lie Is to mci't Freddie Welch , the for mer Kngllsh lightweight champion , In u twenty round bout In San Francisco Whtlo not a haidi hlltcr , Welch Is re- Kardud as ono of the best two handed boxers In the world , lie Is lightning fr.st with hands and feet , wonderfully skillful , a perCeet Judge of distance and very reel In action. 1'reddlo Is also an artist at Infighting as well as at long range. Wolgnst has done all that has huen anlied of him so far , and his friends lie- llevo he will be successful against the wonderful Britisher , but even Ad's most ardent admirers are doubtful that he will bo able to stop Wc ! < h Inside I IK * limit of twenty rounds. They llguie that he will not be able to corner the foreigner to hind his clfeitlu1 blow Others point to the three lights whi h Welch had with Packy McFnrlnnil. Knch one went the limit , and \Velili was given a draw each time , although In the last bout 1'acky was given the credit with having a shade by the Kng- lisli sport writers. Wolgast In order to gain n decision will have to either knock him out or have him in distress at the wlndup. If Krcddle can finish the twenty rounds fresh he will get the decision , for he In HO much faster than Wolgnst and such n clever fellow that ho figures to out point him. Uut Wolgast had a clever Photo by American 1'rcss Association. VIIEDDIK WELCH or I-.NOLAND , WHO Jll.Kl' Al > WOI.OAST. one to meet In Owen Moran , and he solved his style , beat down his guards and stopped him. Wolgnst has a way of covering up and wading In to close range and from there launching volleys of terrific drives to body and head. None of his opponents so far have been able to keep him at n respectful distance , and none has been able to get away from these bombardments ; consequently they have all gone down before the "wild cat" from Michigan. Now , while Freddie Welch Is a taller fellow than Owen Moran and faster , It Is doubtful If he can stave off the rushes of Wolgast. It Is a foregone conclusion that if the champion man ages to get into his farorlto fighting position , head close up against his op ponent , the Britisher will not be able to slug with him nor will ho be able to survive the terrific hammering that Wolgnst w 111 cut loose with. Men who have boxed with the Cad iliac boy In workouts and In real tights say that lie lilts harder at close quarters than any lightweight in the history of the ring. Abe Attell , foxy and experienced an he Is. said recently that Wolgast would beat every light weight who faced him In a twenty round fight. lie's too powerful and hits too hard. Attell says none of the boys can resist his rushes or beep him nt n distance. Ho follows his man around the ring , taking blows aimed at him on his gloves until he gets the fellow Just where he wants him. Ad then makes n little dash and lets fly as he unwinds at close quarters Ho sends all the jiowpr of his makeup Into every punch , and It docs not take many of these to beat nn opponent Into submission. All things considered. Welch should give a gooil account of himself , but Ad figures to win Inside the limit. Canada Sends Lacrosse Team. Canadian clubs plan to get together two lacrosse teams for the Olympic games In Sweden next year. A repre sentative of the Swedish Touring club proposes to take the Vancouver Mann cup team and the champion Canadian Lacrosse association seniors to the games. Howard Will Coach Columbia. Tom Howard , the well known hock ey p'nyer. who for live years coached the \ale team , will this winter try to whip the Columbia hockey team into winning form. Business is conducted at such a ten sion that you don't know your favorite store today simply because you visited It last week or even yesterday ! For a atoro renews Itself every day and "your store" may bo twice as Import ant to yon today ai I * a - ' ek ago GOOD QUARTERS NUMEROUS. Vloro Good Field Generals Than Ever This Season , Good quarterbacks have been numer- DUB this season. In the east Howe of Ynlo Is nbout the best , although Bprnckllng of Ilrown and Miller of iA Ct ? ? 5T J % | S ; , i < f' " & V&felX X 1 y OifiVVEj Photos by American Press Association. THREE OF THE M'.ADINO QCAUTEBBACKS Ol' SEASON. Tenn State give him n close run for the honors , with Butler of Cornell n close fourth. In the west the leading field generals are Moll of Wisconsin , McMillan of Michigan. Seiller of Illinois and Ca- pron o { . Minucsv > . A.1I have dguae splendid work for their teams and help ed add to this season's football history. THORPE ALL AROUND ATHLETE Carlisle Indian Has Made Great Name In Many Branches of Sport. Carlisle has a remarkable all round athlete In James Thorpe of Oklahoma. He is a fine basketball player , a base ball pitcher of great talent and has played a creditable game at halfback on the football team. He can fill any of the positions on these three teams , and in addition he excels at lacrosse and tennis. He plays handball , hockey and In door baseball with equal skill and fin Ished third In the annual cross country meet last spring. He has put the six teen pound shot forty-three feet , broad Jump twenty-two feet ten Inches , run a hundred yards In 10 seconds flat and cleared six feet In the high Jump. He has run the high hurdles In 15 4-5 seconds ends and the low hurdles In 20 sec onds. In one track meet last spring Thorpe won five events and was second end In another. Here's Your Champion Baseball Fan. J. J. Lawrcs of Milwaukee Is perhaps the champion baseball fan of the coun try. Lawres said recently that he started seventeen years ago to collect his statistics on baseball , and now he has forty-two large volumes. It takes him three hours each day to keep his records up to date. lie has the records of 17,000 ball players In his books and can answer any question on baseball that has come up during the last sev enteen years. Long Will Retire From Tennis. "Mel" Long , one of the greatest of Frisco's tennis stars , will retire from the courts permanently , no says the game interferes with bis studies In the University of California. BRISK SPORTING NOTES Cornell has just added a course In wrestling and will have intercollegiate meets with several universities In the cast. "Dick" Grant , former Harvard run ner and coach at Minnesota , has sprung a new idea by combining Bible study with athletics. By his work recently nt Columbia col lege H. L. Beatty has earned the right to represent this country In the Olym pic games at Stockholm next year. The first basketball league ever or ganized among the women of New England will include clubs In New- Haven. Waterbury , Bridgeport , Merl- den , Naugatuck , Derby , Ansonla and Branford. Some part ven If a email part of this newspaper's space today ought to bo serving you. U ought to carry your message ne busy upon your quest or Hrr n i PLAYERS NOT ON BIG ELEVENS WHO MADE 1911 HISTORY. SPRACKLING IS BROWN'S STAR Quarterback of Providence Boys One of Best ir Position Miller of Pcnn State Another Thorpe of Cirllule One of the Greatest of Halfbasks. Few minor league baseball players are Known beyond their own small cir cuits until gnibbcd up by the majors , wlnn. If ou'ii for a short time , they Jump Into almost national prominence , in which respect they "hn\e It on" an.x number of footballlsts , who , howevei great they may be. seldom attract a great deal of attention from the mass es unless they are fortunate enough to be on a team that manages to whip a member of the "big four. " There are rafts of players unknown to the general run of football fans , but who If given the chance probably would make good with any of the group from which the champion elev ens are Invariably drawn. There Isn't a doubt that Sprackllng , quarterback and captain of Brown , could grab any quarterback position In the east , with two possible excep tions , Yale , with Howe , and Penn State , with Miller , might think n long time before assigning Sprackling to the position , yet at Yale the appear ance of just such a man iw he might result in Howe being shifted to one of tlie halfback positions. Miller of Penn State occupies almost ns high rank. Unfortunately Penn State docs not travel In such polite so ciety ns Brown. But In the Penn game Miller was a rnvelatlon. He not only proved himself a master field gen eral , but his running both from posi tion and in carrying back punts equal ed anything seen on Franklin field In years. Both are great field generals ; both get every last ounce of power out of their teams ; both are deadly accurate In hurling forward passes about ; both can kick and both are sure death on punts , with speed and dodging ability enough to run their backs yards farther than the average quarter. It is something of n coincidence that Brown and Penn State with two of the greatest quarterbacks In the coun try should also have two of the very best ends. Ashbaugh of Brown Is almost as greatly responsible as Sprackllng for the success Brown has achieved with the forward pass , and Captiiln Very of Penn State works al most as well with Miller. These two , l.ke their teammates , could grab rcgu- I. if positions on tiny team. Two other quarterbacks of more than average ability Captain Fogg of Syracuse and Welsh of Carlisle have been playing considerable football this jear Welsh ran something like 100 yards for a touchdown In the Penn- Carllsle game recently and was so successful in picking the weak spots in the Penn defense that he was never once forced to reveal the full strength of his team's attack. Fogg eained his spurs against Mich igan a few weeks ago , his general ship going n long way toward enabling Syracuse to hold n better football team to a tie score. He Is not ns artful a runner ns Spruckllng , Miller or Welsh on a broken field , but his Is n sturdier line plunger , running from his position. Halfback Thorpe , the mainstay of the Carlisle Indians , Is rated one of the best halfbacks In the country. Some critics have labeled him the greatest of the year as tin all round performer. J. Weelock , his running mate , is almost as effective. If any thing he Is n harder man to play on an end run , but does not hit the line as hea\ily as Thorpe and Is nothing like so good a kicker. A substitute halfback on the Wil liams team , Alnslee by name , Is on record as having made the longest run of the year In a game against u "big1' eleven. In the Cornell- Williams clash he grabbed up a klckoff on his own five yard line and ran 10. yards to o touchdown. Only once In the history of football has that run been equaled at Cornell and not this year at all on any gridiron. Lafayette has two candidates , Tackle Kelly and Halfback Spiegel. Compe tent critics think highly of both. Kcl ly , a giant of a man with nn elevation in excess of six feet , Is not only a rare good tackle , but one of the best punters In the country as well. L.tnj in the . \enr Kelly got In kicks ranging from fifty-live to sixty-live yards In every game. Spiegel , his teammate , Is another Sprackllm : In going down an open field. Still another Is floating around who would bo welcomed by the Harvard coaches like a million dollars If he were eligible to piny for the Crimson varsity. Unfortunately this young man , one Brlekley , is but n freshman. Ho recently kicked four field goals In one game. There are many more. West Point and Annapolis anyhow could hardly be classed with the "minors. " Both Army and Navy , though outside the classic ring , are both fairly loaded down with high class football players who never can hope to achieve the fnme tliit would be theirs If they were playing with Yale. Harvard , Princeton or IX 'Twas Ever Thus. "Pn , vfhat does It mean when you say that prices fluctuate ? " "It means , my BOH , that they go up and down. When It's something you've got to buy the price goes up. and when It's something you've got to sell the price goes down. " SPICY SPORTING CHATS 11 y TOMMY CLAHK. Met rorrlblu Terry" McUovern the other day. The one time greatest of alt featherweights In feeling the de sire to battle welling up within him again. Terry believes that two months of real hard work would help him re- dine hl.s bulky proportions and lit him for one more trial In the ring. The tecent appearance of Harry Forbes and Willie Fitzgerald , who weie stars \\hen Terry was In his prime , has made the Brooklynlte somewhat Jealous , and a desire to emu late their performance Is getting the better of ! ils Judgment. However , Terence has some good friends who , no doubt , will convince him of the foolishness of his pioject. If not , the hard grind of life In a training camp \\lll probably be Milllelont to discour age him , as It did Young Corbett. McOo\ern Is now referee of a Brook lyn light club where he made his Ilrst bid for fame In the ring and Inciden tally lost his llrst light witha , young ster named Jack Slice , although It Is not down In his record. The bout last- 'd two rounds. The first was all Me- Uovcrn's. On his return to the corner Slice's seconds told their man to hurl some tantall/.lng remark at Terry. At the beginning of the second round Slice told McOo\ern that he just loved to light monkeys , ikhat was enough. Me- Govern cast boxing to the winds and immediately picked Sncc up and threw him out of the ring. Terry now weighs 105 pounds. Kid McCoy Is bewildered. The Kid was practically matched to meet Sailor Uurko In Brooklyn recently. When the match maker of the club accosted McCoy and asked him to sign articles the Kid demanded S'J.r.OO. . "Why , Kid , " said the matchmaker , "I only want you to fight ono night , not'for a week. " That's enough to bewilder any one. even Kid McCoy. Since McCoy defeated several fifth raters he thinks ho Is now In line for a match with such huskies as .Tim Klynn , Al Kaufman , Al Pnlzcr and Jim Kennedy. McCoy would do well to ponder for awhile before taking on any of the men ho seeks to meet. Any of the above mentioned men would jolt the Kid so rudely that he soon would realize he had shot his pugilistic bolt. Lots of people say they can't see why Choynskl. the vctqran heavy weight fighter , should return to the ring. The answer Is very plain. He wants to get some of the good money being passed to the has-beens and the ncvor-wuzzers. One of the latest nicknames for President Charley Kbbets of the Brook lyn Baseball club Is "Chuckling Choi- ly. " It Is spoken by his friends during his absence always. In all fairness to Harvard It con ho put down that this is the ruling the ory of football criticism at the Cam bridge school : "When the football team wins , glory be to the coaches ; when it loses , what n disgraceful bu/ich of Incompetents they are. " THERE'S ONE BORN EVERY MINUTE. You know Buffalo Costello ? J Sure , he fought Alec Grcggains J > about eighty rounds or more down at Coney Island years and years ago. Well , they put the < > Buffalo in the cooler a few weeks x ago for seeking assistance up on * 4 > the Great White Way. The Buf- < > fj falo or Mr. Costpllo , rather just < j > before this met a boob up the > line who wau daffy on fight. 4j When they weie introduced the , boob looked Costello over from > head to foot and then asked In- | > qulringly : j ? "Say. you're not the Buffalo < | Costello who fought Greggalns x years ago. are you ? " < f > The Buffalo smiled and nodded x assent. < j > "Say , " continued the boob , tapping - $ ping Costello upon the shoulder , "my father has been talking of that fight for the past ten years , I'll bet. lie says It was the great est tiling he ever saw in his life. < ? > So you ate Buffalo Costello. eh ? $ < j > Well , I'll be darned ! " $ Costello waited a moment and J ? < J > then , edging closer , whispered In < f > $ the gent's car. "Say , have you got jf a buck to spare ? " The boob , only too anxious to help out such a great and famous lighter , started to dig Into his Jeuns and piped. "Sure , sure ! " Then , not sure of the amount , he added. "Say , Buffalo , how much Is a buck ? " Costello almost dropped dead with surprise , but braced himself and , looking his friend In the 1 eye. answered. "Two dollars ! " COMING SPORT EVENTS The national Indoor meet of the Am ateur Athletic association will be held In New York Uee , 20 and 27. The second Indoor international trap shooting tournament and sportsmen's show will open In New York March 2 and continue until March i ) . A new ice rink Is being built In To ronto which will outshine anything of Ks kind In the country. All of the reg ular Canadian league games will bo jluyed ut the rink. Usually there Is nn nd In this nnper which contains information tnat would envo money for you sometimes a few cents , sometimes a few dollars , some times many dollar * I FEW GOOD CENTER FOOTBALL COACHES HAVE TIME GETTING CAPABLE PLAYERS. BLUETHENTHAL IS ABOUT BEST Princeton Man Played Consistently Good All Around Game This Sea son So Did Ketcham of Yale , Mor- rcll of Minnesota and Others. The scarcity of good centers has been noticeable In the east and west this season. In the old days there was al ways a wealth of material for this po sition , but this year coaches had a hard time of it. Years ago under the old rules the middle man on the line was generally a place for the fattest boy In the college , but the new code has given that doctrine a black eye. The center who Is fit for the part these days must be an athletic youngster who can run , tackle , pass the ball well , fit In In more ways than one and gen erally prove his usefulness. The center who plays good football under the new code must combine quickness of body with quickness of thought. While Hie passing of the ball still devolves upon him as It has In the past , the new centers have shown such remarkable ability to play fine defensive football that they have revolutionized , every Idea that had been In vogue as to the duties of the position. Under the rule permitting the direct pass to any player back of the line the center must be able to shoot the ball to any angle which Is demanded. In addition to the dllllculty In passing ac curately to players who are standing , occasional ! ) he Is called upon to pa s to a player who Is In motion If the ball I'hotos by American Press Association. THUKB LEADING CKNTKKS OP SEASON. is not put into play through the old medium of second handling by the quarterback. It Is essential that the center pass the ball accurately , for with the attack strung out u little more than it was in the old days a poor pass or a pass which ends In a fumble Is likely to re sult in the loss of the game. The de fense is quick to pile through , and it takes alertness on the part of the at tack to hold the ball against such op position. In the old game the backs ran so closely Into the quarterback that fre quently he shoved the ball Into their arms , thereby eliminating to eome ex tent the possibility of fumbling. In the more open game It is often the case that a pass must be made some dis tance and the ball must be sent along without any particular twist As a defensive player the center is equally Important. Nowadays it Is the fashion to play a "loose" center That means that the center need not necessarily play right on the line every minute In defense and that it Is not Incumbent upon him to stand his ground and resist the attacking cen ter , lie can slip to one side and get after the man with the ball If he is alert enough to follow It through while It Is being passed. In lhp < e days It Is more Important to pay every attention fo securing re sults thrnimh the snood of an eleven than It Is in rely upon physical strength without activity. Those who e playing has stood out this year me Morris of 1'enn , Ketch- am of Yule. Weenis of Annapolis and Rlucthcnthn ! of Princeton. The last mentioned Is the best middle man in the east this M > nson. 'In ( ho west Morrell > f .Minnesota Is the leader. Others who have shown up very well ro Store-r of Harvard. Pierce of WIs- : onsln anil Patterson of Michigan. Misfits at the Baroaln Sale. Nell 1 stopped In at n bargain sale today Belle Did you see nnythlnc that looked real cheap ? Noll- Yrs several men waiting for their wives - Philadelphia Ledger. , Russia Notifies Powers. 1'arlH , Nov. 1HtmtUii 1 ! today In formed France and the- other po\\orni that she Insists on the neutrality of the. Dardanelles , IIH provided In the treaty of London In 1S7I. This notifi cation follows the report that Italy Is furthering the war against Turkey. Intending to block the Dardanelles CUPJ.IENT Sl'ORT NOTES Great. Britain will send a team of ( Urlers to Canada for a tour about Jan 1 Japan and China are likely to enter track and field teams In the Olympic games at Stockholm next year. Several rinks of Scotch curlers may take part In a bonspiel In Boston next January. The Scoti liinen are to reach Montreal In Jnnuar.v. John P. Moakley , coach of the Cor nell track and cross country teams for the past thirteen years , has just sign ed another coniract there for live yenrs. San Francisco Is hopeful of having an America cup race a feature of an International regatta as a part of the Panama Paclllc International e.\posl lion In Uiir > . The National Collegiate Athletic as sociation will hold Its annual meeting in New York on Dec. 'JN it Includes In Its membership eighty colleges and universities , numbering over 100.000 students. They will discuss matters for the beitermt'Ut of athletics among the colleges. Nap Team Has Had Many Pilots. Harry Du\ls Is the sKth manager of the Naps In the past eleven years Others weie Mc.Meer , 11KIO-1 ; Armour , 1002-1 : I.njole. lP.or.-U ; McC.ulre. 11)10 , and Stovall. 1H11. In but three years did the Phib finish as high as third. England to Send Mixed Tennis Team. Kiif/huid Is in send a mixed lawn tennis icnm. in < hiding three women , to \onth \ Africa for a Dories of matches Monster Stadium Planned at Yale. Yale iin.M rst\'s | proposed new Hindi uni will s ( . u Battle Creek. Howard Miller had ii new burnt stairway built on the west side of the opera house. A. .1. Wells has been on the sicl list for about one week. The members of the Lutheran con gregatlon of Battle Creek heights who are without a minister now , b > the removal of Kev. George Bloedel t < Indiana , have sent a call to Kev. 13r nest Eckhardt to Blair , Neb. The. hit ter will have n conference with his church members next Sunday and ; decision will be reached whether lit can accept this call or not , A new cottage of Sam Kent , sr. , 01 Hale street , Is nearly completed aiu the latter expects to move to town Ii the near future. Miss Augusta Meyer was up hen from Norfolk Sunday visiting will friends. Jake Schlnck , jr. , came over fion Hoskins Saturday for a visit with his parents and other relatives. Kev .1. Hoffman , visitator of the Lutheran congregations of northeast Nebraska ( Missouri synod ) was In specting the Lutheran parochial school at Green Garden Tuesday. Fred EyI was under the care of a physician this week , but is reported as improving in health at this writ ing. Chas. Niles was hero Tuesday on business from Tilden. He informer The News correspondent that he jusl had sold eighty acres adjoining that town for $ lf)0 per acre to Osborn Sons. The land was known as the old fair ground. Grover Stamper , who went back to old Virginia about a > ear ago , re turned Wednesday , and is going to make his home with his mother , Mrs Shoemaker , who lives with her bus band on the L. B. Baker ranch north of hero in Pierce county. O. N. Stuckey , of Norfolk , deputy revenue collector of this district , was here Monday on official duty. SOUTH DAK > TA AT A GLANCE. A Taft club lias been formed at IIu ron. ron.The last session of the United States congress made special approp riations to South Dakota amounting to nearly ? 1,500,000. A. P. Maahs of White Lake is ex hibiting an ear of corn twelve inches long , and is challenging any farmer in the world to beat it. Justice McDonotiRh of Deadwood has ruled that a man can live in mountain caves if he chooses to and cannot he punished ns an "indigent" because of it. William Kettleson , charged with stealing meat from a farmer's wagon at Huron , was run down by blood hounds and is now in jail awaiting trial. trial.The malt house of the Schwonk- Barth Brewery company at Yankton was burned to the ground. The loss is estimated at $ G.OOO , almost entirely covered by insurance. Kev. W. S. Grim , pastor of the M. E. church at Kapld City , was stricken with acute mania immediately after preaching ono of his greatest sermons. .1. W. Kyan , a homesteader near Smithwick , has been adjudged insane. It is believed that his aberration is duo to the lonely homestead life. A ferryboat propelled by the river current is being temporarily used In place of the pontoon bridge at Yank- ton. The bridge boats have been put up for the winter. Mrs. Nellie McMahon , the Sturgis widow who shot and killed Attorney David I . Thomas , has lost her legal fight and has been taken to the in sane hospital at Yankton. It has been discovered that Judges serving terms In South Dakota cannot announce themselves as candidates for any other office. This will affect a number of congressional aspirants. ] SOCIETY Pleasures of the Week , The dcimitniout of household econo mics of tlio Woman's club met with Mis. Myron Walker last Monday , as sisted by Airs. Klngsley , Mis. Vlelo and Mrs. Williams. The subject for study was : "Ilow to Keep Chihlien lit School. " by Ketha Child Dorr. The at tide dem-ilbed an Ideal Industilal school In Gary , hid. , where pupiln tm gl\en a practical education. The bos- ( esses tuM-U'd lofrcHlinientH at 5 o'clock , ( he dcnmnstinllou bolng a walnut i east In Soyer paper bags. Mr. nml Mrs. D. Miithewson pie - sided at a u > r > attractl\e i ! o'clock dinner party on Tuesday evening. Thhly-slx guests enjoyed n tempting menu at prettily appointed tables. ItrldgovnB the after dinner featuie , the honors going to Mrs. N. A. Haiti- bolt and C. S. Bridge. Mr. and Mrs. E , A. Bullock ontei- tnlnod a small company of friends at ti o'clock dinner last Sat unlay In hon or of Mr. and Mrs. W. 11. Uuttorflold. Cards weie1 u pleasant pnstlnio after the dinner. Mis. Philip Harmony entertained the members of the Neighborhood kensington on Wednesday afternoon. The hostess served a dainty supper at the close of a very pleasant after noon. W. W. Hoffman celebrated his birthday yesteiday by entertaining n half do/en friends at a delightful staj ; dinner elaborately .served In eight courses at the Meichants cafe. The ladles of Iho First Congrega tional chinch gave a very successful chicken pie supper and npinn sale in the chinch parlors on Friday evening Personals. Sioux City News : In courtesy to Miss Margate ! Butler of Norfolk , Neb. , who is a guest in Iho J. W. Smith home. Miss Alleen Smith will entertain informally this evening. At. the close of the evening the eighteen guests will be seated at small tables where a two-course luncheon will ho served by Mis. J. D. Heglln and the > hostess. Sioux City News : Miss Margaret Butler of Norfolk , Neb. , will be com plimented this evening at the home of Miss Irnui Fox. Guessing games will occupy the hours , after which the hostess will serve a course luncheon - eon , assisted by Miss Alleen Smith. Miss Alice Johnson will entertain Fri day evening in honor of Miss Butler. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bntterflold and their guest , Mrs. Dayton of Washing ton , D. C. , left today for southern Cali fornia where they will spend the win ter. Mrs. W. N. Huso visited in Omaha a few days during the week with Mrs. G. A. Young and Mrs. W. G. Baker. Mrs. C. II. Keynolds has spent part of the week in Omaha , a guest in thc- home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bnchol/ . Miss Kale Burnham spent part of the week in Tilden visiting old time friends. Mrs. Charles H. Kelsey returned Thursday from a short visit nt Ne- ligh. Legion of Honor Case Ends. Boston , Mass. , Nov. 2. . . An order Is sued by the superior court directing Henry A. Wymnn , of the supreme' council , American Legion of Honor , to draw up a decree for the payment of . . dividend of 4 per cent to those whose claims were approved by the receiver , practically ends seven years of litigation growing out of the failure of ono of the largest fraternal orders of this country. The claimants repre sented by the receiver number 2,558 , with total claims of $ : { , 'J24.r.2C. The American Legion of Honor during its. existence paid $10,000,000 In death claims , and at one time had a mem bership of 05,000 , representing every state in the union , Canada and other countries , Its failure was due to ex tended litigation resulting from an al leged Illegal change in the by-laws , attempting to reduce the amount of certificates from ? n,000 to $2,000. CAR CRUSHES MAN. Night Automobile Accident at Valley Stirs the Town. Fremont , Neb , Nov. 25. Abraham Wcinsteln. an Omaha peddler , was seriously if not fatally Injured near Valley last evening when ho was struck by an automobile driven by D. D. Hersey of David City. Dr. Talbot of Broken Bow driving along the road shortly after the accident , came upon the prostrate form as Wcinsteln's companion , also a peddler , was at tempting to bring him to conscious ness. Dr. Talbot took the Injured mane o Valley. SCREAMS AT THE JUDGE. Woman Declares That He is Unfit to Be on the Bench. Los Angeles , Cal. , Nov. 25. With arms akimbo and face thrust up to the icnch , Mrs. Anna F. Holman , said to ) e a sister of Oliver Hlrschbcrg , a Mttsburg millionaire , shouted at udgo Monroe , of the superior court f the county : "You're unfit to be a judge ! Did on hear that ? " Then , screaming and scratching , ho was led away. Mrs. Holman's divorce null had ust been transferred to the Orange ounty court.