Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 17, 1912, Page 4, Image 4
TIIE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 17. 1912- V The Only Thing Mutt Wouldn't Do for Fifty Dollars By "Bud" Fisher fou "Te Love or 1 wV KNe i . . y6O0D DO "Too wwy To eevv . VERY Easn; FIFTY ? YOU hm I'D rjR Fifty TV-, 1 Got to do To CMrVNUS CLOTnfiSNMlTM Ne AND V ( JUbT POLCOVJ - " : : 1 : ; ' : : I. . 1 NOW -U. YOO'Vt GOT To 1 ITJO i TO STANO that ti ho 9 mjtev ( TVi7 40T FUCD ON WITH Tm jy vgHO LIV( S 'M THNT HOUSE HfLL THINK TOVW6 AND enPTT Hi?, &UN WYOU TVrfN WHEN oF fMHO TNI WW TiirV 7m a ,15 --vn arraUiMff WWH'.' STAHO IN FRONT FOR PUVa :nvjt. FOR PUve :nvjT. I fe TO j 1 JJ YOU'LL, HME TO GET NOTHCR BOt. HStWS XOWR, TEH if-; s . J N. .e-v 1 wv Z3fkriif'''?tiiAr . g MEW OWNERS OF DES MOINES Taomai 7tinretther and Frank Iibell Will Buy Fraachiie. TZSX9 AOEEED OH 70S SEAL riaa to BalM Ptwilm Park rat rinrt tUH dak ! Ik t'apltal ri7,kl lwa. f 8IOLX C1TT, I, Jn. 11-ThomM P. Fairwcathcr, x-prnMunt of lira 8Iou Cllr BM Ball club, aad Frank lilrtll, aannr until today, at tha Pwblo, fran rkta, alii Ixi tha mar (wMti o( tka.lxa Xoli, rranrhlrr. WMIa tlilr option ha a Mk yt to run. Mr. ralrwcatbar tont(ht doclarrd tarma ka4 baan acraad to wharaby )M an4 tha former Pueblo ownar would ac gulra tba aluk. A downtewa park will.ba built la ! llolnaa and flrat-claaa club will ba put In lha Vfattara laajrua. Mahmout Fails : to Throw Wel?er Tauaalf Makqtout fallod to throw Wabar af ciarakvnd In (an mlnutna at tha Krel laat alaM and MahmoM'a tnanacer, Km Klaak. waa but flax Waber waa wlndad aad .all bat plnaad down whan tha time keeper aaved Mm. Wfbar looka blfier thaa M ah moat, but tha Turk ihowi bat tar kaadwark. Mahmout will lake on' a double-header tonlcht wben Charlea Pater and Joe Ktrhnaa will try to repeat Weber' per formanca and aom at Klank'a awnay. ' - ' REVOLVER TEAMS TO HOLD TRIALS FOR OLYMPIC GAMES NEW YORK. Jan. M.-KllailnaUoa trial to pick tha revolver team ta repre sent tha United atatea at tha Olympic Same win ba bald by tha United Btatea Krretver aaaorlatloa la varioua part of tba country mtll May A Thla au decided tonight at tha annoal meet In of tha aaaortatloa held In thla city. Tha 'tea win cooatat of four men and two ettbetttatea, Tha Mirlallon tonlnlit elected tba fol ioartac emcen: Prealoeat & R. A I tall. Kprtncfletd. Man.; vk president. C. U Ltoaea, Baa Praadaea: C C Cniuiun, U Louie: R. J. Mulllian. BaJUmore; V. H. Whicham. Chlcaao: Dr. R. 11. fayre. New York; eeeretary and treaa urer, I. B. CraMree. Sprlnctlatd. Mat. With the Bowlers The Omaha Oa company had full away on tha Morrlann allay lt nltht. Thy bowled tha flrat lean game on the alley, rlcore: let. 3d. Id. Tull T, K. Wood IK 141 .. X? II. H. iJUbrow It) H Wt L Weymuller m 3W 171 Hi ToUl 3 eM U4 DYNAMITEKK. let. Sd. W. Total. MoPonald IM IM ) MrAndraw IM IN 111 lit Hatr IM la le iJ Total i UT. Neleon Hansen .... t. jonnaon. Total ., TAR BAB1K.-I. 1st. id. IM l4 ,.: in m Ill X M. Total. Ml 1J Ml tat Mi Corlll U It. Johnson. 11. A. Jonoaon. TataJa W PILOTS. 1st. ....... 11 lit ta Vi t'i l.ca il. Total. laa ui J Ul He? J. Wood. fhelpa .. Sward .. , MI 1U.ZNORS. 1st. M. IM 1W IM let II Ul Sd. Total. 1 T let l lei art 1. Total W ' FLTINti ulTCHMKN. . let. M. Sd. Total. Ilasl U 1 1 Berlin U Ut Ji eweaurtd ! 1 1J Total " ret Loch took tare straight from the rermlla an tha Metropoktaa allay. Kuhry had high, cam of 117 and high to tal of ft fur tha Tete Loch. Kernel had high game at Ul and high total of Mi for the Fermlts. dcora: PERM ITS. let. l. ad. Totai. Rica I " H. Howlay m l 1 Koherty M 1 Ut J Kemai .. lt ! J. Howley Ml let Ui Us RILEY CARRIES OFF HONORS IN SKI RUNNERS' TOURNEY VIRGINIA. Minn.. Jan. K-Barney Riley at thla city carried off the pro feeeloaal boners la the akl tournament held her today. Hie record waa IM teal. XU riaaa at Dumth was tka beat att teur at the slide, making a record of 111 feet. The professions cores: lUrney Rllar, Vlrjtnla ri, jaook rieetad. BtoMahioa. Ha .les Auguat Nordky, Virginia... W, i . n. aaooeren. superior to Arling Laavkk. Mougntoo .i Tba jBdgaa were O. L. Orlnden. Nell Floaa, Dulath. aad K. Bergaoa. Virginia. -.i. au In ina Mercantile league tha A. L Kout company took two from tea Columbia Fire Underwriter. Mokry having nmn total with KU Tba Rl Paioa took three from the gae Hidings. Lamb getting high alogl and high total with and K. Bland also had a hh gam with SI. A. O. V. W. No. 1J won three from the O las Blowers, J. Jaros aad Bchlndler getting high games with 111 aad IM, re spectively. ' Tba Outlaw lock tha Corey McKensie Printing company Into camp by taking three, tireen getting high total tor hi team with M and Carpenter of the print er getting a total of M7. Score: COLUMBIA FIRE rNDER WRITERS. IM. M. d. 'lotal. Neleon lil um IM U Uriftin I7 1 lit Boaera FIFTY-SIX RINKS ENTERED IN DULUTH CURLERS' MEET , LULCTH. Jaa. H.-WI1H flfty-atx link eniarad for playmg la the ainataenth aaaaaJ boaaptil . of tha Xorthwaatarn qrnng aaaodatloa tea 'aptet that la now under war promlan to ecllps all pre-.-loua. Fifty-At rtok previousty held tba attendane record. The lea la In Meal condition and tha weather perfect for curling. Play In tba first draw to day ta the pnhnh trophy brought 'out Iwlutb ana Superior carle re. ' Miaaa Waipa Meersrd : P1TT8BLROM. Pa.. Jas. K.-Jimmy Howard of ChkeT9 and Frank Klaus of I1ltburrh weat ail feet raunds here lo I alit. "lac flgkt on popular derieioa wa vea to Klaua. la the aecoad roubd jioward wee aaacked aowa and sit i.. mefc tae -juni. la the retaaiaisg rouaa Dober Totals in. 3d. Kuhry 1H 1 Mrkartin IW l'l IMiiham IM ?'l ba.aer m 1 lie t tin Lnn water lil Id. Total. i I7 la kri 11 n l 16 la irti Ml 1.71 1.1 sl Total r MS rw l,e, A. I. HOOT PRlN'llNO COMPANY. 1st. M. 3d. Total Mokry Ml 1 F. Jam i 1 Kranda U 1T 1W in Stork well IT! IK ISS CM Ureea IM 17 ITS let Total M u m t.im CORKY A WcKENZIK PHINTINQ CO. 1st 2d Id Total t Smith lil ISO ,1a 4 Carpenter 14 HiJ li7 M7 Johnson Ill 164 14. Ml Totals ui 47 41 !,JH Ordeman Wrestles Westergaard Here on Friday Night Ureal Interest I being aroused In the city over tha coming wrestling match Friday night when Jesa Waatrrgaard, the lean giant, and Henry lOrdeois. tha Minneapolis heavyweight, meet St the Auditorium In a finish match. No one will consider Ordeman a second rater when they atop to think that dur ing tha four years ha has been In the game h haa wrestled and defeated euch men a Je Westergaard, lr. Roller, Fred Heell, Charley Cutler, .Charley Olson, HJalmar Lundin, tha Swedish champion; Raoul do Rouan, tha French champion; Leo Pnrdello. tha Italian champion; Carl Puns, John Perrelll and numerous dinar leaser llghta. Ordeman wrestled George Hacken climldt on January IT. 1911, and It took tha Russian twa hour and forty-aevett mlnutee to pin the Minneapolis man's shoulder to tha mat for the first fall. "Hack" took tha aecoad fall In twenty minutes. Ordeman la a Norwegian by birth, Is 2 years old and weigh lie pounds He stsnds five feet, eleven and one-quarter Inchea In his stocking feet. Snow is Now Melting Fast Out in Wyoming According to the railroad map. the cold weather ha received a severe art bark and a temperature akin to spring I pretty genersl. Along th Northwestern from Long Pin, weat, the theremomrter read ing at 1 o'clock yesterday morning were from 44 to 4 degrees a hove aero. It waa ii above st Casper and tha eaow wa melting very rapidly. Th Burlington' weather map showed warmer weather all over Nebraska, with not a point touching sere. Her are some of tha temperature at 7 o'clock yester day morning. O'Neill. 3): Columbus. ; Erteaon, Sar gent and Kearney, K; Alliance, 3d; Dead wood, 4?; Sherklaa and Qidy. 6: Syra cuse, 15; Holdrege, IT; Benkleman, 35; Oimsty. at Would Discontinue Live Stock Trains Totals 4W K7 a.1. rAxu& 1. Sd. Sd. Total. Blind 1 14 17. U bengstoa ITS IM kH Lei&U -31 ITS 171 Total i SSJ M 1.C 8PAILHING8. 1st. 3d. M. Tots! R. Zk-hmlater IM 171 171 4M H. ZidualMar Ul IS lii 4l Straw 1 let let 4m - Totals '.at 41 4S7 lTtl . GLASS BLOWERS. 1st Id 3d Tstsl Johnson 17 in 14 0 Koianchlck IS )4g . 118 at Potter 144 Id 1 ioi lleai-higs on the petition of the "Omaha" road to be allowed to discon tinue Sunday live stock train from the Crofton and Btoomfletd branches ordered last apring by th tt railway commit tee on petition of shippers on the two branches and the South Omaha live stock Interests, were held by IT. Wlnnett and Henry T. Clarke of the commission at the Commercial club yesterday. The hearing Involves also the demurrer of the original petltionera and a new petition for a Kunday train oa the New- UT LetSiraitle branch. The railroad plead that tna auBineas a too amau to jusury ins service. GUARANTY ACT HELD INYALID Bank Legiilition Declared Bank and Odiont by Judge Troup. CLEMENTS TO TAKE AN APPEAL Total 471 4t! 4)7 i.ta a. a u. w. no. n. let es m T9ta! Schlndler lit 1 174 (14 i. Jaroa m Mi IS U4 Simpson Ml WS U .17 Total .L , $g7 b& OUTLAWS. 1st M Vt) itt for! PRINCIPAL M'HUGH WILL ENTERTAIN GRADUATES Mis Kate Melius h. principal of the Omaha High school, will keep -"open house" for the members of the mid-term graduating claaa of 1SU-1JU at nor borne, 721 Dodge street, next Tuesday evening. All the class officers and members of the class have been Invited to spend the evening informally and talk over aom of the reiieeuibrancea of their high school The raoana will ba decorated la maroon and white, the etaa colors, and refresh inert to will be errved during the evening- Mlra Jessie Town and Prof. J. V. Woo! nr. the class faculty advisers. will aastat with tha aaterulnment of the guests Jada lieelares that Prevision ml Amendalery Art Are Attempt leaver Oeaeral Law lata Special Regalatlon. Provisos of the amendatory bank guar anty act parsed by the INI Nebraska leg. lalature were rigorously denounced and declared unconstitutional because they dlvcrlmlnate agJkt Haukuyrsx snd aa Mansllslng honkbr Judge, A. C. Troup of tha Waahlngtun county district court In an opinion given yeaterdsy afternoon In the rase of Nebraska against the Farmers' and Merchant' bank of Oak land. Neb. I In th course of his opinion Judge Troup used th adjective "rank" and "odloua" In describing th alleged discriminatory character of tha provisos which he da olared Invalid. If Judge Troup Is sustained by the higher courts th tate will lose approxi mately IX. Or) In aaement agmlnet cap ital alork of aome fifteen banks, which It ha expected to collect under the provisos of the amendatory act i t'lraaeat Will Appeal. K. J. Clement of Lincoln, who has rep resented the Hate, said the care will b carried to the supreme court, but until h has conferred with Attorney General Grant Martin he cannot tell whether the matter will ba taken direct to the su preme court or whether further hearing In dlatrtrt court will be asked. ' The original bank guaranty law pro vided for asaraament against all stats banks, th aeaesementa to go Into a state hank guaranty fund. In order that the amount of asseasment against each bank might properly be fixed the law pro vided that beginning with June, 1PM, all tha bank ihould flies with th rHate Ranking board statement of their dally average deposit and other information upon which th aaseaatnanta could be baaed. The validity of th law wa ques tioned and taken to the court for a settlement. Not until nil waa th ques tion finally determined. The United State supreme court held the law valid. Tha 111 legislature then amended the tow so as to nuke it operative from June, lll. Instead of from June. Ik. To the amendatory act were attached two pro visos which. In substance, provided that the original law. effective from June. IM. should operate In tha cases of bank that had liquidated or nationalised thernservee since the passage of tha first bank guar anty act. Maadasana Action Started. Th banks that had liquidated or nation alised, some fifteen la number, refused to report to the state banking board and the state had to start a mandamus action to have them forced to do so. The defendant bank answered with the declaration that the provisos were la valid becauaa they violated that section of th state ronetlliMlon which prohibit dtarrtminatorr leglalatlon. The state filed a reply denying this dsim. The defend ants acting through th Farmer and Merchants hank, then demurred to th reply. Judge Troup sustained the demurrer. In ruling he said In part: What poaalbl object or purpose could the legislature nave aad In passing so rank and discriminatory proviso as tbeac. except that It waa to penalise banks which should liquidate or nationalise themselves after the passage of the first act 7 But there la ao moral wrong m Hqui dating or nationalizing: th. Ica-la kuure did aot provide a penalty for bank ae dotnc ha the future. What 1 there t justify suck a penalty Jg tSlvea Eaaasple. "Suppose there are two banks, for ex ample. One nation Usee tteeif oa June B. the other on July 3. two day later, ruder these proviso one would have to pay a penalty of otnethlng Ilk t3-.a. while the other would have la pay not a Ingle cent. I fall to find luetic or fair aess ta this. It to aa arbitrary and un warranted discrimination without any just or an reasonable grounds tor Its up port. ' "Th larsvistoa are aa attempt to con vert a general law Into a special law of th moat odious character, applicable rVy to certain banking Institutions, wtiM other are not affected at all. "To my mind It to clear that such ar bitrarily and unreasonably discrimina tory legislation upon suck baseless and artificial aupport cannot aland." Michaelsen Gives ' Work to Unemployed The city hall I an uproar. City Kleo trlclan Vlchaelaen, having secured a vacuum cleaner, has set his assistant In spectors to work cleaning house. They are raising a great smoke. The fact that apring house cleaning had started In th city hall waa soon known throughout th building. Someone phoned the Associate Charities; "Mr- Michael sen would Ilk to have aeveral women help him In hi office right away." There wa a cos mopolitan crowd In front of th charities office. They rushed to tha electrlciaa'a office, said th mayor had sent them and were ejected with difficulty. Half an hour had elapsed when Tom Flynn answered th telephone. "Mayor Dahlman aaya send some of your street cleaner down to Mlcbaelsrn's office at tnce." They were aenL Michaelsen la not red-headed, but the color of hi hair began to change. "I don't want any help." he yelled. "Get out." Then cam a corps of trusties from City Engineer Craig office and numerous others trooped In. Murder may have been com mitted on the pot. but th most dinger ou Inatrumenl In th room wa the vacuum cleaner. After driving eut the Intruder the electrician locked th door and the hum of Industry I the only sound that comes from hi office now. r-everal heads of depart menta are planning to adopt the electrician' Idea and give the unemployed something to do. GREEK GAMBLING DEN PROPRIETOR IS FINED Charged with running a disorderly house at S3 South Thirteenth street Peter Lam pas was yesterday fined IM and costa by Judge Foster. Thirteen In mates were also tried. Five were dis charged, five were flnd e and costs each and three forfeited ihelr bond for non appearance J-empei' place waa raided by Sergeants Cook and fctgwart. A pail of card and a large number, of poker chip were taken as evidence. Key to the 6ltuat!on-lee Advertising. Dean's Soup House is Still Popular The popularity of soup as an abater of of hunger, a warmer of cold Inside and a cheering concoction generally continues at ths Jacobs' Memorial hsll and at the City mission. I A steady stream of hungry humanity continue to flow Into the hall despite th rls In temperature. Over seventy men were given (upper Monday evening and about thirty-five were housed there for the night. Yesterday there was aa unending line of appllcsns for help, who were fed and clothed In warm things. Dean Tancock of Trinity cathedral spent most of Monday visiting families hi need. At tha City mission the call tor food, clothing and fuel are as many kl ever. At both mission and hall tber Is a de mand among the men for work! af any kind, but the supply of job Is almost a I minus quantity. FARM ANIMALS BRING SOME VERY LOW PRICES' The public sale at the farm of John Okerlund south of Florence demonstrated that, feed, to mighty scarce among ,tlie farmers In thla section of the state. One mare,' who two years ago as part of a team that sold for Km. only brought 111; I another, brought the magnificent price of tie; a fresh cow brought, S2e; yearling pigs brought P and M and all other stock in about the same proportion. follow Ilia flrat dose, of. Dr.. Klng g New rill, ine painica regujeier. we.i strengthen you. Guaranteed. Sot'. TAor sale by Beaton Drug CO. "".'J''--'., i Society Brand Clothes Any $25, $30, $35 Suitor Overcoat $16J85 UOLLHER'S CIjOHIXG OCT RALK Opposite Harden' v Feeling is BcUcving IN the matter of hand some lines, correct pro portions and beautiful finish, seeing is believing. But when it comes to a car that literally glides over the inequalities of the road; a car that "handles" like a well-trained thorough bred, eager yet obedient; a car that never rieeds coaxing on the hills; - ' a car that inspires restful confidence at all tames; then feeling is believing! You can "feel" the differ ence between the Olds mobile and the average car. A road demonstration will positively reveal qualities not apparent to the eye. For that reason we invite you to take a ride in the demonstrator. D. E. FORD, Spscia! Factory RepressntatWs 24 IS Farmana St, Omaha, Neb.