Omaha Daily NEWS SECTION PAGES OXE TO SIXTEEN THE WEATHER. IK Fair, VOL. XLII NO. 22. OMAHA," SATURDAY. MORNING, JULY 13, 1912 SIXTEEN PAGES. SINGLE COPY, TWO CENTS. I, Bee CHAFIN NAMED TO HEAD DM TICKET Froiubitionists in National Conven . , tion Name Candidates to Make Race. ARIZONA MAN FOR FIRST PLACE Watkins of Ohio Selected to Run for Vice President. NOMINATIONS QUICKLY MADE Nominees Are Skme Men Who Made f Race Four Years Ago. MANY - ARE WILLING TO RUN California and Texas Have Aspirants for the Coveted Position but They Are Eliminated by the. Voting-. for president....;....:..:.; Eugene W.-Chafin, Arizona FOR VICE PRESIDENT .Aaron S. Watkins, Ohio ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 12.-The I prohibitionists', national convention took 'up this afternoon the nominations of can- didates for president and vice president.' ; Eugene W. Chafin of Arizona, the nomi nee of four years ago, was first placed tin nomination. F. W. Emerson of San Francisco also was named a sa presi dential candidate. Several other candi- uttico wereio De namea ana u was evi- (dent a choice would not bemad euntll ilate In the session. Andrew Jackson Houston of Texas was I placed in nomination for president by J. 'L. Campbell of Texas. Illinois seconded fine nomination of Chafin. . The ballot resulted in the nomination of Chafin. Aaron S. Watkins of Ohio was nomi nated for vice' president. The party ticket, Chafin and Watkins, is th esame as i nth ecampalgn of 1908. Regards it, an ' Honor. Mr. Chafin said he regarded the nom ination as the greatest political honor 'bestowed on any man this year.- He thanked ,tje convention for his nomina tion and promised not to stand for a third ternjj. ; ' ' .",; After the nomination of officers the - convention was forced to rush its busi ness to a conclusion, as many of the delegates were leaving for their homes. Because of this the proposal to change ithe name of the party was not taken up for general discussion and action. A. J. Orem of Massachusetts in a brief speech promised to pledge more money i to the campaign fund should the name .; i ii . RAWtf f AQUICB CUrtBT MITCHELL, 6. D.. July 12. -(Special.) The state- examiner's office of this city ihai.ust .concluded an examination of the state BanK at south Shore, in Cod ington county; which is temporarily closed because of the suicide of the cashier, R. H. Williams. The cashier had been connected with a, farmers' elevator at South Shore for sometime in which was stored about $14,000 worth of grain , owned by the farmers in that section. Williams disposed of the grain and used the money to speculate on the board ot trade, and In time lost all. He drew on a grain firm for $500 and placed it to the credit of the farmers in his bank. When he had to make the draft good later and saw the impossibility of it and that this would bring out his embezzle ment, Williams committed suicide. The bank examiner discovered a shortage of i$500. The bank will be little affected by the embezzlement. : ESCAPED CONVICTS ARE SURROUNDED IN CABIN CRAIG, Colo., July 12. Two escaped convicts from the Wyoming penitentiary, who have been terrorizing the settlers near the Colorado-Wyoming line, were surrounded today In a cabin forty miles northeast of here. One of the men . is Frank Dempsey and his companion is a life-termer. They are well supplied with ammunition and a battle is expected niomenarlly. Yesterday the men visited the Davidson ranch and compelled Mrs. Davidson to dress the wounds of one of them and prepare them a meal. GOES FISHING, FALLS IM CREEK ANDJS DROWNED DEADWOOD, S. D., July ll.-While try ing to catch a big fish In a deep pool in Iron creek, near here, John Mickenbier, a young homesteader of Kutte county fell in and was drowned. Mlchenbler bad joined a party of strang ers and boasted that he could show, the biggest catch. He is believed to have relatives at Pana, O. The Weather Official Forecast Forecast till 7 p. m. Saturday: For Omaha, Council Bluffs and VlcloJty Fair tonight and Saturday; slightly cooler tonight. ' Hours. Dee. Temperature at Omaha 5 a. m....... 72 6 a. m 71 1 a. m 74 8 a. m 77 9 a. m SI 10 a. m -. 82 11 a. m... gg 12 m 91 1 p. m. 92 3 p. m. 95 1 p. m... ....... 97 Local Weather Record. , - 1912. 1911. 1900. Lowest last night 62 68 SO M Precipitation 06 .04 .W .02 Normal temperature for today, 77 de grees. Deficiency in precipitation since March 1, 7.02 Inches. Deficiency corresponding period, , 1911. 7.49 inches. ueiiaency corresponding penoa, jjuv, '11.70 inches. Wisconsin Demos Make Platform and , i Endorse Slate MILWAUKEE, Wis., July 12.-A plank favoring the amendment of the present income tax law of Wisconsin was incor porated in the platform adopted by the democratic state convention today. The adoption of the plank followed a hard fight on the floor of the convention by radicals who favored a plank promising a repeal of the present law and the sub stitution of an entirely new statute. The platform, as presented by the reso lutions committee, ratified that of the Baltimore convention, pledged support to the candidates named there and affirmed confidence in William J. Bryan. On' the ground that "government by appointive officers is not government by the peo pie," the platform condemned the prac tlce of "multiplying commissions and ap pointive offices in Wisconsin." Final paragraphs favored municipal home rule. pledged the party's support to,.the con tltutional amendment providing for the initiative, referendum and recall, and at firmed the party's belief in the principle of the guarantee of bank deposits. Fewer than 300 delegates were present when the afternoon session was opened. .Nominations ror , lieutenant governor began immediately. Henry A. Moehlenph of Clinton and Harry W. Bolens of Port Washington were the only . nominees. Both names will go on the primary ticket. Andrew J. Kealy of Hudson was the sole nominee for secretary of state. R. A. Watkins of Lancaster, J. J. Brenk of Milwaukee and E. P. Conway of G;anl Rapids were placed in nomination, but withdrew. , Jacob Leonard of Marathon and Nicholas Schmidt of Marathon City were nomi nated for state treasurer. M. T. Cannon of Merrillan and Fred Meyers of Wau paca also were placed before the conveu tion, but they were eliminated ona call to select the two highest candidates. Governor Eberhart Say s There is No Need of Third Party ST. PAUL, July 12.-In a letter to Hugh T. Halbert, Minnesota Roosevelt leader, who recently mailed a circular letter to all candidates for governor In this state, asking them to bo on record in support of the proposed new third party move, Governor Eberhart today positively refuses to Join the third party movement. "I can see no need of organizing a third party," wrote Governor Eberhart. MADISON, Wis., July 12.-The Roose velt party cannot get on the general elec tion ballot In Wisconsin as a. regular ticket. It can get on the ballot under the individual or nonpartisan nomination as provided by the statute, according to a recent opinion by the attorney general. Under one section.: of the law, upon peti tion of 1,000 elector?., th parts can have five words" to explain lha principles it represents.--' v.-.'--.-.-' . Statue of Mlo is A Ujiveilelit Fargo FARGO, N." D., July 12.-With hundreds of former residents of the counties of Northern Europe present as well as an official representative, of France, the statue of Rollo, the Viking chieftain, was unveiled today in the park. The statue, which is a replica of that unveiled June 5, 1911, at Rouen, France, was presented by that city to America. H. G. Maugras, secretary of the French embassy' at Washington, represented the French government at the unveiling cere mony. Mr. Maugras Is a native of Nor mandy, where the followers of Rollo settled after the siege of Paris in 911. The statue was accepted by Mayor W. D. Sweet in behalf of Fargo and by Governor John Burke in behalf of the state. Senator L. B. Hanna spoke as representative of President ' Taft. The unveiling ceremony itself was entrusted to Miss Horton Gharst, daughter of. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. R. Gharst of Fargo. TUFTS IS CONVICTED OF EMBEZZLINGWIFE'S MONEY LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 12.-The Jury in the case of Gorham Tufts, jr., accused of having gained possession of approxi mately $100,000 from his wife, formerly a Mrs. Roe of Fort Worth, Tex., by the fraudulent power of attorney, returned a verdict late last night finding Tufts guilty. He was remanded for sentence. His attorneys Indicated that an appeal might be taken, v This was Tufts' second trial, the jury in the first - hearing having disagreed. Tufts was charged with having used In California papers granting him power of attorney in Texas. His defence was that he did not know this power was void In California and that he had no intention of using it fraudulently. . ' It was claimed thjat Tufts used the money he is alleged to have secured in furthering the interests of the so-called "Church of God," a mystic Oriental sect of which he was the acknowledged head. HEAVY RAIN IN NORTH .. DAKOTA AND MINNESOTA MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.,' July 12,-The heaviest rainfall since the rainy period of June 30, early today swept the . north west, according to reports received here, Minnesota," South Dakota and portions of North Dakota receiving an especially heavy precipitation. At Dickinson, N. D., a destructive hailstorm Is said to have' damaged crops severely over a stretch ot grain growing country. At Mannako, Minn., there was a precipita tion of 2.70 Inches at 8 o'clock this morn ing, while at numerous other . paints in South Dakota and Minnesota the rainfall exceeded an inch. ' SHOOTS WIFE AND HER SISTER AND KILLS SELF HASTINGS, Minn., July 11 Crazed, it Is said, by liquor, W. Mowry today shot and probably fatally wounded his wife and her sister, Mrs. . J. E. Brown, and killed himself by r. cutting his throat Mowry was a watchman in the insane asylum. ..-- ROOSEVELT AND HIS AMBITIONS Senator La Follette of Wisconsin . Analyzes Conduct of Former President in Politics. CONTRASTS HIM WITH BRYAN Declares that the Motives of Colonel Are Purely Selfish, BACKED BY MONEY INTERESTS Would Destroy All Who Would Not " Agree with His Opinions. FAKED DELEGATES TO CONTROL Insist that the Oyster Bay Man Had Opportunity at Chicago to Serve the Progressive arty, bat Refused. WASHINGTON, July 12.-Under the caption, 'The Case of Mr. Roosevelt, Senator La Follette has written the fol lowing editorial in the - current number of La Follette's weekly: "Bryan at Baltimore foregoing alt chance of his own nomination, marshall ing all his forces, braving Tammany and the trusts, to rescue his party from their domination, carrying th convention for the adoption of th most progressiva democratic platform yet offered and the nomination of the most progressive can didate available,, was a towering figure of moral power and patriotic devotion to civie righteousness. - "Roosevelt at ' Chicago, backed by money derived from the stock-watering operations of the Steel trust and the Harvester trust, organizing what are now confessed to have been fakes as to nearly 200 delegates In order to control the re publican convention and secure his own nomination, refusing to aid in making a progressive platform, bound to have the nomination or destroy th republican party, was a most striking exampl of misdirected power and unworthy ambi tion. . "Roosevelt had as great an opportunity to serve the progressive cause at Chicago as Bryan had at Baltimore. But Roose velt was serving the man, not the cause. He wanted one thing he wanted the nomination. And yet he did not have enough votes to nominate himself upon any honest basis. He did have enough delegates in that convention ultimately to have nominated a real progressive and adopted a strong progressive platform. He could, even have nominated Hadley in much the same spirit as hundreds of thousands of them will now support JlVllson. ' Neither. Hadley nor Wilson are veterans In the progressive ranks. Neither of them has been tried, by the sevfmt tests. .Both .appear, to be tmen of h!gh ideals, whose record, tbouguh&feJv promise. v ' ' ;?". S.'. : Teddy 1st for Roosevelt. "But Roosevelt would not consider Hadley. He would have no one but him self. At the first suggestion of Hadley he ordered the ihird, party maneuvers, lest he lose his followers. "If he had the evidence to prove that Taft could not be honestly and fairly nominated, Why did he not direct his lieu tenants to present that evidence to the national committee, and then to the. con vention and the country so clearly that tbe convention would not have dared to nominate Taft, and that Taft could not in honor, have accepted the nomination. if made. The reason1 is obvious. An analysis of the testimony will, I am convinced, show ' that neither Taft nor Roosevelt had a majority of honestly or regularly elected delegates. This the managers upon both sides well understood. Each candl date was trying to seat a sufficient number of fraudulently credentlaled delegates, added to those regularly chosen to support hlra, to secure control of the convention, and 'steam-roll' the nomination. It was a proceeding with which each was acquainted, and which each had sanctioned in prior conventions. 'This explains the evtraordinary con duct of Roosevelt. H could not enter upon an analysis of the evidence as would prove Taft's regularly elected delegates In the minority, without Inevitably sub jecting his own spuriously credentlaled delegates to an examination so critical as would expose the telslty of his -own contention that he had an honestly elected majority of the delegates. He therefore deliberately, chose to claim everything, to cry aloud, to bully the national committee and the convention and having thus created a condition which would make Impossible a calm Investiga tion of cases upon merit, carry the con vention by storm. ' S ' . '. Program 1-nrely Selfish. "That this is the true psychology of the Roosevelt proceedings becomes perfectly plain. He was there to force his own nomination or tmash the convention. He was not there to preserve the integrity of the republican party, and make it an instrument tor the promotion of pro gressive principles and the restoration of government to the people.' Otherwise he would have directed his floor managers to contest every Inch of the ground for a progressive platform before the com mittee on resolutions and in' the open convention. "But Mr. 'Roosevelt was not governed by. suggestion of that spirit of high patriotism and unselfish purposes of which Bryan furnished such a magnifi cent example one week later In the demo cratlc convention at Baltimore. Instcao, he filled the public ear with sound and fury. He ruthlessly sacrificed everything to the Idea of his being the one candi date. He gagged his followers in the con vention without putting on record any facts uron which the public could baso a definite, intelligent judgment regarding the, validity of Tafts nomination. Ht submitted no suggestion as to a plat form of progressive principles. He clam ored loudly for purging the convention roil , or tainted delegates, without purg ing his own candidacy of his tainted contests and his tainted trust suiiDort. He offered no reason tor a third party excepting his own over-mastering craving for. a third term. ' The In the City, .From the Chicago News. LARIMER RESUMES SPEECH Senator Opens with Attack on Taft and Roosevelt. CHARGES GIGAlgIC CONSPIRACY Say President, Former President, W, J, Bryan and . All Chicago Newspaper Owner Are Parties to It. i . ,, ... . WASHINGTON, July 12.-6pec!flc de nial of all charges and intimation of com plicity in fraud in his election were made by Senatr Lorlmer today in the first three houra he occupied the floor ot the nata. speech,, resum! . aft '.ttifMfia-n "' ' ' ':,-t -jIM yesterday, combined agalnatStyarTnerS DflDftniX upon his enemies and charges ot j ..rI VT-T Mrik' from attack his critics in the senate. When the senate resumed at 2 o'clook it was confronted with the possibility of a further prolongation of the debate: Senator La Follette appeared in the chamber and intimated to friends that he wanted to discuss the case after Mr. Lorlmer concluded. Several other sen ators also contemplated making brief statements. y Senator Lorlmer appeared much re freshed jrhen ' he again took the floor. He Informed inquirers during the reces that he did not know how much longer he would speak. Well filled galleries and an attentive audience of senators and house members heard Lorlmer. Dramatic guestures again oharactered his delivery as he strode back and forth on the center aisle ot tbe senate chamber. ' Begins with Roosevelt. The attack on Colonel Roosevelt with whlcl' he opened his speech, was based on testimony given by George B. Cortel you yesterday before a senate committee regarding regarding the $1,900,000 cam paign fund raised for the republncon party campaign in 1h. Mr. Lorlmer re ferred to Colonel Roosevelt as the "custodlon of all y the morals of the country, private and public. "Of course." he exclaimed, "not a cent of that $1,900,000 could have been contributed by the predatory wealth of the country. ' Surely all of ft . was the free gift of the common people for whom this man is the great champion. No malefactor contributed to that fund j only the common people of whom he was the guardian." The letter from President Taft to Colonel Roosevelt expressing the hope that Lorlmer would be ousted, which became public in the pre-conventlon cam paign, was again taken up by Lorlmer, He drew attention ,to President Taft's phrase emphasising the "necessity of winning." He declared his enemies, had tried to win, "not by a free and fair fight, but . by sneaking up behind like a thief In the night." Charlies Gigantic Conspiracy. "Was ever mortal man ever more completely surrounded by conspiracy and intrigue," exclaimed Lorlmer, dra matically. "The president of the Cnited States, William . Taft; Theodore Roose velt, the ex-president; a former demo cratlc candidate for the presidency, Wil liam J. Bryan, and the trust press of the country all were in it all joined In the (Continued on Second i a) TOMORROW The Best Colored Comics with The Sunday Beat Season of Inconsistency The National Capital Friday, July 13, 1913. The Senate. . ? Convened at 10 a. m. Senator Lorlmer resumed hit speech de fending himself against the charges that he is not entitled to his seat - ' The House. Convened at noon. Considered private pension bills. ' Official papers of impeachment of Judge Robert W. Archbald were , pre pared tor presentation to the senate. Savs Prof its of Ibwati ion , CHICAGO, 'July U.-Rur,al, education as now conducted was descrlSed aa "behind tbe time;.' and threatening the prosperity of (liii farmers by speakers before the National Education association today. , The lack of funds for country, schools was said to be '. due to . the system of renting fairms." Warren H. Wilson, di rector of missions. New Tork City, de. clared that la Illinois 60 per cent And It Iowa'38 per cent of the farms were reiited and because the farmers had to rent to city people the lands were going up In price while their productiveness was dt. mlnlshlng. TJilrty-four. counties In Ohio, he asserted, are less productive now than they were during the civil war. . . ' "In a country whose soil Is new we are beginning to import from' countries where the soil has been tilled 1,000 years," said Mr. Wilson. . Under the one-year leaso system he said farmers could not be ex pected to spend money either for Im proving the land or. for school ' houses. They would not build a school house in community where they were only tern-, porarily located, be said. He quoted tig ures purporting to show that the profu of farmers in Iowa depended on child labor. Founder of Peoria Board of Trade Dead PEORIA, July 12. -Robert C. Grier. ono of Peoria's oldest and most successful business men and uncle ot John Urlev Hlbbern of Princeton, died at his home here today. Mr. Grier founded the Peoria Board of Trade, was prenident of the association several terms and until eleven years ago, when ho retired, was one ot the most prominent and active grain men In the west ,V . , TOBACCO TRUST MAN, CONTRADICTS C0RTELY0U NEW. TORK, July 12.-Junlus Parker, counsel for the, American' Tobacco com pany, commenting on the testimony of George B. Cortelyou before 'the stnato campaign contributions' committee htat "Some tobacco people came, in' with a contribution" to the 1904 republican cam paign fund, denied today that the Ameri can Tobacco company had . offered to contribute. j '., ' "The American Tobacco ompany," h said,, "did not ontrlbute or offer to con tribute to the campaign fund of Presi dent Roosevelt in 19W. If Mr. Cortelyou, said or Implied that, he Is mistaken." WILSON SENDS MESSAGE TO DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE SEAGIRT, N. J., July 12. Governor Wilson put th final touches today on th message which Robert S. Hudspeth will carry for him to the democratic na tional committee In Chicago next Mon day. The governor has mnde up his mind, be said, as to whom he will select for national chairman, but will make nd an nouncement of his choice except to the committee. " 1 Among the caller at the "littie White House" today was Edward F. Goura, na tional committeeman (wm, Missouri, who came over from Spring Lake. V On Vacation. COURT HOLDS MISS HEPPNER Young Woman Accused of Being in f Funk Conspiracy Under Bonds. IS HELD ON PERJURY CHARGE Claim is Hide " that the Women i Hod Sometbln 1o Po with . the Henalaa; AUeaatioa i , ''' gait. ' CHICAGO, July 12,-Mlss Aileen Hep pnes, the young woman named by Mr. Josephine penning, as the'ptiiaon who lu fluenceif ,hei tn the alleged ciispira.u.r .toMf0jireoce 8.5 Funk, Eenejl smau. ager of the-International Harvester Com pany, by mean of ui) .faf 4nm1 tor alleged alienation bf Mf.". Hennliig' le-ffeetions, fas held, to the grand jury moay on -a cnarge t perjury. The bond of Ml us Heppner Were fixed by. Municipal Judge Newcomer at $3,000 and there was a sharp clash between counsel, for. Mis . Heppner and counsel for Mrs. Funk over the amount of the bond. ( J it -, ' i .' ,i ' ' Attorney J. E. MeLelsh; representing Funk,, asked that the bond be Increased, saying, that he hsd been told that it was the- Intention of Mies Heppner to leave the, state and that , $6,000 had been given Mfs. Wary Meyers,' who slnd the bond for Miss Heppner. '' "' Attorney -Donahoe whom Mr. Hennln aid j had sent her sums of money at different times while the Hennlna; allentatlon suit was pending, charged that McLelgh was "making a false state ment and pleaded that the bond be do creased. , McLellh said he had no witnesses to prove his statement, but had been told It .as a fact. Judge Newcomer affirmed the bond at in,o. , saying: "In the absence of any showing on the statement made by Mr. McLelgh, and the charge' In this cae being a penitentiary offense, I will not change the bond from $5,000." In her testimony . In the damage suit. Miss Heppner said that on December 20, 1909, she had seen Funk and Mrs. Henning walk down the corridor and enter a room while she was dining with Mrs. Eohple and Mrs. Hoerner and her daugh ter in the Grand Pacific hotel. ' Mrs. Hoerner and her daughter flatly denied that they were In Chicago on that day or dining , with Miss Heppner. The .plea of counsel for Miss Heppner was that even though was not a fact that the three dined together on the day In questioning, it was not a mate rial lisuft In the suit end therfore a misstatement of that fact would not be perjury Jn the meaning of the law. Coun sel for Funk Insisted that the statement was cltrcumstantlally material and cited uthorlt!es to sustain their contention. The court ruled against the argument that the state was not material in hold ing the young woman to the grand juyr. LABORER HURT BY TRAIN . GIVEN ANOTHER HEARING ST. PAUL, Minn.. July 12. -Because he says an Omaha railway detective named Sandager kept him filled . with whisky and obtained a contract to settle a dam age suit for a comparatively small sum, Tom Rase, ; a Norwegian, will nave his case against the "Soo road" revlewej In the district court. The state supreme court to ordered today. ' . . On March 19, 1907, a laborer was struck by a trsin, one eye knocked out, his hear ing destroyed, Ws brain Injured and his body partly paralyzed. . . HIGHER RATE ON HORSES IN NEBRASKA SUSPENDED WASHINGTON, July 12-Increases varying from $1 to 116.60 a car for the transportation of horses and mules from Chicago, St. Louis and other points to destinations In South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado . and Wyo ming today were suspended by the Inter stute Commerce .commission until No vember '12. next Meantime, an inquiry into the proposed advance will be made. YANKEES LOWER TWO MORE MARKS American Athletes Continue Har ; vesting Their Crop of Laurels " at Stockholm. MEREDITH MAKES FINE RUN Mercersburg Boy Goes 400 Meters in " ' ' Torty-Eight Seconds Flat BROAD JUMP HARK IS BROKEN Vermont Man Makes New Record of -Nearly Twenty-Five Feet FINN WINS THE DISCUS THROW Americans Are Second and Third in This Event .Tryont In the 400 Meters Race Largely . Formal. BTOCiyftoLM,' July 12.-Tankee ath- ' Jetes continued .harvesting their crop, of laurels at the Olympic games today,. All the places in' the final ot the UO-meter race were won by Americans; a Uni versity -of Vermont man captured the broad jump, and nine wearers of the starry"- shield qualified for the , semi finals 'tnthe 400-meter race. Incidentally Americans broke two records one ot them twice. In the 400 meter race, James Meredith, the Mercers burg school boy, paced by the veteran Melvin Sheppard, wore down " th old Olympio mark is 48 seconds a few minutes after Charles Redpath of Syra cuse university had broken the same record by running the distance in 43.7 seconds. ' In the running broad Jump Albert L. Gutterson, the Vermont leaper, . with a jump of 7 meters 60 centimeters (24 feet 11 Inches and a fraction) beat the previous Olympio record ot 24 feat 6ft inches. , The discus event was something of a disappointment for the American team, 1 who met a powerful opponent in ths Finn, H. A. Talpale, but they made, him break a world's record with & thro of 148 feet 1V Inches to get first place, !Two of the United States team. H. L. Byrd and James II. Duncan, were second and third respectively. : Intense feeling was aroused by the dis qualification of ponald B. Young ot the Boston Athletic association in the siml flnale of the' 400-meter flat race for In terference wlth.Braun. It la understood that the-American committee is likely to make a protest and some of the English sportsmen here probably will support it. The Young- episode Is almost a duplica tion of that which occurred In London during the last Olympic gumes, wben Carpenter, the American sprinter, was disqualified In the 410-yard race. To add to the unpleasantness of the )ay for tiie Americans, the sailors of th f inland, struck ni refused to man the -launch to and from the shore. ; . ( Th moinlny,.tavted:;'3wttl a fine performahce -the Finn. A. K. Talpale - in . ' the discus . throwing, best hand final. Te beat . with his throw of 43 meters 21 centimeters (143 feet ' 1 Inches) not only ' the 1 Olympic record of 13B feet 1 Inches made by the American, Sheridan, In Athens In 1906, but also the world's record of 145 feet 9ft inches established by James Duncan at Celtic park. New York, on Jun 2 this year. R. L. Byrd's throw of 42 metres 32 centimetres (133 feet 9 inches) and Jttmes ' Duncan's ' throw of 42 metres 28 centrlmetres (138 feet S inches) also exceeded the standing Olympio record. Tryoat for 400-Meter Race. The first tryouts for the 400-metres flat race were largely formalities. In several of the heats there were only two entries and what races there were usually oc curred between the second and third man. The failure of G. R. L. Anderson. England, to gain a place in the first heat . was a great disappointment to the Eng lishmen. '''..' The first and second In each trial heat qualified for the semi-finals run later In the day. Americans who won places tn the seml-flnals were: James M. Rosen berger, Irish American Athletlo club: Melvin W. Sheppard, Irish American Athletlo club; James B. Meredith, Mer cerburg academy; Donald B. Young, Boston Amateur Athletic club; Harold B. Haft, University of Michigan; Edward F. Llndberg, Chicago Amateur Athletlo club; Clarence S. Edmundson, Seattle Athletlo association; ; L C. Davenport, University of Chicago,, and Charles D. Reidpath, Syracuse university. England will, jiave six representatives Jn the semi-finals, Sweden five and France ' and Norway two each. South Africa. Italy, Germany, Japan and Hun gary will be represented. No attempt was made to run fast in the heats where only two men competed and It was not necessary that Sheppard and E. W. Haley. England, who ran a dead heat In the second heat, merely covered the course at a Jog trot, taking SfiH seconds to cover the 400 metres. In the first heat of the seml-flnals of the 400-meters , race, Charles D. Reid- The real ODDortu nity market for every body in this city is The Bee classified pages. "Whether it's a chance to invest money, get a position, find a man or woman employe, buy or sell anything, it matters not what the -need so' long as it's a want you will always get results just the 1 ones you go after if ; you use specific little J want ads. They do their work in a confi dential way. V Tyler 1000 HI i 1 i ' Si A' ; p to M i 3 s l.