Till' U.MA1IA, MA S rl A . .) A M -Ml i IW. I .). Bringing Up Father Drawn for The Bee by George McManus " i. Y n i - - 1 ' 1 . 1 .. . . . rj r-T -r rr-. : 1 : Hr - RtMtMDrTft ( f, " ( " fetEMt, TO Mt ! HuDBiE - I VAjmt COnE IM HERE WIFIF 'SoS yoVS- J TH! 'S&KSr- tt" e?SE SEES-Tlr 1 J ET '? ''' l 1IUMAN LABOR NOT l'C0MM0DITY--0. B. B. This Defense Will Be Made" in Suit Brought by Federali Under . Sherman Law. JjUfDIS TO DO SOME QUIZZING ,? CHICAGO, Jan. 19. --One of the points Jri th defense of Organised baa ball In Hie entl-tnist ult biouitht against It by ne Federal league, . which will be heard 4 P morrow, will be bated on section of itie Clayton act recently passed by con-tji-esa, according- tp-a report current here tonight. The ' sect ion which tho attor neys for the defense t're expected to cite, jesds: ' ' "That the labor-of a human being U lint a commodity or article, of commerce," The Federal ireagua (ill of complaint sinks that Organized ban ball be (le 4 Jared a trust In "restraint .of trade and commerce." It was nld tonight the at 'to'meys would contend that as Oinaolsed .e bnll deals lit lab.jr It cannot be laid 'violate th law. V V.'sio 1 Mor".fcidiiit Flka. - ' j 'it was- said .tnigjH thai no mora affi davits would be filed befor the opening of JJo .case. The additional testimony to tie lrrried probably, will be verbal. 3-re!ent 'Tr)ier of , th. National league i Vinong Hhe- flkt-ly tf take. the wit Jies stand. -It was- generally' predicted that! Judge' 'Lendis-, ' before' whom the t aseT wilt ?e h'rd. and who Is, widely Vnoan as) a base Lk;l onthuslsst, will V ;orcicrG.-': Yield When the Hbt help Is sought at the right t'nj'tiindJgcstloh la a torment. BiliousneM causes ufTerlnjj. 'Either is likely to lead to wona and weak eninff ick.nesa. Tha right help, tha best correcUva,.for disordered conditions . f tBe, etotnach, livr, kidneys or bowola ii r.crw knows to ba tixe his Knowledge of Hie game In ques tioning witnesses. According to the affidavits filed so far tha following salaries are alleged to have besn offered ball players by the Federal league and either accepted or refused by the playera; Rresnahan (refused). 112,000. . Prrrttt (accepted). fS.OW. Hamilton (accepted and reconsidered). I7.0". Kalkenberg (accepted). I7.WX). Iverens (refused i, $6,000. Vloa (refused), $,000. Hlandlng (accepted and reconsidered), IS.. cooper rreruseoi, ,. Agnew (refused), T.(m;. Hbotten (refused), Jft.ft. WalKer (refused). H.IW. Mcijulllen (refused), H.J0O. , lUiimgardner (refused), M.OOO. Kahlcr (aacepled and reconsidered). 1VJ). . What O. B. B. rata fe. A'ffldavita also purriort to show that Lee Magee, now manager of th Brook lyn Federals, drew W.OOO as member of the W. Louis Natlonais and that Ed Konetchy, now with tha Pittsburgh Fed erals, drew I6.M0 with tha Pittsburgh. Nationals. i '. Among today's arrivals who, were on the side of Organised Ball were Captain T. V. Huston, new part owner of tha New Tork Americans; John T. Bruce, secretary 1 of the National commission, and .Umpire QHlo ChlU of. tha American league. Lea MsKee. manager of th Brooklyn club; Fielder Jones,' manager of tha Pt. Louis club; Philip D. C. Ball, tha Bl. Iouia owner, and R. E. Dates, counsel, were among those who joined the Federal 'group. Great Britain Will Not Allow Safe Conduct to the Cotton Ship Dabia WASHINGTON, Jan. J9.-The British government will not consent to allow the steamer Dacla, recently transferred from Oarman to American registry, to pro ceed to Ilotterdam under safe conduct with Its cargo of cotton, the State de partment was notified today from Lon don. The British reply for suggestions for safe conduct recently made by tbe State dopartmont came through the American embassy at London. While tho text of the message . waa withheld. It Is known the British objection was based broadly on a reluctance to create a precedent, which, It Is felt, would be followed by many similar purchases of German ships in America and efforts' to operate them on the former German trade routes, i The British note does not undertake to assert tha right of Oreet Britain to Interfere with ships purohased and trans ferred to the American flag In a legiti mate way. The objection to the transfer of tha Dec Fa, acordlng to the British view, Is that It waa not genuine, it being Inti mated the British government believes the American purchaser really waa act ing tor German principals. -. . Tha Dacla's cotton cargo, admittedly, la not, subject to. selsure and the. British note leaves it to be Inferred that If the owners of the cotton do not make other arrangement for its shipment to Ger many and the Dacla puts to aea, the cotton either will be unloaded In an Kng- llnh port and placed at the disposal of the owners to forward to Germany by another and neutral ship, or appropriated by the British government upon payment to the owners of its Invoice value. The State department already has In formed Mr. Breltung of Marquette. Mich., the owner of the ehlp, of the refusal of the British . government to promise not to seise the Dacla on this particular trip. As he has stated to tho department, that the freight, charges upon tho cotton with which the Pacta Is loaded would about equal the purchase price of the vessel, it Is assumed that he will take the chance of making the voyage, and If the ship Is seised, will go before a British prUe court. Ptate department official are of th opinion that such a court would liberate the Dacla If the British government Is content, as It says It Is. to take Its stand upon the genuineness of the transfer. In view of the evidence rm that point which already has been avtbmltted to the- de- partmemj.-;;, , . v :v ..' Iowa Bigand Little Colleges Unable to Agree on Track Rules IOWA f)lTT. Ia.,Jan. IS, -(Special. A bomb wsa" thrown Into Iowa, state! athletic, circle thl week when' repre sentatives at a secret conference held at Ames reported that the three Iowa cenference schools Ames, Iowa univer sity and Drake had failed to agree with the minor college on eligibility rules for stale track and field meets. The minor colleges want the big school to exclude their seniors. The larger schools want th small fry to exclude their fresh men. ' .It la a certainty that there will b no Iowa state collegiate meet this spring, and tha prospect are that neither Iowa, A me nor Drake will be able to schedule foot ball game next fall with. any of the minor schools. This leaves each of th three big sohools with at least two open dates on tliclr foool ball schedules. IK V 1 T) Tl..i. TT1 iuid tW -rifht tJmvto uks thi. fa- xvourKU r uia ,v aiue mous family remedy is at tha first sign of coming trouble. Ceacham'a Pills hav so immediate an effect for cood. by cleansing tha system snd purifying tha blood, that jrovr ill know after a few doses they Aro'tliV.: ," . . .. . , ..; .Resort tr Sal? AaV MxlUlne la the WerM. Said aveiTwfcere. la sm, 10s., SSa. of Park at $35,000 W. A. Hourka, ewner of th Omaha Dm Ball club, haa been asked by Beo retary Farreil of the National asaoclattoji to prepare a alaUmant to be filed as an affidavit la tha suit brought by th Fed eral league against Organised Base Ball. Kourke will prepare a statement showing the Inrestment ha has made in Omaha and ether details rertalnlng to the dun, Rourke says the investment and Improve ments in Rourke park will be placed at M.wo. . . v. rft-.fer Firt Ka'.f- t:uwU.Ki!e, C8 for , alter tor lha distance, yoa ,1 rida. Itcfciftalor sU- r ' ' 1 1 er rtiBrutfif. 1 , . i WaHls t . V.. 1 ofvSl.W . -thavs Oat Servtoe- tola Tsxl Senlce Co J St04 Famatn W. Ss. OMAHA T C'aark Tler. ; I I'Rtsrvrrov v i is i ..i.h. n r.u.h, Uli-' ior' of lileti's at thi Cut verilty of t'levelsud. O.. waa choeen head coach o( the 1'rttweton foot bi tara at a niMtlns of tho board of attiH'tic con trol here tojrty. He was graduated from Princeton In ISM. but did not piny fool Kali while In cullers, devoting his atten tion to track athletics, lie held th Princeton record for lite lu-yar4 dash, lloppe Beats lama. DRTflOlT. Ml h., Jan. n.-Willle Hopp detaated Melbourne Inman, iwt to 117, la th tiriit blotk 01 their fcoO-point content Ik J balk line billiard, played here this afternoon. Averages and high runs: lloppe, CO 10-13; lia, Ionian. -11; 0. MeKea laa tlb Tlaere. DKTnuIT. Mich.. Jan. !. Roy McKee. catclier of tbe ..merk-an league tut II team, today sinned a 1$1& contract with the local orgaulsatlun. It had been r ported he was seriously considering ao otler mad by th federal league. PROTECTION I Try ThUIf You . , Have Dandruff fiOL'TH t HI All A SAYINGS HANK Is tha only Savings Bank in Uouglas County wbera tha dciiowlts are protected by tha DKPOSITOK S (Jl'AKANTEE KL'Nl). i'.'e Interebt paid ta depuitits. , W iry ndf fi-t tha highest In terest aud Jr'rclt.l -security. I SOUTH. OMAHA1 SAVKiGS BANK 2 1th an J Til Streets H. . j.tf-jiW It K, 'ref1nt lit l;l K, V. Pies. 1 l, f.t n, lhLlrr. M S a There la on sure way that never falls 'to remove dandruff completely and that ' la to dlsaolv It. Thl der troys It entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arveo; apply It at , night when retiring; ua nougl to niola ten the clp and rub It in gently lib th finger tips. 11 y morning ntoit. If not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and tlira or four more applications will tompletely dis solve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. ao matter bow much daodruff Tu may nave, You will (Ind, too, that all Itching and dlEtlng of the scalp will stop instsntly and your -hair wt'.l be f'.ulfy, lust roue, (I'jiiy, silky and 't and look and fe a hundred tim-a better. You tan set liquid srvoa at any drug tore. It is liwkpeaMva. and U 'r ounca Is ail oa need. This slini'l remedy has btver been knuKn to faii AdrcrtlscmenL CUTR1GHT1S NOT ACCEPTABLE Nottingham, England, Officials Re fuse to Receive Lincoln Man as American Vice Consul. WRITES, PRO-GERMAN LETTERS NOTTINGHAM. England. Jan.4,.(VU Ijoadon) On account of letter written by him and published In a newspaper at' Lincoln, Neb., John L. Outfight, newly accredited American vice consul at Not tingham, did not take up the duties for which he cam to this city,, but returned to London.. Mr. Cutrlght departed from Nottingham after ha had been. .Vurnicd by the mayor and other city .officials that he would nor be acceptable a vice-consul because hi newspaper lettera-were re garded a expressive of pro-Gernuto sentiment ' i - L ' . ". : . Before coming ta Nottingham Mr Cut right served as American vice consul at Coburg, Germany. While there he wrote the tetters to which tha Nottingham of ficials took exception. Mr. Outright 1 a son of John Cutright, editor of tbe Lincoln Rar and formerly private secretary of William J, Bryan. The son, a graduate of th University of Nebraska, haa been In the consulsr ser vice only a few month.. ' . ' rntrtgkt ta Londem. LONDON. Jan. lS.-Th Brl.tlsti foreign office haa tut Information concerning oh- jeclloaa on tha part of' NotthTfunn of ficial to the assumption by Mr. Cutright or his duties-ax U American consulate. Tb 'American embassy would make n taHarcfint eoaoarnlng tha case turther than to say that If Outright was not ac ceptable to tha Nottingham auhoritlea he probably would be sent elaewhere. I Mr. Cutright Is still In London and ex pects to return shortly to America. Printed ta Omaha Paper. LINCOLN. Neb., Jan, 19. No letters written by John L. Cutright. American vice consul, recently accredited to Not tingham, England, from Cobnrg. Ger many, were published in a Lincoln news paper. It Is believed here that the letter written by Mr. Cutright and objected to by the Nottingham official appeared In an Omaha newspaper, December 11. 1914. The following extract from the letter in thought to be one of the paragraph to which tb British official take excep tion: "I am sorry to see the anti-German at titude of the American papere. To me there never waa a better example of the way- the American people love to be duped than the way they are allowing the French and British report to fill their publication to the detriment of the pro fessed American policy of giving each, side' to a controversy fair play and of sympathising with the party that' Is -Vwn. Just why American paper are so dead against Germany ia hard to under- j stind." " ' Yeans Man n War -Hone, . wamiiutu, Jan. in. J. L- cut- i' right, a ho. aas vice consul at Nottlng hum. sailed from klngtaiid January IS for th; United btatcs, having relliuUhed his office of his own volition and upon th Insistence of his faintly, according to blate department officials. Th depart ment ha had n word either from Cut- right or the American embassy to sup port th report that ho proved unsatis factory to the people of Nottingham. He is th son of an old friend of secretary Pryand and hi purpose In going abroad was educational. After a short stay In Coberg, Germany, be lecam dluatla fld and waa trauslatrtd to EiujUnd. ----- HYMENEAL yv-- John M. Brswslss TORK, Neb.. Jan.- llMBpeclafc)-Jbnn M. Browning died at the borne of his daughter, Mrs, D. N. CampbeU, last Sat urday evening, Mr, Browning waa 74 year old.' He was an early settler In Custer county and had been a resident of thla,eity. only six .years. The body was taken to Mason City, Custer county, for Interment. M '- .. - - FOURTEEN SHOT IN STRIKE RIOT Laborers and Deputy Sheriffs Fight Revolver Battle at . Chemical Plant in New Jersey. TRAIN IS STOPPED BY STRIKERS ROOSEVELT. N. J., Jan. l-Fourteen men were shot, four of them being mor tally wounded. In a battle between 250 striking laborers and fifty deputy sheriffs at the plant of the American Agricultural Chemical company here today. The fight started when the strikers stopped a .Central It&ilroad of New Jer sey train from Klizabethport to see If the train brought strikebreakers to the plant. There wero : no strikebreakers aboard, but a few office employes who were pas sengers, ' started an outer)', apparently believing that the strikers Intended harm to them. General Fusillade ISnsues. In answer to the call fifty armed dep uty sheriffs ran to the scene from the .company's plant, where they had been stationed for the lust two weeks. A gen eral, encounter betwen the deputies And the strikers followed. . -. - : At first only stone were paed. Then some one fired a shot. This wss the sig nal for av fusillade;, wblcbucame apparently from., both side. None , of the deputlea was ljijured, .Tint many of the strikers fell; Most of the wounded were- shot through -the legs, as the deputies fired low. The strikers dispersed, some carry ing the wounded men away. The four most seriously wounded were from the train to the plant by the dep uties without further incident. Ttea Piled ou Track. District Superintendent Champion of the company, who is In charge of the plant here, said tbe 'strikers had held up the train by piling ties across the tracks. The strike at the plant has been on for two weeks. According to the company's statement, approximately half of ' their W employes are affected. The strikers ore unskilled laborers. It is said, who quit work when their demand tpr an increase of , 40 cents a day was refused. The men receive approximately 12 a day each. No other 'class of workers', It was said, had been affected by the strike. The plant Is still In operation. Receiver Asked for M. Rumely Company INDIANAPOLIS. Jnd.. Jan 19. -Petition for a received for the M. Kumely company, a 30.000,0 agricultural ma chinery manufacturing concern, was filed In the United States 'district court here today. Rumors that an effort would be made to place the corporation In the hands of receivers, as a means to re organise have been current for" some time. " , ; ' Among the attorneys, it was stated that Charles S. Funk,' prestdent-of tha Rume ley company wontd -t named receiver. ' The receivership, 1 intended. It Is. stated, to lift the -'company . out of it financial difficulties, which began about two years ago, when It was discovered! there had ' bean a great over-production of fartmlng . machinery. Th company was re-organised then end. a number of plants closed down, pending the liquida tion of the over production. taken to a hospital at Ellmabeth. not Tar Pressure, it Is understood, haav been away. It waa said that theso men prob- j sorted to . tne Actuation by the , tact . that abfy will die. 'the company has some (3,000,000. An loans r "The office" emnloves' wera .escorted I at banks secured bv fanners' notes. . ' Ida Tarbell Says Labor Conditions Constantly Improve SEW YORK, Jan. 1.-Miss Ida M. Tarbell, author and investigator, testi fied at the continuation today of the In vestigation by tbe federal industrial re lations commission Into the great phllan- tliropia foundations that her observa tions over a period of twenty-five years led.. her to believe that wffrkhlg -conditions generally were constantly- improv ing and that large corporations were now moro acutely Interesting themselves lo the welfare of thelr-employe than ever before. She advocated the sclentlflo-man-agement of shop and the establishment of an eight-hour day as panacea -.or labor troubles and a means of bettering the living conditions of workers. ' The -witness asserted' that the cost ot living had increased at a rate greater than wages.. She did not believe suffrage was an Important factor In dealing with social unrest among workers. The United State Steel corporation, I she declared had done more In recent year to providi safety and better living .Conditions ' for its employes than almost any other large concern. . ' ' John MUcbell. former president of ' the United Mine .Workers ,. and . how . a New Tork state labor commissioner, was t testify, late this afternoon. ' -. 1 THREE PLEAD GUILTY TO EVADING 0LE0 TAX ST. LOUIS, Jan. . Three ' nion pleaded guilty In the federal court here today to violation of the federal law le qulring the pas'ment of a tax on colored oleomargarine. These three were the firs: of forty defendants to be placed on trial 3 a Real Tobacco any man ever the real nb-bite lifted no- Here's the greatest package of smoke satisfaction that cover from. ; It's fuil of Prince -Albert, blister brand of smokin's for pipe and ciga- bulge on every tobacco: that's ever been the bite s taken out by a patented pro- on the tongue' as" a .sohg " of gladness. rette. P. A. has got sold or ever will be, because 'cess-' that leaves P, A. as A LUST - - tt Head The Bee "Business Chance" and get Into your own business. Wautau Itaadred Year Old. OALK.-BI R1. III.. Jan. t -Eight il. dri. toriy-five grandchildren, eislity--lnt sreal-gisndchlldren, nine lei iand -lill.lrea and slk'een (p-t-t-sriil .hUdrta brlped Sirs. Mary Ko iiitrato her K" birthday at t. Au gusiine toiUy. r-he J born at Nor wich N. January lilk BUe uu to iLavi touiity ta lit. 1 the national joy smoke is the real prize winner in the ten-cent tidy red tin and the five-cent toppy. red bag, .but when - a fellow has a pound costal-glass humidor of P. A. it's just the same as having a sockful of boodle in reserve for a rainy day. Time to replace that empty jar with a full one of P. A. That humidor of tobacco you got for Xmas must be running mighty low just about now. If you haven' t got a good supply of P. A. in the crystal glass jar with the sponge in the cover that keeps It fresh and fragrant for pipe and ciga rette-fit all the time, go to it and invest today. )- I'.;' - " ' :: , i'. ' y .') '.: : '. : ' ... -''; "...f- '-,; ;i y- :. -y: -YYB () .... ? 'HrY ,jJxf J ' ''- "'' (I -Y:Y .r'TT "" - j I : J I r " i i-r-ii t?.v I ; in ' Sold at stores where they sell tobacco. R. J.' Reynolds Tobacco Co. Win$ton-Sa!em, N. (X -A ! V'.. v rys. - t' T " '""""' "HI t,..-yr-; I .A Tin.1