Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1915)
12 BRINGING UP FATHER J r T lit - r t i 1 I i T7 i MA.OAJ-1 - KltjS A. 0rsMD LADY TO AlXOW Mfc THE to etcoT AM TOCvvy ! v f N.'a . , i i i i i i i j j i n i . i i 'ra i r i Chicago Team Takes Lead; Omaha in Second Position Chalmers Team of Windy Gity and the .letter's Old Age Pass Leading Jack Daniels in Five-Man Event OMAHANS PLACED IN SINGLES TTTB.UAM LEADEKs. . OUT. Boor. . . Out mii, chloago Jetttf Old Age, Omaha Jaok Denials, at. Louis , Bowlers' Journal, Chloago Valao Cnfa. X Mara A In a X'raas. at. Lotus WashlBftons, 88. Iools r -lists! fa, Bt, X.onls nt. locl BnedaJs, Bit. Xouls . . . . 2apint Powder Co.. St. Xquis.., flats, Minneapolis AXX. XTEWTB. Braes Jarrstt. at. IVoals ....... Aati Jtdllcka, Bralnard. sTsb. . Law Wsldscker. at, IrOale H. aj. tacmaos. Bt. Joseph Xar an t Braframaa, aims Cltr. . 8.780 . a.7: . 1.704 . 8.66S . a.a . a.i . 8.838 ..i.rn . .1 731 ..l.T8 , .1.117 . . 1,731 Tha Chalmcra' quintet of Chlcano and th Jettr'a Old Aga team of Omaha both paaaed tha Jack Danlcla of Bt. Loula, leadera in tha flva-man division, laat night. Tha Olialmnra rcgUlared tha high mark, t,T91, and ara now heading tha field In tha race for first money. The Jettera were cloaa behind with 1.787 and have firm crip on tha coin hung up for aecond ponltlon. s Tha Bowlers Journal team of Chirac" also hurled Into tha money, sneaking Into fourth placo with a count of 2,714. The Jack Pantrls, who were first, ara now third and tha Palaca Cafes of La Mars. Ia.. dropped from aecond to fifth place. That tha Chalmers team would teat the Jack Daniels' mark waa predicted before they went on the drives. And they made good. With tha great Jimmy lilouln tu pilot them tha Windy village cracks smashed the lumber In Mg city style. Collier was the high Chalmers' man with a total of 610, and lilouln was next with ttiS. A big gallery waa out to aea Jimmy and his pais push the slxtren-pounderat Individual Event 1st. 2d. Id. Tol. 237 248 fi& 2K I 1 (L I'.S 244 2.2 218 601 17(i im t4 174 1 Ml 188 l 141 201 107 l-si in 124 E21 11 17 41 1 2 0 6..1 2I 24 (73 liW 1W0 bM 177 7 m M. Wiesner. Chicago.... II. Marino, Chicago J. Ploiiln. Chicago K. Rolfe. Chicago II. Hlern. Chicago I". Itangart. Chicago.... Otto Hempke, Lincoln.. H. Cooiey, Omaha IU Warrlner. pueblo.... 'II. Kclpla, Pueblo F. PI i on. Pueblo V. Pierce. Pueblo....!. I. Qjerde, Pueblo J. Baumgart. Chicago.. ...am ...KM ...Mi ...171 ...MJ ...m ...1W ...IM ...Ml ...181 Two-Man Scores Yesterday 1st. Id. M. Total 0. Zimmerman .... 170 187 19 5tt fV. Pierce IM a M8 C. Zurp Iu8 1Mb lt bl 0. Dixon 17 14 193 ft Total 1.046 Total 1.1JU j. Htears 157 193 181 511 M. Welsner I 17 144 607 v. Thoina 104 175 180 b? V. Hrennen 161 241 180 62 Total 1.U32 . ?: a ss O. Hempke 148 188 lun 2 Tnl 1 Total 1.0I3 Total ' II Marino 190 21S 194 697 f. Balser ill 148 13t 4 O.' Hangart It 10- 171 il A. Oot hen wager .. m 171 181 rD Total l.W8 Total MI R. Kolfe 16 1K3 156 h C. Bland 196 147 146 4T C. Cvlher 170 l9j 190 K6 U. Htuns 14a 183 216 643 Total 1.04 Total 1.0J0 Lincoln High Would Meet North Platte ( From a Staff Correspondent ) LINCOLN. Neb., Nov. 2.-Spclal Tel earara.) Manager Marshall of the Lin cola High school foot ball eleven this afternoon started negotiations with the authorities of the North Platte high for a puts season game to determine the championship of tha state. Neither Lin coln nor North PlaUa has beei defeated this season and the relative scores Indi cate the teams are about on par. Mar shall proposes the game be played at the university field either rFlday or Satur day of nxt week. MASON CITY FOOT BALL TEAM MAKES FINE RECORD MASON C1TT. Neb., Nov. .-8pe-cisl.l The series of foot bail games of the hlii schools of CVster county for the year 11 wars closed hers yester day afternoon by a gams between Mason City and Ansley, and which Mason City won by a score of 11 to a Mason City': team won blfch honors la the series with the s.'hovl teams of other towns In tne county and also Including Arcadia, hav ing tuaUe tha record of losing but one gams ts Broken Bow, playing a 4, to gams with Ansley and winning six games. Much Interest centered around this fnal game. There was a large at ttndaiKO flora neighboring towns. Ans ley. confident of winning, sent down a VOU HAVE MY COH S-triT-OARCM- JT you mow eLTo: down the runways as If they were six teen ounces. The Jelttirs caught all the bad breaks In the luck last night, but they did the business nevertheless The Old Age lads had twenty-one splits In the three games whli-h shows how badly the breaks went against them. It was those fatal splits alone which kept the Omahans from marking up a better record than the Chalmers. Myrom Btuns was the high Jetter man with a 630. Htuns rolled one game of :i. his aecond one. George Zimmerman drove home a 67S total with a 144 game to re tard progress and Clyde Wand hit out with a Ml total. Fred Balser had tha worst luck of the bunch and the best ha could do waa 44. " Lewis Team Holla Well. The lcwls Buffet team of Omaha also did some pretty neat work by rolling I.SIi. A 11 game by J. Roaenberg turned the trick. A mlscue by the man on tha score sheet last night almost caused a riot among tha gallery. The gent on tha tabbing sheet read the Jetter total for tha third W instead of WO. The additional thirty pins he Inadvertantly added put the Old Age squad ahead of the Chalmers and a near riot occurred when the official sheet howed the lower mark. Tha Chalmers' and Jetters' marks are expected to stand a while and probably will not be beaten at the most by more ths,n two or three teams unless some ex ceptional rolling should occur. The men who rolled In the team evtr.ts last night take the alleys In the doubles and singles today and they are expected to take aome wallups at the existing reo- ordu Scores Yesterday r. Collier. Chicago 17 17B 11 KW V. Thorn. Chicago 1M 21S 1h bMJ f Boro. Omaha 177 KM) 147 4i4 W. Blerman. Chlcsgo....l8 V 1M 11. fliii.lo . ,1'iN 178 HO 'i ,.17 IM 1W 6: ..I'M l! ins ..IM l.J 1N 471 It. Kelkenberg . A. Iiuffum U. ()llson K. Menklna Oati-s K. Moekctt .... C. y.nrp O. y.lmmerman M. Htuns I. llalivr U. Lowe ..17 1H0 1) 4S .110 164 178 m ..147 176 1HI 513 .AM 156 177 499 ..178 IM IM 6nl . .1W i'4 2'.'3 bl ,.17 IM 171 m ..177 lil 131 4.i Us r ire delegation. A reception and sup per was given In the opera hall tonight In tha foot ball team's honor. Omaha Squad Wins from Corning Crew The Omaha National bank basket ball team of the Omaha Commercial league returned from Cornlqg, la., with tha acaipe or tne company tw team or that place hunting from their belts. The gam was a Thanksgiving attraction at Corn ing. The Omaha lads won 13 to 11, due to some swell team work which be wildered the Company. K squad. REO CLOUD HIGH TAKES FRANKLIN ACADEMY TO FALL REO CIjOCD. Neb.. Nov. .- Special Tclegram.V-Red Cloud1 defeated the strong Franklin academy here, il to 0. being the aecond defeat ever credited to Red Cloud over Franklin In ten years. Star playing waa dons by Fulback Pol nlcky and Quarterback Overleaao of Red Cloud, who scored eight of ten touch downs. KlJd was credited for two. kicked four goals and Polnlcky two. Franklin was outclassed at all points of the game, their only ohancs of scoring being a drop-kick, which failed. Red Cloud has scored 1T7 points In the last two games, defeating Oxford last week, (1 to 0. Referee:' dclattley of Red Cloud. I'm pi re; Sbtrer of Lincoln. TFT -vniTLVr r . ri , Y V r ; r llll'j l.ljl.i IMI.Vll.V, h,i I ( i.-.Vl, . Bill I I l i 11 HI I II I I I II 1ST II' 'ryr1ght. T9IX, lnfrntVnl News fcervtc l'.igtMrl H. I'stent Office. SSTO MXSt io ArCft,.0U 1 k BUT YOOU, TAKE THE H.TTHEB? j HE BUSTED VOOWL W WOULT HOW CAN . THANK . ' R . f PUT HI ? AM ASOUriD INWKXICM- CHICAGO BOWLERS PLACE J SINGLES Milo Wiesner Goes Into Third Place, Marino Into Fourth and Blouin and Eolfe Tie for Tenth. ALSO PLACE IN ALL-EVENTS HTDITIDIJAI. ZTEIT. Krrmta Brnggeman, Bloax Oty.. Al Wartebow, Omaha Mllo Wiesner, Chicago H. X. MoCoy, Omaha Raak Marino, Cbloas-) Jnl Bchmltt, Bt. Xtonls rred aeblapvelsl, at. Itonls M. Js. Mieiuans, mt. Josepa Oeorre Toman, Omaha . . JlmiBT lonn. Chicago Bob Bolf a. CMeafo TWO-MAM alVKBT. 54 648 648 633 614 633 eoa f" C39 Brace Oarrett-Charley Hoaser, Bt. X.onla 1,198 W. K. BTadUr-Oust Tolmaa, It, Joaanli .1,13 .'l,158 Kenneth Bolple-Olydf Ojobran, Cunaha J. 3. Wahrla.J. 1. Bchaafar. J.OOJS 1,111 1 O. A. Taadewater-Tred VUey, at. X.onls 1.183 I Tsd Beala-rraak Conrad. Omaha . 1.14S i Tred Btsmagle-Jake mnegar, gt, Iioma 1,149 frank Janosh-F. TrUs. Omaba. .. -1,144 Clint Cola-Walter Bhea, Mlnnsap. oils AI.I. rVEKTS, Braoa Jarrett, at. Louis Bill Brennan, Chicago Xank Mart so, Chios go Anton JedUoka, Bralnard, Iffeb. . Xw Wsldeoker at. Ionia K. B. Biemaa. Bt. Jesses. Herman BrnrgemaB, Bionx City Chuck Collier, Chicago 1 143 . .1,778 . .1.748 ..1.741 . .1.74 . .1.7M . .l.W . .1.733 , .1,733 Four Chicago bowlers rolled them selves Into the elite class In the Indi vidual event of the Midwest tournament yesterday. Mllo Wiesner and JIank Marino of the Chicago Howlers' Journal No. I and Jimmy Blouin and Bob Rolfe of the Chalmers are the quartet of Windy City pin tumblers who are now numbered among the ten leaders. Mllo Wiesner wss the star of the bunch. When Mllo got through smashing up the Midwest's ten plna It was dis covered his mark was 615, which places him In third position. Just three pins be hind Al Warlchow of Omaha. Hank Marino's 625 total waa Just enough to get him fifth place, a single pin ahead of Jul Bchmltt, the 8t. Louis crack. Blouin and Rolfe ran It neck and neck and both chalked up totala of 0l. This score makes Jimmy and Bob dead locked for tenth money. II. Steers of Chicago and Ralph Bclple of Omaha also rolled good games which will get them some of the prise dough. Steers chalked up a 604 total and Sclple a 602 mark. Breasss'i Total High. Three of the Chicago cracka also grabbed off positions tn the all events. Bill Brennan went Into second place in this division with a grand total of 1.745. Marino took third place with 1.741 and Chuck Collier, the Illustrious cap tain of tha Chalmers quintet, tied with Herman Bruggeman of Sioux City for seventh place with 1,733. No change waa made yesterday In the two-man event. Wallle Pierce and F. Dixon of Pueblo turned In the highest score, 1.133, . In this division, but that was not sufficient to land them among the fortunate ten. The other double scores were alt below 1.100 Red Cloud Suggests Beaver City Game RED CLOl'D. N"b.. Nov. (Special Telegram.) Red Cloud challenges the claim of Beaver City to the undisputed championship of southwestern Nebraska. Red Cloud claims championship of the Republican valley and also of south western Nebraska. eBaver City deefated Franklin academy, 39 to 0, and Oxford, It to T. Red Cloud scored 66 to against Franklin academy and6 lto 0 aruJnst Ox ford. Red Cloud will defend Its claim In a poet aesson game wlih Beaver City If necessary. Eukland Throws Frome at Friend FRIEND. Neb.. Nov. 26.-(Speclsl.-Clarence Eukland won two straight falls fiom Mike Frome of Iowa H their wres- i t'.ing n.atch at the Armory Wednes-lsy ' right. Chris Jordan was billed to wrestle I Fiome. but on account of a atrsined neck Fuklatid waa substituted. The bout went fcrty-two minutes and was good all the way. Inrwe Khe Contest Taknr. TABOR, la., Nov. 2i Hpeclal. Sev eral hundred people attended the horse shoe throwing contest held In the Tabor public park Tuesday, which was open to the world, except to Thurman. which waa excluded owing to the recent small pox cases In that locality. Rudolph and kl elvers were well represented. Clarence Bounds of Randolph was the winner of the first prise. ARMY AN DNAYY BOUT TODAY Soldier and Sailor Foot Ball Teams Will Break Tie at New York This Afternoon. SQUADS ARE EVENLY MATCHED NEW YORK Nov. M.The Army and Navy foot ball teams meet In this city tomorrow In the twentieth contest be tween elevens representing he navy and military arademlea since the series be gan In 1890. The service game will, as In past years, mark the close of the eastern gridiron season and Carries ad ditional Interest this year owing to the fact a decisive result will break the tie existing between the soldier and sailor elevens. As the score stands tonight, each academy has wone nine game, with one ending In a tie score. While neither combination has shown anything remarkable In the way of foot bull aMIIty this fall, the usual hard fought gridiron struggle Is expected, since the rivalry Is extremely keen and the Players as Individuals and the teams as units throw every particle of physical I" "! pl"Kln training Into the an- nual clanh. No foot ball classic In any portion of the country Is ever played with greater earnestness or Is productive of more thrills than this meeting of the srmy and navy. For this reason It at tracts each season one of the most spec-' tncutar gatherings of foot ball specta tors. Dlanltarlea Will Attend. The game tomorrow will be no excep- non ror tne social, service and official circles of the national will be represented at the Polo grounds from the chief cxecti tive or tne United States down through l the diplomatic, naval and military corps to the midshipman and lieutenant Just graduated from Annapolis or West Point. President Wilson will attend In addition to a host of admirals, generals, senators, congressmen, governmental department heads, cabinet officials and represents tlves of foreign governments. Based upon the advance sale of tickets and the allotments made to the compet ing academies. It Is estimated that fully 46.000 spectators will fill every available seat In the permanent and temporary standa of the Giants' base ball bark, which has been turned Into a foot baU stadium for the occasion. Months ago the Initial applications for seats tegan to arrive at the offices of the New York Nstlonal League Base Ball club and long before the world's series was finished the few thousand seats for sale by the club had been over subscribed. Today the rare set of seats In the hands or a speculator commands starring figures and sales are made at many times the face vslue of the coupons. Teams Krenlr Matched. The records of the entire series to date shows that during a period of more than twenty-five years, the two academies have been evenly matched. Each Insti tution has won and lost nine games, while the contest of 1906, played at Prince ton, resulted in a 6 to 6 tie. All the other matches have been played at Philadelphia or New York. In total points scored the army leads with 201 to the navy's 139. The soldiers also hold the honors of the largest score. West Point having defeated the Bailors 40 to 6 In 1908. To offset this the middles have whitewashed the army on six occasions, while the cadets have accomplished thla feat against the navy but twice. The complete record of the aeries since U90, tha present season scores, the prob able lineup and the physical ststlstlcs of the two squads follow: Series Reewwd. 1(MVvv 24 Army 1K91 Armv.... 1902 Navy IK93 Navy.... 1K99 Army.... 19i0 Navy .... tool Army.... 19n S Army .... 1903 Army.... 19i 4 Army 190i Army.... I9M Navy.... ....Si ....12 .... ...17 ....11 ....11 ....22 ....40 ....11 6 ....10 Navy 1 Armv Army 4 Navy J Army " Navy 6 Navy 8 Navy Navy Navy Army 1WI7 Navy. 4 Army 1908 Army 4 Navy 1910 Navy 8 Army 0 1911 Navy. 1912 Navy. 1913 Army. 1914 Army. 3 Army 0 4 Army 22 Navy I 3) Navy Ittld BMMtrdi, ARMY. Holy Cross Gettysburg Colgate Georgetown Villa Nova. Notre Dame Maine Oct. Oot. Oct. Oct. Oct. 114 22 1rl 0 D4 10 3013 ...14 ...13 ... e ...18 ... 7 ... Nov. 0 Nov. 1124 Nov. 20-17 hpilngfleld 7 Armv IJmss. NAVr. Georgetown Pittsburgh 47 Pennsylvania Virginia Poly Oot. ct. Oct. 1- 0 -12 1- 7 2330 Oct Oot. l'fc-12 North Carolina... Nov. 413 Hnrknell Nov. 11 at Colby Nov. 7 I'rstnus iy Llnena. Name and Position. Weight. Iledfteld. left end 13 lbs. 18 Height 6 ft. in. Jones, left tackle i lbs. O Hare, left guard. ...192 lbs. McaTwan, center 192 lbs. Meachant, right guard. 17 It s. Weyend leapt.), H. T-197 Iba. Neyland. light end. ..170 Pis. Gerhardt. q'terback...!46 Iba. 6 ft. 6 ft. ft. 8 ft. 8 ft. 6 ft. 1 In. 2 In. 1 in. 1 la. t ft. 7 In. Ford, left halfback. .171 lbs. 6 ft. 11 In. Olinhant. right half,. 163 Iba. 6 ft. Tin. Coffin. fulltMck h,i lbs ft. (in. Name and Position. Wright. Height. Johnson, left end 1 lbs. ' I fu W la. Oilman, left tackle. ...17 - Kerrheer. left guard. .185 lbs. 8 ft. Jones, renter ITS lbs. 6 ft. I In. Smith, tight guard.. 190 It. 6 ft. 11 in. Ward, right tackle. ...177 lbs. I ft. 18 In. Von Hetiuberg. Kt. .180 lbs. 8 ft. 1 In 1 1 Drawn for The Bee bv George McManus ralg. quarterback. ..147 lbs. 5 ft. 6 ft. 6 ft. 6 ft. 7 In. 9 in. 8 in. 10 in. Msrttn, left halfback. .161 lbs. I 'avis, right halfback. 163 lbs. Wrstphal. fullback. .. .184 lbs. Wisconsin After Stiehm as Coach of the 1916 Team Jumbo Stiehm Is being considered as a rorslble coach to succeed Juneau at the V'rlverslty of Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Mtdent body and alumni am demanding the discharge of Juneau on the grounds of failure to produce winning teams. Sllehm, Doble of Washington and Warner rf Pittsburgh are suggested as men to succeed Juneau. Stiehm Is a Wisconsin faduate and played tenter on the Wis cot sin eleven. CHARLEY CUTLER EASY FOR RUSSIAN INVADER! BOSTON. Mass.. Nov. 2T. (Special Telegram. ) Charley Cutler has been de feated again. This time It was Adnlph Aberg. the Russinn grnppler, w'no would like to battle Joe Sterner, who turned the trick In straight fulls. f.eneva Wins from Friend. FRIEND. Neb., Nov. 26. (Sped il.) The rrlend High school basket ball team lost In first game thla season to the Geneva Kirn school team on the local floor Wednesdsy night, :8 to t'nrtla nnd Mlrdrn Tie. CCRTIS. Neb., Nov. 26. (Special Tele uram.) The Curtis Aggies and the Mln On High school played a 7-to-7 tie game at Curtis on Thanksgiving dsy. Kearney Normal-Hasting: a Tie. K EARN FXY. Neb.. Nov. 26 iSnecial (Telegram. Kearney normal and Hast ings college tied In a foot bail contest here today. 6 to 6. Winn made forward passes, which are the normals' long uit. Impossible snd rums and goal kirks were eauallv difficult, while Keasnev had the best of of one thousand people attended and the chool band lent enlhilasm to the rooters. Kna-Ievrood Is Ilea ten. SIOCX CITY, la.. Nov. 2fi-Englewood high, Chicago, lost a closclv contested gitdlron battle to Sioux City high, 3 to 0. Wemplo drop-kicked soil from the thirty-five yard line. The visitors Inter cepted a forward pass In the last quarter and took It within four yards of Sioux City's goal. Tho ball was forced over the line on the next p'ay, but a fifteen yard penalty was Inflicted for holding and the locals were saved from defeat. Kendall Beats llaskrll. Tl.'LSA, Okl., Nov. 26,-After the Has kell Indians had led, 3 to 0, for three pe liods today In their foot hall game with the Henry Kendall college eleven, John Young, quarterback for Kendall, caught a t-hcrt punt and raced fifty yard to the Haskell goal fcr the only touchdown of the game. The game ended three minutes later with the final score: Kendall. 7. Haskell, 3. President Cancels Cabinet Meeting to Work on Message WASHINGTON, Nov. 2. President Wilson cancelled the cabinet meeting to csy that he might continue work on hU ficVress to congress. The president wrote ur.til late last night, but was unable to finish It. The president plans to leave foi New York tomorrow morning to see tho Army-Navy foot ball game, and will finish the message before his departure. He hoped to get it to the public printer by noon today, but was uncertain. Another American On Ancona Injured; WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 26. -An- other American citizen who wss on the ! torpedoed Italian liner Ancona has been ! (tj located by the consul general at Mar-j tiles. He is Joseph Tortsl and Is said to be In s hospital on the North African coast. htm. Depositions will be taken from DEATH RECORD n, Vmi ti. raaalaaham. Mrs. Paul G. Cunningham of Columbus. Neb., daughler-ln-law of Colonel C. U. Cunningham of tha city died Thursday evening. Mrs. Cunningham had many friends In Omaha as she and her husband lived here for some time. 8he was a daughter of the late Judge Qulsenberry of Mexico, Mo., and ia survived by her husband, three daughters and a son. The funeral will bs held at Columbus Sundsy afternoon, at the Episcopal Jj church, of which Ijrs. Cunningham was a member. Dr. Calvin Starr. BEATRICE. Ntb.. Nov. 26. Special.) Dr. Calvin Starr, for the laat thirty years a resident of Beatrice and probabl) the oldest person In Gage county, died yesterday morning at an early hour, aged 94 yea-s. His widow. Dr. Julia C. Starr, Is still pi settling in the city. HYMENEAL j Beller-Baeaer. LINDSAY. Neb.. Nov. Special.! Anton Heller and Ida Sue per were mar itc at the St. Bernard Catholic church ettrrday by Rev. Mr. Cyriac. -11 COURSING MEET AT SUPERIOR ENDS Owncn Arc Pleased that Next Meet Will Be Staged in Omaha. WILL BRING MANY MEN Superior. Neb., Nov. 2fl. (Special Tclc ram The finals In the three-day cours ing meet were run off this afternoon. In the puppy stske Boy Scout, owned by Oalbreth and Mndsen of Superior won over Nelva Neversettle, 5 to 3. In the nil npe, Dick and Joe Clair, dogs owned by Woodsworth and Itngan of rticn. drew the finalsb tit did not i win the race. t. le spec in I stoke was won by Girl Scout, another dog owned by Galbrcath and MacUen of Superior. The owners are all rejoicing that there will lie a meet In Omahn, December 1 to 4. on account of having plenty of hotel accomodations, etc., which they generally do not have In the smaller I towns. I It Is likely that next venr's hi a- loko will be saged In Omaha, This will bring ' nbouu 15) dogs, and over 10) dot; men ' from different states, besides several i thousand out of town people that go because they like the sport. W. S. Blvens of Beatrice, the best shipper in the country, will be there to ship the dogs, and Ed Fisher of Wlnfteld, Kan., who ranks high as a coursing Judge, will do the Judging. French Report They Gain in Offensive PARIS, Nov. 2S A victory for the ! fnni'h fnMAa In CArHtta In sin AffanatvB ' movement undertaken on Tuesday last Is reported In a dispatch from Salonlkl, filed yesterday to theltavae agency. The French are said to have captured the town of Brousnlk, west of Krlvolak. The French attack was made at a point west of Krlvolak, on the route to Ra dovista. Brousnlk was captured in the afternoon, the dispatch says. The Bul garians made a counter attack during the following night, but without success. An important result of the occupation of this town Is that It protects Krlvolak from further artillery fire. Reports have reached Salonlkl from Serbian sources that considerable forces of Serbian troops are marching . from Katchanlk In the direction of Prtlep. In order to assure protection of the railway Get an Overcoat Saturday $20 and $25 Garments I I These are new overcoats, desirable in style, pat tern and quality. They include the popular loose fitting velvet collar coat, some staple dress coats and some long ulsters. Just at the beginning of winter you are enabled to get a splendid overcoat at the very end-of-the-season price. Our windows display these garments. i ill Sooth Persistence is a . W tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant ly to be really succcessful. to Monsstir. the only line available for forwarding supplies. Important reinforcements of French and British tcops cont'nue to arrive at Snlonikl. Suffrage Petition Ends Its Long Trip Across Continent NEW YORK, Nov. W. The trans-continental trip of the great petition, signed by 60.000 women voters, asking for a woman suffrage amendment to the fed eral constitution, ended here today. Mrs. Sarah Bard Field and Miss Francis Joliffe, who carried It from San Francisco by automobile, will rest a bit before first going on their Journey to Washington to present the petition to President Wilson on i ecembr 6. Miss Joliffe is already here. Owing to an attack of neuralgia, she was com pelled to make part of the Journey by railroad. Mrs. Field Is expected today. The two envoys will meet on the out skirts of the city. They will be escorted from that point by a delegation of pro Inent surrragiEts and the wives or severs city officials. George McAneny, actl mavor. win deliver an address or we come at an official reception biter the day. Kaiser Tells Pope Germany Fighting in Self-Defense ROME. Nov. 26.. (Via Paris.) It wal asserted In well Informed quarters hers today that Cardinal Von Hartmann, archbishop of Cologne, who arrived In Rome yesterday, was the bearer of a message from Emperor William to Popt Benedict in . which the. emperor Is re ported to have disclaimed responsibility for the war. Germany waa described si having been forced Into It In self-defense. tJoTernor of New Jersey Declines, TRENTON, N. J., Nov. 26. Governor Fielder today declined an Invitation to be Henry Ford's guest In the proposed peace delegation to Europe. He sent a telegram saying: "Invitation declined. Believe that ef forts for peace by citizens of neutral nations and Individuals would be con sidered meddlesome." Cnsnllnn of (Grant's Tomb Dead. NEW YORK, Nov. 2. Colonel W. It M. Elstare, 73, for ten years guardian ol Grant'a tomb. Is dead here. He fougnl under General Slocum In the civil wa"i with the 102d New York volunteers. .50 161k Street. J the cardinal vir It