Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 21, 1916, Page 11, Image 11

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    BRINGING UP
6ELLEVUE MEN GET
COVETED LETTERS
Annual Foot Ball Banquet of
Indians Featured by Much
College Spirit.
COACH BENJAMIN TALKS
Gridiron knocks and bruises, cares
and responsibilities vvtre all forgotten
last evening at the annual foot
ball banquet at Rellevue college. Be
neath festoons of purple and gold,
the college colors, and over tables
decorated with imitation foot balls,
the "Ala Rah!" the war cry of the
Omahas, mingled with the joyous
strains of "We're Making Lots of
Noise for Our Foot Ball Team,"' and
the more reverent bars of "The Pur
ple and the Gold." The banquet
closed with the student body rising
and singing the college hymn.
Athletes Talk.
Ralph Martin of the senior class
was toastmaster. The program, which
followed the banquet, consisted of the
following numbers:
"Ala Rah!" the college yell, all gusts.
"Defense of the Past," ex-Captain Walter
Rarely.
"Defense of the Future." Captain-elect
Watdemar Gustafson.
"Toast to the Scrubs." Kathryn Ohman.
"Review of the Season," Coach Benja
min. "Athletic Plans." Athletic Manager Stew
art. "Basket Ball Prospects.' 'Captain James
A Hen.
"We're Making Lots of Noise," all guests.
Award of letters. Prof. P. IV. Evans.
At the conclusion of the evening's
jollity, letters were awarded to the
following basket ball men of last
vear's varsity: James Allen, Walter
Racely. Samuel Kinnier, Harry Er
win. Perry Johns, Caryl Picotte and
Lester Stewart.
The following men were awarded
foot ball letters for playing on this
fall's team: Walter Racely, Walde
mar Gustafson, Samuel Kinnier,
Perry Johns, Harry Erwin, Lester
Stewart, James Allen, Caryl Picotte,
Charles Evans,. Eugene Ebersole,
Glen Williams, James Daugherty,
Glenn Mincer, Harold Shainholtz,
Harold Ounlap.
The following members of the foot
ball reserves were awarded the official
"R:" Walker Rule, Clint E. Day,
John Kinnier, George Primrose, Ed
gar Redfern, Pierre Picotte.
Badgers Want to
Meet Nebraska
Lincoln. Dec. 20. Wisconsin has
asked for a foot ball game with Ne
braska, to be played at Madison Oc
tober 13, next, it was announced to
night in university athletic circles.
That date has already been arranged
for the Iowa game and cannot be
granted the Badgers. Nebraska is,
however, anxious to play Wisconsin
and there will be further correspond
ence in an effort to reach an agree
ment and effect a two-year contract.
Beselins Prove Too Fast for
Y. M. H. A. Basket Tossers
The Beselins in the Commercial
league defeated the Young Men's
Hebrew association basket ball team
last evening by a score of 25 to 16.
The Beselins are students and alumni
of the Nebraska School for thDeaf.
Tamiseia and 'Stark starred for the
Beselins, Brown for the Young Men's
Hebrew association. Lineup:
BESELINS. T. M. H. A.
Cooper
Tamiseia
Stark
Trenke
Cuscaden
Substitutes:
. . R.F.
..L.F.
C.
. . R.G.
..L.O.
R.F.
L.F. .
C
R.O.
L.O. .
Brown
... Kaiman
Cohn
. . Davidson
Levy
Sherman, Copeland. Shead.
Conner (St. Tamiseia (7t
J-teld goals:
Stark 3. Brown 131. Kilmsn Cohn Font
goals: Brown, Cohn 2), Copeland. Cuscaden
IS). Referee: H. R. Mulligan. Time of
halves: IS minutes.
Arlington High Takes Omaha
National Banks Into Camp
Arlington, Neb., Dec. 20. (Special.)
-The basket ball, team of the Omaha
National bank went down to defeat
before the Arlington High school five
in a hotly contested game here to
night. The score was 23 to 15. The
game was played in the city hall audi-,
tonum. i nc lineup:
ARLINGTON.
OMAHA.
Leect
Sarhlot
Price
.... Buraenroad
Kchtenkamp ....R.F.
Hamming L.F.
Alexander c.
Ludwli T. L.O.
Ullfry R.G.
R.F.
L.F..
C...
R.a.
Berwick
Officials: Bender of Omaha and Hofman
of Arlington.
Arlignton High school defeated the
Bennington (Neb. Athletic club here
Monday evening.
Interdenominates Defeat
Church of the Covenant
The West Side Interdenomina
tionals defeated the Church of the
Covenant in the Church league last
evening by a score of 1 1 to 7. G. Orr
and Groves scored all the points for
their respective sides. Lineup
COVENANTS.
c. Orr R.F.
Guthrie L.F.
Buzzard C.
TNTERDENOMS
R.F Grovel
L.F Hall
C stavlk
R.O Capillte
L.O Miller
Orr...
Mills
Substitute: Bmderson for Capillte. Goals
from field: G. Orr (31, Oroves (4). Goals
from foul: G. Orr. Oroves (3). Referee:
H. K. Mulligan. Time of halves: 10 minutes.
FATHER
"
Pipp Led American League in Timely Hits
1: l M f ? ' 1 "4 1
k - . - i
I 1 ' 1 i i
I : '. V": ::i
h-' i
WALTER
The honor of driving in the great
est number of runs in the American
league during the 1916 season falls
to Walter Pipp, the big first baseman
of the Yankees, who pushed ninety
nine runs over the plate during the
BASKET TOSSERS
FORM HEW LEAGUE
Inter-City Octet Organized by
Representatives of Tri
City Schools.
FIRST GAME JANUARY NINE
A new basket ball league, to be
known as the Inter-City Octet, has
been organized in Omaha. The league
was organized last evening at the
Young Men's Christian association,
when representatives of eight tri-city
schools met with Physical Director
Bud Kearns. Harold Linahan of
Creighton was elected president, C. S.
Sparks of Council Bluffs High, secre
tary. The teams of the league will be
composed of university reserves, high
school teams and high school alumni.
The members of the league are:
Creighton Reserves, University of
Omaha Reserve. Bellevue Reserves,
Nebraska School for the Deaf, Papil
lion High school, South High, Council
Bluffs High Alumni of 1916 and the
Council Bluffs High.
Each team will be required to put
up $5 as a bond and in case any team
drops out of the league the bond will
be forfeited. The first game will be
played at the University of Omaha
January 9. The teams will play on
Tuesdays and Thursdays. Each mem
ber of the winning team will receive a
watch fob as a prize.
The committee will meet again Sat
urday evening at the Young Men's
Christian association to make final
plans. Those who organized the
league are: Bud Kearns of the Young
Men's Christian association, Harold
Linahan of Creighton, R. Seeiey of the
Nebraska School for the Deaf. Will
iam Campen of the University of
Omaha. C. S. Sparks of Council Bluffs
and J. Patton of South High school.
THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1916.
Copyright, 191ft.
International News Sarrtaa.
PIPP.
campaign. The Yankee slugger chased
in sixteen more runs than did Tris
Speaker, the league's leading slugger,
and thirty-two more than Ty Cobb,
who was Speaker's only real rival for
the batting honors.
Tip O'Neill Given
Job in Base Ball
Chicago, Dec. 20. Norris O'Neill,
former president of the Western
league, has been engaged to arrange
the details of the Chicago National
league base ball teams' training trip to
California next spring.
"Stub" Barrow Tells
Of Wedding Long Ago
Iowa City, la., Dec. 20. (Special.)
After keeping his wedding a 'secret
for eight months, "Stub" Barron, cap
tain of the Iowa foot ball team in
1915, coach of the freshman squad
this year and at present a student in
the university law school, has an
nounced his marriage on last April to
Miss Marian Robertson of Washta, la.
The event took place at Vinton.
Mrs. Barron is a graduate of the
State Teachers' college at Cedar Kails
and has taken a year of post-graduate
work at the University of Minnesota.
Barron himself was tackle and center
on the Hawkeye varsity for three
years and was recognized as one of
the greatest linemen of all time at the
university. He was also the winner of
letters in wrestling, in which he was
unusually proficient.
Mr. and Mrs. Barron have furnished
a home in Iowa City and will live here
after the first of the year.
Famous Cherry Grower
Of Yankton is Dead
Yankton, S. D., Dec. 20. (Special.)
Samuel Keucher, whose cherry farm
was widely known and who was very
successful at fruit growing on
his remarkable place two miles west
of this city, died Sunday. He was
born in Ohio in 1837 and was an
early pioneer here. He was a mill
wright by trade and constructed most
of the pioneer mills over a wide ter
ritory, even as far as Colorado. He
leaves a wife, two brother! and two
sisters.
I'olds Need Attention.
Tour cold needs Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey,
It cuts phlcBm. kilts germs, stops the cough.
Only 35, . All druggists. Advertisement.
SHIFT IN UNEUP
SAVESJRESHIES
Use of Grey Matter by Captain
of Bellevue Team Saves
Game.
DAUGHERTY THE BIG NOISE
INTKRCLA8S TKAM STANDING
Won. iMKt
Junior! 2 fl
i .ono
1 .0"0
1 "
Sophomorii 1 I
Seniors n 1
PrflpB i
Bellevue college freshmen signalized
their entrance into
the mtcrciass
tournament yesterday evening by de
feating the sophomores in a fast game
by the score of 25 to 18. Close guard
ing on the part of Erwin and Gustaf
son for the sophomores and poor
shooting kept the sophomores in the
ead for most of the first period until
Captain Williams of the freshmen
shifted Daugherty from forward to
center and went to forward himself.
This left Daugherty freer and he re
sponded by shooting three basket? in
rapid succession and the period ended
with the teams tied, 11 all.
Daugherty made eight baskets in all
and did most of the scoring for the
freshmen the second half, lie made
sixteen points in all, two less than
enough to tie the sophs. Erwin and
Johns were almost the whole team for
the sophomores. Lineup:
FRESHMEN. I SOPHOMORES.
tjausherty R.F. R.F
Davis I..F, 1..F
Williams C.C..
Khalnholtz R.O.IR.Ci
Dunlap L.Q.IL.U
. ... Rule
. . . Johns
. . Dobbin
Oustafson
Erwin
Substitutes: Freshmen,
Redfern for Dun
lap. Miner for Iavls. Goals from field:
uaugrnerly ti, Williams j, einainnniiz,
Redfern, Johna (3). Erwin (3), Rule. Dob.
bin. Ooals from foul: Williams, Rule. Johns.
Referee: Stewart. Timers: Cullom and
Benjamin. Scoror: Chandler.
The juniors ran away with the preps
in the first game of the evening, 55 to
14. Allen of the juniors made twelve
goals from the geld, Evans made nine
and the other juniors made two each.
Zurcher scored three field goals and
six free throws. He made all but
two points for his team.
As the annual foot ball banquet is
scheduled for tonight and the annual
German club Christmas celebration
will take place Thursday evening, and
as most of the students will leave for
home Friday aftenoon, the remainder
of the interclass tournament will be
played off after the holidays.
SPECULATORS JUST
AS BAD AS HAIL FOR
COUNTRY'S WHEAT
(Continued From Page One.)
all of us, that is to make an extortion
ate profit because he has the power
to do so. '
"I say that one reason why we have
not gotten ahead faster with the mar
keting is because we have not edu
cated the business public to the fact
that it is equally as important to it as
it is to the producer himself."
Buying Power Goes to Waste.
Fred L. Palmer, Limon. Colo., spoke
of the necessity of national control
of Equity-Union centralized ex
changes, and the economic advantages
of such control.
President C. O. Drayton said: "Mr.
Palmer is right. We're letting a lot of
our buying power go to waste. If we
have fifty exchanges we should unite
our buying power. If we had 500
exchanges in the United States and
they had the buying power united, it
would be worth $500 to me alone next
spring on the machinery I will have
to buy. We want 500 exchanges and
those united, and we're going to get
them."
Director Edwin W. Reed. Haigler,
Neb., spoke on "Equity-Union Co
Operative Meat Packing Plants." He
said this is entirely practicable and
added that he would be ill , favor of
levying on every member of the
Equity-Union to help along this fight
against the present meat packing
companies.
Thousands of Members.
There are at the present time
for the opening. There arc at present
18,806 members of the organization
in the nation, according to the state
ment of Secretary George Denny of
Greenville, III. Of this number 5,674
joined during 1916, which fact is
cited by the delegates and the secre
tary to prove that the movement is
popular and is growing. Eighty new
local organizations were formed dur
ing the year.
President C. O. Drayton of Green
ville, III., in his opening address pre
dicted equity-union packing houses
flour mills, coa! and lumber mills, in
a few years, for he declared that the
success of the equity-union creameries
throughout the country would demon
strate the practicability of such move
ments. He cited particularly the
conspicuous success of these cream
eries at Orleans, Neb,, Aberdeen,
S. D., and Limon, Colo,
Co-Operation is Keynote.
"The great question of distribution
Drawn for
Bowling Results
IViesUr iMftl.
POW KLl, St'PFLT CO. j
let. 2d. Tot. I
Cosdy lot I'D 1U SJJ
Ills, hI 10 177 111 MS
O'Connor . .141 143 130 4n4 )
Nwne IS9-1T7 184 &SB i
Totals. .. ISO l III 3773
CORBY M KKN7.1R.
let. 3d. 3d. Tot,
Plnrm.n ..111 173 171 III
Prlmeau ...li4 173 383 141
lUMld.y ...173 17 144 412
K,nl 143 III l tit
ho-nmin 304 100 2l:l 107
Handicap ..II II II 1
Totals 174 -' 135 273k
Kl'NCt. COM. CO.
1st. 2d. 3d. Tot.
Kelly till 131 110 443
Rstekln .. .It) 143 ISO 441
I. C. Knnel.143 11 IJO 47!
Klm'erman 111 lla US 432
W. Ham.. .171 111 331 SIT
Totals. .. .304 3K 301 3433
Mt nPHT nin it.
1st. 2d. 3d. Tot.
Ullcl.COck .IS! 133 111 44.1
llrolte !U II lsf 0
Handicap . . H9 397
Totals. . . .197 114 131231a
I'KTB I.OCHS.
1st. 3d.
oi-h... IH lit
ind,..ISS 31 3
L'!2 IS7
1(3 ill
r-....l!6 12
3d. Tol.
201 573
223 337
134 1,1:1
IK f3
1S2 491
Totals 117 337 4I 2323
CLARA BBLI.KB.
1st. 3d. 3d. Tot.
l3 117 1S 64
173 172 17 &33
Martin 161 1(3 IRS 52
of the necessities of life," he con
tinued, "direct from producer to the
consumers can be worked out suc
cessfully Vy equity-union co-operation,
because equity-union co-operation
will knock out all capitalism and
profit-taking between the producer
and consumer. All co-operation
which is worked by a few is for the
few and against the many. We must
organize and educate the many to
be equity-union co-operators. This
is the great work of the Farmers'
Equity union."
In the absence of Mayor Dahlman,
who was to have welcomed the dele
gates, E. V. Parrish, manager of the
bureau of publicity, welcomed the
delegates. The response was" made by
C. Vincent, delegate from Omaha.
WILSON URGES
NATIONS AT WAE
DISCUSS PEACE
ItenUnueta. Feoan Pag Ob. I
fering it until these overtures had
been answered but for the fact that it
also concerns the question of peace
and may best be considered in con
nection with other proposals which
have the same end in view, The
president can only beg that his sug
gestion be considered entirely on its
own merits and as if it had been made
in other circumstances."
Then all the notes proceed iden
tically, as follows:
"The president suggests that an
early occasion be sought to call out
from all the nations now at war such
an avowal of their respective views
as to the terms upon which the war
might be concluded and the arrange
ments which would be deeded satis
factory as a guaranty against its re
newal or the kindling of any similar
conflict in the future as would make
it possible frankly to compare them.
- Indifferent to Means.
"He is indifferent as to the means
taken to accomplish. He would be
happy himself to be of service or
even to take the initiative in its ac
complishment in any way that might
prove acceptable, but he has no de
sire to determine the method or the
instrumentality. One way will be as
acceptable to him as another if only
the great object he has in mind be
attained.
"He takes the liberty of calling at
tention to the fact that the objects
which the statesmen of the belliger
ents on both sides have in mind in
this war are virtually the same as
stated in general terms to their own
people and to the world. Each side
desires to make the rights and privi
leges of weak people and small states
as secure against aggression or de
nial in the fnture as the rights and
privileges of great and powerful states
now al war
"Each wishes itself to be made se
cure in the future, along with all
other nations and peoples, against the
recurrence of wars like this and
against aggression of selfish interfer
ence of any kind. Each would be
jealous of the formation of any more
rival leagues to preserve an uncer
tain balance of power amidst multi
plying suspicions; but each is ready
to consider the formation of a league
of nations to insure peace and justice
throughout the world. Before that
final step can be taken, however, each
deems it necessary first to settle the
issues of the present war upon terms
which will certainly safeguard the in
dependence, the territorial integrity
and the political and commercial
freedom of the nations involved.
United States Vitally Interested.
"In the measures to be taken to
secure the future peace of the world
the people and government of the
United States are as vitally and di
rectly interested as the governments
now at war. Their interest, more
over, in the means to be adopted to
relieve the smaller and weaker oeo
pies of the world of the peril of wrong
and violence is as quick and ardent
as that of any other people or gov
ernment. They stand ready, and even
eager, to co-operate in tne accom
plishment of these ends when the war
is over, with every influence and re
source at their command.
"But the war must first be con
eluded. The terms upon which it is
to be concluded they are not at lib
The Bee by George McManus
on Omaha Alleys
. .Ifil tfil 140 470
..3111 141 134 4I
..140 14 13 40
.173 17 111 147
.. 3 i 3
Mayer ...
Coleman
Handicap
Totals 133 711 III 1414
HOMK RK8TAURAXT.
1st. 2d. 3d. Tol,
larn 12 Ifi 10 130
"leff 13 HI 30 t
Mat-man ...80& ,6 190 &:!
Toman 303 HI 202 ft
Wartchou' .111 202 lib 17
Totals 13 100 171 1131
Ol.U 8TTLB I.A11KR.
1st. 3d. 3d. Tol.
London 117 117 111 l3!
Nnerry 13 1ft! 146 40
Virman ...14J 11,4 127 426
Reynolds ,.H0 12 1S 477
Kneeil IS 14 H 471
Handicap ..15 lift 55 15
Totals 131 153 140 2511
erty to suggest, but the president
does feel that it is his right and his
duty to point out their intimate in
terests in its conclusions, lest it
should presently be too late to accom
plish the greater things which lie be
yond its conclusion, lest the situation
of neutral nations, now exceedingly
hard to endure, be rendered altogether
intolerable, and lest, more than all, an
injury be done civilization itself
which can never be atoned for or re
paired. Justified in Suggesting Plan.
"The president, therefore, feels jus
tified in suggesting an immediate op
portunity for a comparison of views
as to the terms .which must precede
those ultimate arrangements for the
peace of the world which all desire
and in which the neutral nations as
well as those at war are ready to play
their full responsible part. If the con
test must continue to proceed to
wards undefined ends by slow attri
tion until the one group of belliger
ents or the other is exhausted, if
millions upon millions of human lives
must continue to be offered up until
on the one side or the other there are
no more to offer, if resentments must
be kindled that can never cool ana de
spairs engendered from which there
can be no recovery, hopes of peace
and of the willing concern of free peo
ples will be rendered vain and idle.
"The life of the entire world has
been nrofoundlv affected. Every part
of the great family of mankind has
felt the burden and terror ot this un
precedented contest of arms. No na
tion in the civilized world can be said
to stand outside of its inbuence or to
be safe against its disturbing effects,
And yet the concrete objects for
which it is being waged have never
been definitely stated.
Not Specifically Stated.
"The leaders of the several bellig
erents have, as has been 'said, stated
those objects in general terms. But,
stated in general terms, they seem the
same on both sides. Never yet have
the authoritative spokesmen of either
side avowed the precise objects which
would, if attained, satisfy them and
their people that the war had been
fought out. The world has been left to
conjecture what definite results, what
actual exchange of guanantees, what
political or territorial changes or re
adjustments, what stage of military
successes even would bring the war to
an end.
"It may he that peace is nearer than
we know; that the terms which the
belligerents on the one side and on the
other would deem it necessary to in
sist upon are not so irreconcilable as
some have feared; that an interchange
of views would clear the way at least
for conference and make the perma
nent concern of the nations a hope of
the immediate future, a concert of na
tions immediately practicable.
The president is not proposing
peace, he is not even offering media
tion. He is merely proposing that
soundings be taken in order that we ;
may learn, the neutral nations with j
the belligerent, how near the haven j
of peace may be for which all man-1
kind long with an intense and increas- j
ingly longing. He believes that the
spirit in which he speaks and the ob
jects which he seeks will be under
stood by all concerned and he confi
dently hopes for a response which will
bring a new light into the affairs of !
the world."
The note to the entente group will
he delivered to Great Britain, France.
Italy. Japan, Russia. Belgium, Monte
negro, Portugal. Roumania and Ser
bia. That to the central powers will ;
be delivered to Germany, Austria-1
Hungary, Turkey and Bulgaria.
It is being delivered to all neutral
governments for their information.
France Extends
Its Moratorium
Paris, Dec. 20. An extension of
the moratorium for three months
from January 1 is provided in a de-'
cree published today in the Journal ;
Officii. The decreq is accompanied ,
by a note from the; minister of com
merce, stating there remains unpaid !
only U40,000,000 fo a total of 4,480,-1
000,000 francs of paper benefiting from :
the moratorium which was held by i
the bank of France in August of 1914. !
. I
Fr RheantaUain
Apply Sloan's Liniment to the painful part
Is all you need. The pain goes at once. Only
ZTio. All drusBlsts. Advertisement.
11
Bopp's Answer Is a
Sensational Charge
San Francisco, Dec. 20. Detectifes,
not dynamiters, to uncover construc
tion of submarines in the United
States for the entei.te allies and ship
ment of Japanese from California tor
war duty, were hird by the German
consulate here, according to Theo
dore Roche, in his opening statement
for the defetse of "ranz Bopp and
associates on trial for alleged dyna
miting conspiracies. ",
Roche said he was prepared to
prove the Union Iron works of San
Francisco built submarines here dur
ing 1915 for the entente allies and
shipped the parts to Canada for ss
sembly. He asserted British 4hips trans
ported Japanese from San Francisco
to Japanese war ships in the-Pacific.
Objections by the defense to the
continuance of the trial on the
ground that the government had not
made out a prima tacie case were de
nied by the court. ''
In outlining his defense Kocne said
C. C. Crowley, Louis J. Smith, J." H.
Van Koolbergen and Mrs. Margaret
Cornell, alleged consulate spies, were
supposed to keep tab on entente tnu- ,
nitions shipments. It is on Smith's
story of attempted dynamitings that
the government relies mainly.
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