Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 27, 1917, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
BRINGING UP FATHER
FOR GOODNESS
WHt ARE VE
LEAVIN' EF0RE
THE HOW
I'D OUT?.
PHILS REFUSE TO
PAY ALEX $15,000
President Baker Writes Great
Hurler He Is Astonished
at Demands.
OI7EBS HIM ONLY $8,000
Philadelphia, Jan. 26. President
William F. Baker of the Philadelphia
National league club today made pub
lie a letter lent to Grover Alexander,
tht club'i itar pitcher,, refusing the
player's demand for i three-year con
tract at $15,000 a year. Mr. Baker
told Alexander that he was "aston
ished at his demand and that an offer
of $8,000 a year still stood and would
ot be increased by any great
mount."
Alexander is at his home in St.
Paul, Neb.
It was said here Catcher Killifer
has been offered a contract $2,000 less
than last year and that he and Alex
ander had decided to stand together
in demanding more money.
President Baker will confer with
the star battery next month.
Twenty-five Ball
Players Vote to .
; v Support Strike
. New York, Jan. 26. Base ball
players from many major and minor
league clubs voted here last night
to sustain President David Fultz of
the Base Ball Players', fraternity in
calling a strike next month unless
the players' demands are granted.
Twenty-five men attended the meet
ing. '.. . .. .
President -tmz, who presided, read
telegrams from .Tri - Speaker of
Cleveland and Al Oemaree of Chi
cago pledging their-support.
Paul H. Turner, attorney for the
Actors' Equity association, described
the benefits the association obtained
by virtue of its affiliation with the
American Federation' of Labor, He
asserted that-their connection with
the federation did pot' necessarily
mean -standardized pay for actors.
This lie added also would apply to
base ball players.
The players at the meeting were:
Jack Dalton, Los Angeles; Edward
Reulbach, Boston Nationals; William
Fischer, Pittsburgh Nationals; J.
bert Daniels, Louisville American as
sociation; John Miller, St. Louis Na
tionals; Otto Miller, Brooklyn;
Georee Burns. New York Nationals;
George H. . Burns, Detroit; James
Archer, Chicago Nationals; toward
Burns. Philadelphia Nationals; Thom
as Clarke. Cincinnati; Grover Hartley,
St Louis Americans; John Enie
mann, Newark Internationals; Albert
Schact, Newark; Charles Jamieson
Washington; Alvin Carlstrom, Buf
falo; William Doak, M. Louis na
tionals; Lawrence Gardner, Boston
Americans; Kichaid Hoblitzel, Boston
Americans; George Chalmers, Kan
as City American association; Ar
thur Wilson, Chicago Nationals; Gus
tave Getz, Brooklyn.
Paul Shields Is
Signed Play Guard
. With the Brandeis
Paul Shields, former University of
Nebraska foot ball and basket ball
star, has joined the Brandeis quintet
He wilt play a 'guard position.
The addition of Shields is expected
to greatly strengthen the Brandeis
five. Paul was a star at South High
before going to the Cornhusker insti
tution, where he was one of the best
flippers ever decorated with an "N."
He has had eight years of basket ball
experience.
Herb Stryker and Shields played to
gether at both South High and Ne
braska and with them playing to
gether on the Brandeis five again, the
department store quintet's potency
should be Increased several fold.
Leaders in-Big Dog Derby
Reach Grafton at 1 o'clock
' St Paul, Minn., Jan. 26. Leaders
in 1he Winnipeg-St Paul dog race
'reached Grafton, forty-one miles
north of Grand Forks, at noon to-
. day. and shortly before l o'clock
pulled out on their southward jour
ney, hoping to reach brand forks
tonight. the three leaders were
i . T 1 . - . r JN
.and Mike Kelley.
' Two teams dropped out of the race
today and were transported back to
'Winnipeg, via the railroad. They
were Gunnar Gutterson, who became
ill, and Thordar Thordarson, Von
whom the strain of the ,ace ulso told.
Clan Gordon No. 63 will hold Burns
'celebration at Swedish Auditorium,
1609 Chicago, Friday night, January
26. at 8 p. m.
WIETHE
LVbT TIME
"YOULL 1ET
A CHANCE TO
HUMILIATE
ME IN A
THEATRE -
V- r
Sport Calendar Today
Motor Boat Opening of Notional Motor
float dhow, tlranil Central palate, Now
York, ('unvoittlon of MUmIkmIppI Power float
aMoclatioa, t'lUnago (Hunday).
Automobile OpetjinK of Chicago Automo
bile show. Opening of Mrhsnona. Va.v Au
tomobile allow.
Hockey Harvard airalDlit Queen', at
Ronton. Hprtngnelrt agalnet Reiuoelaer Polr
torhnir, at Troy. I WUIIama at alaat H. A. C,
at H HllaBMtowa.V (
Times. Athletlon f'oaat ArtlllatT 'corpo In
door track and field rameo, at Hneto. Hee
and Infantry Indoor traek and field emmm,
Chtoago.
tosses Ball 4'omell acalnat Princeton, at
Princeton. Minnesota acalnat NorUiwmtoni,
at Jfivaaaton.
FACTORY OWNER IS
SENT TOSIM SIM
Man Whose Locked Door Con
tributed to Thirteen Deaths
in Fire is Sentenced.
THESE MOKE TO BE TRIED
New York, Jan. 26. Asserting that
a sentence in prison should, teach a
far-reaching lesson to factory owners
and tenants who fail to provide prop
er fire exits, Supreme Court Justice
Kapper today sent Sartiuel Barkin to
Sing Sing for from tvvo and a half
to five and V half years. Barkin is
a partner in a shirt-making company
housed in a Brooklyn building where
nine women and four men operatives
lost their lives in a fire because the
trap door between their place of work
and Barkin's floor was locked.
Barkin was convicted by a jury
earlier this week. His partner, Sam
uel' Simon, and the building's own
ers, Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Dia
mond, proprietors of a capdy com
pany m the structure, are still to be
tried on similar charges.
Doubles Match of
Ice Tennis to Be
Played at Miller
A doubles match of ice tennis will
be played this afternoon at 3 o'clock
on the pond at Miller park.
l.eland Wykert and Elmer Nordcll
will play Walter Florkee and Joe
Wirti.
Wykert and Wirtr introduced the
ice tennis game to Omaha and have
played several singles matches at Mil
ler park. They have now induced Nor
dell and florkee, who arc good
skaters and also know how to play
tennis, to tackle the game, and will
stage the doubles event this afternoon.
Methodists Ready for
Clash With State Uni
University Dace, Neb., Jan. 26.
(Special.) Wesleyan meets the Uni
versity of Nebraska on the state
floor Saturday evening in the first
game of their annual series, with the
odds about even. Both teams started
the season with a number of changes
in the lineup and the Saturday game
will be the first opportunity for local
fans to see the men in a real contest.
Wesleyan is not confident this year,
as it was last. The absence of Kline,
Johnson and Vifquain from the lineup
makes a hole that Coach Kline has
found some difficulty in filling. Grove,
the ex-Omaha star, is assured of a
regular place as guard and his work
in the few games already played has
been remarkable. Blodgett, a Drake
player, is playing a forward and will
probably be continued in that posi
tion, nugnes, iroiier and fetz are
all old men and the coach has been
building his new team around, this
trio. If the Wesleyan defense is work
ing in its usual shape Saturday eve
ning the Methodists hope to retain the
hnnnrt Ihev hv. keen wel.. (, ll..
last three seasons.
Italy and Free Trade
Renew Old Hostilities
Corrapondne ot Th Associated Press.)
Rome, Jan. 8. Free trade is again
to be a political issue in Italy. A free
trade paper, the L'Unita. has just
made its appearance, as the organ of
the new propaganda. The chief item
of the program for the present will be
the lowering of tariff duties between
the allied powers as a step toward a
future and wider application of the
principle.
Colds Need
Veui
our cold needs Dr. Bell's Pios-Tsr-
Honer; It cuts phlerra, sUlls serins, stops
the couch. Oolr Sic All dragvtsts. Adv.
SEA FOODS
Direct From Coast
Twico Wotk
Live Lobsters a Specialty
HOTEL ROME
THE P.ZE:
Copyright, 191 .
Interna l jonul Neva Strrle
NOV TELL ME
WHAT DIOTOU MEAN
,EY APPLAUDING
' VvHEH THE GENTLE
MAN GOT THROlXiH
v -oak r. win ".
HARDING MAY ASK
REYISEDTAX LAWS
Governor of Iowa Likely to
Recommend Saving in
This Manner.
CHANGE MILLAGE SYSTEM
(From a Rlaff Correspondent.)
Des Moines, la., Jan. 26. (Special
Telegram.) Revision of tax laws of
Iowa by the Thirty-seventh general
assembly will save the state fully
$10,000,000, in the opinion of Gov
ernor Harding.
While the governor has not sent
any messages to the- general assem
bly, other (Man his inaugural address,
it is understood that he considers re
modeling of tax laws so that each
taxing body shall levy for revenue
actually needed, and not According to
the millage system, one of the most
important maters for the present
legislature -to bring about.
Would Control Phones.
Telephone companies will become
common carriers and be placed under
the jurisdiction of the State Railroad
commission if a bill now being
drafted by the Iowa League of Mu
nicipalities, under the direction of W.
H. Byers becomes a law. The plan
is favored both by the cities and tele
phone companies. Regulation of
rates, enforcement of service and en
forcement of physical connections are
the principal power over the com
panies conferred on the commission
by the bill.
Speaker Pitt's Program.
M. B. Pitt, speaker of the house
of representatives, has announced his
program for the assembly. He would
have the present legislature adjourn
within ninety days from its convening.
He would have a commission of three
men of high legal talent appointed
SUIT
-.
TO
F
R
E
E
With every Suit(c&ptailored to your order. Free means free. No prices
changed. We
Trouserjr-absolutely
None given free after sale closes. Don't come after and expect to get these pants free,
Just Think of It. Men! ?
A REGULAR
SUIT
PAIR OF
N. W. Cor.
Mail
OMAHA. SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1917.
oiol
OU
DRAG ME
ALLTHE WAV
HOME TO
AtK ME
-njW
I I 1' l -
with the governor a fourth member, to
revise the Iowa code, this commis
sion to report to an adjourned session
of the present session within a year
or when their task is completed, the
legislators conic back at their own
expense. He would have another
commission appointed to study state
offices and commissions and also
county government, to discover if
there are duplications and overlap
ping of work, and to report on some
sort of rearrangement along the lines
of efficiency. He hopes to have these
commissions provided for by the
present legislature and the work
carried out.
Clean Up Bootleggers.
Both state and federal authorities
here are getting ready for a final
sweep-up on bootlegging in Polk
county. Many trials are scheduled in
the feder'al court the rest of the week
and the marshal is making arrests
every day. Four new charges have
been filed by the county attorney
against violators in Polk county. Ten
liquor cases are scheduled before
Judge Hutchinson in the district
court.
To Erect Dodge Memorial.
The resolution by Senator Kimball
of Pottawattamie county to erect a
Monument at Council Bluffs in honor
of General Grenvillc M. Dodge
passed the senate of the Iowa legis
lature yesterday by a unanimous
vote. An amendment to locate the
monument in Des Moines, introduced
by Senator White of Benton county,
received only Senator White's vote.
It is expected the monument will cost
from $100,000 to $200,000. The com
missioners will be appointed by the
governor and serve free of charge.
The money for the monument will be
raised by public subscription.
To Get Bum Check Writers.
The fraudulent making of" checks
will be prevented by law if a bill
introduced today by Senator Kimball
of Council Bluffs is adopted. This
would make it a misdemeanor for
any person to draw a check on a
bank when he knew he did not have
the funds there to pay it, punishable
Cor.
ORDER
Z I, 'd
I " I I J r IB
of Trousers
Made to Your Measure
wish you to bear in
free. Furthermore, you get the
REMEMBER, ONE
for there will be none
$25 AND $30
Tailored to Your Measure
and Extra $7.00
PANTS FREE
WORLD'S LARGEST UNION TAILORS
15th and Harney
orders not filled during this sale
Drawn for
ANbWER ME ? DO TOU
REALIZE HE SPOKE ,
FRENCH AND WHAT J
p. HE t)MU? j
I KNOW
IT W0Z-FOREKN
r2
CHATTER-
by fine and imprisonment in the
county jail. A bill to license bar
bers was introduced by Senator
Thompson of Burlington. It would
provide for a board of examiners
with headquarters in the state capitol.
the board members, to receive $1,200
per year. This board would hold ex
aminations and enforce laws with
reference to the trade. Under the
law a barber would be prevented
from serving a customer afflicted with
tuberculosis, erysipelas, eczema, im
petigo, syrosis, or any other con
tagious disease.
Two Weddings at Red Oak.
Red Oak, la., Jan. 26. (Special.)
Rev. G. O. Gustafson, pastor of the
Swedish Lutheran church here, united
in marriage yesterday two couples of
Montgomery county's best young
people, the ceremonies being per
formed at the Gustafson home.
Mr. Harry Clang of Essex and Miss
Gertrude Vandcrholm of Red Oak
were married at 5 o'clock yesterday
evening. They were accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Winn of Nyman.
Mr. and Mrs. Klang will make their
home on a farm near Nyman.
Mr. Henry L. Landstrom and Miss
Lillie Marie Johnson, both of Red
Oak, were married at 8 o'clock in the
evening. They were accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Arvid Landstrom. The
bride and groom left after the wed
ding for Wakefield, Neb., where they
will make a short visit. They will re
side on a farm five miles south of Red
Oak.
Golden Wedding at Red Oak.
Red Oak, la., Jan. 26. (Special.)
A number of Red OaW residents went
to Elliott yesterday afternoon, where
they attended the celebration of the
golden wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Spicer, former
residents of Pilot Grove township.
Mr. Spicer was born in Pennsylvania
on July 10, 1842, and Mrs. Spicer,
whose maiden name was Clarissa Gar
vey, was born in New York on May
12, 1849. They were married Janu
ary 24, t867, in Pulaska, Wis., from
where they moved to Nebraska in
I
15th and Harney
i -.
mind that you get the extra $ i.w
sartie good service now ana
WEEK ONLY
S
Streets
The Bee by George MpManus
'
DIED
1873. Two years later they came to
Montgomery country, settling on a
farm in Pilot Grove township, where
they resided until 190.5, when they
went to Elliott to make their home.
Baron Rhondda's Daughter
Enters Drug Business
(Correspondence of The Associated Press.)
London, Jan. 12. Lady Mackworth,
daughter of Baron Rhondda, who has
been called the most successful Eng
lish business woman, has just taken
over the management of a large Ger
man drug business in England, which
her father purchased at auction a few
months ago.
Baron Rhondda, now in the Lloyd
George cabinet as president of the
Local Government board, is known
as "the British coal king." He has
much faith in woman's business abil
ity. His wife, the Baroness Rhondda.
is manager bf a mineral water com
pany at Fulham. His reliance upon
his daughter's business skill was illus
trated in 1915, when, during his ab
sence in America in connection with
The Horrible Handicap
of Poisoned Blood
The Innocent Suffer Even Unto
the Third and Fourth Genera
tions, But Relief Is Now in
Sight.
It has long been accepted as a
matter of course that the sins of the
fathers must be suffered by innocent
posterity, yet it is hard to become
reconciled to this condition. The
heritage of physical infirmity is a
handicap under which thousands
must face the battle of life.
Scrofula is probably the most no
ticeable of the transmitted blood dis
orders, though there arc other more
severe diseases of the blood that pass
from one generation to another. No
matter what inherited Mood taint you
may be laboring under, S. S. S. offers
hope. This remedy has been in gen-
Sts.
always
I SMI III 'I I If III HH ill IsTTB
union t .m.ui ii .m'WMtsh . -jmais- ' t7t ismb
r - TS
WELL-HE SAID -THE
LEADING MAM OOtT
- SO THE t)HOW
VOULD CLObE -
AND YOO APPLAUDED-
I
the organization of the supply of mu
nitions, he entrusted her with the
oversight of his entire business in
Great Britain.
"1 am a firm believer ill woman's
; capacity for business." said Ladv
j Mackworth in talking over her new
, ventures, "and I look forward to the
i time when 'Smith & Daughter' will
excite no more comment over the en
trance of a business house than does
'Smith & Son' today."
Former Omaha Man Shot
At Denver by Holdup
Denver, Colo., Jan. 26. Thinking
a man who entered his drug store last
night was a friend attempting a prac
tical joke. Dr. D. B. McMahan of
Denver lapghed at him instead of
raising his hands as commanded. The
robber shot him and escaped with
$10. Noise of a phonograph playing
a record prevented persons in the
store from realizing a robbery was
under way until the shot was heard.
Dr. McMahan, who formerly lived
in Omaha, today has an even chance
to live, according to physicians.
! eral use for more than fifty years. It
i is purely vegetable, and contains not
a particle of any chemical, ana acts
promptly on the blood by routing all
traces of the taint, and restoring it to
absolute purity.
Some of the most distressing cases
of transmitted blood poison have
yielded to the treatment of S. S. S.,
and no case should be considered in
curable until this great remedy has
been given a thorough trial. S. S. S.
acts as an antidote to every impurity
in the blood. You can obtain it at
any drug store. Our chief medical
adviser will take pleasure in giving
you without cost any advice that your
individual case requires. Write to
day to Swift Specific Co., 36 Swift
Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
TO ORDER l
lTUilHtlMK3s lit ll