THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1919. 1; r BARNYARD ro MEET IN VIC BEE i PETERSBURG MEW to or imhUU MohM M City Gets 1920 kto-T yhoe Pitching Tourney; lor tlnito Time Sport Springs I j i line opun dpniiy JaiHh Popular Favor. wan I Petersburg. Fla.. March 31.-- JMSlJ1-) "Barnyard golf" the new ifor horseshoe ""oitchinn has ( . Nitfo its own and is all the race end it Prominent business .men, the V '. I . ,.. (J VCI, liavc 14HCU HI IMC OUl- ,V , Thport introduced to the world stitutiillage blacksmiths" of years . j Actional organization has . Cj formed and horse shoe or i its air "barnyard golf" clubs will .. be springing up everywhere in :rica. .Virry C Haynes. a prominent fcer, of Akron, O.. was elected ; Sdent of the new body. 1 tro4e-presidents elected were D. .nk Robinson, of Poughkeepsie, I Y.; Fred M. Burst, Columbus. C A. Giant, of Pittsburgh, Pa., Pjd Huntsvijle. Ala.; VV. W. Henrv, liisbon, O.; Joseph Burkhart, Bin- Ird, N. D., and L. J. Byers, Coin later, Mich. J. I. Ward, St. Peters (irg, Fla., wag chosen secretary, and Henry T, Steinhauer, Monticello, N. was elected treasurer. I The second annual "Barnyard lf" tournament for the champion tgi&vt America will be held again In Petersburg during February 1920, " which experts the "country over till participate. There are 30 per- rct courts in St. Petersburg open tie year around for lovers of the lime, , sAt a meeting of the rules commit- held here, several important jlianges were made and among them ' pas the scoring of ' tournament flames. Hereafter 50 points will Constitute a game in all titular -pitches, while regulation contests III remain at 21 points. The dis- Miee between the pegs which are to iniof steel, has been placed at 40 Qtit of the vice presidents of the ,. . -ganization is the national cliam t0bn and he helped in drawing up he rules that will govern the sport hjilhe future. He is Fred M. Burst jColumbus, O. i I ' ! ; neiemont Trapshots ami. 1 'l . n ... n r C sum iCKea ro uive kj. u. v,. Gunners Good Battle orev brat ii evident that the Omaha Gun orcb shooters are going to have tip work cut out for them when y meet-the Fremont Trapshoo Vclub next Sunday afternoon at ing; local club grounds in the shoor out'the Reese trophy. The Fremont oveters are practicing as diligently ... 'tur. home boys, and the scores Thi1 'n re as goo and somt ine Mjttle better than those of its appeal a gun men, ernment. iday, R. Middaugh showed tobacco tr?a card breaking 50 .n nhots- Koyen and Wil holders neefj up ,n the scores JUfx and 45 respectively ifTfie "Jeffqrts. Fourteen Fre ffwjnterTwerefaVthe traps and there dre -no ready poor scores. The Scores': .4 V Hit spirl)iMeh-.. : m mtmn ... 45 Ttfmaii j... 4 Bddnugfc; " IIO fituen 7. r - A Rector 43 Roo!indroth 41 Will? Mcintosh 4" '.Bpuller 40 greaU se , Cdy S2 . t.&)rn 18 Jnf IS Shot at 60 50 60 60 . 50 N 50 60 50 60 50 50 35 25 35 De').'-:-V 3riy League Class B Organizations Hold Elections. Tonight t pre, pagers of, the American and if fcr league, class B organizations, tfy meet with Jake Isaacson lues a 1& evening to perfect the organiza i of, their leagues. The meeting f.l pe held in the office of Park , .Jcimmyisioner : Falconer and will dlkrt at 8 o'clock. thThe class - B fellows will ele;t bteir; officers at this meeting. The iitv. league elected its president at L -t last session, but the American tfid not. Election of a president for he American league and vecret . ries r(both of the organisations wil the plce- A schedule for each tnavV wil1 1so be dravin up f . ' Session. The opening date for re8arHbiganiations was decided edBa t the last meeting, but no for i" mti schedule was adopted Frank w!rbs, president or me i-uy league. 41 a schedule drawn up which he jl1resent to the managers ot us t-nt zation tor approval. )ht" With 'Right to Jaw.- tadelphia. Pa., March 31. tfohnny Kilbane, featherweignt cjoampion, KtNcii MfiwIyPhiladelphia. in the second ' Cou'Vi scheduled six-round bout . iierei tonight. The knockout blow & Ava a short right to the jaw. Exneriment with vr It Often Leads it a Will Never Be Cured by Local Treatment With . - : Sprays and Douches. Treatment With. ii ui: ca shxCttaxrh is a condition of the ible i'Jt nd can not be cured by lo.cal Mrs. 0,g 0f 8ty,vs and douches; 000 under iter-nl orvb the thou. used, for the furtherance s, rted to i.ane IS, OI course, mtipuic v- a rgards aj a use or tnose resource SlToShS lo the moVemriwhich attack, the disease , at i? en in their conservatism, rcfeblood, and produces sat- XJjed influence that enu rinanent. Theyvrun - -i rmauciiL. incviu 11 Vnt a masculine figHre ON POINTS JOE LYNCH LOSES TO JIMMIE WILD While He Loses the Bout, American Boxer Is Con gratulated by Prince oj Wales. London , March 31. "Jimni"e" Wilde, the British flyweight cham pion, tonight defeated Joe Lynch, an American boxer, on points in a 15 round bout. The Trince of Wales, Prince Al bert and Lord Lonsdale witnessed the contest. It was a fast and stub bornly fought battle throughout. Wilde started a three to ne fa vorite, but Lynch was doing ,o well in the' ninth round that the bettirg fell Jto even. In this and the fol lowing rounds, Wilde was badly shaken by heavy punishment, but fought gamely and recovered, in the fifteenth. The American finished the fresher of the two, and although Wilde won on points, he had a close call. The verdict was somewhat of a surprise to many present and there was some adverse comment. WilJe was giving Lynch about 16 pounds in weight. At the close of the fight the Prince of Wales congratulated , both nun and said that it was by meeting-: such as this that Anglo-Americin friendship, which they had welcomed throughout the war, became cement ed for all time. , Polo Players Take Up Boxing to Condition Themselves for Play Del Monte, Cal., March 31. Box ing as a regular exercise is consid ered one of the best aids to condi tioning in order to play polo in the estimation of a number of promi nent polo players who are here for the playing season with their sta bles. According to its advocates there is no exergise which is better adapted for limbering the muscles, quickening the eye and improving the' wind. C. Maurice Heckscher, '.he Mead owbrook club player, believes in it o the extent of securing a boxing part ner with whom he puts -on the gloves every day. Matty Flynn, the east ern middleweight boxer, is the man who puts the poloist through hts pace. Samuel F. B. Morse, former Yale football captain, and Eric Peddey are two other devotees of polo who are regularly taking up boxing -o condition them for the game. The Del Monte polo champion ships are scheduled to begin here on March 29 to continue to April 13. t At least a half do'en teams are expected to enter the events, in cluding several of the well known local organizations, which contain .1 number of the best polo payers on the Pacific coast. Coast Boxing Followers Discouraged at Prospects .San Francisco, Cal., March 31. Devotees of boxing in California who had hoped for favorable action in the present legislature in the mat ter of a referendum on the question of holding 10-round bouts frankly are discouraged in the light of the recent confessions of crooked deal ing made by Fred Fulton and Jack Johnson, the heavyweight pugilists. Opinion seemingly is inited in the belief that the sport snould not be made to suffer for the derelic tions of a few, and that ways and means should be sought to protect the public by adequately punishing the dishonest boxers. Four Players Get Places in National Indoor Tennis Meet New York, March 31. Four play ers today won places in the third round of the national indoor tennis championship singles. S. Howard Vospell, the "playing-through" champion, defeated Cory M. mer iman in straight sets, 6-2, 6-0. Fran'' C. Anderson, the junior of the Kings County club, beat Henry S. Parker 6-1, 11-13, 6-2. The scores of the other match follow: Gerald Emerson, Glenwocd Tennis club, defeated Edmund H. Hendrickson, Amherst, 6-3, 6-4: Peter Ball," Yale, defeated Frank Loughman, New York Athletic club. 6-4, 6-4. Greb Given Decision. - Pittsburgh, March 31 Harry Greb Pittsburgh, a' middleweight, was given the newspaper decision over Billy Miske. St. Paul, a heavy weight, in their 10-round bout here tonight. . Greb won eight of the 10 rounds on points. Shutout for University. Bloomngton, Ind., March 31. In the opening game of the bsse bal1 season here today, the Indianapolis (American Association) club defeat ed the Indiana University team, 9 to 0. Catarrh; to Uread consumption comes more and more aggravated J finally rnnhen rinum into the alarming condition that results when the lungs are affected. Thus Catarrh may be the forerunner of that most dreaded and hopeless of all diseases, consumption No local treatment affords per manent relief. Experience has taught that S. S. S. is the one remedy i even" me wuioi. "ferers are urfin IhoroughVtr: i . " V the Medi NEt advj SILK HAT HARRY f Pip - )l f , - ) S HE MATH PUTTINCTHt NEXT ONE OVER" SAME OLD SYRUP: MALARIA PARK, Fla.: Last year's pennant grabbers are going faster than a secret through a sewing circle. We don't see how they can keep us out of first place without an injunction. The boys are knocking that hand grenade for a row of Eskimo milestonef. Quinine Junction, Ga.: Although we finished in the caboose last sea son, we have that old pennant spent already. We have a pitching staff that Ty Cobb couldn't hit with a bass fiddle. Our baserunners are eas ing home when the shortstop is tagging their shadows at secpnd base. Buy your peanuts now before they jump to world series prices. Mopeville, Tex.: A team of Philadelphia lawyers couldn't bilk the Red Necks out of this season's championship. The boys are so full of pepper that we have to lasso 'em to make 'cm eat. We'll finish first on one, leg. Bunk Station, Miss.: The team is smacking that agate so hard that they are scaring all the birds north. Every time one of the boys lands it sounds like a guy hitting a ripe pumpkin with a bed slat. Anything under a three-base hit is out. We'll cop the pennant, but we don't ex pec to make much mopey on tjje gate. The attendance will consist of big crowds who got iri"on balls nit over center field fence. JULY. SAME TEAMS. DIFFERENT SYRUP. Cleveburgh: Out of the fifty cuckoos who ate their heads off down in Malaria Park last spring not a one is left, except the ground keeper, who was wise enough to marry the manager's gimlet-eyecl sister. We're glad the manager only had one sister. The team has a losing average of 68 out of 70 games. It rained twice. . Bostonatti: That crowd of meat hounds out at Zoo ark could never grab the pennant unless they sneaked upon it in the dark. The pitching staff couldn't throw a ball through a horse collar. Manager Gapper said he had the cream of the league, but this' is the first time we ever lamped the cream on the bottom ot the milk. The team's winning average is only six short of Woody's 14 points. Three batters were canned for swinging at a flock of sparrows. n St. Yorkland: The only home player who reached first in June got so dizzy that they had to nail his hat on. The club owners tied the boiler to 36 players. The pitchers are so scared of the opposing batters that they would pass a clothing dummy on suspicion. The base ruuners are so slow that they still have snow on their shoes from the last blizzard in December. Eighth place looks high for us this year. Pittstroit: Some bae ball writer called our team a bunch of bums, but we don't think they deserve the promotion. They're all round Shoul dered from looking at grounders hopping through their legs. The bat ters couldn't hit a bale of cotton with a shovel The outfielders couldn't catch a dime in a tambourine. If a broken armed pitcher was throwing meat balls at our batters they would all starve to death. The catchers couldn't get the ball to second in a letter. A team average of .0049 is a fever for this bunch. Class Distinction Is Taboo in Democracy of the Sinn Feiners London, March 31. Sinn Fein' is probably the only political move ment in Europe in which the dif ference between women and men is not only nominal, but nonexistent. It has obviously captured the souls of Ireland's young womanhood, and to the fact that they march, -jiot in separate bodies, but in the same ranks with their sweethearts and brothers, the movement owes SO per cent oTits iron strength. Sinn Fein knows and calculates on the strength of its young women enthusiasts. Some of them, in Dub lin at least, are girls of good social position who have given up "family and fortune to join its wild, if fascin ating ranks. For example, at the late Richacd Coleman's public fu neral in Dublin, there was a girl marching at the head of one of the principal Sinn Fein branches of clubsand in company with two of ficers, she was apparently in charge of the contingent. They were prac tically all men marchirfg behind her a well-known solicitor, doc tors and barristers, more than one famous racing man, chemists and teachers and manual workers all sorts and conditions of men-j-yet they evidently saw nothing unusual in being led by a girl, and they treated her just the same as they treated their other officers. During the general election Sinn Fein women played a surprisingly prominent official part. In the rebel countess' constituency most of the work was done by women: and in Alderman Tttomas Kelly's there was a young woman in charge of his central committee rooms, who seemed to have the election laws at her finger ends. Later she was sworn in as an impersonation agent in a city ward the only female in a squad of about 40 men. And this girl is typical of the women and of the place they hold in Sinn Fe,'n. Democracy, too, is the very life of Sinn Fein women. It is not at all unusual to march side by. side with your coal man ; or for a mistress to 9. Intern.tton-1 Copyright, 191 I'M TEU-'AJ Cr ovJ THAT" l! HIT SKOtt jilASMeu-wcs-eVW ww or manifest. A woman may hold the hig-hest post in the organization. She might, for instance succeed De Valera; but neither a pretty face nor family influence nor aristocratic rank would be of the slightest help to her in influencing the Sinn Fein ers. - Perhaps nowhere 4s the mystery of this movement and of Ireland herself so exemplified as in Graf ton street. Beautifully dressed wo men, wearing regimental badges, perhaps, with officers in uniform, pass shoulder to shoulder and sit side by side at tea with pretty rebels wearing republican badges and col ors, and with volunteer escorts. Autoists Demanding Performance from Cars Automobile owners, as well as au tomobile manufacturers, are putting into practice lessons learned during the war, according to W.. L. Killy, Lexington distributor. "While builders of cars were tak ing advantage of developments in engineering brought forth under the stress of the times, motorists were learning to value-performance above ?il else in . a car," declares Mr. Killy. "This is evident from the fact that they demand consistent proof of the car's utility before buying. They in vestigate performance first and look at lines afterward. The day of buy ing a car for appearance sake alone is past." With the Bowlers Hooater League. Won. Lost. Pet. Loney's Exprru 18 6 .722 Kohlers Autos .;..ll 7 .612 Harmony Cafeteria g 10 .444 Omaha HayCo 4 14 .222 Individual Averages. Hanrock 195jH. Chase 149 K. Chase". 163Boyd ' 14S Rasmusxen 161IRush 147 E. Knoski lS9irhac 147 Urlmm 159j3lade 142 Kranda .' 159jH. Bachman ....141 C. Bachman lftSlKronardt U.16 Orant UliLaughery '.133 I.oblanc lBlUlurphy 12f Kohler 15l Orphrum (iarden League. Won. Lost. Pot. Kohler'e Express , 26 4 .87 South Side Wonders 21 .700 OmaiaStf-uct. Steel 1 14 .633 WJT 15 IS .600 ..14 16 .467 DC achman ! New. Servic. DfaWll fOf . lk.7 I'M MOT KIDDXjG 5 AS THAT 50 ME op -we Bt6-seJT - rue JweujeSt" Sport By KID The big event in Council Bluffs wrestling circles will be the Barney Burtiam-Charley Pesek match at the Bluffs Auditorium on the night of April 12. This pair of middle weights will meet in a finish match, best two out of three falls for the entire gate receipts, winner take all, with Denny Ryan, athletic director of the Knights of Columbus at Fort Omaha, referee. Manager Bill Jackson of the Oma ha Western league ball club wishes to invite some of the local semi-pro players to come out to Rourke park some time during the latter part of the week and work out with him. throwing the pill around a little and batting a few "fungoes." Wees Cor coran, Chugs Ryan, Jimmy Collins, Alvie Graves and the southpaw out fielder formerly with the Murphys, Sutaj, are especially invited to come, out. The hand ball tournament at the Y. M. C. A. is attracting consider able attention among the habitues at the ' Y." There are still two teams with 1,000 per cent standings, but the tourney is hardly half over and it is expected that these teams will drop a game ,or two before the close of the event. The winning team will challenge the Omaha Ath letic club to a series of games to de cide the city championship. It is nearly time for another Dristy-Stangl wrestling match. These two young heavyweights have met three times and the standing is still 50-50. Dristy was the winner in the amateur meet a year ago, Stangl won the pro tussle at the Omaha auditorium and each gained a fall at Carroll, la., a short time ago and the match was called a draw when Stangl injured his arm. Friends of "Big Bill" are predicting that there will be a winner in their next match and his initials won't be J. S. Dristy has been working out King Greets Hero of Top-o'-World Automobile Race Barcelona, Spain, March 30. The great Partridge mountain race, the premier event of the year in all Spanish motordom, was being run. With the sun not yet in sight, 12 great speed creations were hurling themselves along the treacherous, winding road, through a dangerous mist, toward Spain's "top-o'-the-world" the cloud-capped peak of Partridge mountain. Breathlessly the little group of men and women at the foot of the shrine waited,, peering intently "tip ward to where the rising sun was painting the top or tne mountain a dusky blood-red. A man at a road side telephone turned. "Jose is out. Car went over on a turn. Mechani cian killed," he cried, with a sob in his voice, for Jose, who drove a high-powered Italian ar, was a pop ular favorite with the villagers. Silently the seconds passed and, before the contest was half finished, only five cars were left, the others being strewn in splintered heaps of wreckage along the treacherous road. It was a saddened little group at the shrine which waited the final result which came from the watcher at the telephone after the time of the contestants had been computed. "Luis Carreras, in Hudson Super Six, wins," he shouted, and a ripple of cheers greeted the sun, visible for the first time through the mists. In winning with a stock car, the only change in it having been the It-: HoLYe Big Game Hunters Buffalo Shooting in Wyo. Cheyenne, Wyo., March 31. (Spe cial.) Blase sportsmen who lament the fact that they can no longer pur sue and kill the wild buffalo of the western plains, a la Buffalo Bill, have one more guess coming. Such as have the price and the price will be a long one may soon enjoy the novelty of a wild buffalo hunt, in his native habitat unaccompanied by taint of civilization or game warden restrictions, just as Bill Cody did in thcgood old days of . the woolly west. Major Timothy McCoy, owner of i I .1 S t ... ... iscvciai rnousana acre, ot mountain WvJaiaAin land in j Owl creek iT" I West" 'TjSIHViiirinntia. ha The Bee b Tad mm I ou A VOW OtD uJSa kith 7 p. a- Shorts GRAVES. with Clarence Ecklund and he claims that he has learned a great deal from the light-heavyweight champion and will surely gain a de cisive victory when he meets Stangl again. . I Wrestling promoters at Daven port, la., want to sign Charlie Peters up for a match over there in the near future. It is doubtful that the Papillion carpenter will take on a match in the Iowa city as he is par ticularly busy aiding the booze hounds in Sarpy county just now. Charlie is the sheriff, by gosh, in that there county and he just nat urally hasn't got time to train for any mat bouts now. He couldn't even go on for his manager, Jack Lewis, at one of the Omaha shows. The former welterweight cham pion, Ted Lewis, has entered a New York hospital for a thorough exam ination. Both he and his friends be lieve that he is the victim of some sort of sickness that is sapping his strength and staying power and that it has been gaining on him for a long time. Some of his friends claim that it was the cause of his recent loss of the title to Jack Britton. Sick or not sick, it is dollars to stale dough nuts that Lewis will never regain the welter crown as long as Jack Britton owns it. He will probably get chances enough at it, but he will never be able to topple that cham pionship decoration from the brow of the present title-' older. The Bellevue gunners will get to gether the latter part of this week to perfect the organization "of a Bellevue Trapshooting club. Johnny Brown, Bert Brassman and his two sons and the Langhein boys are the leading gunners in the Missouri river town at present, but when all the young fellows return from the army and navy, they will present quite a respectful crowd of shooters. They have had no trap gun exper ience, but they are all crack shot hunters of ducks, geese and rabbits. use of a special body, Carreras had broken all records for the course by 13 kilometers. Carreras leached the top of the mountain in 35 3-5 min utes at an average speed of 121 kilo meters an hour. In recognition of the feat King Alfonso had his chief secretary send Carreras a letter, which said: "I have had the honor to convey to his majesty the news of your vic tory, and he has specially charged me to convey to you his congratula tions on having won the race with a Hudson Super-Six." Oshkosh Team Wins in Five Men Event in BowlinglIeet Toledo, March 31. The five-men event of the American Bowling con gress tournament closed here to night after more than three weeks of almost continuous competition with the Athearn hotel five of Osh kosh, Wis., winning the champion ship by a team score of 2,992. Thirty-two more teams competed tonight, but none was able to enter the list of first ten. The Riordan Coffee company five of Kansas City, Mo., was high of the second squad tonight with 2,850, good for about thirtieth place in the money divi sion. Today's Calendar of Sports. Raring Winter meeting of Cuba-Amer-ran Jockey club, at linvana. Kpring meet ing at Ouklawn Park. Hot Springs, Ark. Spring meeting of Southern Maryland Rac ing association, at Howie, Md. Automobile Opening of annual show of Denver Automobile Healers' Association. Boiing Soldier Rartfield against Bat tling Ortega, four rounds, at San Fran cisco. Kid Norfolk against Larry Williams 1 rounds, at Boston Palmer herd of buffalo and will turn the animals loose in a 4,000-acre en closure in which the meek and lowly but business-like barbed wire will take no part. Rim rock already en closes the area, and artificial barriers will be erected to insure the reten tion of this herd representing an in vestment of more than $40,000. As soon as the enclosure can be completed the Major announces he will invite a few noted sportsman for a real buffalo hunt, in order to try out his plans thoroughly. After that, ambitious big game hunters with the price may get their sanies Sin trie Mainr i n-.,::.. i- . f wtWI i I -,"al-'"8 "SI. I " " -iiriicr nera HITCHCOCK NOT IN ACCORD WITH ROOT PROPOSAL Nebraska Senator Thinks Submission of All Disputes to Tribunal Would Raise Storm of Objection. WashingtoiCMarch 31. -Disagree ment, as to the necessity of the six amendments proposed by Elihu Root to the league of nations constitu tion was expressed tnniirht in a statement by Senator Hitchcock, Ne- Draska. ihe amendments proposed by Root and contained in a letter to Will Havs. rennhliran natinnal rnm- mitteenian, also were the subject of a statement hv Senator Hnrah. Idaho, an onoonent of the nronosed covenant, who endorsed the view- DOIIlt ot Knot Asserting that the statement of Koot was entitled "to the highest Consideration." Senator Hitrhrnrk expressed the belief that his proposal tor compulsory submission of all dis putes including those of "national honor" and "vital interests" to an international tribunal for trial would raise "a storm of objection" in the senate and would be going further than other nations would care to go. Should Be Divided. The amendment proposed by Mr. Root reserving the Monroe Doc trine and American questions, in cluding immigration, should at least be divided, the Nebraska senator said, as one nortion of the amend ment treats of an international pol icy and the other a domestic policy. The Monroe Doctrine, Senator Hitchcock said. is extended to the entire world by the proposed cov enant and specific inclusion is not necessary, as "our notice to the world still stands that we will regard it as a cause of war . if any nation attempts forcible aggression on the western hemisphere." "As to Root's proposition that questions of a domestic character like immigration should be definite ly excluded from the league's juris diction," said Hitchcock, "I agree with him, although not in the word ing of his amendment. I am quite certain that only international ques tions can be considered, but that matter can easily be made .clear and I believe it will be." Service Equipment to Count Heavy This Year "This is the year when the dealer's rervice equipment will count with prospective owners," says C. J. Dut ton, local Kissel distributor. "The service end has always been important, but from now on for sev eral reasons it will be of greater im portance. "In buying a truck or passenger car the purchaser considers the pur chase in a business way. He real izes that to get proper results on Ins investment he will have to take proper care of his truck or car, and knows that he will undoubtedly have tc buy spare parts from time to time as well as to have necessary re pairs taken care of promptly and ef ficiently. Rutherford Heads Better Letters Association W. O. Rutherford of the B. F. Goodrich Rubber company has been elected president of the Better Let ters association. The organization is national in scope and numbers among its members some of the foremost mercantile and manufac turing concerns in the country. The pyrpose of the body is to make busi ness correspondence uniformly ef ficent and to eliminate through ex change of ideas and constructive .riticism objectional and unneces sary practices, and to carry on an extensive educational campaign es tablishing good letter writing fun damentals. Four German Subs Leave England for United States Harwich, England, March 31. Four German submarines conoyed by the United States submarine tender Bushnell, left here today for the United States. Many more than the required number of officers are making the transatlantic trip on the captured craft. Dismiss Mandamus Washington, March 31. Federal court decrees dismissing mandamus proceedings brought by William F. Arant, seeking to have the secretary of the interior directed to show cause why Arant should be removed as superintendent of Crater Lake National park, Oregon, were upheld today by the supreme court. Arant claimed that under civil service laws he could not be removed without first being notified in writing of charges made against him. LANPHER The better grade dealers sell Lanpher Hats because they must sell articles in which you, the Pul lie, have confidenceThey're RATHBUN 'PARDON CASE PROBE TO END TO WEEK Investigation by Judiciary Committee of Iowa House Nearly Finished, According to Des Moines Reports. Des Moines, la., March 31. This week will see the end of the Rath bun pardon case investigation by the judiciary committee of the Iowa house of .representatives, according to present plans. The house may re ceive a committee report on the mat ter Friday or Saturday. When the committee resumes its investigation tomorrow afternoon, further witnesses will be examined with regard to the methods em ployed by H. M. Havner, attonty general, and other state counsel in setting aside the pardon and sending Krnest Rathbun to Anamosa re formatory. Most of the inquiry so far has dealt with Gov. W. L. Harding's ac tion in pardoning the youth before he had served a day of his life sen tence for criminal assault, but the final sessions last week switched to a new phase-the part Havner played in the matter. The resolution adopted by the house ordering the investigation called for the fullest inquiry not only into the governor's reasons for freeing the young man, but also into the methods employed by Havner in gaining revocation of the pardon through an "agreement" with young Rathbun. May Recommend Censure. Close observers of the investiga tion are predicting freely the prob able course the committee's recom mendations to the house will take, and among the four Des Moines pa pers there is absolute unanimity of professed belief that impeachment proceedings will not be mentioned, but, they predict? the committee un doubtedly will recommend censure of both Governor -Jlarding and At torney General Havner, the former for acting hastily in granting the pardon without fullest investigation, and the latter for entering into an alleged "bargain" that sent Rathbun to the reformatory and caused the quashing of indictments voted by the Ida county grand jury against his brother and father and his attor ney, George Clark.V Governor Harding has admitted in testifying before the committee that he did not investigate the case on his own initiative, but relied on information furnished by Clark, to gether with the records of the trial. He admitted further that had he in vestigated for himself, he would have concluded Rathbun was guilty as charged, and would have refused a pardon. , Just what knowledge, if any, the governor had of the alleged "bar gain" setting aside the pardonhas not been brought out, and possibly may come up before the investiga tion is completed. H. W. Byers, special committee counsel, severely arraigned Attorney General Havner, Clark and others Who were parties to the alleged "bargain." and which, Bvers said, sent "Rathbun to the penitentiary to save Clark." While the attention of the public has been centered in the investiga tion, both branches of the legisla ture, the house and senate, have con tinued grinding out measures, hop ing to complete their task 'in time for adjournment some time after the middle of the month. There still is no indication that adjourn ment sine die can be taken before the 19th, and the session may ex tend beyond that. The highly important good roads bill made its appearance in both houses last week, and is assured of almost immediate consideration. The house made it a special order for tomorrow morning at 10 o'clockf and the senate is expected to con sider it later this week, probably not until final action in the lower chamber, however. Division of Opinion. A division of opinion has beet caused in the legislature on the pro posal to send former members of the 168th infantry to New York to meet the regiment when it returns with the Rainbow division. The senate passed a bill by Senator Rat cliff of Red Oak for an appropria tion of $50,000 to pay the expenses, of the invalided soldiers, but when the house military affairs commit tee got hold of the bill, it changed it radically. As before the house, the bill would make an appropria tion of $75,000 and designate Des Moines as the city in which to hold an official reception of the lt8th in fantry, the state paying all expenses for the attendance of disabled Iow ans who saw service Jh the war in either the army or navy branch. It is said many members of the house are opposed to the measure as amended, and even stronger opposi tion probably would develop in the senate if the house passed it, as committee members declare it will. $5 I Vald at tbo South 4 x W-AZJ Ud at. tbo Smith