THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY APRIL 22, 1919. GREAT DEMPSEY CARNIVAL BEST SHOW ON BOARDS Even Better Than Jeffries ' Tour; Staged On Same Plan ' and Outclasses Sullivan Venture of 1881. - When Omaha" sforting tans , see the Tack Dchnpsey Athletic carnival at -the "Auditorium Thursday night, they will see the jrreatest show of its kind ever attempted in America. Be fore the famous Reno mill. Jim Jeff rie made a triumphal tour of the cun'fy,? hoxingr . exhibitions 'and CTsiting a furore among; his sup- ,pfy"rs. - Sullivan startled the world bv meeting all comers and paying $M) to aiyone,that. coul stay before 'him' for four rounds. That tour is .i. t t r i ine reasoiv jonn u. was proclaimed the " champion' 'of thampions.v He never forfe;ted his bonus money, no mart ever stood up to him over the fon round route. N The Dempsey carnival is even greater than was Sullivan's. Jack will: pay $1,000 to anyone staying four rounds and doesn't stop with the one bout with the challenger. He ihenstakes on a sparring partner and. gives another exhibition. - Be sides' Dempsey's sensational appear- , ancfc, he carries a company of all nation wrestlers who exhibit their 'wares before" Jack gets into the .ring. Local talent is secured when possible, to oppose the wrestlers and whtn they are not available, they 'wrestle among themselves, always giving a good show and thus appeal ing to fol'owcrrof tHs line of sport. , To Box Williams. Thursday night. Dempsey will box 'a three-round exhibition with Harry, WilVams, the local newcomer in the heavyweight boxing game, but who is considered a fine prospect for championship honors within the next few vears. Following Harry's bout. Jack will take on his only New York conquerer, ohn Lester Johnson, a gigantic negro, who was given a popular verdict dver him in Demp1 sev's first New York appeacance. Thts fellow J&hnson will serve to . give fans an idea of how Jack- will work in the bout with Willard. The negro is six feet four inches tall and weighs 230 pounds add has an enor mous reach. Jack will demonstrate the blows he hopes will bring him championship, on the huge colored chap. , Three local favorites will perform on the mat and a Central American champion will work against the carnival wrestlers before the cham ' pionship contender appears. Mat suda Ouishi, the Japanese mat ar tist, will meet Ludecke the Central Anfcricans Tom Rav and Jess Queen . will wrestle to a fall and the leading heavyweight wrestler with the show will take, on , the popular Papillion carpenters Charlie Peters. It is reported that Paul .Murray, the nesrro boxing instructor at the Nor'h Side Athletic club and janitor nt (he Federal building, expects to box, two rounds with Dempsey also. Murray went four rounds with Jack Johnson when the ex-champion was in hi best form, he Says, and two rounds with Jess Willard. He is 35 years- oJd al weighs - only 175 pounds, , but believes he is in good 'shape and hopes to stick two rounds. "Of course. I'll probably -get mussed up some." grinned Murray. "But ' I can stand that. I think Dempsey is a better man than either Johnson or Willard. , Miller, Second Sacker, Back' From Overseas; , Won't Be in Opener New, York, April 21. John B. (Dots) Miller, second baseman, who left the St. Louis - National league base ball .club to enlist" in the ma rines, returned today as a casual on the cruiser , Charleston. A few months after' this country entered ' the warhe did not "make a run ,for ' a shipyard and grab a handful of .Vivets, he said, and betyoaned what he said was his -"hard luck" not -arriving in France n time to get into action before the armistice was signed. .v ," "And now I'm back home, what's ' happened?" MHler added. "I'm to be sent down to Cjuantico to be mustered out and the St. Louis team 'opens the season in . Chicago on April 27 and I won't be there." JACK DEMPSEY And His All-Star ' Athletic Carnival AUDITORIUM Thursday Night, April 24 '. Box Office Now Open Prices, $1, $1.50 and S2.00 World's Featherweight Championship OEIESTLinG MATCH , Council Sluffs Auditorium TUESDAY NIGHT; APRIL 22 Vernon Breedlove 1 FEATHERWEIGHT CHAMPION OF THE WORLD Waiter Smith CLAIMANT AND CHALLENGER Best Two'Out of Three Falls No Time Limit TWO GOOD Starts At Ttckata en sal at Clark's Drug Stor and Kellogg' Barbar Shop. Riagtide $1.50. War Tax, 15c Balcony, first 5 rows. ................. .$1.00. War Tax. 10c Balance of Balcony .50. 'War Tax, 5c DENNIE RYAN, Referee. Notes From TK t;r lpairttps tret under war to day in every city of the circuits with opening games. Booked, ine. urooic-lyn-Boston games at Boston go into to the standing columns of the Na tional Jeague, but that was a special opening for some, reasoa Of other. TV,, root coQsnn starts today. a st ern dopesters pick the Giants and the Cubs to be battling tor tne rag. RrnnLlvn and Itnstnn are well-UD in the line according to the dope. The two Sox teams appear to- have the edge in the American,1 the red nose of Boston being the favorite over the white legs of cmcago. -ine A.,niM.ni A cenrialimi lAilt nnefl their doors today, too.' Cofumbus seems to be the pick in this loop, wrtlvMU waukee having a good chance. ' ' "One of the biggesf trapshooting tournaments in this country opens at Pinehurst, N. C, tomorrow after nnm The North Carolina State Trapshooting association fosters this yearly event. ,v" ' i' - ' Former Welterweight Champion T1 1 pwis arrordinc to advices from his physician, has .recovered from his illness ana is.reaay ior inc ring onca more.'Ke has been" signed for a return bout with Jack'Br.ttton on the Fourth of July. but bei. re tliat engagement he will, probably meet Johnny Tillman of St. Patii at Philadelphia. V The light-heavyweight boxing championship will be decided, in a 15-round mill at Tulsa. Okl.. tonight. r;ii Mint n( sf. Paul, defender of t'-e title, will meet Bill Brennair of Chicago and a referee's decision win he rendered at the conclusion of the bout. Miske figures to win the mill, but Breniian will make him step out to do it. 4 - Philadelphia has another, boxing ,club, named the , Empire "Athletic club. The-Empire, promoters have a location . just across - the street from the beautiful Olympia'A. C, though their bouts wilf be held on a different night. They have picked Thursday night 'for their' shows. 'hile the Olymbia stages bouts on Mondays. Joe O'Donnell and John- nv Murray will box the opening bill this Thursday night. They nre bantams. . - ' The Walker boxing bill, fostered by tlie, Army, Navy ' and Civilian board 6f boxing control has passed the senate of New, York State legis lature and been sent back to the lower house. The New York house now has two boxing1 measures up for consideration, the Gibbs bill and the Walker article. The fans of OMAHA RELEASES THREE PLAYERS, TWO TO WE Red Mack and Jess Kranda Go to Three Eye League, While Hi Hale Let Out Unconditionally. "Manager ""Bill ""Jackson of the Omaha Western league club an nounced yesterday morning that he bed released three p:ayers of - the present squaS, one unconditionally and the other two to - th Moline (111.) Three-Eye league ' club. The players turned over to Moline are Red Mack and Jess Kranda. Hi Hale was released unconditionally, but may he placed with a Three-Eye club later in the season- when he rounds into form. He is in poor shape now and because of a bad arm cannot seem to get in shape at any very early date. Not in very good form when he re ported, the practice in the cool breezes here didn't help Hale's bad arm any, in fact it seemed to be getting worse, and under such con ditions Hi would be of no use to any club, so Jackson let him go un conditionally, so that he could take his own" time in getting in proper conditions. If he succeeds in put ting himself in shape, he will report the fact to Jackson, and Bill. will have him placed with - Moline or some other Three-Eye league club. The rele-fse of Kranda and Mack was not on account of any poor showing against the Armours, but Simply because Bill figured that he had men that were just as valuable as either of these two to fill their posi tions and he felt he could spare them better than any of the others. Both of these fello should make wel come additions to the Moline club, as they are both good ball players and will probably come back to Omaha or to some other Western league club later in the season or next year. Hale has made a num ber o.f friends here and they will be sorry to see him go, but he is an other that will probably come back fhere again, if he, can round into good playing form. PRELIMINARIES 8:30 Sharp. ' AL FIORI, Promoter. Sport the eastern metropolis 'favor the Gibbs law rather than' the Walkeo ticket. . , y ' . " . The crack Akron, O., welter weight, Johnny Criffith, will box K, O. Willie Laughlin in Griffith's home town," Akron, "next Monday night. Laughlin recently lost a ver diet tOJack Britton in l5 rounds at Tulsa, Okl., and the weltes cham pion has defeated the Akron scrap per, over the--same route, so that the scrap between the two should prove a corking good mill. , . . . The grave of the late Lutfier Mc Carthy is being decorated iti flowers by the Elks of Pequa, 0 every few days. They have had this taken care of for the past six years. Billy AlcCarney, here a few days ago in advance of the Jack Demp sey. athletic carnival, was Luther's manager in his hey-day and passing around that way, he stopped at the former white heavy weight cham pion's grave and was surprised at its well-kept appearance. . A real featherweight champion ship wrestling match will b: on tap, at the Council Bluffs audtorium to nijtht .when Walter Smith, dis charged sergeant of the U. S. armjTj of Grand Island, Neb., meets Vernon Breedlove, another discharged army sergeant and featherweight cham pion of the world, in a finish match, best two out of three falls with no time; limit. Smith won the feathef weight title of the British Isles at Glasgow, Scotland, and two divytion al championships of vhc American army, so that he s.iciild prove a worthy opponent for the 125 ppund wrestling king. Omaha's popular welterweight wrestler, Young Gotch, will met Geo. jorgan of Minden, la., in the semi-tinal bout and thev will als-J go to a finish in a best two out of three fall match. Jorgan.-has met and de feated some of the, best weiters. in and around Iowa, while Gotch's rep utation is well known to local fol lowers of the mat game! This match should prove a bang-up bout and may be as interesting as the main event" itself, though Breedlove has promised a fast bout, on his ar, especially. , ; .,.-' The opening bout wil b a one fall finish match, between two mid dleweight amateurs of Council Bluffs, who seek to decide the ama teur supPfcrnacy of the Bluffs in this bout. Both are said to be good men and of the kind that would probably make their marks as professional performers if they were to inter the money mat game. Quincy, Mass., Runner Wins Marathon Race at Boston in 2:29: 13 2-5 Boston. April 21. Carl W. A. Linder of the Hurja Athletic club of Quincy won the Boston Athletic as association' 25-mile marathon run Saturday in two hours 29 minutes 13 2-5 seconds. William Wick of Quincy finished second and Ott J. Lanko of the Keleva Athletic club of Brooklyn was third. Wick's time was 2:30:15. The record for the course is 2:21: 18 1-5, made by Michael J. Ryan of the Irish-American Athletic club in 1912. Frank Gillespie ot Chicago finished fourth and M. J. Lynch of Washington, D. C. fifth. Linder took the lead from Gilles pie, near Coolidge Corner, Brook line,' more than two miles from the fikish, .after the western runner had led the field for several miles. The men started from. Ashland at noon. American Army Boxing Championships Reach Finals Set for April 26 Paris, April 21. (By Associated Press.) The boxing championships have now reached the survival of the fittest stage and before General Pershing, Marshal Foch and a bril liant galaxy of officers Jronr both the French and American' staffs the winners of the bouts on April 26, will be declared the champions of their respective classes in the Amer ican army. The semi-finals were fin ished Friday , night, but Colonel Johnson, athletic director . of the American' expeditionary forces, de cided to give the boys the1 benefit of a full week of training before ,the finals. , E. W. Dickerson Says He Is Still Western League President - Kansas City, April 21. In a state ment issued here last night, E. W. Dickerson, who was elected presi dent of the Western' league in June, 1917, and who has recently returned from overseas, reiterated his declar ation that his contract with the league is still in force, that he alone is the president and .not Al Tierney of Chicago, who was J selected for that office several months ago by Western league magnates. Xfr. Dickerson said that the elec tion of Mr. Tierney to the position was done without any - notification as far as he was concerned. ; Exhibition Base Ball Games. Philadelphia, Arll--Sl. The Philadel phia Nationals tied the exihlbitlon bam ball series at two-all by defeating the Philadelphia Americans here' today, I to 0 Score: R. H. E. Americans .000 001) 000- 0 9 1 Nationals 100 109 000 i 4 1 Batteriese: Geary, Orevell and Perkins; Watson. Woodward and ady. Brooklyn, April 31 In an exhibition rime today the New York Americans de feated the Brooklyn Natlouals. 6 to 1. Brooklyn made Its single ryn In the eighth inning off two hi.ta. Score: R. H. E. New Tork Americans i 8 A Brooklyn Nationals ....1 t i Batteries: Shawkey, Thormahlen and Hannah: Lamanx. Marquard and Grimes and Miller and M. Wheat A . Today's Calendar of Sports. Raring:' Spring meeting of Harfortl Ag. rlcaltHrnl and Breeders' association, at Havre de tirace, Md Baseball : Opening of the season of the Texas leagae. v Trark: Annual track and field meet or Southern Cnllfornla college conference, at Redlands, Cal. "Owmtingr I'nlted North and South mtear trnpahootlng tournament, 4i Plne harst. .o-ilnirr Billy Mlk vs. Bill Rrennan, 1.1 ronndti at TvJaa. Charlie White m Eddie CltaalnaBMaw, U rounds, at Boston. MAJOR LEAGUES HAVE PREPARED FOR NEW PERIOD Recently I Acquired Players and Conditions Make for Rad ical Changes in Conducting 'Big Circuits in Evidence. New York, April 21. The com ing, week 'Will usher In another base ball season under cpnditions which JheNnajer league magnate!, players and, fa".'! hope and expect will be more fruitful than those of the past few years"; With the blight of war lifted from the national sport it is the belief in all sections that the gam will Tebound to the heights of popularity wMch it enjoyed previous to the fleyastating sweep of world wide hostilities."-, . League officials and club owners, with this idea in mind, have devoted the past few months to preparing for a new period u base ball and their handiwork is evident in many directions. ' Radical changes were made in methods and system of con ducting the big leagues at the annual meetinsrv of. the magnates. Indi vidual c'.nh owners have labored to improve the strength of their forces and through the team managers have purchased or graded players in order to round out formidable com binations. . Both Leagues Stronger. How wdl tfiey litaye builded only time can demonstrate, but viewed from the standpoint of the, present it would appear as though both the National and American circuits were stronger and better balanced than has been the case in recent sea sons. Before the pennant races are well under way it is expected that the last of the, diamond stars now serving with the forces either at Lome or abroad, will have "doffed tl.e khak for base ball flannel. Many will reappear upon the field with a glamo't heretofoie lacking and the fans' welcome will be back ed by a sentiment containing some-., thing more than the admiration due the player for his , playing ability alone. .Mingled with faces of returning veteran- who havs won honors on the battlefields o Europe, as well au on the diamond, will be seen those of new comers bringing the speed, agility and zest of youth to the national game. From 'the training camps of the southland come reports of the sparkling play of several ;recruits-who promise to quickly establish themselves in the hearts of the fans as a result of their unusual skill with bat and ball. It is this constantly 'changing pic ture of personnel, playing ability and combat, tempered with the sen- t.ment and traditions of base ball, that has established the sport so firmly throughout the nation. Old stars may fade; youthful phenom enons leap to the zenith in their places, and-club owners come and go with little apparent effect upon the , popularity of the game. For many years base ball has held its own thrcugh prosperous and de pressing seasons because it is base ball ard America's game Tradi tion had welded the sport into an integral part of the nation's life. " Eastern 'CJubs Lead. Chicago leads in the number of championships won as the teams of that city have accounted for 11 pen nants. Boston is second with nine and New YorJc third with eight. Of the 37 pennants won by cities now represented in the league eastern clubs have captured 22 and western tepms IE. - ' ..This year the clubs face a shorter season and a pennant race of 140 games in place of the usual 154. VVhen the teams take the field on Wednesday with Chicago at St. Louis, Cleveland at Detroit, Phila delphia at Washington and Boston at New York, on the American league circuit and Brooklyn at Bos ton; 'New York at Philadelphia, Pittsburgh at Chicago and St. Louis at Cincinnati in the National league, the 1919 season will be about a week later in starting than has been the case in past yeas. What effect, if any, this will have upon the pennant races is uncertain at this time. Managers and mag nates hope for sittled weather and expect , that if normal temperature onditions prevail the teams will be able to play fast ball from the start. Close struggles with the lead shift ing frequently should make the base ball season of 1919 one of the brightest periods in "the annals of the game. Where Opening Games Will Be Played Wednesday, April 23. National league At Boston Brooklyn against Boston. At rnuaaeipma ,New York at Fhila- deluhia At Chicago Flttsburgh against Chi cago. At Cincinnati St. I,ouls against Cin cinnati. ' American Xearue. i At St. Louis Chicago against St. Louis. Detroit Cleveland against Detroit. Washington Philadelphia against V aahinKtcii. At New Yorlt Boston against New Tork i i Cook and Chef Talk and Walk Too Much and Are Discharged A 'furious verbal gale disturbed the interior of Dutch Mill No. 2, 1216 . Farnam street, yesterday aft ernoon. This unwonted discharge of words resulted in the discharge of Frank Vairo, cook, and Joseph Kawulot, chef. Vairo. a returned soldier, arranged with Kawulot to appear in the -parade. Vairo contended that he had been engaged by. Kawulot and be lieved that v"orders 'was orders" when they came from the chef, so at 11 o'clock he walked out of the place and into the parade. According to Managers Eva To bin and Henry F. Bougeois, neither Vairo nor Kawulot mentioned the fact of the former's intended absence so the noonday rush might be pro vided for. . . Underwood Resigns. Portsmouth, Va.. April 21. Mar tin Underwood, general solicitor ot the Seaboard Air Line railway, has resigned and will'become general so licitor of the United States railroad administration at Washington. . A a. ft" NEXT PUMOR that Browns are after A y Leonard and Dundee acted iJJ signed. , tJ Qarry Herrmann almost reached that stage where a guy sees the welcome sign hanging on the exit. The poor Red Sox will suffer blooded Americans w -allow this stylishly in a nice, loose buzzard, winter resort among' the rough orange blossoms. 1 , Has the war made ua cruel? ' , .-' A Round From Any Dundee Fight. Round Whattsiz Johnny bounced off his chair as if he had springs in all his hip pockets and about 50 hip pockets. He swung his arms like a bear fighting bumble bees. His opponent didn't know what it was-all about, but decided that' Louisiana must have gone re publican. Dundee then put his head down to where his knees would have been if they hadn't been where his head should have been, and made niore motions with his gloves than a flivver owner trying to put up a one-man top. , While his antagonist was trying to figure it all out with the aid of a net and an adding machine, Johnny kept bouncing around the ring as if either his feet were very He bounced so high that he looked tan museum. His rival paged a dictionary and looked for the answer to the puzzle under the Z's. It wasn't in the book. Dundee ran a full marathon in one spot and just when he had his man surrounded he popped back against the ropes and popped off again like a bon-bon at a birthday party. He repeated this 11 times, so it couldn't have been an accident the first time. Then Johnny jumped up and down like one of those things that eat cocoanuts in the Bronx Zoo. He resembled a flea, accepting the jumping nomination. Hia opponent was dizzier than a guy getting a telegram collect. ,Dundee's mitts were waving like a railroad semaphore signalling a clear track ahead two minutes before the big wreck. He got the ropes twisted around his neck like a lavaliere and let himself fly out like a kid shooting wooden ducks with, a - slingshot. He gazapped around the ring like-a grasshopper on the rubber crutches. His man was groggier than a nearsighted lian proclamation by the light of a Kaiser Bill's health is improving. Dundee's arms and legs were galloped around his opponent until the poor zapp looked like a May pole. Then Johnny flatwheeled around the works like a former Bronx waitress getting 10,000 smackers a week in vaudeville for tossing off a classic Greek dance. The illusion-would have been perfect except that Johnny had his shoes on. '. , Gong! - POTASH COMPANY CALLS OFFICERS BEFORE COURTS Half Million Dollar Sui Started in Douglas County by Merriman Concern of herry County. Suit for $460,000 was filed yes terday in district court by the Mer riman Potash Products company of Cherry county, Nebraska, against W. A. McWhorter, W. G. ChipBey, J. Masse, C. S. Wohlberg and Charles L. Dundy. Frank Howell, attorney for the plaintiff, says the defendants are men yvho came to Omaha and promoted the company. The Merriman Potash . Products company is the successor to t'.e W il-f liam Berg company, resulting from a reorganization early this year. The plaintiff alleges that the five defendants converted to their own use the funds, assets and property of the William Berg company in an amount of more than $100,000. The petition states that A. L. Kruss, manager of the plaintiff com pany, secured valuable leases for potash lands in his own name, but for the benefit- of the William Berg company, which were in truth and fact held in trust for this com pany. Organize Company. . The five defendants who, .at that time were officers of the company, LANPHER JLf there ever was an excuse for cheapening a hat it is now when , hat materials are at high tide nevertheless the Lanpher has maintained its high $C 00 quality leVeL ' J Watch the Little They are Unsightly and Disfigured Sig nals of Bad Blood. Don't. close your eyes to the warning which nature gives, when unsightly pimples appear on your face and other parts of the body. Not only are these . pimples and splotches disfiguring, but they lead to serious skin diseases that spreid and cause the most discomforting irritation and pain. Some times they foretell Eczema, boils, blisters, scaly eruptions and other annoy ances that burn like flames of fire, and make your feel that your skin is ablaze. ' - When these symptoms appear on I any part of the" body, take prompt NE VER' Eddie Collins. So was Zim. they didn't know the armistice was . , v in Florida this spring. Are red atrocity t While we are reposing those poor nsh are expatriated to a tender or the floor was very hot. like a chandelier in the Metropoli Zambesian trying to read a Mongo glucose diamond. No luck, no fuck. busier than milkman at a pump. He refused to allow Kruss to turn these leases over to the Berg company, the petition alleges. Instead, they organized a company called the Ne braska Ota company which is called "a pretended corporation." This company was owned by the five de fendants. The Nebras'ka Ota company, it is alleged, took the leases from Krjuss and sold them to the William Berg rrvmnanv fnr $100 000 -unirK ,'f !c Suitharged, they converted to their own use. The plaintiff charges that the five defendants converted a total of $460,000 of William Berg company assets by manipulation of leases, stocks, certificates of deposit, etc. An accounting is asked. The court is asked to compel restitution to the company of any funds or assets Wrongfully converted, if such are found. ' In March, 1919, the five defend ants resigned as officers of the com pany. Negro Highwayman Will v Be Taken Back to Chicago Sergt. Owen Ward of the Chicago police department arrived in Omaha yesterday to take back with him James Rankin, negro highwayman, captured on the South Side several days ago. Rankin held upJJO men at the point of a gun in a CTicago cabaret four months ago and made his escape with $400. He was arrested on the South Side upon descriptions sent out by the Chicago police. Army Orders. . Washington, April 21. (Special Tele eraaaJ Capt. Frank M. Manson, Medical i-orps, is relieved from duty at Camp Dnds andwill proceed to Fort Snelllng, Second ht. Jack W. McRae, band lead er. Camp Knox, Ky., is assigned to the 2nd Infantry, Camp Dodge. Pimples; Nature's Warning step1 to rid the blood of these disor ders. And -the one remedy which has no equal as a purifier is S. S. S., the purely vegetable blood medicine, which has been on the market for more than fifty years. It is sold by druggists everywhere. If you are afflicted with any form of skin disease, do not expect to be cured by lotions,' ointments, salves and other local remedies, as they can not possibly reach the source of the trouble, which is in the blood. Begin taking S. S. S. today, and write a complete history of your case to- our chiefmedicil adviser who will give you special in structions, without charge. Write at once to swill opecme o., zou Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga PHOTOPLAYS. CHE was O prisoner with a half-mac man asnerjailer and then came the great crisis in her MMM0VA OUTAFOG From the slaqe. success byH-MLshinMams 'CEPTION ry ,wjSA23iimmzg& & DOUGLAS' YOU'LL HAVE TO HURRY! ONLY 2 MORE HAPPY DAYS TO SEE With MABEL NORM AND , A "The Tomboy: Heroine" """'You will never see a bettir comedy masterpiece in Omaha. Made by Mack Sennett. ' Continuous, 11 A. M. Till 11 P. M. Price. Till 6 P. M., 25c. Evening, 25c, 35c. Boxes, 50c. BRANDEIS NOW COMING Return Engagement Tit first motion picture to speuk frankly of tha causes and effects of venereal diseases. For Men Only PERSONS UNDER 16 NOT' ADMITTED Thursday. Friday and Saturday, April 24-25-26 Admission 35c and War Tax. "The Intrusion of Isabel" BOULEVARD 33d and Leavenworth BESSIE BARRISCALE IN "HEARTS ASLEEP" AMUSEMENTS. mm Tonite and . Wednesday Mat. Wednesday Nights 60c to $2. Pop. Mat. Wed Best Seats, $1. Rachel Crothers Sunshine Comedy Qld Lady 31 With EFFIE ELLSLER FRANK DOBSON 'AND HIS THIRTEEN SIRENS; Cliuclui & Scarlit; Kennady A Roeitar: Walltx Fanner 4 Co.: Bolorea Vil lee!ta and Mar Leooardi. Ass Gray; Bennett SlitTi: Klnstrasit: Travel Weakly. Daily. ifrjljjy's "rL' PHOTOPLAYS, life - SHOALS", NOW PLAYING . FANNIE WARD In the Harvard Prize Play . "COMMON CLAY" A Decided Success on the Stage Even Better on the Screen 0RPHEUM -3EJ?. Today Qnly "Fit to Win" MatineeLadjes Only" Night Men Only LOTHROP-l BERT LYTELL in "HITTING .THE HIGH SPOTS" Lyons Morin and Lloyd Comedies AMISKMENTS. TWO SHOWS IN ONE 'FOLLIES OF THEDAY-Muali!.lnlr-Relfl Brei A Murray: Bailey 4 Porter' Pi.lhT. Hazard. PhotoUsy Attrtl.a-u, AllliS K edv. Qtln Ch.it.r Fe.turs. Rett,, Weefcli? "OMAHA'S FUN, CENTER." Daily Mats., IS-2S.SO vnf 25c-SOc-7Sc-Xl THE VICTORY LOAM alarm, &h.7d. . BOSTUNIAM FRANK FINNY HNNY - hi.'?S "Bit. .1 Hlta." The 8,otl... Lswd"'; j!?' Lunch Room: Th Poor ? Mouts i7..i5 ME. i LADIES' OIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS !!!' l- !'!: "1"1' w """ ' B-f w Bee Want Ads pay big profit A ' the. people who read them. JA wjU il 1 J I J w w w ' w ' Xl PAULINE FREDERICK 3 in "ONE WEEK OF LIFE" g 3xldyfyx!x!xln