Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1919)
THE BEE! OMAHA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1919. ROURKES DROP TWO MORE GAMES TO WICHITA TEAM Schatzman and Fuhr E&ch . Suffer Loss of Game; Omaha Blanked in First. Wichita, Kan., Sept. 10. Wichita took two games from Omaha and made it three straight for the series. Sirs (asses OMAHA. . . AB. R. IT. PO.A.E. OUlaann. Ib 0 Jackson, lb S la. If 4 0 HnnmlniwH, 4 0 Rptllmnn, rf t Hohlnkle. rf 4 Harbmta. lb 4 0 Brawn. S 0 Schatsman, p S 0 Results and Standings WESTERN LEAOrE. St sioux cur Joplln OMAHA .. Won. Lost. Pet. ..74 hi .74 ti .i4i ..71 .133 .. 4 .(It ..67 ft .608 .. S .43 .. 74 .426 ..(3 TI .40! Yesterday's Besnlts. Wichita, J-10: Omahs. 0-4. Tula. 4-1; Pea Moines. 1-1. Oklahoma City, -7: Sioux City. M. Joplln. 11-1: St. Joseph. 4-1. Game Today. Omaha, at Wichita. St. Joseph at Joplln. 8loux City at Oklahoma City. Des Moines at Tulaa. NATIONAL LEAGUE. 0 S 1 14 Totals a 0 S 24 IT S WICHITA. AB. R. IT. PO.A.E. Wtlholt. rf 4 1 1 3 1 I Washburn, Sb 4 1 S S 1 1 Krnrcrr, Sb 4 A Z 0 1 0 Mueller, lb 4 0 1 a 1 I) Kwtilrtt. a. 4 114 8 1) Mr Bride, If 4 A 2 S 0 A Wolf, rf t A A S 1 A Taryan. 8 1 1 S 1 A Bowman, a 8 1 t 0 3 U Totals SS 8 It 27 18 2 Omaha AAOAAOOA A A Wichita 11100A20 x S Two-base hit Yaryan. Three-bane hit: Bowman, Ewoldt. Sacrifice hit: Wolfe. Ewoldt. Left on banes: Wichita, 8: Omaha, 9. Bases on ball: Off Bow man, 8. Struck out: By Bowman, 8: hr Rehattmaa, 1. Hit by pitched bull: (Hpellman). Time: 1:38. I'mpire:, Jacobs and Shannon. Second tame: . OMAHA. AB. R. H. PO.A.E. Olalason, tb . . . . Jackson, lb I .re. If Hemmlnvway, . Spellman, rf . . . . Shlnkle, cf Barbean, Sb , . . . . Brown, e Fuhr, n Halo 1 A 1 1 i 11 12 4 4 A A 2 A 8 1 A A 8 2 A 1 A J Total 81 8 12 24 8 8 WICHITA. AB. R. H. PO. A.E. Wllholt, ef 5 1 1 8 2 A Washburn. 8b ft 2 8 4 1 A Kruecer, Sb 8 1 A 1 A A Mueller, lb 4 2 2 A A Ewoldt, 4 1 8 4 8 A Mcllrlde, If 8 1 A 2 A I Wolfe, rf 8 1 A A A A Yaryan, 8 1 1 4 A A Lynch, p 8 A A A 3 A 9 1 Totals , SS 1A 9 27 Ran for Fuhr In ninth. Omaha A A A A 1 A A A 2 3 Wichita AAA8AAA7 x 10 Two-baae hit: Ewoldt, Waahburn, Hem-mlng-war, Bnrbeau. Three-hae hit: Muel ler. Sacrifice hlta: Mcllrlde, Lynch. Naerlflee fly: Spellman, Kruecer,. Dou ble playt: Ewoldt to Mueller. Stolen bate: Cilslason. Left on base: Wichita, 4 1 Omaha, II. Bases on ball: Off Lynch. 4; off Fuhr, 3. Struck out by Fuhr, 8 Lynch, 4, Time: 1;30.. Um pires! Jacobs and Shannon. Oklahoma City Hits Hard and Defeats Sioux Twice Oklahoma City, Okl., Sept. 10. Oklahoma City hit hard today and took two games from Sioux City, 8 to 2 and 7 to 3. The second game was limited to seven innings by agreement. Score: Flrat rams: R.H.E. Sioux City 1 0 o 0 1 0 0 0 3 6 Okla. City 1 1000114 x S 16 2 Batteries: Raamuasen and McDermott; Hill and Griffith. Second came: R. H. E. Sioux City 8 9 0 8 0 0 0 S 7 1 Oklahoma City 0 0 1 4 0 1 7 10 i Batteries: Barnes, Allen, Flatcfccr and Elffert; Park and Griffith. Tulsa Wins Double-Header From Des Moines, 4-2, 8-1 Tulsa, Okla., Sept. 10. Tulsa won a double header from Des Moines here today, Bayne besting Allison in a pitcher's battle in the first game, while Winn was hit hard in the second. Yank Davis won the first game Won. Lost. Pet. Cincinnati 17 40 .85 New York 77 4 .2 Chicago 5 48 .575 Pittaburfh 63 1 .&08 Brooklyn 0 64 .484 Boaton . .60 71 .413 St Louis 4 75 .380 Philadelphia 44 79 .361 Yesterday's Results. New York, 7: Chicago, 2. Boaton-Plttaburrh : rain. Cincinnati, 2; Philadelphia, St. Louis. 11; Brooklyn. . Games Today. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. AMERICAN LEAfll E, Won. Chicago 80 Cleveland 73 Detroit 71 New York 66 St. Loula 64 Boaton 60 Washington 47 Philadelphia 84 Yesterday's Results. Cleveland, -3; New York, 0-J Washington-Chicago, rain. St. Louis-Boston, rain. Philadelphia, t: Detroit, I. Games Today. Chicago at Washington. Cleveland at New York. Detroit at Philadelphia, tit. Louis at Boston. Lost. 44 61 64 S6 60 62 78 90 Pet. .645 .589 .568 .641 .616 .492 .376 .274 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. Pet. St. Paul 83 61 .619 Kansas City 74 67 .695 Indianapolis 74 59 .556 Louisville 71 63 .534 Columbus 71 62 ,534 Minneapolis 63 71 .470 Milwaukee 52 84 .3S2 Toledo 60 82 .379 Yesterday' Result. Columbus, 3-1; Kansas City, 2-7. Milwaukee, 8; Louisville, 2 . Indianapolis, 8; St. Paul, 6. Minneapolis, 4: Toledo. 1. American Association. Louisville, Ky., Sept. 10. R. H. E. Milwaukee g 13 2 Louisville 2 g 2 Batteries: Northrop and Marshall; Davis and Kocher. Tol-do, O., Sept. 10. ' Minneapolis Toledo Batteries- Shellenbach Mlljua and Kelly. ' R. H. E. 4 8 2 1 2 3 and Henry; Indianapolis, Sept. 10. R. H. E. St. Paul 6 8 2 Indianapolis 8 13 5 Batteries: Williams. Hall and Hargrave; Crum, Cavet and Lear). Columbus, O., Sept. 10. First game: R. H. E. Kansas City Columbus Batteries: Evans and Lalonge, George and Wagner. Second game: Kansas City 7 IS 2 Columbus 1 6 0 Batteries: Haines and Lalonge, Monroe; Leyme, Lukanovlc. ond Wagner. . 2 13 1 .391 Monroe; R. H. E. with two runs and Barney Cleve land made a circuit clout in the second. First gams: R.H.E. Tulsa 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 x 4 11 3 Des Moines, 00110000 02 4 1 Batteries: Allison and Breen, Bayne and Schmidt. Second game: R. H. E. Des Moines 1 0 0 0 0 0 01 6 1 Tulsa 1 0 6 0 0 1 8 8 1 Batteries: Winn and Walker; Bennett and Schmidt. St. Joseph and Miners Split - Double-Header at Joplin Jopfin, Mo., Sept. 10. (Special.) Toolin swamped the league lead ers in the first game of a double header winning 23 to 4, but bt. Josep hcame back in the second con test and won 8 to 6. Scores: R. H. E. St. Joseph ...08000000 1 4 6 4 joplln ZS0005U3 - a a 2 Batteries: North, Brown, Rose and Shes tak, Bonowltz; Boebler and Briebeck. Second game: R. H. F- St. Joseph ....10021001 38 11 1 Joplin 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 06 12 3 OLDEST AND BEST BLOOD PURIFIER Time Makes No Mistakes. We have never claimed that S. S. S. was a medicine to work wonders, nor one that would cure every physical ailment or disorder. More than fifty years ago i was placed on the mar ket and recommended as a blood purifier, and today, after a long and successful career, and when its use has become almost universal, only the same honest claim is made for it that it will relieve those diseases and disorders arising from an impoverished condition of the blood. Time makes no mistakes, and the very best recommendation of S. S. S. is the fact that it has stood a long test and is now more generally used than ever before, and has the confi dence, we believe, of a great er number of people than any other blood medicine. The blood is the most vital force of life ; - every organ, nerve, muscle,' tissue and sinew of the body is depend ent on it for nourishment and strength, and as it circulates through the system, pure and rich, it furnishes these dif ferent members the healthful properties needed to preserve them and enable them to per form their various duties. So long as the blood remains free from infection we are apt to escape disease, but any im purity, humor or poison acts injuriously on the system and affects the general health. V Postular eruptions, pimples, rashes, and the various skin affections; show 'that the blood is in a feverish condition as a result of some humor, or the presence of an irritating, fiery acid. Rheumatism, Ca tarrh, Sores and Ulcers, Scro fula and similar blood dis orders will continue to grow worse as long as the cause re mains. A disordered condi tion of the blood may come from various causes, such as a sluggish condition of the sys tem, imperfect bowel and kidney action, indigestion, etc.; but whatever the cause the blood must be purified be fo'j; the body can be healthy. S. S. is a natural blood purifier and tonic. It is made entirely of the harmless juices and extracts of roots, herbs and barks of recognized med icinal value, and being free from all harmful minerals is an absolutely safe medicine for young or old. S. S. S. goes into the circulation. It fresh ens and enriches the blood and will do for you what it has done for thousands of others. S. S. S. is the most re liable and at the same time a most pleasant acting medicine for those whose blood has be come impoverished and needs building up. A course of S. S. S. will prove to you its great efficacy, as it has in numerous other cases which have been report ed to us by grateful patients. Do not continue to suffer because of wrong treatment, but go to your drug store and commence taking S. S. S. to day. Also write fully to our head physician, who will give you full instructions about your own case. Address Medical Director, 412 Swift Laboratory, At lanta, Georgia. Adv. "WO A a liSBBSV ttEXT CJE OVER WITiroiMsTDAVm 11 if r 1 Ants W JS f. SVIJ-, 03b. IssssBaaW BEAUTY PARLORS. THE birds who get rich scooping warts into dimples have got the shriller sex up on their high heels for fair. The beauty experts who make knock-kneed swans out of bow-legged ducklings are charging so much for beauty spots and rouge that these articles are almost beyond the reach of the workingman. You can't blame the henna profiteers for striking while the curling iron is hot. If a dowager wants to flapperize her complexion she ought to pay for it. A frail is never satisfied with the facial apparatus that nature staked her to. If she's a blonde, she wants to be a brunette. If she's a brun, she wants to be a blonde. If she ain't either, she wants to be both. If she is an old demon of 40 she wants to look like two young demons of 20. Mathematically correct, but hard to accomplish without an adding machine and an axe. You use the axe on the adding machine. No woman has any use for an adding machine that adds over 17, either in years or shoe sizes. You can't censure the peroxide impressarios for charging double for double chins. Anybody who can make locomotives out of scrap iron is entitled to the gate receipts. The frail who pulls a Jim he Penman stunt with a lipstick and an electric needle in an effort to forge herself a new complexion is a swindler. In the old days beauty was skin deep. Now it is only powder deep. A chicken believes that taxation without misrepresentation is tyranny. There are no more mothers and daughters any more. They all want to be kewpies. No more grandmathers and granddaughters, either. We now have flappers and grandflappers. The only way you can tell a woman from her daughter is by asking her grandson. Synthetic beauty is the darb now. For eight berries you can get a wave in your hair that will make your bonnet act like a rocking chair. For 40 smackers they will smear a permanent wiggle in your toupee that you could open bottles with. The permanent wave last three days. Give a beauty chauffeur 100 butons and he will do everything with your wig but make it bark. It it's red he will make it ptomaine green, and if it's junk colored he will brighten it up so that you can flag trains by tipping your bonnet to the engineer. If you want the old henna work slapped on your knob, the beauty mechanic gets a lot of stuff that looks like mud, acts like mud, and hangs it on your skull. You perch there on a chair like a ham in a smokehouse. In eight hours he removes the mud stuff, and what's left of your wool is the same color as the deuce of hearts. If your complexion was the same as the Queen of Spades when you left home you can't blame the old man for thinking that somebody framed the pack. The old brunette-blonde route is the well-known peroxide journey and is no longer stylish among the elite who judge heads from the out side. With a combination steam roller and hamburger steak chopper he cuts your warts down three sizes smaller and presses your wrinkles back into your skull. This makes 'em come Ymt of the back of your head, but you can keep your hat on. Marcel waves are put in with a machine that looks like a concrete mixer, and judging by some of the marcelled skulls, maybe it's right. A blizzard of beauty spots, a shower of talcum and rouge, and you're beautiful. The only trouble with this brand of beauty is that it is the kind that you've got to watch like your hats and overcoats in a one-armed lunch. It also has to be renewed as often as the battery in a pocket flashlight. REDS SHUT OUT PHILLIES, LAST GAME OF SERIES "Slim" Salee in Fine Form and Wins Mound Duel From Hogg, Quaker Hurler. Cincinnati, Sept. 10. Salee was in fine form today and outpitched Hogg, enabling the league leaders to win their last game with Phila delphia by a score of 2 to 0. Score: PHILADELPHIA. I CINCINNATI. AB.H.O.E. AB.H.O.E. Lab'au. If. 4 2 2 OlRgth, 2b. 4 2 4 3 uinaub't, lb 4 2 OlRoush, cf. 4 2 OlNeale, rf. 3 OiKopf. as. 3 0 OiDuncan. If. 3 4 OlSchre'r, 3b. 2 2 Olwinuo. c. 2 3 "Sallee. p. 2 Blac'ne, Sb. 4 Wll'ms, cf. 4 Meusel, rf. 4 Lud'us. lb. 3 Cravath 1 Bancr't, ss. S Paul'te, 2b. 8 Adams, c. 2 Hogg. p. 3 1 13 2 3 0 01 Totals 31 7 24 0 Totals 27 9 27 0 Batted for Luderua In ninth. Philadelphia 0 0000000 00 Cincinnati 0 0020000 x 2 Two-bass hits: Boush. Duncan. Stolen base: Labourvau. Sacrifice hits: Schrei ber. Adams. Double plays: Schreiber to Rath to Daubert; Kopf to Rath to Dau bart: Meusel to Luderus. Left on bases: Philadelphia, S; Cincinnati, S. Bases on balls: Off Hogg, S. Struck out: By Sallee, 1; by Hogg, 2. Giants Win Easy Gams. Chicago, Sept. 10. New York hit Hend rlx hard today, driving him out of the box in the flrat lnntng, and easily de feated Chicago, 7 to 2. The visitors ac cumulated 18 hits, Burns and Kauff making three each. Score: ' R.H.E. New York 8 0000111 1 7 18 0 Chicago 01100000 0 2 S 3 Batteries: Toney, Barnes and Snyder; Hendrlx, Carter, Bailey and Killlfer, Daly. Cards Win From Dodgers. St. Louis, Sept. 10. St. Louis pounded Mamaux for six runs In the third today and won a loosely played game from Brooklyn, 11 to 8. When the locals had a aafe lead, Manager Rickey tried out two recruit pitchers. Both were batted from the box. Score: R.H.E. Brooklyn 1 0010002 4 8 12 2 St. Louis 0 0(30200 x 11 12 1 Batteries: Henlon and Miller; Good win, Koenlghmark, Parker, Tuero and Dilhoefer. Two Men Held in Woman Assault Case, One Discharged Wiley Comptori, 2417 Poppleton avenue, held in connection with the alleged attack on Mrs. F. P. Props, Drake Court, early Tuesday, by six men, was discharged in police court yesterday for lack of evidence. Compton's attorney, at the hear ing, brought out the fact that Mrs. Props gave her maiden name, Olive Gibbs, to the police when she re ported the alleged assault. Leo Agnew, 835 South Twenty second street, and Max Moss, 819 South Twenty-fifth street, two men arrested in connection with the as sault, were ordered held under $200 bonds each. Jimmie Cosgrove Arrested for Attack on Brother Jimmie Cosgrove broke all the chairs in his brother's house yester day and then proceeded to eject the brother, M. P. Cosgrove, 2814 Pink ney street, according to the police. jimmie was arrested by Officer Thomas Ryan and charged with re sisting an officer, drunkenness and fighting. His bond was fixed at $1,000. M. P. Cosgrove was held as complaining witness. Officer Ryan told Leroy Boylan to call the patrol. Boylan refused to do so and was arrested and charged with refusing to assist an officer. Railway stations In Sweden at which meals are served are indi cated by the simple but sugeestive picture of a crossed knife and fork onnnsite to tha nimt nf th itn;.. lia the timetabl TIGERS LOSE IN NINTH INNING MACKMEN RALLY Held Hitless Until Final Frame, Athletics Get Six Runs and Win Game. TWO NEW WORLD RECORDS SET IN GRAND CIRCUIT Echo Direct and Easton Shat ter Existing Marks for Four-Year-Olds in 2;07 Trot, Syracuse, N. Y., Sept.' 10. A new world's record for 4-year-old geld ings was written into trotting his tory today at the New York state fair grand circuit meeting when in the 2:07 trot, Echo Direct, the sturdy son of Echo Todd and Victoria Di rect, trotted the third heat in 2:041-4. , In the fourth heat Ben White piloted the big roan, Easton, around the course in 2:06 3-4, thus bettering the mark which had stood until Echo Direct's performance today. Chief interest in the day's events appeared to center in the three-cornered pacing duel in the 2:10 pace for the Syracuse stake of $3,000, in which Goldie Todd vanquished Se nardo and Frank Dewey after three sensational heats. The Ka-Noo-No 3-year-old trot for a purse of $2,012.50 went to Brother Peter. Irish Votr won the 2:12 pace in straight heats in hard stretch drives. 2:07 trot, puree $1,000; three heat plan: Easton, ro. g , by The Tramp (White) 1 I 1 1 Echo Direct, b. g., by Echo Todd (Brusle) 8 1 J Peter June, ch. g., by Peter the Great (Jones) S 1 4 S Busy's Lassie, b. m (Cox) 3 4 3 ro Charley Penn, b. g. (Dlckerson) 4 5 5 ro Time: 2:074, z:o?, z:us. ziue'. 2:13 nace. nurse 11.000: three heat plan: Irish Voter, b. g.t by John A. Mc- Kerron (Noble) 1 1 1 Prince Pepper, blk. g. (Hyde) .... 2 2 3 Fred Hal., b. K. (McPherson) . . . . 8 3 2 Florence Peters, ch'. m. (Cox) .... 4 4 dr Time: 2:08, 2:0614, z:05H-Three-year-old trot. "The Ka-Noo-no," purse 12.012.50: Brother Peter, b. c, by Peter, Ths Oreat (Thomas) 1 8 1 Little Lee, b. g.. by Axworthy (McDonald) 114 Grace Drake, blk. f. (White) 2 2 King Stout, ch. h. (Stout) 3 4 3 Wikl Wikl, b. g. (Jones) 4 6 dr Eliza Dillon, Peter Worth. Liberty Todd and Bourbon Watts also started. Time: 2:08, 2:08. 2:08. 2:10 pace, 1'The Syracuse." purse 3.1. 000: three heat plan: doldte Todd, b. m., by Todd Mac (Jones) 2 1 1 Senardo, b. g., by San Francisco (Murphy) 1 3 3 Frank Dewey, br. h (Cox) 3 2 2 Time: 2:03, 2:06, z:u. To beat 2:14, trotting: Electro Dillon, b. h.. by Dillon Ax worthy (Crossman), won. Time: z:074. In every 1,000 marrages performed in Great Britain 21 are between first cousins. Among the nobility the r?tc is much higher, amounting to 45 in 1,000. Philadelphia, Sept. 10. Pinch hit ting extraordinary enabled Philadel phia to score six runs with one out in the ninth inning and win from De troit today, 6 to 5. Dauss held the Athletics to a single hit until the ninth inning. Score: DETROIT. PHILADELPHIA. AB.H.O.E.l AB.H.O.E. Bush. ss. Cobb. cf. Veach, If. Hell'n, lb Shorten, rf. Jones. 3 b. Toung, 2b. Alnsm'h. c. Dauss, p. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 10 0 3 1 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2Hlgh. rf. 4 OlWIngo. If. 4 OiGrlffln, lb. 4 OiWelsch, cf. 4 "iGalla'y, ss. 3 OlDugan, 3b 3 OiDykes, 2b.' 3 "'Styles, OIBeone, xWitt, Johnson, p. Izstrunk Burrus Total 36 1325 SlxxWalker One out when winning run scored. xBatted for Boone In eighth. zBatted for Dugan In ninth. Batted for Dykes in ninth. xxBatted for Styles tn ninth. Detroit 0 0 I 1 0 0 9 1 08 Philadelphia 00000000 66 Two-bass hits: Veach, Toung. Three bass hits: Cobb. Griffin, Burrua. Home run: Walker. Stolen bases: Bush, Short en. Sacrifice hlta: Hellmann, Dauss. Left on bases: Detroit, 10: Philadelphia, 4. Bases on balls: off Boons, 4; off Dauss, 3. Hits: Off Boons, 13 In eight Innings; off Johnson, 11 in one Inning. Struck out: By Dauss, 10; by Johnson, I. Winning pitcher: Johnson. Indians Scalp Tanks Twice. New York, Sept. 10. Cleveland de feated New Tork In the second of a double-header hers today, ths scores being 3 to 0 and 3 to 2, after Caldwell shut out his former mates without a hit In the firsWgame. Uhle, a former Cleve land sand lot pitcher, defeated the Yank ees In the second game. Gardner won the aecond game for Cleveland In the sixth inning, hitting a home run with Harris on base. Scores: First game: R.H.E. Cleveland 300001000 3 6 1 New York ....00000000 0 0 0 0 Batteries: Caldwell and O'Neill and Hannah. Second game: Cleveland 00000301 0 3 7 1 New York ....10000000 1 2 8 1 Batteries: Uhle and Thomas; Qulnn, Mogridgs and Ruehl. ; Mays R.H.E. Health Office Will Probe Contagious Disease Sources An investigation of every case of contagious disease reported is to be made by the new administration of the health office, according to Dr. J. F. Edwards, who started his work as health commissioner last week. "We believj that by promptly tracing the source of contagion, other exposures may be prevented," said the doctor. "It will not always be possible to trace the source, but in many cases it can be found. In typhoid fever, this investigation work will prove most valuable." Inter-League Series Now Even; Atlanta Wins on Error Columbia, Sept. 10. An error in the ninth inning, the only misplay of the game, allowed Atlanta to score the winning run, defeating Co lumbia, 2 to 1, which evened the se ries between the pennant winners of the Southern and South Atlantic as sociations. Today's Calendar of Sports. Raring: Autumn meeting of Westches ter Raring association, at Belmont Park, N. Y.; Autumn meeting of Hartford Agri cnltnral and Breeders' association opens at Havre do Grare. Md. Trotting: National Circuit meeting at 8yrarse. Great Western Circuit meet ing at Milwaukee. (Shooting: Annnal trapshooting tourna ment of the Westy Hogans. at Aalantic Citr. ' Boxing: Jark Burke against Rob Boner. 1 round, at Bock Island, 111, I STRIKING COOKS AND WAITERS TO OPEN RESTAURANT Eating Place to Serve Both Strikers and General Public. A co-operative restaurant will be opened by the striking cooks, wait ers and waitresses today, it was announced yesterday by J. M. James, member of strikers' executive committee. It will be located in the old Orpheum garden, 1415 Harney street. This wholly unexpected step by the union follows numerous com plaints by members of other locals that there were not a sufficient number of "fair" restaurants in the city. According to Mr. James, many of the organized workers have been put to great inconveni ence because of their sympathy with the strikers, being forced to walk many blocks to reach union houses. The Windsor hotel, Tenth and Jackson streets; the Carlton hotel,, Fifteenth and Harney streets, and the Uncle Sam's restaurant, Thir teenth and Douglas streets, capitu lated to the union Tuesday and granted the demands of the strik ers, it was reported. Approximately 40 restaurant workers are employed in these three places. Six waitresses and cooks were arrested last night and charged with disturbing the peace by unlaw ful picketing. They are Robert Murphy, Conant hotel; Myrtle Mc Lane, 2208 Harney street; Pearl Handricks, California apartments; Mary Flagg, Twenty-second and Farnam streets; P. W. Langston, 4122 North Twenty-eighth street; Jack Williams, King hotel; S. W. Knowles, 4122 North Twenty-eighth street. Girl Ordered to Return Present to Former Lover Judge Robert W. Patrick, in muni cipal court today, decided that Bar bara Enright, 1406 Sherman avenue, should return a victrola to James F. Baker, her former soldier-lover, who gave her the instrument be fore he went to war, with the reser vation that she should keep the present if she remained true to him during his absence. Baker, who brought a replevin action against Emileen Enright, the young woman's mother, testified that when he learned of Barbara's alleged fickleness, he demanded the return of the victrola and vas re fused bv the mother. STEGHER WANTS $25,000 TO MEET MARIN PLESTINA Joe's Brother Tells Promoter Peerless One Will Take on "Big Bear" for This Amount. Joe Stccher's brother, Anton Stecher, who does the business for the Peerless One, in a conversation regarding future matches, said Joe was not averse to a meeting with Marin Plestina, if he got his price. Asked what his price was, Anton named $25,000 as the figure. The Jugo-Slav wrestler is to meet Chris Sorenson at Lincoln tonight in a finish match. Ernie Holmes, the local sporting man, will referee the match. C. J. Marsh, Plestina's handler, was elated when he i-eard that Joe Stecher had named a price to wrestle his man. He savs this is more than he would ever do be fore. Tonight's mat:h in Lincoln v ill he a wonderful thinj; for the win ner. Should Plestina win it will prove that he should receive con sideration in the making of the big matches around this section of the country and if Sorenson wins it will place him among the foremost wrestlers in the game. It v ill mean that the winner is a real champion ship contender, whoever it may be. The ex-soldier wound up his hard training last Sunday and has done nothing but a few light workouts to loosen up since that time. Pies- Centrals Foot Ball Squad Answers first ; Call, Over 100 Strong a i a. 1 . t -r t auuui in; largest nuniucr ui iuui ball candidates that ever turned out school answered the first call for foot ball Wednesday. Oyer 100 . i: J.4.- J A Cft UmA been expected. Coach Harold Mulligan and As sistant Coach Schmidt addressed tha boys on the foot ball regulations and wliBt m,,na ii nfft th fam Art Logan, last year's captain, anil ArnnM Harnrr. this vfir'l can- tain, also made speeches. Coach Mulligan announced that early season games will be played ., . i 1 1 r ;i ni..ff. wun soutn nign, council liiuus, Norfolk and Beatrice. The full schedule will be announced later. Games for the second team or re serves will be secured later. Foot ball material was distributed to all last year men yesterday. The real hard foot ball practice will begin next week, when Mulli gan will have his team picked. The high' school campus will, be the. scene for foot ball practice this week. tina worked hard up until Tuesday evening. Wednesday he went through a light workout, a sort of loosening up process and will go to Lincoln on the 9:15 train, Thurs uay. Referee Ernie Holmes will maka the journey on the train leaving: at 1:15 Thursday afternoon. He will be accompanied by a large party of Omaha mat fans, who are anx ious to see whether Plestina is the great wrestler his manager claim ujjajiijjiniLiiBiuii)illMJMUiiJiiuii)UlutailllitlhiJtiiiiNUH.Jl.llwl'.tsiBlililiiiiLVMiHmin LANPHER Only the man who has worn a lanpher knows the full meaning of this name in a hat. IT'S ABOUT TIME YOU JOINED. Too much Turkish or Just enough Turkish? rf one way, at least, smoking ia exactly like eating. The more rick and delicious a certain food is, the more care people lake to avoid eating too much of it for instance, plum pudding or candy. The same rule applies to smoking. Cigar smokers, for example, are today more careful to avoid too many rich, heavy Havanas. (In fact, more and more cigar smokers now moke cigarettes too, to help cut down the number of cigars.) In the same way, cigarette smokers are learning that Turkish tobacco, delicious as it is, is so over-rich or heavy that a man can easily smoke too much of it But they are learning also that, instead of cutting down the number of cigarettes per day, they can cut down on the proportion of Turkish in eact( cigarette. How to reduce on Turkish THEY can do this by switching from straight Turkish to part Turk ish, or Turkish blend," cigarettes. The first Turkish blend cigarette ever made and the one which has always held first-rank importance is Fatima. Fatima contains more Turkish than does any other Turkish blend cigarette. Perhaps this is the main reason why so many smokers of straight Turkish cigarettes keep switching to Fatimas. Less worry about"too many" ANOTHER reason undoubtedly is - the fact that Fatimas treat Fatima's Record At scores of places where one would expect only fancy, straight Turkish ciga rettes to sell, Fatima is today the leader. For example, Fatima is the largest seller at: smokers so kindly. The Turkish is so perfectly "balanced" by the other tobaccos in the blend that Fatima smokers never have any worry about smoking "too many." AT any rate, whatever the reason may be, Fatima keeps on attract ing more and more of those smokers who, if they preferred the fancy, expensive, straight Turkish ciga- rettes, could easily afford them. This is shown, of course, by Fatima's record in having won the top notch in sales at so many of ths fashionable clubs and hotels and other prominent places all over the country. How much is "just enough"? DOES not Fatima's record seem to prove that this is the one ciga rette containing just enough Turkish? Not too much nor too little Turkish, but ;ast enough. Make the test for yourself. Atlantic City Marlborough-Blenheim Hotel Traymore Btston Hotel Touraine Hotel Copley Plaza Stock Exchange Chicag Auditorium Hotel Congress Hotel Namtantttt Pier Casino New York Hotel Astor Stock Exchanee Hotel Vanderbilt Palm Beach The Breaker Philadelphia Ritc-Carlton Stock Exchange Woshiugton The Capitol Building . 1 CIGARETTE iiL KCMMONO.VA. ' itmfi FATIMA A Sensible Cigarette 20 for 23 cents Contains more Turkish than any othet Turkish Blend Cigarette.