Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 13, 1919, Page 13, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1919.
ROURKES TAKE
EXTRA INNING
GAME AT JOPLIN
s
Come Up From Behind and
Tie Score in Seventh;
Win in the Four
, teenth.
Joplin, Mo., Sept. 12. Omaha tied
Jnplin's two-run lead in the seventh
and defeated the locals, 3 to 2, in
the 14th inning of the opening game
today in a pitchers' battle between
Townsend and Marks and Payne.
Boehler, Strand and Lamb com-
pleted a triple steal In the first in
ning, Boehler stealing home. Score:
OMAHA. ,
AB B. H. O. A. E,
ftlslasnn, th 9
Jackson, lb 6 0
Im, If 1
Hrmlnrway, as 6 0
8pellmnn, rf. t
fchlnkle. rf fl 0
Hartwaa, lb 0
Brown, t 1
Towasrnd, p 1 9
BRINGING UP FATHER
Sn Jifta nd Mag ft la Fall
Page of Color la Th Sunday Bm.
Drawn for The Be by McManut
rpnM tail laUmat tonal News Sat lea,
I'M OINC "TO LEAve "TOO ON
THl IbLMO WITH rRrVNCOlVXXR
NEW VALET- ME CAN'T PtAK An
, WORD OF CNCLI.W-
the wax vou
are corn TO
WAKE HE
LCArN
VCLl-THE Two
JKAt WILL e
HCWE TOOAf
I WONDER IP .
HE'LL HAVE A'
AtCWT-
OO WON'T r ,f - Tu $
fORClT TO A au a, BOAT .
- ' 3 --WLtAHN - -J -1 '"' "HAT rH .14. ft
1 rTT tail -I I , . - - I u u f. !!,
irviiSJ n u jrrm bu "&t x j i w i i.'j i to know "xomit i i is uira
J. i'""l K " v--H WSL J lASk. I nf J mine- , ,. c h n nraKn
XCXJR HtfW&ANO ftONB UY
I OTTA ir IT TO HJM HC
Ay-NE ruLL or pep atcou-v.
Ht OUrXt Arl tSONC PUMPKIN
l-7 AT TkHCQTIN' CfAOf
RCAT
HEAVEN
HE. HA
TAOHT
TOO
cn;lh
rif1
- Hz
3 IS
S
1
Total, 68
JOFUX.
Thnnipaon, tb.
Hovhlcr, rf. , . .
Knit, cf
Ntrand, If
Imb, b
risrbroofc, lb.
Hnuidt, M. , . .
Bonehoaakjr, a,
Nmlth
Pnjn, p
Mark,, p. .....
AB. B. H. O. A. E.
,...T 1112 0
.... i 4 s e
0 7 H
.... 0 2 S 0 0
....a l s s o
.... 0 0 14 8 1
....a o i 4 a i
,... o i a e e
....l t o o
.... oooio
....4 o t i : o
! ! i BATTING RALLY
IN NINTH INNING
GIVES REDS GAME
0 0
0 0
X 1
S 1
S 0
S 14 43 24 2
Total , SS 14 41 15 2
Batted for Bottcbonaky In ninth.
Omaha ..0 0 0 0 0 1 1 00 00 1 S
joplin r...t oooooo oooooea 2
Two-bano hit I tpcllaian. Three-baio hlti
1. Sacrlflco hit! Niitt. Sacrifice fly:
Barban. Stolon basooi Hoehler (2), Htrand,
Lamb. Doublo plays t Jnrknon to HmlnK
wair to Jarkon; Hemlnsway to tilclaoon to
Jaekaon. Lft on ba,ra: Omaha, 10 i Jop
lin. 11. Knn and hit: Off Payne, 3 and 8
In 0 2-S Inning,. Struck out! By Town
tend, 3 by Payne, 8. Bum on ball,: Off
Townnrnd, It off Payne, li off Mark,, 4.
Vmpireil Meyer, and Duly. Time; 2:85.
St. Joseph Cinches Pennant .
by Defeating Wiches, 4 to 3
Wichita, Kan., Sept. 12. St.
Joseph won the Western league pen
nant by defeating Wichita in the
.first game of the series, 4 to 3. The
fame was a thrilling battle between
lusser and Hoffman. Musser re
lieved Gregory in the first inning
with two on oases jtnd three runs,
although he worked a full game the
day before, and pitched wonderful
ball for nine innings. Two doubles
in the tenth by Walker and Dolan,
won the game. Hoffman also
pitched a strong game and errors
back of him allowed Wichita most
of their runs.
A great throw by Jackson, who
threw Musser out "at the plate after
Washburn had singled in the eighth,
saved the game for St. Joseph.
8cor: - r.h:e.
St, Joph....S oooooeoo 1 4 10 4
Wichita 0 31000000 0 3 10 0
Batterlei: Hoffman and Sheatak; Gref
. ory, Muwer and Yaryan. .
Oklahoma City's Ragged
Defense Gives Boosters Game
Oklahoma City, Okl., Sept. 12.
Oklahoma City presented a ragged
'defense today and Des Moines won
the opening game of the series, 8
( to J. Score:
e Molnea ... 0 0 4 0 1 t I 1 0' 11 E2
"Oklahoma City 0 0100030 0 3 11 7
Batteriea: Payae and Breen; Hill,
Meadow and Griffith.
flitarc Plav P rrnrlpc Ramiv
VIIVI0 IUJ bllVIIVV, VMIMU
and Defeat Sioux City, 10-6
Tulsa, Okl., Sept. 12. Tulsa won
a listless game from Sioux City here
today, the ony feature being the er
rorless defense of the Oilers. Scire:
filoin City .. UMIIIl 0 (111' 6
Tulsa 0300243 10 IS 0
Batterlea: Fletcher and MeDermott:
' .Denqia, Bayne and Schmidt.
.-Australian Team Defeats
Americans in U. S.
Doubles Championship
; i
' Chicago, Sept. 12. Gerald L. Pat
terson and Norman E. Brookes,
Australians, winners of the United
States doubles championship in ten
nis for 1919, showed their supre
macy over William M. Johnston and
Clarence J. Griffin of San Francis
co, the team that formerly twice
held the same honors in the inter
national jnatches which opened Fri
day. The Australians won In straight
sets. Brookes played the most fin
ished tennis, while Patterson used
'. tremendous power in his hitting.
Johnston was considerably off form.
The other , Australian pair, R. V.
i nomas ana Kanaoipn i.yceu, were
off their game and were beaten by
Ralplf H. Burdick and Samuel
Hardy of Chicago.
Vincent Richards of Yonkers, N.
Y. was unable to come to Chicago
for a singles exhibition and in his
stead .Walter T. Hayes of Chicago
appeared against Willis E. Davis of
San Francisco in a two-set match
which they divided. Hayes played
in all around good style, but Davis
solved his style in the second set.
Nua-fi
Pender, Sept. 12 McGill of Wis
ner defeated Jenkins of Rosalie in
Wednesday night's wrestling match.
The former won two straight falls.
the time being 16 and 10 minutes,
respectively. McGill is matched
.' against Gatewood of Decatur on
September 24 at this place for $150
side bet.
League Leaders Win, 6 to 5,
in Game in Which Every
Run Made Was
. Earned.
Cincinnati, Sept. 12. By a strong
batting rally in the ninth inning, the
Reds nosed out Boston, 6 to S. Eller
was hit hard in the third inning,
when Boston scored four runs. The
batting of Duncan for the Reds and
Rawlings for Boston was very ef
fective. Both teams fielded well,
every run on each side being cleanly
earned. The score:
' B H E.
Bolton 0 0400001 0 i 1J 1
Cincinnati 10030000 3-6 11 0
Batterlee: FlIllnHlm and Oowdy, 'Ift'Nelll;
Eller, Fisher and Wtngo, Rarlden.
Phil, Defeat flratea.
Pittsburgh, Sept. 12. Philadelphia defeat
ed nttsburfh today, 6 to 6. The locals
staged a rally In the ninth Inning that fell
one short of tying the score. Miller was
knocked out of the box In the seventh
Inning after yielding aU runs on six hits.
Score: R. H. E.
Philadelphia ..0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 S 10 2
Pittsburgh ....0001 0 0 1 0 35 7 1
Batteries: Cantwell and Clarke; Miller,
Pender, Wlsner atd Schmidt.
tiianti Down Carda. '
St. Louis. Sept. II. Grouping two bases
on balls with a doubte and a single on
May In the first Inning, New Tork got
away to a flying atart and was never
overtaken, St. Louis losing the first game
of the series, 6 to 6. Score: R. H. E.
New Tork .... 3 0J 0 0 0 0 1 06 i 2
St. Louis 10010003 06 13 2
Batteries: Toney and Snyder: May,
Woodward, Tuoro, Jacobs and Clemons,
Dilhoefcr.
Local Golfer Plans New
Links at Fremont, Neb.
Fremont, Neb., Sept. 12. (Spe
cial.) Charley Johnson, piofession
al of the Omaha Happy Hollow
club, has finished layine out the new
golf course of the Fremont Country
club on the old Chautauqua grounds
north of the city. The club re
cently purchased the tract of 105
acres. Uoiters are nigniy pieasea
with the new course which is con
sidered unusually "sporty." The
course is 2,950 yards long.
The North Western and Burling
ton tracks run through the grounds
and the Rawhide creek wends its
way through the center of the
course. Work of clearing the land
and seeding down the acreage that
has been under cultivation is under
way. It is planned to use the
course next spring.
Grand Circuit Races Are
Postponed; Geers to Ohio
Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. ,12. The
Grand circuit program of nine races,
scheduled for today, was declared
off because of ,rain and the horses
were shipped to Columbus, O. Ed
ward F. "Pop" Geers, who was in
jured Monday, when his colt Heglar
boiled through the fence, left with
his associates for the Ohio city. He
may not, however, be able to drive
next week.
American Association.
Columbus, O., Sept 12. Score:
Kansas City 16 14 I
Columbus I 15 9
Batteries Hall, Monroe and La Longe;
Leyme, Lukanovlc and Wagner. i
Toledo, Sept. 13. score:
First gams:
Minneapolis
Toledo
Batteries Hovllk and Owens
and Kelly.
Second game:
Minneapolis
Toledo
Batteries Roberson and Owen; Sanders
snd Kelly.
Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 12. Score:
R. H. E.
St. Paul 8 3
Indianapolis 1 3 4
Batteries Merrltt and Hargrave; Hill,
Brown and Leary, Henline.
Louisville, Sept. 12. Score: R. H. E.
Milwaukee T 13 1
Louisville 6 I 0
Batteries Phillips, Northrop and Huhn;
Tlncup and Kocher.
R. H. E.
4 3
7 5
Brady
S. H. E.
16 3
4 7 1
Today's Calendar of Sports.
Raring: Close of fall meeting of VTest
ehreter Racing association at Belmont
park. Opening of fall meeting of Ken
tucky Jockey club at Lexington. Open
ing of fall meeting of Business Men's
Racing association at Reno,
Trottingt Close of Grand clrenlt meet
ing at Syracuse.
Polos National championship tourna
ment of the Polo association opens at
Philadelphia, .
Athletics: A. A. V. national track and
field championships at Philadelphia.
Boxing i Jos Leonard against Phil Lo
gan, 10 rounds, at Biaghamton, N. Y.
Don't Experiment with Catarrh;
It Often Leads to Serious Trouble
You Will Never Be Cured by
Results and Standings
WESTERN LEAGUE.
Won. Cost. Pet
St. Joseph 7 6 .576
Wichita 74 63 .540
Tulsa 74 ti .640
Dea Moines ,.70 65 .519
Oklahoma City 67 66 .496
Sioux City 69 .496
Joplin 56 76 .434
OMKHA 54 79 .406
Yesterday's Results.
Omaha, I; Joplin, I.
Des Moines, 6: Oklahoma City, 3.
Tulsa. 10; Sioux City, 6.
St. Joseph, 4: Wichita, 3.
Games Today.
Omaha at Joplin.
St. Joseph at Wichita.
Sioux City at Tulsa.
Des Moines at Oklahoma Ctty.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Cincinnati 8S 40 .688
New York 79 46 .682
Chicago 66 60 .624
Pittsburgh 66 62 .512
Brooklyn 61 66 .480
Boston 50 73 .410
St. Louis 47 76 .382
Philadelphia 43 79 .363
Yesterday's Results.
Chicago, 3-4; Brooklyn. 1-5.
Philadelphia, t: Pittsburgh. 6.
New York, 6; St. Louis, 6.
Cincinnati, 6: Boston, 6.
Games Today.
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh.
Boston at Cincinnati.
Brooklyn at Chicago.
New York at St. Louis.
45
62
65
56
62
6.1
79
92
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Won. Lost.
Chicago 82
Cleveland 74
Detroit 73
New York 67
St. Louis 64
Boston 62
Wrsshlntton 49
Philadelphia ...34
Yesterday's Results.
Cleveland. 4; Boston. 3.
Washington, 4; Detroit, 0.
St. Louis-Boston; rain.
Chicago, 7; Philadelphia, 0.
Games Today.
Detroit at Washington.
Chicago at Philadelphia.
St. Louis at New York.
Cleveland at Boston.
Pet.
.646
.587
.667
.645
.60S
.496
.33
.270
62
67
60
63
68
73
82
84
Pet.
.618
.568
.656
.530
.493
.463
.383
.38"
Local Treatment With Sprays.'.1
Catarrh is a condition of - tEe
blood and can not be cured ty local
applications of sprays and douches;
this has been proven by the thou
sands who have vainly resorted to
this method of treatment. ,
Catarrh should not be neglected
or experimented with. The wrong
treatment is valuable time' lost,'
during which the. disease is getting
a firmer hold upon its victim, and
making it more difficult for even
the proper treatment to accomplish
results.
Thoueh Catarrh makes its first
appearance in the ' nostrils, throat
aud air "passnag?s, the disease-becomes
more and more aggravated
and finally reaches down into the
lungs, and everyone recognizes the
alarming conditions that result
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 rem
dy which attacks the disease at
its source, the blood, and produces
satisfactory results ' in even the
worst cases. Catarrh sufferers are
.urged to give S. S. S. a thorough
trial. -It is sold by all druggists.
You are invited to write to the
Medical Department for expert ad
vice as-to how to treat your own
ease. Address Swift Specific Co.,
1254 Swilt Laboratory, Atlanta, Ua,
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
Won. Lost.
St. Paul 84
Kansas Ctty 75
Indianapolis 76
Louisville ., 71
Columbus 66
Minneapolis ,.63
Toledo 62
Milwaukee 53
Yesterday's Results.
Toledo, 7-6; Minneapolis, 4-1.
St. Paul, 8; Indianapolis. 1.
Kansas City, 18: Columbus, 9.
Milwaukee. 7; Louisville, 5.
CHIEF EXECUTIVE
OF MINNESOTA WILL
GREET OMAHA TEAM
Bee Writer Tells of Greetings
by Mayor and Governor
St. Paul.
in
By WILLIAM O. BLOZIES.
St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 12. (Special
Telegram.) Arrived here O. K. and
immediately got in touch with the
officials of the St. Paul Amateur
Base Ball association. According to
he local heads St. Paul amateur fol
lowers will turn out in full force
Sunday afternoon at Lexington park,
vvnere tne big championship contest
will be staged between the Unions,
class B City champs of the Omaha
association and the crack Cardozos
of the local association.
It is expected that one of the
largest crowds of the vear will be in
attendance, weather permitting, and
the locals are confident that their
favorites will carry off the champion-
snip, aitnough tnere are a number
of the fans betting on the Omaha
champs in the event that Stucker
hurls the game, since the local fans
received word that the youngster
hurled a no-hit, no-run game last
Sunday. !
An elaborate program has been
arranged for the Omaha champs
when they arrive atvthe northern
city. The Unions, headed by James
Milota, recording secretary, and
Frank Jacobs, president of the City
league, will arrive" here at 7:30
o'clock tomorrow morning and will
De met at tne station by otticials of
the local association. They will be
taken to the Ryan hotel, where they
will make their headquarters while
in the city.
The Omaha team will be taken
to the city hall at 9 o'clock, where
Mayor L. C. Hodgson will turn over
the key . to the city, and at 10:30
o clock they will be met by Gover
nor J. A. A. Burnquist, who will
make the principal address, welcom
ing the Omaha champs to the north
ern city. Later on they will be tak
en on an automobile tour around
the city. A banquet will be given in
their honor at 6 o'clock at the Ryan
hotel and a theater party in the
evening.
Confessed Automobile Thief
Bound Over to District Court
E. H. Perkins and J. F. Wilson,
both living at 2910 Deer Park Boul
evard, were bound over to district
eourt in police court yesterday, the
former for stealing an automobile
owned by S. O. Bnggs, 1343 South
Thirty-fourth street, and the latter
on a charge of receiving stolen
property. Perkins pleaded guilty.
Their bonds were fixed at $2,000
each.
Cash and Bonds Are Stolen
From Strongbox In Home
Albert Bennett, 2411 South
Eleventh street, reported to the po
lice early yesterday that someone
stole a strongbox from his home
containing $106 in cash, $150 in Lib
erty bonds, an $89 check and Various
valuable papers.
Mm
svisy-yg.xzEav
piunrTiNCTO
Honr one
OVER"
WITirDlKSTOAm
YANK Bun Johnson case won't go to the jury. It will be turned&ver
to an unbiased orchestra of ukulele twangers.
Chinese spectator fell out of the Supreme Court bleachers when Bun's
lawyervreferred to him as the Rhoderick Dhu of base ball. Expect the
Ouija boards to register Rhoderick's disgust.
Lull in the trial while Ben chirped "I'll be with you when the sub
poenas bloom again." -
Bun's lawyer broughout he fact that Mays had pardissipated in two
world series. May have meant participated. Maybe both.'
The opposition's lawyer is of the hip and elbow school of oratory.
Uses his voice only when he runs out of gestures.
The worst that can happen to Mays is that he will be sentenced to
stick with the Yanks. '
Yanjss have a team of lawyers. One is an old bird. When he gets on
the other bird runs for him.
A lawyer seems to be a song plugger with a legal education.
Bun's lawyer buzzed for two houn straight without saying the same
thing twice or one thing once.
4i
The league president accuses Mays of conduct unbecoming a pitcher
or a gentleman.
Mays hasn't attended the trial so far. Fo ra bird who is suspended
he is losing a lot of ball games.
The question is, did Bun havethe power to suspend Mays?
He did.
Did he have the power to keep him suspended?
He did not.
When the Yanks' lawyer spiels Bun seems to grow split hoofs and a
forked tail. You wonder how he gets his hat over his horns.
When his lawyer sings a lullaby Bun sprouts a cherubic coniplexion
like a cat full of Grade- A cream. A halo hangs over his ears like a
horse collar on a door knob.
1
If the Yanks .bought Mays to help cop the pennant the records indi
cate they should can their twin lawyers and hire an alienist.,
'
The case goes to the jury soon, barring war, earthquakes or Wood
row's veto.
The works took a Shantung twist when Ump Owens popped into court.
He got jealous and left when he piped the lawyers using their whole
framework in making gestures. ,
200,000 APPLY
FOR TICKETS FOR
WORLD'S SERIES
Office of Cincinnati Club Is
Swamped With Applications
for Reservations for
Ball Classic.
Cincinnati, O., Sept. 12. Long
lines of persons gathered on the
stairs of Wiggins block or down the
street from the Cincinnati National
league base ball offices here this
morning, while as many as could
get in the club offices waited their
turn to receive cards on which ap
plications for world's series seats
must be written.
President August Herrmann of
the Cincinnati club had announced
that no attention would be given to
any requests for world series tickets j
except by filling out cards issued to
applicants at the club's offices.
The application cards read for
tickets for the first three games. No
single tickets will be issued. The
prices for world series games were
given on the application as follows: ;
Grand stand, reserved, $5.50;
grand stand, reserved (upper), $3.30;
field boxes, $6.60; pavilion, unre
served, $2.20, and bleachers, unre
served, $1.10.
A "notice" is printed on the ap
plication card which says that the
applicant agrees that the method
adopted by the club for tle distri
bution of tickets is not a lottery
scheme.
Herrmann has announced that it
is intended to place the names of
the applicants for tickets in a bas
ket and if the pennant is won by
the Cincinnati Nationals hold a
drawing of these cards to distribute
the available seats.
Herrmann said today his office
has been swamped by applications
for world series seats, already num
bering more than 200,000, and that
his plan to hold a drawing is the
only way out of the difficulty.
Reports of Grain Surplus
In Ukraine Are Unfounded
Paris, Sept. 12. Advices from
American Red Cross investigators
at Poltava, southern Russia re
ceived in Paris today state that re
ports cf an enormous grain surplu
i.T Ukraine and southern Russi?
which have disturbed American
wheat growers with visions of a
tumbling market may be dismissed
as groundless. I
Russia and the countries border
ing on the Black Sea will need the
entire 1919 cropthe reports said.
Classified advertising is the most
n.v(U.Vl. mA mnct rltrerr therefore
use The Bee's want ads regularly.-! pen to the children.
WHITE SOX SHUT
MACKMEN OUT
WITH SEMI IN BOX
Wilkinson, Ex-Sandlot Hurler,
Blanks Athletics in First
Major League Ap
pearance. Philadelphia, Sept, 12. Errors by
Dugan and Wingo, followed by
timely Chicago hitting, gave the vis
itors today's game with Philadel
phia in the first inning. The score
was 7 to 0. Wilkinson made his first
major league appearance in the box
fcr Chicago and brilliant support inJ
the closing innings helped him shut
out the locals. Score:
R. H. E.
Chicago 60001000 07 10 0
Philadelphia . 00000000 00 5 3
Batteries: Wilkinson and Schalk; Tork,
Roberts, Noyes and Perkins, Styles.
Senators Blank Tigers.
Waahlneton. Sent. 12. Washington to
day took the opening game of the series
from Detroit, 4 to 0. Erlck.on, obtained
by the locals from Detroit, held his tor
mar tram mates to four scattered hits and
siruck out nine. Score: R. H. K.'
Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 4 0
Washington ...00011011 x 4 10 0
Batteries: Love, Boland and Alnsmtth;
Erlr kBOjfl and Gharrlty.
i
Indians Come From Behind,
Boston, Sept. 12 Jones weakened in the
last two Innings today, allowing Cleveland
to come from behind sitd wtn from Bos
ton, 4 to 2. A pass to Wambsganss,
Smith's single. O'Neill's double, Coveleskl's
single, a pass to Graney, Chapman's strike
out and Speaker's sacrifice fly, gave
Cleveland three runs In the ninth Score:
RUG
Clevelsnd 0000081 34 '
Boston 3 010000 0 3 7 1
Batteries: Coveleskl and O'Neill, Thom
as: Jones, Russell and Schange.
Paralyzed' Father;
Near Death Begs
For Return of Son
With his body paralyzed and al
most all hope for his recovery gone',
Nelson Puncaes, 2861 Bristol street,
lies on his deathbed constantly call
ing for his son George, 26 years old,
who disappeared from home more
than six months ago, following his
discharge, from the army in Jan
uary,
Mr. Puncaes has been partly par
alyzed for many years. Due to the
stress and excitement incident to the
war his condition became worse,
d the disappearance- of his son
s added to his worries. His
condition is said by his physicians
to be critical.
Now the aged father, near the
point of death, lies vainly calling for
the son, who hat severed home ties
because of a petty difference with
him.
Hmed to Bench by Auto.
Man Is Seriously Injured
Harry Budatz, 2226 Avenue D,
Council Bluffs, Ia vas internally
injured when he was pinned to a
mechanic's bench at the Universal
iraraKe. 2326 Leavenworth street, b
an automobile driven by J. W. Gri:
fin. proprietor of the garage.
He was taken to the Mercy hospi
tal, in Council Bluffs.
At the request of his father, Rob
ert Budatz, Omaha police investi
gated the case and notified Griffin
to come to the police station.
I
OMAHA RED SOX
PLAY COUNCIL
BLUFFSJUNDAY
Longeways' to Tackle Local
Colored Cracks in Double
Bill at Rourke Park;
First Game, 2 P. M.
The Council Bluffs Longeways
will play the Omaha Red Sox, the
crack colored team, in a double
header at Rourke park Sunday after
noon. With the Armours, the pma
ha semi-pros, away, playing the Ar
mour team of Kansas City, the local
ball park would be without an at
traction had- not the colored boys
and the Bluffs club agreed to meet
there. ". .
The Longeways team is one of the
strongest semi-professional clubs in
this vicinity and has tried for some
time to book a game with the Ar- ;
niours, but the Packers had their
dates arranged so far'ahetd that it
was found impossible to accommo- !
date the Bluffs aggregation, s
After much wrangling the Omaha
Red Sox finally made arrangements
to play the Longeways. , '
The first game will start at 2
o'clock. Popular prices, 30 cents to
grandstand or bleachers, will be the
admission charges.
Germany Ships Gold
London, Sept. 12. (Via Montre
al.) It is reported today that M,
500,000 in gold has reached London ;
from Germany. A portion is said
to be already on the way to Canada
in payment for foodstuffs.
Judge Grants Double
Divorce On Grounds
That Both Are Guilty
An unusual "double" divorce was
granted by District Judge Sears yes
terday in the case of Homer Charles
and Maude Charles. Judge Sears
declared that each was guilty of cru
elty. He granted a divorce to
Homer from Maude and gave him
custody of one of their children.
He also granted a divorce to Maude
from Homer and granted her the
custody of the other child.
Horner alleged, in his petition that
his wife treated him cruelly. He
testified that she. said his presence
made her nervous and he finally
decided to go away, he said.
Mrs. Charles, in a cross-petition,
alleged that her husband threatened
her life and declared he would not
be responsible for what. might hap-
Young men! This is your
style headquarters latest,
smartest clothes designed
exclusively for you
Featuring especially the' Newest Michael
Stern, Rochester, and Schloss Bros., Balti
more, Styles for Young Men.
v.
Young men know1 they can always find here the
latest word in correct styles; clothes that mean
business and social success for them; the latest
ideas for college men, high school men, young
business men, for sport wear.
The distinguishing features of this fall's models are the
longer coat; high waist line, deep chested high shoul
dered, broad lapels, flare skirts, bl-swlng sleeves, new
style pockets. Single and double-breasted models ; new
pleated and belted models; styles you're sure to like.
Many new colors and patterns. A remarkable snowing
especially, at
$20 $25 $30
$35 $40
aW-5-IZ 'WvWi'.'.O,;.:.'. J 04 B :lt,.VS.- afUll
Tour big opportunity to save from 3)10 to $15 on these famous Palace Suits is here Sat
urday. Practical sty Its; these are suits from last season's showing that's why you can
bny them at this ridiculous low price Saturday The values are unmatchable, at
Remarkable Sale of $25430FaUSuits415
15
Mothers! For School
We Feature
Saturday Wonderful Values
Boys' Suits at $10.98
in
Plans for schooltime were made by us months in advance, so
that we could offer you remarkable values in boys' suits, in spite of
the increasing costs. When you see these suits you'll see-how well
wenave succeeded in our efforts to save you money.
The fabrics are staunch wearing: all
chosen especially for school wear.
Newest models; Nor folks and ombiua
tlon waist seam, belted all Around
models. . All have extra knickers to
match; some have double seat and
knee. All sizes 6 to is y9ars
greatest boys' suit value
you'll find anywhere,
at
7 ;3nio.
$10.
Boys' Corduroy
Suits Saturday
$4.48
Just the thing for school
wear. Made of stanch wear
ing tan, drab and seal brown
corduroys; sizes 3 to 8 years.
If bought on today's market
these suits could not be dupli
cated at anything near our
special price.
Extra BoysJ
School Suits. $7.98
There's a splendid saving
here for mothers' seeking an
economical school suit Popu
lar styles tor boys of nil asea,
0 to 18 years. Thse Suits
would be extra big values
now, even at $10 and $il; so
don't fall to buy tomorrow at
our special
sale price
of
ll4 " e
$7.98
2S
s
Boys' Solid
Leather Shoes
Button 6r lace, will with
stand all the kicks and scuffs
nusboy is bound to give Ms
shoes.
Sixes 13 fo 2, ,
$1.98
Sixes 2 to 6,
$2.48
Boys' School Blouses, fancy
stripe and crepe, madras, per
cales; sizes 6 to IS years; extra
big values, at 75tt
Boys' Real Leather Belts, tans
and blacks, all sizes. Special,
t 250
loys' and Youths' New Fall
ihlrts, high grade makes; crepes
iQd madras; special, at SI .50
Boys' and Girls' Cotton Stock
ings; Black Cat and other high
grade brands; 1 guaranteed for
colors and service; blacks only;
sizes SH to ll1,: big values,
at 25;
Boys' Caps; newest shapes;
popular colors; special values,
at .... :..50$,
Boys New Fall Union Suits,
'rom Superior, Royal and Globe
Ills; all sizes, 24 to 34; won
rtul range for selection ; extra
..ig values at .; ...85
Boys' Neckwear, made of mill
ends of 7 5c and $1 neckwear;
special today 35