Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 1, 1910, Page 8

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THE BE N0 CAME WITH HAWKENES University of Iowa Dropped from Sohedule of Cornhuskers. oF Tows Arranges Game with Pardue on Date that Manager Eager Had Previously Asked ¥ HISTORY NEGOTIATIONS OLN, Jan. 81.—(Spectal.)—The Uni- v of Towa Is destined to wake up soon ard learn that Manager Eager of the Corn- husker athletle teams is not bluffing about having dropped the Hawkeyes from the Nebraska schedule next fall, as was pre- Gicted by a dispateh to The Sunday Bee from Iowa City, on the grounds that the Jowa management had recelved no word from Bager reghrding the severance of gridiron relations. . A story from Lincoln last week announcing for the first time that Nebraska and Towa would not play next fal called forth at once a dental from Jowa City of the veraclty of the local statement, and ncldentally brought out charges to the effect that Manager Bager was assuming a dictatorfal attitude In ar- ranging games with the Missourl valley schools. These accusatfons have not ruffled the composure of the Cornhusker manager in the least, and he still maintains that he has taken a just course in trying to fix the Nebraska foot ball schedule. He also Affirmed In an Interview today the state- ment that Nebraska will not play Iowa pext season. History of Negotiations. Tarly last fall Manager Bager asked Towa for a date in October for the 1910 game . and requested that the Hawkeye managsment not fill its schedule until the Cornhuskers should get their dates Into shape. On_December 11 Manager Eager recelved a letter from Prof. Smith of Jowa, asking that the Cornhuskers play Jowa on November 19 and stating that the Hawkeyes would prefer to play in Omaha. Two days later the Cornhusker manager wrote Prof, Smith that it would be impossible for Nebraska to meet Towa on the November date, and saving that some day In October would be satisfactory. With this letter and. fts direct statement in hand, Prof. Smith, three weeks later, scheduled a game with Burdue for October 22, the day Nebraska wanted, and then in- formed the Cornhuskers that Towa would play them on November 19. The Cornhuskers bave regarded this ac- tion as a direct affront to themselves. It looks as though Iowa took on Purdue in preference to Nebraska simply becauso the Indlaia school is a member of the “Blg Bight,” to which body Iowa also be- longs. It hurts Nebraska pride to be cast down for & school Mke Purdue—a school that has been so poor in foot ball for the last six years that the athletic board only twice during that time has awarded members of the team the honorary sweat~ ers with the university lefter, But, no matter what amends Towa may care to make at this Iate cccasion, there hardly 1s a chance that it could recoricile the local' menagement to glving it a school even It sufficient apologles could be made for the slight to the Lincoln team. Ne- braska's schedule {s now so arranged that there Is no place on it for Iowa, unless that school would “accept Thanksglving day; but Uy the Chicago conference rules #t 1s forbladen to play on Turkey day. Heavy Schedule at Finish, On November § Nebraska is scheduied to play Kansas and on the following Satur- day, November 12, it Is to take on Ames. Thanksgiving day will see the Cornhuskers in & hard game. November 19 Is still Gpen, but it will be allowed to stay that way. The Nebraska management does not want four hard games In & row, as a tontest on November 19 would make, putting Kansas, Ames, Iowa and a Thanksglving day stiug. ®le all within less' than a month. Two years ago the Cornhuskers tried such 8 combination and it proved fatal to them in the last of the series, when Kansas de. feated (hem, after Cole's men had tied Minnesota and defeated both Ames and Iowa. 8o, unless Manager Eager is overruled by the Board of Control, Iowa and Ne- braska wiil not play next fall. The local students favor a game with lowa and would like to have it played in Omaha, but under the present conditions they are per- fectly willing to forego the meeting next weason. WITH THE BOWLERS. O s amd OMAHA LEAGUE. (Franclsco Alleys.) Tuesday—Molonys vérsus Storz Triumphs, Wednesday—-Luxus versus Molonys. ADhursday—Dreshers versus MeCord-Brady 08. Friday—Omaha Bedding Co. versus Mets CO]IH(ERCIAI. LEAGUE. eyt ‘Afleys,) Tuesday—Brodegaard Crowns versus O sdnesay-.0' Brien's | Mo nesday—0' mn's onte . Chy ursday- Al e - e o 0e Co. versus Drel ;dly—llrslb\ll Candy Co. versus Glen- B 'BRS' LEAGUR. '5 . nciseo Alleys.) nlo ‘:: lay~Yousem's Colts versus West- L Pmm.y—cmm Citys versus Sprague ! METROPOLITAN LEAGUE, g_(-vt Cellar Alleys.) Tuesday—Freneh Way versus Dally News, Wednesday~8un Kiss versus Bungalows, Thursday—Tracy Bros. T. B. C. versus ‘Westsides. Friday—Hussle Acorns versus Hollys. MERCANTILE LiAGUE. (Franeiseo Alleys.) "'l‘ue-uy Carpenter Paper Co. versus Q. W-&uuy Capitol Boilers versus Omana Thursday-Gate Citys versus Kamos. P.l'\:::ym 8q versus Midiand The Mercantile league defeated the Glen- bu-‘lno'nmmon‘n‘lum, winning tw games out of three and total pins. L Bad Digh total of M Bcore: P v Flekel GLENWOOD BUSINESS MEN. Ist' 20 34. Total, . s 463 "2 “~ A2 (2] 2,304 3. Total. 157 31 187 [y 2 4 I 4w 170 “7 o T s Tames Out Of thres from o won o m ‘ost Hiden; rolling high JSeries and; 5'.',": single Ted Oak:~ defedted *Glensont 0% maich game by s the )\fi‘mfi et and venteen Pins, Tawshe of high total of 411 bigh game of 214 pins. Scores; - P N YOUSEM'S COLTS, Ast. M. 3d. Total. I I e e R 3 g‘l Bl m o oL amw ll’la. Tol;‘l' oo - s W | Ty‘lflu n Pacifics versus Cudahys) ednesday-~No game. A ) in their | | LA 13 Totals .. g Total Albeo . JI8 1% 168 6 Alleen W M 16 Frisier . 10 A Richel 519 561 Wilkens 100 %2 Totals .. & 2,67 RED OAR. st 24 30 Total Ed Rush FLTR T ] Johnson W m 4w Wilson . 15 158 Tawshe a4 W e Plekerel 182 Totals 850 B 261 DISCIPLINE BALL FIELD Hundred Nineteem National League Men Ordered from Field Last Year. . 31.—More National Were ordered from the base t year and later suspended than in several years past. Whether due 0 rowdyism or more stringent appiication of rules by umplires, 119 men were banished from the field and later eighteen of them were suspended by Presidents Heydler and Pulliam. In 1908 the umpires ordered ninety-four players to the club houses, and, in 1907, 112, The late Harry Pulllam suspended sixteen | players in and seventeen in 1807. The Pittsburg team which won the pen- nant had the best behaved set of men. Only seven of its players weére banished and none suspended. There was & great improvement in the deportment of the New York players, only seventeen of them being sent trom the field and none of them being disciplined by the National league's presi- dent. Boston, Cincinnatl and Philadelphia each had fifteen men removed. - Brookiyn and St. Louls each seventeen and Chicago elghteen. Of the eighteen players sus- pended, Chicago had two, Philadelphla three, Brooklyn and St. Louls each four, and Cineinnati fiye, The players suspended were Bresnahan of St. Louls, four times; Griffith of Cin- olnnati and Lennox of Brooklyn, each three times; Evers of Chicago and Gleason of Philadelphia, each twice, and Burch of Brooklyn, Hoth and Liescher of Cincin- natl and Knabe of Philadelphia, each once. According to figures compiled by a local statisticlan, the National league players paid $28 into the treasury of the league for misbehavior. Of this amount Chicago play- ers contributed $135, Philadelphla, $125, and Cincinnatl, 2. Those fined ®vere Chance, ‘Evers, Tinker and_Stanley of Chicago, Dolan, Moren and Knabe of Philadelphia and Roth of Cincinnati. SUPERIOR FOR STATE LEAGUE. Great Interest Shown Over Proposed Organization. SUPERIOR, Neb., Jan. Sl—(Spectal.)— The invitation of Grand Island to meet with them this week to arrange plans for | the organization of a state base ball league | was gladly recelved by the fans at Superfor and arrangements were soon made to send representatives to the meeting, Superior has a fine ball park and s one of the really good base ball towns of the st For several years: Superlor has played professional base ball, hiring several sal- aried players and having a team that would { meet all comers. The opportunity to join the state league came just at the right moment. Two Hundred Out wt Ames. AMES, Ia., Jan, 3L—(Speclal)—In re- sponse to Trainer Jack Watson's call for a meeting of the Ames track candidates, 200 cinder path aspirants gathered in the eh- gineering assembly room to hear the first lecture of the year by the track coach. The second week of February will find prac- tically every one of the 200 working out faithfully in the shed here preparatory to the outdoor track season. Watson 1s tre- | mendously handicapped by the lack of a gymnasium. Ames will be especlally strong In the distance events, according to the early dope. Kemler, a two-miler, will be a new man In state circles, though during his first year he made great records In the home meet and dual events. Captain John Kraft will make one of the best half milers in the middle west this season, according to Trainer Watson and Cockerall is picked for points in_the mile. Trullinger, Wells, Keeney and Young will form the nucléus of the sprinters and Holcomb and New- man will be th ehigh hurdlers. Si Lam- bert will be greatly missed in the hammer throw, but Lee and Crawford will go far toward making up the deficlency by their work { nthe high jum, Grinnell on M. V. Committee. DES MOINES, Jan. 31.—(Special.)—Grin- nell has been voted a place on the Missourl valley games committee in this city, a most unusual honor, as lowa college 15 not a | member of the Missouri valley conference, | The honors that Grinnell has won In track and basket ball the last two years plainly entitle the scarlet and biack to a place on the committee, Theer 1s little doubt that Charles Rawson, a prominent alum- nus of Grinnell, will be chosen as the rep- resentative. The members of the games committee form the three Iowa’ members of the conference and Mr. Rawson will ar- range for the annual track meet of Mis- sourl calley schools to be held in Moines next spring, It fs probable that Grinnell will be admitted to ‘the confer- ence at the June meetin Des | Track Meet for Small College. IOWA CITY, Ia., Jan. 3L-—(Special.)— That the colleges of Towa, exclusive of Towa, Ames and Drake, will hold a state track and fleld meet of thelr own this spring is a strong possibility, The Towa State Teachers' college at Cedar Falls has dy sent out Invitations and offered | le_medals for such an event. When , Drake and lowa joined the Missouri valley conference two years ago the dis- content among the minar colleges began to develop. This vear when the state mee was abandoned the smaller institutions | Were out of any kind of & central_event 10 which to send thelr track teams. There- fore the present agitation is the natural outgrowth of the demand for a track meet, Paulban Flies at Salt Lake City. SALT LAKE CITY, . 81.—Louls Paul- han, the French aviator, made a flight of ten minutes at Agricuitural park today. He reached an altitude of 300 feet, or 4,000 above sea level. He made an average speed of thiry miles an' hour. Paulhan said that because of the pecullar atmospheric | conditions he was unaole to reach a higher | I altitude. The flight was made In a te: | perature of I degrees, with a wind of fiv miles per hour. Pietri Outruns Hayes. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. §L—Trailing | within three feet of his opponent for twentybsix miles and -allowing him to make the pace at dil times, Dorando Pletri, | Itallan Marathon runner, went to the front in the last two laps of his race with Johnny Hayes of New York this afternoon and 2:41°35, |won by sixty yards. The timé we within forty-five seconds of the record, American Handicap, PITTSBURG, Jan. 81.—The Grand Amer. fean handicap shoot will be held under the auspices of the Intcrstate Shoating asso- | clation in Shicago June 22, 23 and 24, ac- cording to a statement issued today. THREE DROWNED AT MEMPHIS | Disabled linmll:Tnnnrl in Over- turned by Tewboat Off Hope- fleld Polat. | MEMPHIS, Tenn, Jan. 31 — Floating helplessly in & disabled gasoline launch, three men wero drowned when the launch | was run down by the towboat Enterprise off Hopefield Point tonight. The dead are: ALBERT SCHNINNERER, aged 32 | JOSEPH DIETRICH, aged 33 HARRY HURST, aged 3. | Charles 8. Aufroth, a fourth occupant of | the launch, saved himself by seizing the gupwale of a heavily laden coal barge, which the Enterprise was towing. Nobody is Too Old to learn that the sure way to cure a cough or cold Is with Dr. King's New Discovery. 50c and $1. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Telegram to the Omaha Ad Club, HAVANA, Cuba, Jan. Si—Several of us will be up for the national gonvention in August, Not «fraid of the beefsteak being short, but be sure to have good supply Kl Paxo clgars en hand. FERNANDEZ RODRIGUEZ. ——— Races at the Roller Rink. Roller skating will “liold the boards the Auditorium all this week and on Tues- day and Thursday nights there will be exclting races. Tuesday night it will be a “bavrel” race and on Thursday. night it will be & tree-for-all. Chorus Lady” ai the Boyd. Rose Stahl and company in ‘“The Chorus Lady,” a comedy in four acts, by James Forbes, under direction of Herry B. Har- ris. The cast Mrs. O'Brien .. Alice Lelgh Nora O'Br Isabel Goodwin Stable Boy Shrimp ... . George Kerryhart The Duke Thomas Maguire Patrick O'Brien . Giles Shine Dick Crawford . ter Penington Patricia O'Brien . Rose Stahl Sylvia Simpson Claire Lane Rogers ... jeton_Kent CA By Dan Maliory <. Wilfred Lucas Of the Chorus— Milite Sulzer , Ines Blair . Evelyn La Rue Rita’ Nichols Lou Arches Mal Delaney . Georgla Adams @ wardrobe woman) enyon Bishop Rose Stahl is as charming as ever, and that !s saying a great déal, for ever since she Introduced us to Patricia O'Brien some vears ago at the Orpheum she has been reckoned among the real delights of the stage. Mr. Forbes achleved a consider- uble feat In expanding the twenty-minute sketch Into a four-act play without de- stroying ite Interest or continulty, and Miss Stahl is permitted, as the result, to give us glimpses of the chorus lady in her home, at the theater and in other and more trylng situations. It is a girl of the humbler ways of life, one who Is tighting her own way to Happiness. “When o girl is trying to make It go on twenty per, sees the girl who sits at tue dressing table next to her come down to the show shop In a benzine busz wagonm, it fsn't religlon, but a good, tight grip on home and mother that makes her able to turn down the man behind the bank roll.” And this Is the sort of girl Pat O'Brien was. But hertlster Nora was not. Nora was a silly lttle goose, selfish and spolled, without sense enough to see where she was going. It was Pat who saved her, but at terrific cost to herself. But Nora only thought of the fact that she was saved, and went her merry, selfish way, unmindful of what became of Pat. In Nora's defense it may be set out that she was but 17 and unused to the worid. But cynical, elangy, “wise” Pat O'Brien, without a bit of sham in her nature, and simply working to earn her living and keep her sister from harm, moves through the play on a wave of comedy that|ls clever, and helghtens It with here a) there a touch of worldly wisdom that ls grateful, and some serious acting that is superb. Miss Stahl has changed none since she went to London and made the blase of the world's capital sit up and take notice. She s as earnest and careful . Amy Lesser eatrice Brown ... Annle Ives . Lilllan O'Nelll .. Helen Dahl Florence Grant as ever, and kecps a good firm grip on| her popularity by richly deserving it. The dressing room scene in the second act Is glven with all possible realism and 8oes with a snap. The other acts are also finely presented, and the best possible ef- fect is obtained. The company Is good in all respects. “Classmates” at the Krug. Two men In a struggle for a woman, here and there the primel forces of the fight concealed by refinements and conven- tion, here and there lald bare by grim circumstances, f{s the interestingly pre- sented story of “Classmates.” In the presentation of the play it falls to the role of Phyllls Stafford, represented by Helen Young, to become the most hu- man and convincing, in spite of her minor part. Norman Hackett, in the hero part, as Duncan Irving, is strongest in the jungle scenes as a resolute man up against death in the wilds. -And it is heré, too, that Ernest Wilkes, as Bert Stafford, the villain and ungrateful object of the resculng ex- pedi‘ion, is at his best. "The plot moves from West Point to New York, and thence in South American wildernesses, and back agaln, In scenio representations quite worthy. The audience was well pleased. e at the Orpheum. Agltator,” the one-act play in which Helen Grantley and her company are appearing this week; gains an interest in a timely way because of the similarity o0 the theme to the struggle of the girl shirtwalst makers in the east. The girls of (his playlet are strikers from a pickle | ond jam manufactory and their leader is | the Agitator. ber of the firm is east for the role opposite the leading woman. There is also a re- porter of the typleal stage kind, the note- book-carrying, hiding-behind-a-curtain youth, who exists only on the stage. After considerable stress and suffering the strik- ers win, because their leader, having ex- hausted other means, 18 going to kill her- self that her fate may crystallize public opinlon in behalf of the cause. At this tlthe sclon of the plckle and jam maker The son of the senior mem- | | the existence of a new and unheralded | Jority of the members. | time; and If the men would help him he | promised to help them and sald they should caves in, Mros triumphs, the girls get [Wratever 1t was they wanted and the | Agitator faints Into the arms of the young | plutoerat. | Miss Grantley and the other members of the company are considorably better than the sketch itselt and their ef- forts carried It to favor yesterday. | Two numbers of the bill which commend | themselves to favor are the opening and the closing. The first is Miss Katchen Lolsset, A singer on whose arms and head a num- ber ‘of trained pigeons perch. The last act Is that of Clark Martinettle and Joe Syl- | vester, two acrobats. Eugene and Willle | Howard, two young Yiddish comedians who were liked last year, are doing as well this | time. Other numbers are the Howard mu- sioal Shetlands and some trained dogs, a bootblack quartet, and T. Roy Barnes and Bessie Crawford, who sing and talk. “The Jersey Lilies” at the Gayety, The Initial performances by the ‘Jersey Lilles"" yesterday pleased audiences of the usual size rather more than the majority of offerings at the Gayety have done. There is & good deal of singing, all of which was encored, s0lo numbers by Fannle Vedder and Kate Prior getting particularly en- thusiastic reception. Of the men In the company, Leon Errol and James E. Cooper achieve a good many laughs. There are the usual number of = specialties, which are really very entertaining. The chorus fis numerous and comely, and Is actively en- gaged during the performance. Mellen Pleads for Co-operation Railroad President Also Reiterates Statement that High Wages Breed Poor Service. NEW HAVEN, Conn, Jan. $l.—Mutual co-operation and iInformation as to the work of his company for its employes were the themes of a brief speech tonight of President Mellen of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Raliroad company at the union convention of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. Mr. Mellen began by calling attention of iabor organisation la Comnecticut named the Assoclation of Rallroad President of the state, of which he himself was pres dent, treasurer, secretary and a large m He wanted, as well as his men, a ten- hour day, he wanted doubled pay tor over- work as fellow employes together. “Think 1t over,” said Mr. Mellen. “Let's join hands, because I we don't work to- gether we are both liable to get damaged.” President Mellen referved to the proposed employers’ llability act, which, he said, it it must come, should come by degrees. He called attentlon to the fact, almost un- known, and never appearing {n the news- paper, that his corporation had a pension fund of 200 names, paying out $200,00 a year, to which no eriploye had to pay a cent. He roferred to a statement which he had made to a formex steckholders' meét- g which had exeited hostile ecriticism (namely, this statement that higher wages breed poor service), and while not receding from that general statement, ho sald that now no better set of ‘tallroad men existed, in eficlency and morile, than those who had just brought hiseempany through a period of acute adve¥sity, and he expressed the hope that In thelf future relation with the property they wopld be considerate and not seek too large a plece of it. Price of Bibles Will Advance Publisher Says Rise is Due to Increase in Cost of Paper and Leather, CHICAGO, Jan. 31.~The price of Bibles will g0 up on March 1, according to an announcement made today by a large Bible publishing house which has branches in Cincinnati, Kansas City and San Franelsco. The cause for the advance Is the enforce- ment of the new tariff on imported leather |ana paper. ¢ “Bibles are now about ) pet cent higher than they have ever been before,” sald a member of the firm. “The materials for the best Bibles have gone up so high in price on account of the tariff that we cannot afford to continue to sell our output at prices as now listad,” gogog BLDgg%E;S“UN tho outward symptoms is not all that is nocessary to cure Tho virulent germs which produce these exter- nal manifestations must be completely drivon from the bloed before o real cure can be effected. The loast taint left in the circulation will sooner or later cause o fresh outbreek of the trouble, with all its hideous symptoms of ulcerated mouth and throat, copper-colored spots, falling hair, sores and Only a blood purifier can curo Oontagious Blood Poison. 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