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Y. M. C. A. Tigers Defeat Visitors by Score of 50 to 26. EXCITING IN SPITE OF SCORE Omdha High ool Five Takes Game from Y. M. C, A. Crescents by Narrow Ma of 22 to 20. The Omaha Young Men's Chirstian as- sociation. Tigers walloped the Sioux City Glants to the tune of @ to 26. at the Young Men's Christian assoclation gymnastum Wednesday. and, the Omaha High school took a game from the Young Men's Christ- jan association Crescents, by a scors of 22 to 20. A gnod sized crowd witnessed the games, the Tigers-Glants contest being the most exciting.. The, Tigers will now try for games with the big basket ball teams as their vietory places them in the first class tn basket ball, The Tigers had the best of thelr contest all through the game, showing great im- provement in team work and goal shoot- ing since thelr game with Cotner last Sat- urday. They have the systemh of short passes, keeping -the ball in motion down to & fine solsnce and at the same time so | _ strict a- wateh ds<kept on the other team that very few gouls are made on them. The Sioux City men were fine on run- ning the ball-down, but did nbt seem to be able 10 gét it near enough ta the basket to allow thém to place it in and when this was coupled With the fact that their goal throwing was very poor, they were unable to make any points on the Tigers. They were Also unaplé to cover all of the floor and ‘coritinually left one of the Tiger for- wards uriguarded whereupon he would gently drop the bdll in the basket when 1t came b him, The first haif the Tigers ran up quite a score on ‘the Giants before the -visitors seemed to discover enough of {helr plays to block’ them and break them up. The halt elfed with the Tigers far in the lead. In the #écad half the Glants changed thelr lincup’ &nd started to make up the deficit In the score and for a time they were able to get the ball in their térritory and make Kome goals| but the Tigers' found ‘& way o blgek these plays and fin- ished the half far In the lead again. Ald- rich, although, hurt in the eye, plaved ths| w~star game for the Glants in this half, and the feature of the half was a throw ot his from the middle of the floor into the basket., *Stars Of the Game. The stas for'the Tigers were Weisin and Cohn and Hefche and Bachemeyer did great work fof the ‘Glants. The Giants claim that tWo' of the best players were unable to come on ‘the tdp with them and so thelr team 8" greatly weakened. 'This is the first game they have lost this year. The Ifneup: GIANTE, Aldrich, (C.) Bachemeyor Reiche Johaston Larson , Field gdals: «0), GHitith '(2), luchemeyer -(8), Weisin TIGERS, Cohn ... Harris v < arittith elsin (1), Cohn (), Wilson Aldrich (2), Reiche (4 Joanston. Free throws: , Aldricn (%), Reiche (8). Sloux one point. 'Referee: Detwiler. HillL - Timekedpers: Cohn and The preliminary game between the Omaha High school and the Crescents was fast. The high’school lads had a little the betfer of the team work, although there were two, Burdick did not get in until ‘thé ‘mitd1é ot the last half, as he is suffering’ fromi' @ lame knee. Finley and Patton “dld star playing all through the me for the high'school, and Linn and Robinson did the honors for the Crescents. In the first ‘half the high school played all round the Crescents in bringing the ball to the basket, but were a little ff on thelr goal throwifg and the individual work of the Créfoents made tne score a tie of i to 11, In the second half things were about even untll Burdick got in the game, when the play became a little too fast for the Crescerits ‘and the high school came out with a score of 22 fo 2. The Tineupy OMAH. Trimble CRESCENTS, NEBRASKA LOSES TWO ATHLETES Harvey Rathbone and Dick Ruasell | Leave LINCOLN, 'Feb:17.—(Special)—The up- heaval.in Nebraska athletic circles, created by the departure-of star athletes from the university, continues. Two crack athletes lett the ‘wniversity today, depriving the track and feov ball tea: of some of the b in the schook Russell are the afternoon. fullback on the varsity eleven lr; fall, apd still has two years of intercollegiate foot ball that he can pla: Last fall was his first one on the team and he develol into & wond | player. He Welstn (C) | Wilson | CHICAGO, Feb. 17.—The American league announced Its schedule for 1910 yesterday, One of its features is that it contains only a few conflieting dates with the National | league. The list contains 15 games. icial Ameri Chicago as usual, has the greatest num- ber of conflicting dates. There are eight clashes between the two local clubs, St. Touls has the only other confiicts. The Chicago club drew many P A— of the ague Schedule, 1910. ohoice dates, having July 4, Labor day, seventeen Sundayw and fourteen Saturdays. The season will open on April 14, with the follawing games: St. Louis at Chi- cago, Cleveland at Detroit, Philadeiphia at Washington and Boston at New York. The first sectional series will open in the east on May 10, with Cleveland at Phila- delphia, Chicago at Washington, Detroit at New York and St, Louls at Boston, E— g% N | AT CHICAGO. AT ST. LOUIS, AT DETROIT. AT AT CLEVELAMND, | WASHINGTON. AT PHILADELPHIA. YORK AT NEW AT BOSTON, April Sept. Sept. May 5, 6 1. May June 34, 29, 2. Bept. 2,3, 4. n 2, 2 7.8,9,10. 0. o, June 21, July 6. |prit 3, 28, 27, 8. o i, 2. May 10, 11, 12, 13. July 32, 2, 2, Aug. 2, 28 2 May 18, 16, 17, July 18, 18, %0, Aug. 18, 19, 30, May 19, 20, 21, 38 18, 5 3 July 1314, 15, 16, Aug. 29, %, 31, Apri 14,15, 16,17, “|duly 1, 2.2, (8) (). Sept. 13, 13, ST. LOUIS July 2. April 15, 19, 2. May 8 June 1,22, 23, 5. ly 6 pL. (), (5. ay 28 v Se Sept. 2, 3. May 5.6, 7. M June 25, 2, 30, Jrily :D 5 2%, 15, 14, 15, Aug. %, 26, 2. May 20, 21, 23. May July 8, 9, 11, 12. Ju Aug. 2, 30, 81 7. May 14, 16, 17, 1 16, 2, 2 July 18, 8. ), 21, Aug. 18, 19, 2. April 30; May 1,2,3 July 29, 30, 31, Sept. 11, Oct. 6,8,9. Aprfl DETROIT May 2, 2, 27, 28 April 2 (30), (30), 81| July WILL 1, 28, 23, 2 (&), (0. , 9, 10, May 19, 20, May 24, 2, 2, 27. July 8,9, 1 Aug. 15, 16, 17. Aug. 2, 25, 26, 27. n 23 1, 12 May 10, 11, 12, 13. July 23, 23, 25, 26. Avg. 23, 23, May 14, 16, 17, 18. 2, 21 20, P CLEVELAND ... April 18, 19,2, May 8, 3. June %, 2. Sept. (5), (5). Oct. 1, 2. Apri] July 31 L & Apr Apri July 3. Sept. 12, 13, 14. Oct. 4, 6. 1114, 15, 16, 17. 11 24, :n; May 1,234, May 19, 20, 21, 23, [July 13,14, 15, 16 1, ug. 2, 3, 51 Aug. 3, 28, 277, June Aug. Sept. JYne 10, 11, 12, 13, Alg. 5, 6, 7, 8. Hept. 26, 27, 28, WASHINGTON\.,, 7 15(16, 18, , 9. 1,234 15, 18. B, N, 5. June 8,7, 8 July 18, 14, Aug. 18, 14, Sept. 19, Aug. 9, 10, June 1,2, 3, 4, Sept. 16, 16, 17. ‘ 11, 12, June 15, 16, 18, 19, Aug. 1, 2, 3, 4. Sept. 23, M4, 25, June | PHILADELPHIA Aug. Fent.. N s D4 1, 11, 12, 13 56,7, 8 % 3 June 1, 2, 4, 5. ug. 9, 10, 11, 12. Sept. 15, 17, 18. May 2, 3, 4 May 28, (30), (30), 31 April 18, (19), (19), 2, 21. Sept. 30; Oct. 1, §, 4. June 21, 22, 25, 2. Sept. (5), (5). April 1‘.115. 1. April 27, 28, 29, 30. [June 21, 22, 23, 24, Sept. (5), (5), 6. April 22, 23, %, 26, M:‘.y 28, (30), (30), 1. “runez, 3, 4,5 Aug. 13, 14, 15, Sept. 19, 20, 21 June NEW YORK.... Auj Sept. 16. A June 10, 11, 12, 13 Aug. b5, 6, 7, 8 Sept. 26, 27, 28 67,80, 9,10, 11, 12. 15,17, 18. \ Sept. June 15, 16, Aug. 1,2, 3, 4. 22 4 17, 18, April 18, 19, 20, July 1, 2, (4, ( Oct. 5, 6, 7. 21, ). June 6,7, 8, 9. Aug. 9. 10, 11, 12, Bept. 15, 17, 18. BOSTON ‘Aug. Sept. June 2, 3, June 15, 16, 18, 19, Aug. 1,2, 8 4. Sept. 23, 24, 5. 4, 5. June 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 16, , 13, 14 Aug. 5, 6, 8. Sept. %, 27, 25, 29. JApril 27, 28, 29, WJuly 1, 2, Oct. 5, 6, 7, May 2,8, 4. June 25, 27, 28, , 30, 4). 3 Sept. 30; Oct. 1, 4, ( A [April 14, 15, 16, July 5, 6, 7. Sept. 1, 2,3 Oct. 8, 8. 29, , 3,4 14 Saturdays. 17 Sunday, July 4—Labor Conflictiny April 3 2%; Juné 2 11; Oct. 2, 9. Day dates, y 18 Sept. AT HOME., 12 Saturdays. 16 Sundays. Decoration Day. Conflicting dates, July 81; Oct. 2. Decorati July 4. 14 Saturdays. ion Day. | 18 Saturdays. July 4. July 4. 13 Saturdays, 13 Saturdays, Decoration Day. Labor Day. 12 Saturdays. April 19, Decoration Day. Labor Day. ature [s Lovely “N Is Nature— : Expert Good Skin and Bad. The Cooper “stomach man" had some- thing to say about womankind yesterds: when interviewed at the drug depart- ment of the Brandels stores, where he is making his headquarters in Omaha. This I8 the easterner who has aroused Inter- ested comment by his extraordinary ideas about disease, 90 per cent of which, he nothing The more, tomach man® sald “Many women paint and-“powder and use cold cream and lotions when thefr complexions begin to fade. They think A sallow, wan-looking face can be made to bloom like a healthy one by such treatment, but this (s all wrong. skin must be treated from the inside out, not from the outside in. True beauty must come from a healthy body. At can't result from an unhealthy one. This is the secret of all beauty In nature—it's beau- iful because it's natural—that's all there 1s to it. Every woman with a good diges- tion has a good complexion. Has Right to Beauty. “Every woman has a right to be beau- and If she is lacking in beauty, is half siek all the time, I8 droopy, éxhausted and not jolly as a girl all her life long, it's her own fault, The trouble with most women is that when they are sick they don't know it. Scores of women, from girls to mature mothers, call on me daily, and not one out of a dosen knows really what is the matter with her. They have | Because It Easterner Tells Reason Why of | clalms, results from stomath trouble and | The | tiful. It Is her divine heritage and duty, | Be Natural,” b 's Hint To Fair Se \ doctored for everything under the sun— for nervous prostration for braih fag, for | bad blood, for indigestion, gastritis, gas or. | the stomach, headache, dizsiness—and the | ehances are ten to one in every case that ‘| the whole troublle is Ifi the stomach, The stomach is virtually the seat of - call it more important than,the he he stomach must absorb and try to digest whateyer s put into it How to Love Health. “1f a woman persists in eating rich food, does not take exerclse as nature mends, and, to add to this, clogs up pores of her skin with greasy toflet com- pounds and lotlons, any thinking person can tell you what Is bound to result. She Wwill lose vitallty, get nervous.: her skin will become pale, her blood thin and pm ples will bregk out. 8he will be tired a chronfc Invalid, Bhe will wonder why she I no longer Happy and buoyant as #he used to be. There s nothing the mat- ter with her but her stomach—it's been overworked, overioaded, can't do its duty | as nature latended, and so the Whble | nervous sgstem and the wonderfully in- | tricate machinery of the humen body is | thrown out of gear. Tone up the stomach, | give it a chance, I say, and that woman will regain her health, her beauty and her joy in lite, | “I know that my medioine will do just this thing, because hundreds have come /to me in every city Where I have intro- duced my medicines, to tell me, almost with tears of joy in their eyes, what I had done for them. Beauty is, woman's dearest posaession. Woman 1 the world's greatest blessing.” — One way to high cost SCHEDULE - STILL TIED UP Committee Sits Up All Night with Sunday Dates. CAN'T SEEM TO UNTANGLE THEM Isolation of Denver s O Trouble in Western Leagne mittee—Meeting Adjourn: Until Afternoon. | | CHICAGO, Feb. 17.—After judging dates {all night, the schedule committee of the | Western Base Ball league decided to take a rest and the meeting scheduled for 10 a,/ m. was postponed until afternoon. The committee spent about elghteen houpé yes- | terday and early this morning vainly try- | ing to make the 168-game list acceptable to all the club owners, The withdrawal of Pueblo from the clr- cult, leaving Denver geographically iso- lated, 18 the cause of much pf the trouble, It is expected the committee will meet later and decide upon a draft. The major- ity of the club owners are in favor of ad- journing today. Dietz Club List is Almost Filled Exun‘nive Improvements Made in the Property and_Club Will- Run Year Round. The membership of the Dietz club Is nearly filled. The list is restricted _to seventy-five. The club has completed a | club house costing $3,500 on its six-acre tract on the west shore of Carter lake, held under le The club house has been equipped with pool and billiard tables, & dance floor, ‘shower bath, and locker rooms. Tennis courts have been laid opt, also a base ball field and the directors propose to devotes attention especlally to these sports. The cldb holds bathing and dock facill- ties on the lake shore. Though primarily an organization for outdoor and water sports, the Dietz is to be run through the entire year hereafter, according to the present plans O, the management) The grounds the -within easy distance of the Sherman avenue car line, The officers of the club are J. J. Me- Mahon, president; E. L. Laverty, yice pres- \dent; Dr. Hayes Gsantner, secretary; A. Andersom; treasurer, The members of the board of directors are F. J. Evans, W. H. Platner, C. . Hall, R. D. Evans and H. E v Neighbor Lodge From the Bluffs Crosses River Modern Woodmen Enjoy Evening of Fraternal Intercourse in Spite N of Weather. Camp No. 120 Modern Woodmen of America entertained a party, of visting Woodmen from the Councl Bluffs camps last night at Woodmen hall in the Con- tinental building. Nathan Bernstein, consul of camp No. 120 presided, and in a cordial manner wel- comed the visitors to the campfire of the nelghbors of No. 120. Consul Snyder of Hazel camp No. 171 of Council Bluffs responded to the fraternal greetings and expressed the appreciation of the visiting Woodmen for the neighborly welcome with which they had been greeted. He referred to the early history of the two camps and mentioned several incidents in the annals of the two camps, which have always had a friendly attachment for. each other. [ \ Sir Willlam Kennedy made a short talk closing his remarks by reciting ‘‘The Volunteer Organist.”” This was so heartily received that Mr. Kenredy favored ~the Woodmen ‘with another selection and gave “The Song of the Camp' by Bayard Taylor. Stephen 'Barker sang a solo that wag enthusiastically applauded and responded tosthe encore by singing “The Mountain King." Messrs. Dunn and Potter, formerly mem- bers of the famous Woodmen mandolin Quartet of camp 120, gave a duet on the mandolin and_gultar and were cheered till they responded with another fine selection, Consul Bernstein introduced the speaker of the evening, Colonel T. W. McCullough, Mr. McCullough spoke on tne “Weather and Woodcratt.” A wrestling match was giVen for the amusement of the Woodmen and it proved to be a popular feature. Frank Troke and Nels Rasgussen were the men who con- tested on' the mat, Troke winning the match in two straight falls. After the wrestling match refreshwents were served to all the Woodmen by the foresters of camp No. 120, ALBERT MORRISON TO LEAD | WOODWARD STOCK COMPANY | Popular Actor Engaged to Head the New Company at the Boyd Theater. Albert Morrison has been re-engaged to | lead the Woodward Stock company, which opens its season at the Boyd theater on | the evening of Saturday, March 5. The leading : woman of the company will be | —ii NOTED PAINTINGS ON VIEW Omaha Society of Fine Arts Opens First Exhibition. s Yo SOCIETY OUT TO SEE THEM Wide Range of Subjects Included, Among Them Works of Casin, ~Kever, Israely/ Le Sidaner and Rosa Bonheur. The first annual exhibition of -paintings held under the auspices of the Omaha Soclety of Rine Arts opened Wednesday at the public library with an attendance of the members of the socfety and thefr in- vited friends. This display, comprising representativa works of the modern ar- tists of Europe and America is the finest exhibition of its kind to be given in Omaha and cénsldered by the Fine Arts soclety as marking the beginning of a new period th the development of art 1ifé in the clty,, . Today and eontinuing to and including February 23 t1é collection will be open to the general. publlc, each afternoon from 2 to 6 o'clock /atit{*¢dch evening from 7:30 to 3 o'clock. The, gpening night was in a sense somewhat of a gociety event. More than 300 Dersons viewed ‘the collection. The pictures received very general appre- clation and ‘admiration highly encouraging to the.people concerned with the move- ment which resulted In bringing these Ppaintings to Omaha. Tha, fifty-foun, paintings on display cover a e :range ‘of subjects and type of ar- tisthe/work. A landscape by Cazin came In for ‘perhaps the highest degree of approv This. bit of work has claimed honor and exalted position in many foreign exhibi- tions. Tt so happens that this study depict a lapdscape most Interestingly like glimpse of wWestern scenery. Representative.of the collection on dis- pldy are “At the Cradle,” by J. S. H. Kever; by Joset Israel by Rosa Bonheur and Henri Ron- “Ideal Head." “Experiment in Light,” “Le Trianon” proves of pecullar Interest to the artists and .students at the first night showing. It is hardly a picture, but !| rather an experiment in light. “One might almost call it a laboratory produet,” was the way J. Laurie Wallace | explained it. “It hasn’t the human appeal of many others of the pictures here, but it Is highly interesting to the painter.” “In_the Garden,” a study by the same | painter, represents a similar endeavor, an | effort to deal with the light and color. rather than form. Rosa Bonheur's buffalo picture attracted considerable attention as being one of the Where Proposed Cold Storage Act Would Hit Hard New Yorker Sn;l—; Would Aid Big Interests to Control Gotham Market. NEW. YORK, Feb. 17.—Alderman Dow- | ling’s resolution that all food products | placed in cold storage must be tagged with | the dgfe at which they are put in and the | date at which they are taken out recelved | a setback today, when a local dealer In- formed the board at a public hearing that the ordinance would play directly into the | hands of those who seek a centralized con- | trol of the food market. i “One company allied with the National Packing company has been making a strong tight to get into the poultry and egg busi- mess. It wants to control themarket here With its $70,000,000 worth of business @ yi sald this dealer. “Now the western packers can put eggs and poultry in western warehouses not affected by this ordinanee and then bring them to New York, untagged, when the season for sale arrives. “It is not Chix e to point out what advantage this Would be to the packers or what would happen to prices if the local dealers were driven out of the market. e o OMAHA GENERAL HOSPITAL SUED FOR WETZEL’'S DEATH Widow of Patient Whe Jumped from Third Story Asks $20,000 Damages. The Omaha General hospital will have to defend a suit for $20,000 damages In dis- triet court for the death February 9 of Alva Wetzel, the typhold fever patient who | leaped from a third story window to the pavement, Sult was begun Wednesday afternoon by the filing of a petition in which Mrs. Fan- nfe Wetzel, ths widow and the adminis- tratrix of Wetzel's estate, is plaintitf. The petition recites that Wetzel was taken to the hospital February 3 and that six days later leaped to his death from | an unfastened window, which was not barred in any way. | It is set forth that the hospital is “not an eleemosynary institution, but a private business conducted for gain and profits Wetzel, by reason of his fever, was sub- Ject to delirlum and to Irrational acts and _says overcome the" of living P. O. Neflsen of P. O. Neilsen Co. “I have been told that half the people in Omaha own their own homes and a large part of them are paying for theirs by monthly paymente. the other half get Let busy and they wont need to worry over the high price of living.” i By purchasing a home on easy terms you are allowed to pay for it with the money you now pay as rent, in a few years the home is paid for and you will have a balance’ left over chase of another h purposes. Look in the. of The Bee today each month for some of the luxuries of life or to put away towards the pur- ouse for investment real estate columns for home bargains for sale on the easy term plan. ... Thursday is home day." School Board Row 1n ’Frisco Rival Bodies in Legal Fight for Con-f trol of Education in California Metropolis. ‘ | SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 17.—A contest be- | tween the rival Boards of Kducation, one | appointed by Former Mayor Taylor\the other by Mayor McCarthy, was vigorously | waged here today by both eides. Although | the Taylor board is! legally in office, by | virtue of a permanent injunctign restrain- | ing Mayor McCarthy from removing its | members, the police took possession of the over to the McCarthy board. When the members of the old board ap- violence toward himself and. that the hos- | peareq they were confronted by a police pital which contracted to give him ‘“all |getail of six men, which denied them ad- care, nursing, ~attentlon, oversight and | mytance. Prepared for this, they were ac- medical treatment knew thjs well, both | .ompanied by an attorney, who entered the when ‘it received the patien\ and at all | poara rooms and read the injunction, upon Whisky is Made from Grain Liquor Distilled {rom Other Sub- stances Must Not Be Branded “Whisky.” v WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—President Taft's decision In the liquot controversy that ‘Whisky Is "lhluk"' whether it be blended or straight, has en formulated in a set of regulations prepared by the Board of Food and Drugs Inkpection of the Department of Agriculture. The returns were completed late today and approved as required by the pure food law, by Sec- retary Wilson of the Department of Agri- from patients.|' The petition declares that|yooms of the board today and turned them |auliure: Secretary MaeVeagh of the Treas- ury department, and Secretary Nagel of the Department of Commerce and Labor. In brief the regulations declared that all un. mixed spirits distilled from grain, prepas ;& in the customary ways, are entitled to u name “Whisky,” without qualifieation. Blended whisky must be labelled as such. t was one of the men whom Coach Cole ex- pected to be a brilllant player next “D"? :‘d }?Idnv- ‘the - Cornhuskers a strong jback eld. J Russell was tHo ing pole vaull Miss Caroline Gates, who comes to Omaha well recommended as an actress possessing experience as well as youth and beauty. Others in the company will be Henry few plctures in the collection representing the work of woman in art. “At the Cradle," a large Kever canvas, | tells ‘a story that finds appreciation from | times Jerelnafter mentioned.” Therefore, negligence upon the part of the hospital is \alleged and damages in sum of $20,000 prayed for. which the McCarthy appointees withdrew, The term “‘whisky,” however, is re- | leaving the old board In possession. The | stricted to distillates from grain, and under the | jocks on doors and desks about the board | (ho regulations, distillates from other sub | rooms had been removed during the oc-|gtances, if labelled ‘“whisky” are mis- Krebbs, leas r and hurdler on the Nebrska track team. His loss will deprive tha Cornhuskers of many in theee two gvents in all the meetn XU SPIUE. Thin is his (hird year in nis st for participation intercolleglate athletics. T h 0 have aitamel a form in the pole vault that Woull Mak Kim ohe of the Veat vault- valley this season. nnouncenent of the departure wo, athlet ditional sad ne for the track feam was given out by Sidney Collins o the effect that he would not take part in spring athletics. He I8 staying out of track athletics 80 he will be eligible for foot ball the news that came to the students today Was ‘not depressing, for with the other aunounoements of the loss of athlétes came _the gtory of, the réturn of Leon K. Warner 40 the unifersity. Warner was a atar Preadhalt oot bt Player last ye one ofthe- fastest: wen. geen on & Lusker years—but after t semester he 16ft sthool father on a f er Eager, I patriotic pr i ather, wha immediately g‘druh the buy to come back 0 school so that he would become eligible for the gridiron game next fall Nebraska' and” Manbattan will not play voot baM mext fall. This announcement was given out by Manager Eager today. The Cornhusker manager failed to come to terms with the Kansas Aggies' manager and the two mentors decided not to try to have their teams plnx next season. The Cornhusker. mavager desired that his team play &t home and the Aggies Insisted on plaving &t Manhattan. if the Kansas men d consented Lo come to Lincoin tho game would have b FORRE" 190 WG oy Hawkeyes Run Around Players frowm ol Mis 10WA CITY, la., Feb. Special Tele- - BOWROFAn Awas~with Jissourl here In. basket ball by the score of % tar work of Ryden, rorward for the €8, Wae the feature of the game aix baskeis. The first halt ended g featureless with the exception of sts by Cohen and Ryden. lowa began corlilg with regularity in the middie of the second half and cinched the victory. The lineup: MISSOURI Burris ) Parker Conen onkiln ! A Hagin- v from fleld! Ryd Stewart 177, Colen (2), * Goals from foul: _Stewart, 2 in five trius; Parker, & In four trialy. Referce: Willluma o Cedar Rapids. 2 He was thought | i FlLoon Drake Defeated by Ames Aggies | | | | Des Moines Quintpt Again Go Down Before Husky Coyn Growers . of To DES MOINES, a., Feb, 17.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Drake and Ames basket ball teams met for the third time this year yesterday {at Ames. Drake was again defeated, the| | score being 33 to 2. Drake put up the best game it has shown againdt the Aggles this season. The fourth and last game between the two teams will be played .at Des Molnes, February 21. The lineup: DRAKE. J. Hoffman. ... Debutts . Mosher Horbert Teveltrup Walker Chappell : J. Hoffman (3, De- @, C.. Hoffman @), Maricle . Mosher (2), Herbert (8), Teveltrup (4.) Field throws: Debutts (1), Mosher (.) Re- teree: Stevenson. ROD AND GUN HAS HOT CONTEST | Crab Will Elect Officers Tonight, with | c ces for. Spirited Voting. The annual meeting of the Omaha Rod {and Gun club will be held this evening at | Crelghton Institute hall on hteenth |street between Farnam and uglas streeis. Officers will be elected for the | coming year and the proposition of buying Courtiand beach will be presented to the b. would give ‘the members a e frontage and provide a much | more commodious club house. There is & |slate in the field and much spirit in the A Whitmore is one candidate nd W. 8. Sheidon another. Hoppe Defea Morningstar. TOLEDO, O, Feb. 11.—-Willie Hflnr de- feated Ora Morningstar at 15:2 balk line blitlards here tonigit, running 40 points in seven mnings to his opponent's 91. He had an average of 6717, with high runs of 179 and 108, while Morningst had an average | of 13 with a hikh run of 6. In the afternoon game Hoppe ran 30 points to Morningstar's 119, with respective Averages of 261 and 1 high runs, 17 and ®. ght. A, | for president | | Duggan, Colin Campbell, Frank Dudley, Lloyd Ingraham, Erville Alderson, Baldwin | Phelps, Willlam Hayes, Henry Lotz, Anna Bates, Marle Hudson, Inez Forrester, and | Ethel Valentine. ,Many of these have | played here before in stock, and are well established In local popularity. The open- ing bill will be “The College Widow," to | be followed the second week by “When | Knighthood Was In Flower. WARNER WILL IS Tlinois Supreme Court Uphol Providing for Tweo M Trast Fand. SPRINGFTELD, I, Feb. 17.~The Tilnols | supreme court today upheld the $2,000.000 trust fund created by the will of Colone! John Warner of Clinton, and continued his | o former commissioner of pensions, ‘espasian Warner, as administrator. The verdict of the circuit court of D- witt county declaring the trust invalid was reversed and remanded.. Minnle Warner, mother, and Flora Warner Bell, sister of Vespasian Warner, | had contended #hat the trust was invalld, as the will might never bé probated apd the circujt court so decreed and ordered a | division ‘of the réal éstate In the trust, | Under today’s decision Vespasian Warner | will continue toCadminister the property | for ten years. | John Warner was twice married. He had two children by his first wife and two by his second. Prior to his\second mar- riage he entered into an ante-muptial agree- ment, whereby &t his death his wife was to recelve only a nominal sum. Later this agréement became the subject of litiga- ton. The effect of today's decision is that the | children will share equally fn'the estate except that the widow gets a dower share. | VALID | Clanse | ton { —— New lowa Champion. PAULINE, la. Feb. 17.—(Specia Brenton of thulm‘ holder of t] Gazette belt America’s cha pound xnfl .\ I8 title against all | Dodge street. the sheer force of the humanity and | motherhood that it speaks. | One of the most widely known painting: shown in Adoif Schreyer's “The Bedouins | Attack.” This painiing was once owned | in the west and later fell into the hands of the Henry Reinhart company, from whose galleries In Chicago the collection shown has been taken. 4 bl The collection was brought to Omaha through the efforts of the lecture commit- tee of the Fine Arts society. Mrs. Z. T. Lindsey is chairman of this committee. Other members are Muse(. B. George, Mrs, Clement Chase, Mrs. A. W. Jetferls | and Mrs. Harold Gifford. Mrs. Charles Offutt is chairman of the privilege com- mittee, DROPS DEAD FROM EXPOSURE| es Demise of Robort ecd—Owner Under Arrest. Brought out to be exercised on a day with the thermometer at gero, after enjoy- Ing the unwontedduxury of a heated stall since December, steed of Robert Alton. Some time in December the animal had been deserted by his owner. He had been found standing on the street on a cold inter's day for twelve hours and trans- erred by the police department to the more congenial atmosphere of Jones' barn, M4 and wagop did not predispose Alton, coloted, to claim his property, and Monday he was 'sent to jall for fifteen days for eruclty. Jones advertised the animal for sale and Wednesday found a purchaser. The man took the animal out to try wind. A half gale was blowing. The horse didn’t like the change of air and just as the corner of Douglas and Twelfth streets was turned e fell dead in his tracks, leaving possibly some legal questions to be deter- mined By the courts. Dynamite Wreeks ings as completely as coughs and colds Wreck lungs. Cure them quick with Dr. King's sa comers at his w New Discovery. ¢ and $1.00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. a was too much for the | A\ mortgage on both horse | cupancy by the McCarthy board. PASSENGER TRAIN IS WRECKED BY BROKEN RMLE Two Passenger Conches Are Dragmged | Forty Rods Near Madison, 8 Eight Persons Hurt. MADISON, 8. D.. Feb. 17.~The Chicago, | Milwaukee & St. Paul passenger train, | which left here at 1 o'clock yesterday for Sloux City was wrecked by a broken rail four miles south of here. Two pas- senger coaches left the track, turned over and were dragged forty rods. No one was Killed, but elght was injured. Injured: Mgs. Carl Bunte, Rock Raplds, Ia., head and hip crushed. H. L. Rock, Chester, 8. D., hip and wrist bruised. A. H. Balley, Minneapolfs, ear cut R A. Scholliiglaw, Dubuque, la.. hip and | cheek bruised. Martin Johns, Madison, 8. crushed. W. off. L. Staley, Chester, 8. D,, head and hand injured. The injured were all taken to the Madi- son hospital. KANSAS MAYORS FORM TRUST Traveling Man Tells of Lat Combine to Ald Muniel System. i civic government ‘trust' is the latest | that Kansas bas produced in the way of freaks,'~wald C. R. Arries, a Kansas City traveling man on his monthly Omaha visjt. “Why, down there I hear that they are planning to have all the city mayors work- ing in co-ope: lon through a headquarter’'s départment at the state university at Law- rence. “Gireat system, when one comes to look D., hana F. Shattuck, Madison, 8. D., ear torn Freak PEACEMAKER GETS STABBED William Hughes of Omaha Injured While Trying to Stop Fight in the ! Willilam. Hughes, 80 South Eighteenth street, a molder, while acting as a peace- maker between Dan Jones, a bartender, and Will Maher, both of Council Bluffs, at the corner of Broadway and Main streets, In the Bluffs last night recelved 9 gash in the back of his head extending. from his ear three inches up in the scalp. The two belligerents escaped arrest, while Hughes s at Mercy hospital in Councll Bluffs recelving medical attention. His wound {s not likely to prove serious. branded, -and the person gufity of mis- branding may be prosecuted. e, @ | e.. Peoria, 11, troubled ‘for some %0 severely at A Travenos H. F. Beers, 617 Tth | writes: I have been | time with kidney trouble, times 1 could scarcely carry &rips. After using one bottle of Foley's Kidney Pilis T have been entirely releved, and | gheertully recommend them to all.” Foley's | Kidney Pills are healing and antisceptle and will restore health and strength. Sola | by au drugsists. | e F Me: | call Douglas 119, Ind~&-2119, same 'phone | numbers for METZ Bottigl Beer to home consumers. Prompt dellvery ;and same | prices guaranteed. Wm. J, Bosckhoff, re- | tail dealer, 508 8. 7th St. WASHINGTON, Feb. 16.~Former Presi- dent Roosevelt, according to an opinion ex- pressed tonight by President Taft to Grand Army veterans in the Department of the | Potomae, ‘eeems to have been an exception | to the rule” This declaration was made by Mr. Taft in speaking of criticisms Which have been made in certain quarters as his administration. He said he-would tebi worse for these criticlsms were It /fot for the fact that in every administration, “with the possible exception,” he added, “of that of my predecessor, who seems to have been an exception to every rule there were vigorous attacks of some sort. - at It. Think of the time they can have getting up batches of ordinances. Now that the commission form of municipal government s 8o much in vogue down that way the city commissions have been work- ing overtime getting out new city laws. Now they can be made in uUnifosm shape by-the municipal trust.” “Lincoln had radicals and insurgents deal with and he had the deuce of a time, said the president. “But I would be ashamed to compare the easy year | have just been through with some of the years of darkness he had to suffer. I am glad to have been hammered this first year, because the next three years will be pleas. Roosevelt Séems to Bé Exception to All Rules ——— | ant, ne matter what the newspapers. say about me." - As a commander-in-chief “whe had u/vor | faced a hostile bullet,” the president said | he, sflluted Samuel R. Van Sant, com- | mander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the republic, in whose honor the banquet was | given, | Retirement of superannuated government employes with a sultable pension by the government was declared by the president ‘m be in the interest of economy and eff)- clency as well as of justice. Speaking of | volunteer army, he said thére ‘wah sultable militia Iaw and the neghlars i the national guard were so similarly trained | that together they could form & strong nucleus for gn expanding army in time of need. { Other speakers were Senator Botah of Idaho, Representatives Dawson WA and Graham of Illinols and uel of the Grand Army of ‘the Y