Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 13, 1915, Page 7

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THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, NOw- FRISLO FANME DIOXT THIS DEFENDANT Sk HAT HARRY SPUANDER MONEY oM YOU AND DIDNT KE MAKE LOVE ™ You . ANSWER orR NO - RENTALS STORES AND OFFICES. STORE, rnodern near ltofflel‘ low Stebbins, 1 rent. G. —= REAL ESTATE FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR SALE "fi“‘; Al ve it Cm.nduo. o'll prove b Ng(mu.bon-n. MINNESOTA. 40, 80 or 160 ACRES, good heavy sofl, well settled part of Todd county, Inn.; Dod roads, schools and churches. Price, § $20 per acre. Terms, §1 per acre o.nh hlllnce $1 per acre a_vear; 5,000 acres to select 1) Schwab Bros., 1028 Plymouth Blag., Sinneapoils, Minn. WE have several d quarter sections of Minnesota lands that we will trade Ior clty roperty. ‘artan & Whalen, le, Minn. ‘WISCONSIN, UPPER, WISCONSIN—Best dairy and general crop state in the union; settiers w;nud lands for sale at low prices on sy terms. Ask for booklet 34 on Wiscon- l|n Centr-l Land Grant. Excellent I for stock ralsing, If interested in fruit lands ask for booklet on apple orchards. Address Land and Indust: l DGD!. 8oo Line Rallway, Minneapolis, M MISCELLANEOUS. VE YOU A FARM FOR SALE? \35 t’ood dmrl ption of your land -lld nnd to_the Sloux Cit; { %V) Joul\- Most, Powerful “tdl\ll!. TWBIIIY-HV. words ev: Frl~ evening, Saturday morning an lven' evmlnl and Sund for one leen ads on "lV- dlt- or 50 woids, ¥, or M drdullllou of any Iowa news- mmh" 950,000 readers daily in four great NEBRASKA, BUY @& fine 640-acre stock ranch near church 'cmml and nnanl store. Mrs. C. hippen, Pardun, Neb. The One Best Buy Anywhere Perkins Co., Neb., Lands, $15 to $25 acre. Come see for your- self. We prove it or pay all of your expenses. KEnough said. Write for particulars to DAVE SHUTER, GRANT, NEB. Agents Wanted in Every County. Write me. ONLY $#16_buys a_6i0-acre rohool land lease in Cherry county, running twenty- four years, being nl.m miles from town and is is a bargain. Write owner, L. C Crandall, 1644 Locust St., hive or- Wt" Impmvcd Priced ". Herman, Neb. S leve wil nn’i‘ REAL ESTATE LOANS W eas, v’v‘f'.?m"&'"uf" . einat ST ond farm Jogsa, T Blmont & Cor i Btats Banke™" A “For Sale” ad will turn second-hand furniture mto cash. CITY property. Larke loans & specialty. W. H Thomas, 28 State an\k Ride #% TO 6% for loans on best class city 1den in amounts $2.000 up, also Reasonable commissions. fl BT (' Ifl 22 Farnam 8t. OMAHA ‘Homes. Nebraska_ tarms o' REAT, BSTATE CO KEEFR 016 Omlhl Nlflonll Phone Df\u AR! ND CT’ O'DOUGHP‘RTY & H"GH "8, 111 Keeline Bldx. Ph . 1013 MONEY on hand for city and farm loans. H, W. Binder, City National Bank Bidc 6% 12 Brandels Theater Bldg. REAL ESTATE—FOR EXCHANGE OXE b-robm house, corner Iot, will trade ity for a good vacant lot. G. A. ECKLES, Phone D. 1808 or H. 5148, T exch arm near Co. BIufls, s in Omaha and Winside, Neb., farm_and J_%0, Bee. FEVEN-PASSENGER auto to_cxchange r S-room bungalow. Phone Doug. 38 RFEAL EflTA'I'l\‘.—-WAmD T WANT o buy for cash ¢ oheap Tots: "Ohve prive and Josel 6 Ecm tion and you will hear from me. 0. 1F you t o sell, let the people know. We take a picture of your place, make 109 coples, wrile a full and completé +dcser piion and put (£ in, the hands of roa 0 dl over estate men In Omaha We a !llfi( it on our bulletin board at 15th an amam Sts.. are where thousands pas ,m‘ dafly. Resulte coum Our charge of the ahave service s i wiving you the greatest amount of Publicity at i » LTY LISTING COMPANY, 400 Ware Hlock REAJ, ESTATE—A\CREAGE 5 Acres, $2500 Vc sightly, near &nler ved u4." 100 ‘grapevincs: 3 acres aifalfa Harnson & Morton "AL ESTATE—NORTH IIDI -Room Cottage with bath; EL ICAGO fiul ‘four-room cot % modern. e R! Tyler i THAT - 80T ree SN MmYSELF CITY TLOANS, C. G. Cariberg, 8i0- [ SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT WELL: COUNIELLOR SAY CooNT R’ YOUR MONO WITNESS 1§ 1MPOSS I BLE SuE Wikl NOT YounG womMAaA) WOou 'L ANSWER NES OR NO IN TALS COVRT GeT ME - ES OR NO ety L Grve HER UF AS A BAD 3006 T HAS WRESTLER WHO WILL BATTLE JOE W. H. Barton Comes to Omaha with Greek Who Doubts Bupremacy of Dodge Lad. WANTS MELADY TO PUT ON MIX ‘W. II. Barton, the man who staged the Stecher-Lewis match in Evansville, Ind., is in Omaha with a Greek ‘“rassler” in tow. The said Greek answrs to the name of Kuvaros and he aspires to tackle Jo- seph Stecher of Dodge, Neb. Barton invaded St. Joseph after leaving Bavnsville and he scheduled a match be- tween Stecher and Kuvaros for next Thursday. He put on a couple of other matches in Joetown to test the sentiment of the city and decided St. Joseph was about ready to enter the hands of under- takers so he cancelled the match and blew the village. He came up to Omaha for the purpose of a conference with Gene Melady. He wants Melady to stago the Stecher- Kuvaros match in Omaha or Councll Bluffs. Barton says the Greek will give Stecher a tough tussle, although, of course, the ©odds would be for victory by the Dodge lad. “I think Kuvaros would make Stecher work harder than any of the other fellows he has wrestled and I be- leve it would be a great mateh,” de- clared Barton. If Barton can't get his man on with Btecher here he intends to beat it for the sunny south land. Sporting Gossip In Various Fields At the coming meeting of the base ball rules committee of the major league a special ruling will be requested to cover the following instance which ocourred on a southern professional diamond last summer: An umpire, very rocently pro moted from the playlng ranks, was offi- clating behind the pitcher's box. With a runner off second the batter drove o high line drive over the hurler's head and the umpire, thinking that he was still shortstopping, speared the ball and ESTATE—INVESTMENTS 100x169 Harney, just west of 20th, $35 M. (Near Exchange.) REAL Harrison & Morton " New Hotel and Store Building rooms, steam heat. running water situated on corner lot attractive revenue and 4 in every room; near 16th St terms. Furtver Information at our office. Glover & Spain Douglas 8962, 915-20 City National. Farnam Street 100 feet on Farnam St., near 20th, $35,000. Harrison & Morton Diedit REAL Esm'm—hmcm, LANEOUS Do You Want a Home? I have a fine new six- room house, all modern, beautifully finished, well located, near street car. A snap for $3,400. Terms: $500 cash, bal- ance monthly payments, Phone Wal. 2125. VR On a 6-room strictly mndtrn. well Mllll home from owner; hot water M. 337, Omaha Ree Lo ts. Al " T, 15th and Moni Bea Offloe. South Omaha TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY, LOST-4$1 REWARD--§100 for capture and conviction of thief, §7% for return of team, buggy and ness. Team of bay mares, welght 1, each; one a little darker than omor. front white rooz. star forel L, e ears clip) other rougher lookln‘ solid bay. Dhur top , Hght colored from weather, orig- y brown; side curtains almost 'hlu. &lflmyn ly be seen driving sngle and other mare, as shafts were nnuua on buggy. Also took ness. If seen, plu.n notif, diately, A 8. Edwards, sub- yES OR NO < Just an E;lrful By Tad Harry Tuthill took Mysterious Billy Smith up to Roston for a fight some years ago and that was some )b if you remember what a mussy person Mysterious Will was. Harry took the first day off to find Bill training quarters and while Harry was away Bill got into a muss with a colored sport and was slashed on the leg with a razor. After quite a run the cops caught the slasher and brought him to the police station. Smith had to identify the man first before charges could be placed against him, so they rushed over to Smli hotel and brought him back to the tion house. The lieutenant at the desk mitted Smith, then ordered the colored carver brought forth from the coop. He stood before the desk. Smith was on the other side of the room. “Is this the man who cut you with a rasor, Mr. Smith?" asked the lieutenant with a stern look. Mysterious Will walked over to where the dusky demon stood, hauled off and knocked the latter flat with a right on the puse, “Is that the man?" tenant agalin. “No,” barked the mysterious one, I never saw him before In my life. asked the leu- threw to second, double play. The ranking mma of the National Lawn Tennis assoclation in its report to the parent body again emphasizes the un- satisfactory response to its request for data upon which to base ita ranking of players. According to the committee, the replies received thiy year were less than the number turned in at the end of the 1914 season. Blanks were supplied, through every club holding ‘'membership in the assoclation, to all players who competed in sanctioned tournaments during 1915 It is estimated that more than 3,000 racquet wielders competed in 142 tou ments sanctioned by the United States National Lawn Tennis association, yet but eighty-six singles and forty-two Goubles record blanks were returned to the committee. As & result a portion of the ranking had to be done upon unoffi- clal and press reports of the play. Since but a small preportion of the tournament players evince any desire to supply the committee with the necessary data for rankifg purposes, other methods for recording the progress of tennis competi- tion will be adopted before the 1916 sea- son begins, President Charles H. Dbbets of the Brooklyn club s authority for the state- ment that an effort will be made at the coming meeting of the Natlonal league to shorten the senfor organization’s base ball season. It is proposed to cut a week off each end of the present season, thus avolding the uncertain weather of early spring and late fall without reducing the rlaying schedule below the 150 game mark. During the automobile racing season just closed $282,000 was dlstributed among the drivers of high-powered speed ma chines. Of this amount, ten drivers di- vided 8217900, while twenty-five other pllots shared in the division of $62,800. The | remaining $11,000 was eplit among more than twice that number of drivers. Omaha High Five Schedule Nearly Filled to Limj_t The Central High school basket ball scheduls, with the excention of one or two games, 18 completed for this year, It will Include the following games: Couneil Bluffs High at Councll Bluffs January 8, Lincoln High at Omaha January 15. Beatrice at Omaha January 2. Sloux City at Omaha February 6. University Place High at University Place February 11, Kansas City (Mo) Omaha February 12. Lincoln High at Lincoln Fehruary 19. Bloux City High at Sloux City Febru- ary %, Counel) ary 2, State high school basket ball teurna~ ment at Lincoln March 11, 12 and 18, Either York or Nebraska City will be schedvled for January 2. If terma can- not be made with either team Omaha will probably play Port Dedee (Ta) High on this date. Twice during the year the team will plav two nights in suceess'on. This is something the hizh school has not tackled bhefore outside the gta tournament. where it {s sometimes neces- sary to play three games in a day. Kan- sas City Normal will play at Lineoln the L | nieht before they come here and Omaha | will play at University Place on the same Enl[fit. Normal High at Pluffs High at Omaha Febru- . FULLERTON Neb., Den, (Snecial ) ~Fulierton H'vh schoo! dofea‘ed Soaldinf acllage jn & eame of hasket ball nn Thersdav eevnine. 3 to 8 The rame which was nlayed at Spalding, little slow. hué thers was some enod team work at times. One of the festiras was free throws by Pritchard of @nald. ine collere, wha during the first hal? made cleven wosls out of twelve tria's. ‘The Fullerton team played its usual was & close g arding _®ame. lll‘lthr— i ol ‘hoflt mu.( bn'flu'«--"'-u»-r column. thus completing a Athletic Couneil 0f Ames College Awards Lettérs AMES, Ia, Dec. Il.—(Special)—The Ames athletio council made followinz awards of varsity insignia 's,” which were announced by Chairman Olyde ‘Wiiljams today : Foot Ball-Aldrich, Deffke, Denfel, Dubel, Evans, Foster, John, Jones, Karr, Holmes, Delaney, McKinley, Mos Packer, Reeve, Sloss and Uhl. Cross-Country—Barker, S8eder, Willlams, Hawthorne, Maakestad and Bcroggie. Bill Brennan, coach of the fast re serves, who had the varsity guessing all fall, recommended reserve “R' sweaters to twenty-seven men of his squad. Th council adopted the recommendation, as follows: C. D. Allstadt, B. E, Axthelm R. Barker, C. F. Breeden, W. O. Cotter. Bill Davis (captain), R, B Dingeman H. B. Evans, D. L. Harring'on, V. Heater, J. A. Hendricks, H. Helseth, C. K. Hood H. Jagger, L. B. Johnson, J. G. Matthews P. Middleton, W. 8. Moore, V. Peters, R. J. Paul, F. Perkine, B. Ricketts, H. G Schnaidt, ¥. T. Tucker, Charles Turner, H, Fitch and Harry Menold. Ames won second place In Missouri Valley conference foot ball. The &roes country team, for two successive sen- #sons, took first in the Missouri Valley conference and second in the Big Nine conference under the coaching of Ned Merriam. INTERNATIONAL PRESI- DENT may secure Cleveland club, D BARROW. CLEVELAND, Dec. 18.~The Cleveland American league and American assocla tion teams will be put under the ham- | mer, tentatively speaking, in the near future, It is understood that Ban John- son, president of the American league, has the matter under consideration and will soon Issue a statement whereby President Edward Barrow of the Inter- national league will be announced as the new leader of the Cleveland club. i = WELL | NEVER. BUT YOUR MONOR. HEARD ONE - TMERE ARE SOME AlK ME ANY |- OH Voure onE QUESTIONT THAT™ PUESTION AND| OF THosE wusE CANNGT BE— Ul ANJSWER. | PEBPLE &H? ANSW ER.ED NEY OR NO | vou'kl ANSWER ME YES of O BN ? For many a year Sir Walter Camp, the opulent oracle of the east who an- nually selects alleged All-American foot ball teams and some way or other gets ‘em printed in Colliers’ Weekly, has been the butt of all of the jokesmiths, paragra- phers and kidders of the west. Sir Walter i Camp has always been regarded as good as Henry Ford and William Jennings Bryan as food for outting and sarcastic squibs. He has always beén good for one laugh a year, But Sir Walter has been cruelly mis- Judged out here in the west. Sir Walter' heart is in the right place and he means well. It has been sald by doubters and scoffers that Walter Camp does know the state of Nebraska is in the United States. But this is a rank injustice to the intelligence of Mr. Camp, who !s perefectly aware Nebraska is in the union and who has nothing but the kindést feel- Ings toward the state. Mr. Camp has this year proved he realizes they grow and make foot ball players in the Cornhusker state. He placed one of them at a tackle on his third All-American team this year. ‘What? You say he did not? You say Seibert Captain 0f University of Omaha's Eleven the coming season at the ahnual foot ball banquet given by the co-eds of the achaol last evening at Rediok hall. Selbert was elected on the first ballot recelving seven of the fourteen votes cast. His closest opponent was Chester Dutcher, who secured five,, Following the election Dr. D, B, Jenkins, who was toastmaster, spoke briefly to the players. He prophesied a more successful season for the coming year and sald that he would do every- thing in his power to boost the sport. Coach DeLamatre, who spoke on the “Trials of a Coach” gave an interesting resume of his work. He declared that though he had had a number of things to contend. with all the trials that he could think of had been happy ones. oach LeLamuire aiso deciied that he would accept the proposition made by hoe athletic board to coach the team next year. Brief toasts were made by Gerald ruce, captain of the 1916 team; Androw Dow, Samuel Slotky, Paul Selby, Miss Mlizabeth Gordon and by Captain-elect Eetbert. Upon the completion of the ban- uet foot ball “O's" were awarded the ollowing players: Gerald Bruce, Victor eBolt, Samuel Slotky, John Jenkina, tHoward DeLamatre, Jap Leach, Teddy Korbmaker, John Seibert, Mark Lowe, | Chester Dutcher, Ernest Adams and Jenks Hart. In telling of the prospects for 1916, tain-elect Sefbert stated that elght of last season’s players would be back and that & number of surrounding high school players have slgnitied their Intention of coming to the local school The players who will be lost by graduation are: De. Bolt, Slotky, Bruce and Hart. Hill and Grenda Win Six-Day Bike Race NPW YORK, Dec. Hoston and Alfred Grenda of Australia, the American-Australian team, won the twenty-third annual six-day bieyele race ~Fred HIN of Madison Square Garden. The final score was 2,770 miles and eight laps, whioh bettered by eloven miles and slx laps the best previous mark, which was set by Goullet and Grenda In New York in 1914, McNamara and Spears finished second, while Magin and Lawrence were tied with Thomas and Ryan for third place. The other teams finished in the following order, Egg and Dupuy, fifth: Faton and Mad- den, sixth; Walthour and Moran, seventh; Hanley and Halstead, elghth: Drobach and Corry, ninth; Seres and Linart, tenth ;nnd Mitten and Hansen, elcventh, Bankers Victors Over Gunner Team ‘The Omaha National bank quintet ad- | ministered & little trimming to . the | Townsends in & practice ante-season | #wme at the Young Men's Christian ssso- clation last night. The bankers won, 28 to 1. Lineup: OIAHA NAT‘U R. L. L. 'rowusr. John Sefbert, for the last two seasons right tackle on the University of Omaha foot ball team was elected captain for which clored at 10:06 o'clock tonight in | ’ NES ME — ) I Wit~ JVOGE ALEXANDETR- me»E‘L INTHE BAacr. 7| savine HERES W-g b b” Do vou STILL W. Camp Knows Nebraska Exists; Puts “Halhgan on Third Team| you saw his lisg of welections and no Cornhuskers were named? AR, it Is true, yon are right. But he did have a Nebraska man on, and later took him off. But he did have him on for a while. Who was it you ask, perhaps. Vie Hal n. Get this now, Vie Halll- €an. Yes, where you saw the name of Weyand, West Point, at tackle on. the third All-Ameriean team, the name of Halligan had been. Somebody tipped Walter off to his mistake and the cor- rection was made in time. But the news leaked and now the world knows it. It probably never dawned on Sir Walter that Halligan hasn't played foot ball for A year, and was coach at Cotner college. [He wanted to give Nebraska recognition so0 he put Halligan on, Bven If Halligan didn't play, he might have, so what's the difference? Sir Walter Camp i the world’s great- est foot ball expert—if you use reverss English—but, as “Cy" Sherman so aptly says, he has missed his vocation, he should be an almanae editor on which basis he could crack his lttle jokes for ever and nobody would have license to complain, University Club will Sta.ge "Plg»e Tournament’ New York. Horseshoe pitching is a pas- is the game at Pumpkin Center and de- olding the nation's politics {s the lead- ing sport at Beaver Crossing. But it takes up the University club of Omah: to dig up the newest, latest and most freakish of all contests and pastimes iu these great United States. A “Pipe Tournament' ‘'ls to be staged at the University club next Saturday ovening at 7:30. Prizes will be awarded in the following “events:" For the largest pipe, For the smallest pipe, For the most unusual pipe, For the strongest pipe. For the member who can keep & corn pipe alight the longest. To enter the tournament each person must demonstrate his ability to smoke the to compete for more than one prise, If the world doesn't hang medals on the person who devised the describea “tournament,” the world s losing its sense of humor. It might also be men- tioned that special mention in “Lives of the Great” should be made of thuse per- sons, who enter or witness the contest. Brandeis Stores Outplay Bellevue Brandels Stores' fast basket ball squad defeated a picked-up team of Bellevue college men in & practice game last night on the Bellevue floor by & score of 61 to 18. The department store men were slow in the first half, but fn the second warmed up to the point where they could take it easy. The college team falled to keep up thelr end of the score. The game was clean throughout, only four fouls be- ing called, three of those on the Brandels men, Maxwell made six points; Burkenroadstwenty of his squad's 61, before they were taken out because | of slight Injuries rrom a head-on collision. | Each Brandels man counted at least two baskets. Btewart, put in for Bellevue to replace Maxwell, made two baskets In |'the last of the second half and stuck to his man like a leech of Bellevue's 1 The Y'ne v BRANDF! BELLEVUR R Hughes LFIRF....... Maxwell “ohn 0 L.F Rurkenr c| € Rifere eh. 1.6 | R Koran "6l LG, Bubstitutions—Roce for Hurkenroad, Etewart for Maxwell Picotte for Noyes, Silsby (captaim) for Rule. "Goals from Hield: ” Burkenroad (10), “Gohn ' (B), s (') Koran (), Ritckie ). Roaca ?), Maxwel 8 art (%), Allen. Gonls Srien o line; - Marwelll e Aton Fitchie. Referces: Rocca and Hen amin orer: Johmston Timer: Wenke. Time of halves: 20 minutes. OHIO STATE FOOT BALL SCHEDULE NEXT YEAR COLUMBUS, O, Dec. 11.—Ohlo state's foot ball games next fall will be with the same seven teams that were playeq in the season just closed. The schedule an- nounced today is as follows: October 7, Ohlo w:-leyln Cold Bilasts Cause Sciation. Sloan's Lintment will help your. selatica. Get & %c bottle now, it penetrates, kills : | the pain—stops many aches. All druggists. —Advertisemant. Now Six-day hleyela races are popular in time followed in Kansas City. Checkers pipe he brings. And no member is eligible b WEAR VOUR COLLARS OVT FM"‘ AGo? SOUTH SIDE HOPES ARE HIGR Coach Patton’s Basket Ball Quintet is Looking Forward to a Brilliant Season. EXPECT TO LOSE ONLY ONE GAME At least one game will the South Side High school basket ball team lose this fall. Three famots alumni stars, Morrie Cohn, Paul Shields and Herb Stryker, have combined te give the high school- ere a walloping and they probably will make good. Cohn played forward on the undefeated Chioage Tiger team of five years back and also on the Wisconsin university five last year. Shield is the well known center on the Cornhuskers quintet, while Stryker played center for the famous University of Chicago five last year. All are in trim and ready for the battle on the night before Christ- mas, Exoept for this single game the Pack- ors are expectantly leoking ferward to & great year. Captain McBride of last year's five expressea the opinion that they are as strong as-last year and will undoubtedly gain strength in the future. All of which looks good te the South Side rooters, whose brilllant prospects before the tournament last year, were crushed utterly by injuries to the play- ers & week before the opening. University Place, York, Nebraska City, Beartice, Auburn and West Point are & few of the headline attractions that Coach Patton has on his schedule st present. Auburn captured the champlonship ot southwestern Nebraska last year and having the same team this year, is anx- lous to meet the local eleven. Nebraska City has practically the same team as lagt year and having taken consolatien honors at that time will be mfich stronger this year, Captain Nixon and Bott are the only surviving membets of last year's five. Bott 1s showing up especially strong at guard, while Graham and Corr are sure satellites at the forward positions. Arthurton and Shainhoits wil make a hot fight for the other guard position, probably alternating during the season's vlay, The schedule to date; Olrrvambor 1i—Tekamah, &t @South Lecember #—Alumni, at louth Omaha. Januar: y T—Fremont, ith O Janvary 14— \West I“oln at fihm Omaha, (undecided. Liuury d-sebrgska City, at Nebraska City. uary 20-University Place, at South Fewiuary 4-Nel Jrll Agwuies, at South Or,n‘:h-, (undecid 11—Heatrice, at Bouth O High, at Frhruu J 15-York, at Sou "\ 4—Aub Omaha, PR uburn, at Bouth (\m-] Doane Gymnasium To Become Reality; Ground is Broken CRETE, Neb,, Dec. 1l.—(8pecial.)~The Doane college gymnasium, which has been asitated for the last year as an abgolute necessity, has at last o a reality. After the flag scrap Wednes- day morning in the chapel, a suscription paper was ciroulated mmong the students to find how much could be ralsed toward a temporary gymnasium to cost about $1,200 unequipped. After the results had been added it was found that among the students along, $1,31 had been pledged. Thursday afternocon the ground was broken and the work is expected to be completed by the time the students re- | turn after Christmas. A large number of the college men have promised to stay over a few days after vacation commences and about thirty of the high school boys have also promised to help, so that the work will cost the college very little. The reason for the agitation of the new gymnasium st this time is the fact that the opera house has preven unsalisfactory on account of the sise of the floor and also from the fact that two posts were inside of the playing space. Scarlet Fever Scare At Children’s Home A scarlet fever scare at Ricverview home yesterday caused ocounty officials to hurry three little gitls, Grace, Maud and Ida Kneiper, from the hospital there to their home. Juvenils Judge Sears, who had ordered the girls held at the home was asked for permission to remove them and hastily gave it. The little girls' illness resembles scar- let fever, but whether it is that disease bas not been difinitely determined, Fifty-three children are at Riverview home 4t the present time, and a sugges- quently keeps Buperintgndent Thompson and county officials awake nights. Chamberiain’s Cough Remedy Most I -v-r ry cough Moare,

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