Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
b' STEWART HAS NEW ) p— y ( 2 THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1916. PLAYS FOR I0WANS Cornhusker Qoach Discards 0ld Formations and Will Develop New Line of Stuff, BONES BY COOK AND CALEY Lincoln, . Nov, 20.—(Special.)—Just by way of making the Husker squad forget all about the nightmare of last Saturday, Dr. E. J, Stewart put them through a vigorous scrimmage to- night. With very few exceptions the Huskers emcrfed from the Saturda conflict in splendid physical condi- tion for the fray with Towa at lowa City next Saturday afternoon. Some of ‘the backfield men were lugging minor bruises, but Stewart is rejoic- ing to think no one was more seri- ously injured. ; One thing is certain—Nebraska will hot Fresent a claim for the Mis- souri Valley championship, although the Huskers are on top of the pile so far as percentages go. The Jay- hawkers lost one conference game and were tied in one; the Missouri Tigers lost one and were tied in one, and Ames lost one and tied in one. . Nebraska alone suffered one defeat. The Husker management and the un- dergraduate body feel that a cham- pionship based on those claims is not worth having. . 1t will be the accepted view at Ne- braska that there is not a champion- ship eleven werthy of the name in the entire Missouri Valley confer- ence and Missouri, Kansas and Ameés can_have one/joyous little battle all to themselves for the empty title, Cook and Caley Panned. The “Husker undergraduates are still dazed by the result of the Sat- ~urday game, In some quarters criti- cism of Coach Stewart has been heard, but it is not general, The gen- eral feeling here is that the poor gen- eralship of Cook and Caley and the fatal mistake of Otoupalik in the third quarter cost the Huskers a con- ference crown. Cook, perhaps, is to bé more censured than Caley if nn{ censure is to be given, for he fell flat in his judgment when the Husk- ers had the ball in Kansas territory and were knocking at the Kansas goal for a touchdown, Dr. Stewart spent an entire weeck drilling the Huskers on new forma- tions. When Nebraska was within reach of a touchdown Caok forgot! all about the new formations and kept hammering away with straight foothall, ramming the, line and ham- mering the ends, Caley called just one new formation and called it at a time when it never should have been used—when the ball was plose to the Nebraska goal. It failed to work and the Huskers were spilled for a ten-yard loss, The experience fnightentd Caley so badly he did not call for another. Coach Remgins Calm, The Nebraska coach alone remains calm and refuses to comment on the Kansas defeat, He said he did not have a word of eritieism for® any member of the team. Starting tonight, the Huskers will make an effort to wipe out the sting of that one defeat by cleaning up on Iowa and Notre Dame. All of the| old formations are to be shoved into the discard and a new line of stuff developed. Stewart is going to de- termine upon a lineup and use it for the remainder of the season, About the first thing the Huskers have before them is to acquire rudi- mentary knowledge of the forward pass. i . Injured Michigan Player Recovering' Ann Arbor, Mich,, Nov, 20—Phy- sicians attending Willard Peach, Michigan right end, who was removed from Saturday's game with Pennsyl- | vania after he became unconscious from a blow on the mouth, asserted today he is recovering, but will be unable to attend classes for several days. %Y" Cross-Country Run Limited to Local Lads The annual cross-country run to be held Thanksgiving day under the aus. pices of the Young Men's Christian association will be limited this year to Omaha athletes ouly. Heretofore | Ames and Nebraska university run-| ners have competed, but their entries| were denied this year, so as to arouse | more local interest in the event. | Hamlin Wins, | 8t, Paul, Minn, Nov. 20.~—~Hamlin uni- | versity defeated MacAlester college for the first time In sIx yea's in thelr annual grid- | fron contest here today, 6 to 0 { Sloan's Liniment for Rheumatism, | ou have rheumatiym, lumbago, get a|the German submarine Deutschiand will be | The craft s expected to | S, is the one thoroughly reliable blood | tonic that will destroy the Malarial 26c bottle of Sloan's Liniment. It kills the pain. All drugglsts—~Advertisament, | SHALL WE DROP IN AND SEE THE JONES WHILE WE ARE OUY WALKING! TALK TQ ME = I'™M CHORIN'!! (termans Hold Fall 0f Monastir Is Not Much of a Reverse 2 Berlin, Nov. 20.—(By Wireless to Sayville.)—"“Monastir's evacuation by the Germans and Bulgars,” says the Overseas News agency, “was a meas- ure which had been prepared for sev- eral days by the chief command of the central allies. The Serbians had crossed the river Cerna and, advanc- ing northward with superior forces, had reached the height north of Che- gel after engagements in which the tide of battle fluctuated and during which General Otto von Bulow, at the héad of the German riflemen, stormed and captured a height, “The height taken by the Serbians was upon the same level as Monastir, so that the Serbians were able to ob- serve the German-Bulgarian positions and were able to shell them from the flanks. Simultaneously strong French forces advanced upon the positions on the Monastir plain, The maintenance with heavy sacrifices of a position without any importance as regarded the general strategical situation would not have been justifiable. Therefore the evacyation of Monastir was a mat- ter of course, as it was lacking in military importance. “The Germans and Bulgarians oe- cupied positions on the hill north of Monastir, from which they dominated the basin of the Cerna. Monastir is under the range of our guns, which means that its position is insecure. “The occupation of Monastir does not in the least change the strategical situation in the Balkans. General Sarrail's task, which was to accom- plish a junction with the Russia-Rou- manian army advancing from Do~ brudja, has failed and now never can be accomplished. The broad strate- i gical plan of the entente would have been complied with if General' Sar- rail had advanced on his eastern flank, but as he was unable to break up the Bulgarin pressure in this sector his principl attacks*were carried out more and more to the westward. Although he thus obtained minor local -suc~ cesses, he thereby made open avowal of the fact that the original plan for joining hands with Russo-Roumanian armies had been abandoned.” Dario Resta Is Only Claimant to Title 0f Champion Driver Los Angeles, Cal,, Nov. 20.—Dario Resta, automabile racing driver, be- came the sole claimant today of the American Automobile association’s title of “champion driver of America” when Johnny Aitken, his rival, an- nounced that he would not race at Ascot speedway on Thanksgiving day. Aitken said tonight he was leaving at gnce for the east with Wilcox, his teammate. He said that the prize money offered in the Ascot event was not sufficient to be attractive, Resta has 4,100 points for the cham- pionship title. With Aitken out there 13 ne one remaining who can defeat him by winning the 700 points allowed the Ascot winner. This is the final contest of the year in which points will be allowed. Thirty-Eight Teams Seek Admittance to Basket Ball Loops A meeting of all persons interested in basket ball will be held at the Young Men's Christian association to- night, Thirty-eight teams have ap- plied for admittance into the three Omaha leagues, the Tri-City, Com- mercial and Church leagues, so a large attendance is expected. Even the Presbyterian church at Platts- mouth seeks a place in the church loop. * Bohemians Hold Exhibit Of Gymnastic Classes Are girls necessarily the weaker sex? The Boliemian gymnastic society of the Tel Jed Sokol Trys exhibited twenty-seven athletic types Sunday afternoon in their hall, Thirteenth and Dorcas streets. They were young girls, all betweeen the ages of 4 and 8 years, but as they gave their “wide drill” the sturdy youngsters showed muscular agility and grace. The girls, all children of well-known Bohemian families, were the hit of the program, The grils' ring drill, presented by twenty-four girls, was another display of feminine athletic prowess that earned applause. Old veterans of the scmetf' gave the men’s dumb bell drill, and although some memories slipped a cog in the exhibit the drill was a success, Fifteen hundred people saw the pro- gram. A social and dance was_held in the evening Deutschland Goes Soon, New Lendon, Conn, Nov. 19.—Repairs to complated woon. start its homeward voyage the latter part of the week, 198,000, belongin, yright, 1916, Interva CATCHER OHIEF MEYERS IS ON MARKET. CHILF MEYERS Just when the Brooklyn club has decided to release Chief Meyers has not been ascertained, but the rumor is persistent that. the old Giant re- liable, when Marquard was at his best, would be disposed of during the win- ter months, According to the story, Manager Robinson considered that his value as a backstop for the Dodgers has decreased, but in what manner is not stated . White Will Fight To Recover Money From Decatur Bank Albert S. White of the Central State bank, who is trying to recover $8,000 which he says he deposited in the defunct Farmers' State bank at Decatur, is peeved at what he calls the “autocratic form of government” in Nebraska, He says: “Shortly before election, the state banking department announced through the newspapers that it had mailed the receiver of the Farmers' State bank at Decatur, Neb, drafts on the guarantee fund for an amount sufficient to pay all depositors of the failed bank, except one or two whose claims had not been allowed by the court. “When the Centra! State bank of Omaha was organized last spring, I deposited in the Decatur bank to the stockholders of the proposed Central State bank. This deposit was made with full re- liance in the good faith and integrity of the Nebraska law providing a guarantee fund for the payment of the deposits in failed banks, “After the failure of the Decatur bank, some of the large depositors went into court and proved the valid- ity of their deposits. In our case we had, in addition to our correspondence with the bank, the sworn testimony of the cashier and the vice president of the Decatur bank as to the validity and regularity of our deposit, and no evidence whatever was offered by the banking board as a reason why this deposit should not be paid. Accord- tingly, Judge Day, before whom the proceedings were heard, ordered the payment of our clai “A few days ago receiver of the Decatur bank, askin why we had not received our $8, He informed me that he had paid all of the other depositors in the bank, but notwithstanding Judge Day's or- der that our claim be paid, the bank- ing board, comprised of Governor J, H. Morehead, Auditor Mr. Smith and Attorney General Reed, had instruct- ed him that our deposit was not to be paid,” Wittenbury Wine. Springfleld, O., Nov. 20.—Wittenburg, 14; Earlham, 7. “IL telephoned the nal News Serviea NOW WHEN WE PASS ANY LABORERS ~| DON'T WANT YOU TO SPEAR TO ANY OF THE HORRID CREATURE® - . |advisable, as in the case of goods i ciated, and when both Italy ! will continue to provide abundant re- [TALY EASTS GATE Wartime Conditions Far Less | Filled With Hardship Than | Supposed. WELCOME TO AMERIOANS (Correspondence of The Associated Presm.) | Milan, Italy, Nov. 20.—The explana- | ¢ Ition of the increasing number of Ameriean firms settling in Italy, is the realization that Italy is the future gateway 10 the Orfent and to the near east, according to Charles F. Hauss, president of the American Chamber of Commerce for Italy, “Because of its geographical posi- tion, joining the nortu of Europe to the Orient,” said Mr. Hauss to a correspondent of The Associated Press, “Italy today offers berter busi- ness opportunities for Americans, in my estimation, than South America or the far east. It has a fine commercial stragetic position and its government and people are actively aware of the fact, and intend to push this advan- tage of location. Dividends Are Paid. “Wartime Italy is far more prosper- ous than is generally known, The re- cent declaration of dividends showed earnings higher even than in peace times. It is also not generally knp- that Italy bought more products the United States during the past year than in any four other great coun- tries. It bought over $200,000,000 worth from us, as compared to $80,- 000,000 in England, $50,000,000 in the Argentine, $50,000,000 in France, and $15,000,000 in Switzerland, 1t is sell- ing to us something over $50,000,000 worth a year, which is about its nor- mal yearly sales, before the war, “There 'is going to be much more business between Italy and the United States, as this big fact of its geo- graphical situation is better appre- and the United States increase their number of merchant ships, at present sadly inadequate to handle the cargoes either way, Italy has provided and turn cargoes, such as its renowned silks, laces, furniture, alimentary| foods, w?nes, cheese, its beautiful | marbles, hematite iron, lead and zinc | ores, as well ag eertain other manu- factures in which it excels. Before | the war, Italy was laying the ground for a fine national merchant marine and right now during the war, it is cantintiing that policy, “T have lived in Italy nearly eight of the seventeen years I have been in Europe, and I can say that Ilal{ has the most liberal government I| have ever lived under. Its laws, though severe, are just, and when you get to know Italians and their customs, you will realize what great strides they have made in science, industry and commerce during the last forty years of a United Italy. Milan, with its more than 600,000 in- habitants, the heart of industrial Italy, has a record growth unique in mod- | ern FEuropean' history. [ts popula- tion has increased fifty per cent in the | last ten years, due to the wealth and | hustle of its business men. | “All of the American firms now in Italy to my knowledge and belief are prospering, some even more than pre- vious to the war, “It is no more difficult to organize a separate company here than else- where, though it would be well before settling for an American company to first carefully try out the field by ac- tual trial of its goods on the Itallan market, Obviously, for some kinds of goods, a separate company is not light in weight, of small volume; and of a certain value, such goods may be :e:-shifipcd and easily en- tered, if the tariff is not high. “Italian tariffs are not oppressive, and they are always specific, never ad valorem. This, of course, means HELLO- MAGQIE ! Drawn for The Bee by George McManu$s I Today’s Calendar of Sports Golf: Ann hurst Cou lub, Pinehurst, N. O. Foot b ward Payne college ngninst Texns Christian university, at Brownwood, Tex. University of Texas agwinat Nouth- western university, at Awstin, Tex, inst Jnek Brit- Boxing: Charlle White ton, twelve rounds, ot against Al MeCoy, ten round Kver Hammer against Joe rounds, st Racine, Wis, Otto against Willle Gradwell, twelve rounds, »t H{. Loul Jack Blackburn l[hlll\lnt Jackle “lark .. kinds, especially semi-finished ducts and raw materials, “The war has opened its eyes to the latent capabilities it possessed finan- pro- going to keep on going ahead.” Uncertain Humanity. “Briefly stated,” we explained, “the ntory of Enoch Ardep was about as follows: He went to sea and wis shipwrocked on an un- Inhabited lsland where ho remained for soy- eral years, When at lnst he was rescued Mr. Arden put out for home with consid- erable Tapidity, only to find that during his absence Mre. Arden had marrled again, What do you suppose was his subscquent aetlon 7" “Hard to figger, replled Mr. Gap John- son of Bumpls Ridge, Ark, who had been listening with deep interest to the recital. “You can't tell which way a toad will jump when you poko Rim, and folks la just as peculiar. Prob'ly he elther took a whot wt his wife's second husband or else borrowed enough money off'n him to get bask to his uninhabited lsland, and I wouldn't bet a niokel on either horn of 'the what-d'ye-call 1t "—~Kansas City A Risky Offer, “The other day at some distance from town I was trying to mend & punctured tire when an automobilist atopped and asked 1f he could help me"! Motorts's frequently do that as a matter of courteny." “But this was an extraordinary case and shows how strong I the force of habit, The man who spoke to me, as I learned latsr when 1 met a car full of detoctives whirling out of tewn on his track, was a fleeing bank embezaler.” — Philadelphla Ledger, that the higher the value of the mer- chandise the easier it is to export to Italy. “ltaly welcomes American initia- tive, al and merchandise of all Malaria impoverishes the blood, thereby weakening the entire system. Once the Malarial germ gets into the blood it multiplies, saturating the blood with Malarial poison and im- purities. You lose energy. You are a constant prey to headaches, worn-out tired feeling. The complexion be- comes sallow, the tongue coated, In order to get relief you must adminis- ter an antidote directly to the poison, and a tonic—blood nourishing food, to build up the wasted system. 8. 8, Malaria T)zstroys‘ the Red Corpuscles of the Blood $.S. S. Relieves Malaria By Cleansing The Blood. e Eerm-, and enrich the blood. This uilding up and blood cleansing pro- cess go hand in hand. You feel the effect immediately. 8. 8. 8. begins at the root of the trouble. It destroys the germs and poison, revitalizes and restores the red blood corpuscles. In a short time you feel the delightful sensation of relief from ague, head- ache, chills and fever. You soon feel the full sense of vigor that goes with perfect health. There is nothing as good, Get S. 8. 8. from your druggist. Medical advice without charge. Write Medical Dept., Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. SIR -HOW DARE You SPEAK TO autump tournament of Plne- | " woman, Time and time again women will rail against the sup- posed handicap of their sex, With- cially as well as industrially, and it is| DON'T You REMEMBER ME - M YOUR |WHY MAN IS THE STRONGER. It Is Only Because Wise Women Wish Him to be Her | Physical Defense. | It is strange that no man envies | us; that you never hear one of these lords of creation bemoaning the fact that he was born a man and not a out so much as a protest they let the poet write about man as “the noblest work of God." It never so | | much as occurred to them to dispute or deny it. It is refreshing and no less sur- prising, then, to find in one of the current magazines, the Unpopular Review, an article, on the joy of be- ing a woman. Men are geniuses, the writer con- them to be. Women lose nothing by this gencrosity, since it is fin- finitely more gratifying, more soul- satisfying, to have made a Plato than merely to have evolved his philos- ophy. Women deliberately and with malice aforethought permitted her- self to be saddled with a reputation for weakness so that man might grow strong enough to be considered a worthy mate for her. “Man is a timorous, self-distrust- ful creature,” the author writes, “who would never have discovered his weakness. “Women, conscious how they hold men's welfare in their hands, simply do not dare to discover how strong they might be if they tried, because they have so far used their physical weakness not only as a means of arousing men's good activities, but also as a means of turning to nobler directions thei ones. Men are tends, merely because women permit | S powers if not stimulated by woman's | for gain and gold. Unable to deter them from this impulse, we let them support us, preserving for their sakes the fiction that we are too frail to support ourselves.” — Philadelphia Ledger. His Regimen. “Regimens! Regimens,” said Prot. Hilary McMastors before the Harvard medical school. “There are too many nonsensioal Hfimlnli young gentlemen, I prefer the regimens of Mark Twain to all zuch rubbish. “Mark had & very striot regimen, yod - know. He nover smoked but one cigar at a time, and never smoked while sleeping. ““He never ate meat except with his meals, and he never drank except at meals and be- tween meals, “His father took a drug atore for a bad debt in Mark's boyhood and among the stores were nine barrels of cod liver oll, These lanted Mark n years. The rest of the family had to | eao and nux nom { He was, in fact, the Hoston Herald, - e along with the ipe Mark being the pet. He got oll trust, Electric Crank- ing, Lighting and Ignition. EXIDE Storage Batteries This Combination Will Make Winter Automobile Startin w DELCO-EXIDE SERVICE TION &a. Neb. Phone Douglas 3607, 2024 Farnam St, FREE BATTERY |NSPECTION naturally acquisitive, impelled to work C."lr‘!_stt‘p&'ll Gillettes now :l'n" tbe “nicest “little gift” for th GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPANY