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Speaking of Sports Those familiar with Tongfellow’s verse “Backward, turn backward, O time 1in they flight, must have thought the 1923 Pirates had done some such stunt when they gazed in wonder at the picture of the * F champions” last night. The Pirates have got such a habit of turning out winning teams that from now on it will be necessary to card index pictures of their teams by year. - Of course perverse fate had to step in and decree that of the two pic tures on file, the 1922 and 1923 teams, | the wrong one had to be picked out for use. However, the boys wen the title,| they won the cup and they all hav pictures so they should worry. Any- way, they know it was a mistake. friends of Tommy Blanchard insist that Butsey Hall's long hit that won the title wa mistake too—but if it was it was an| intentional mistake and the switching of pictures certainly was not. Of course some i ‘ la dollar athletic house from receipts of | | college: sports ¥ * * Proving that the | 31 | « Cook But a glance backward a year is| box office means utterly nothing in|yiow i interesting at that. Several of boys still on the team greatly Ifor instance—who would | recognize in the little boy holding the | flag the stalwart “Slim” Politis who last summer was such a dependable Lox man? | And who would be abie to pick out the Of course Coach but there Miller mater ust the looks same Rum ow at ' slated to take the he Americans, son is the Washington . veteran coach dumped at probably will other college, mentioned, hook Penn Columbia, on with some and | Cornetl being i Miami, Fla, boosters are trying to indnee some major league club to train there this spring. When it comes to climate, Miami is all that conld be desired, No club has trained there since Cincinnati did their stunts| in 1020, the Chicugo White the pitcher to the count of three balls und two strikes | more than any other player in cither of the major leagues, Eddie Collins of fox waits out says that Babe | of ||..m-, 1o g short right John MceGraw Ruth was a member he would make rung in @ ason with the field fence to shoot at Center handlod ovington of roughly ame with — Penney! ord for goals last year i pleased, Coy opportunity | field 3 Quarterback ( college, who was so in the recent v holds the field. e which Center won as it ington was given to score goals from managed to boot har from | every the the cros six over Track experts the wonder University of of the Olympic figure that Hubbard,, colored athlet of r Michigan the one outstanding stars in ext Eames who was Jock tesgional won, fam slated to pro take golf courses has shifted his cngaged st chan of one new ot Miami, ¥ia Instead Jock ha the ney 18-hole pleted ut Nas will take « Pradbu plans been for the Bahamas Januar He wun i arg main until April Wheat oklivn veteran elder of tha s Zach the ¥ majors for 15 years very start, yet last his best elub, has been in o star from the year was one of Now that the way the their war prog Armistice Day is out &0 right with aratio We ghall always thank Jo didn’t com cture for one thing Ameorican which Footha played by 457 AL least 1o not ) players « Ali-Americar collrges ree of Michig smoking nial manager, Billy Marsh ? | brag about has several all lady of seissors, presimed fair, playing un with he did leave uppears has got | act, both rocking the b us shooting guides for and |ji i com- |} the | the conduct of an institution of learn- have changed | ing. IFigures show per cent of all col- | lege students engage in some form of athletl not counting poker or craps. who cut out| something to| fellow he'd have met a s0 Just Jack Dempsey has bought Stra Lewis, wrestling ch tics with the the domestic the house. *** Using no doubt, [ Matt Under the new law a husband who leen missing for five years will b to be dead. This is hardly | gent may be merely out | extra-hole match, ™ says he left the ** That's ‘em with, to about Fraze: ogret. row, sprint o be ex the A. A that Paddock, his foot In it, of them, Speaking of the or, his buek squirrels The summer among by spent it is now bird wi nistake . | | smit) Penny oodison 87 83 168 High St Jalhert L Arol 13 100 Flatw Heln 243 Main No, Rt ] It 121 T Hardware [ o o o ool | |1 ves 10 i Crashing The Pins L ROGLERS ALLEYS, CORBIN SCREW LEAGUE, Serews, Machine Muiliy »0 1 i son Rorg set Serews, Valentine w N a3 CASINO ALLEYS, NORTH & JUbD, Tool Room N3 "o Production, s w 101 166 Receiving, 106 ¢ o 1958 Shipping. —138 Heslin 1 INIVERSAL LEAGUE. Teade Shop No. 2. 1 P& V. CORBIN, Single Men, 2 m 6% 88 « Meet Mr. Lion and his family. {recent hunting cxpedition. “Excuse Me, I Have an Engagement Elsewhere !” The picture was laken in Africa The lion famliy is bound for a drink of nice, cooling water. tance lenses made the photo possible, Ly John Hagenbeck during a Long dis- 7| tional 113 | tootball s { who will be opposite each other, Miss Gary Ferd, Jacksonville, Fla., intends to become one of the world's roremost dancers. Therefore, training mentally, too, and as a sopho- more, ranks high at Florida State college, whére her dancing is attract- fng attention. Rakoski 0| Griffen Smith MeCarthy Youknot 9 =40 Dept. No Kenne i Hincheliffe ... 89 COMMERCIAL ALLEYS, BERLIN CONSTRUCTION (0. 1] The Old Man's Pets, (4. Chaponi o 50 [ 5 Thompson | Michaels T | Warner n Chipper's Speclal; 4 80 Graham . 1 PIIOS 1 ioovsos 90 1. Smith 106 Meyers 104 "0 YALE HAS WON 26 . GAMES FROM TIGER (Continued from Preceding Page) Yale must face Harvard weer from today, call attention to the many | tootball upsets which have occurred this season, Line is Heavier Yale's line from end to end, out weighs that of Princeton and its Lacks in the kieking department, have tunctioned more Impressively than their Tiger rivals, That Yale can be cored upon by a team with a punch has been evidenced in three games this scagon, and the Tigers, having stressed offensive practice all this o week, have high hopes, not only of | scoring upon, but of outscoring the one however has shown wnexecp. strength and In two games from behind to gain victory. is considerable doubt among students as to whether Princeton can cheek this potent on slaught of the Blue, Glants Face Each Other An interesting phase of today's con- test is expected to develop in the in. dividual duel between Century Mil [stead, Yale's giant tackle and Frank Rutan, Princeton’'s ablest linoman, The 3 | came | There lineup: YALE Bingham Milstead Eckart Lovejoy Ditter Blair | Luman Richeson | Neale | Pona | Mallory PRINCETON Stout Emery Bergen Rutan Smith Dinsmore Beattie Ewing Van Gerbig r1.b. b V. A. Schwartz, Brown; Fultz, Brown; field judge, ¥, R. Gillinder, Pennsylvania; head linesman, Major Henry Nelly, Army. Time, four 15 minute periods. This Year's Record The 1923 records of the teams are Referes, umpire, D. 1 29—Buckn« 2] —Brown 0 —Agnmy 1 168-~Maryland 14 Total—Yale 14 | PRINCETON— 16—Johns Hoapkins 17—Georgetonn Notre Dam Navy 3 —Swarthmore & f—Harvard Total—Princston, Opponent Opponents WOULD VACCINATE DOGS The Medica Fourth District of recommended to t assembly that all against rabics F Association of the uth Carolina has state general jogs be vaccinated | bies, the disease! |which “maddens” dogs, has been| steadily increasing in the state for 10 years and the doctors feel that| something drastic Should be done, so| {have recommendad inocwlation of all |dogs as the first step. Muzziing has proved not only wnpopular but inef- |fective, they point out. The vaccine| | perfected will cure beast or human it administered within a few hours after infection, they say The brain of a haby gorilla at birth is almost as big as & human| | paby’s, but grows at a much slower | pace through infancy she's | Hills | GERMAN CRITIC AIRS FAULTS OF AMERICA %Says U. §. Morals Are Poor But Are Well Concealed Cologne, Nov. 17.—German morals are just as good as American morals, |but the Americans are more success- | ful in concealing their lapses, accord- {ing to Dr. Paul Rohrbach, who re- cently completed a tour of America {and is contributing a series of articles to the Cologne Gazette on his impres- sions of the new world. Dr. Rohrbach {In Germany that moral standards arc | higher in the United States than in |Germany is quite erronecous, as the | American morality is only on the sur- |face, and that when one digs down he | inds things as black as in Europe. Dr. Rohrbach s do not permit any large sections to bhe |given over eutirely to the social evil and to dubious |sorts, sueh as are common now in ail European capi and especially in | Berlin, in consequence of widespread |distress and general decline in public morals, 3 ssful in America as had ccording to Dr. Rohrbach, who says American cduca- tors told him the automobile is a ma- chine designed to destroy mor Dr. Rohrbach was starticd by read. ing typieal American novels in which the state of morals among the Amer- ican middle class is unveiled, such as “Main Street,” “Babbit” and Upton | 8inclair's “Book of Lite.” But he does not helieve books fair picture of the life of average Americar The hi heen as suec {been hoped for, give a the v o amused Dr. Rohrbact ind | that women were not so much painted in circles where music and the higher things of life are given more consid- eration, He found that women lead lin public affairs, but heard a number of American men complain about the amount of attention paid to women, Dr.* Rohrbach thinks American but he fo {Detroit on Armistice Day. and stripes, 78 by 150 feet. - Have you examined this True Blue Oakland Coupe for yourself? Have (®ays the impression which is general | ys American cities | Amusements of various | . | | Co-education does not scem to have influen “apt to more readily women hav in politics and succumb to propaganda than men,” This is the reason, in b |opinion, why French propaganda ha |80 much success with the American | public. However, Dr, Rohrbach found |many sympatt s elements inAmeri |can eharacter, in that of the women, and he thinks the av American is good-hearted and pathetic the and | tunate too strong an says they especi sym unfor- with poor FILIPINO OFFICIALS CANKOT JOIN LODGES Only Organizations That Are Fxeept- ed Arve Religious, Athletic But Also of Recreational Nature | Manila, Nov. 17.—Municipal of | ficials of the Philippines hereafter are to be prohibited from joining organi- { zations religious athletic tional ture | The ¢ proval of v those of rec except pure or na- bureau, with the ap- depart- issued a o view to mem- or- with xeeutive the secretary of t ment of the interior, ha cular to this effect with a guarding against affiliation of | bers of local poli with | ganizations likely to interfere [ their auties Masonic | 1abor or |cluded in the explained in cireular forees secret societies and unions are in- ban, executive officials nection with the anizations, 1t ined, in or rituals rigorousiy af- mutual aid co inc is stated, m accordance with secret vows to enforce the w less | wherever fellow members [ tected unfavorably are CANADA EXPORTS AUTOS Ottawa, Ont,, N g total cars States, during the s | numbered 101,00¢ exporte loaded ] and out of over 20 to single inary Hauling a 40 miles of snow day is nething skimo dogs jee in the or for World’s Largest Flag POLICE THWART PLOT AIMED AT SLOVAKS Dismissed and Active Civil Servants Are Found in Conspiracy to Wreck Czechoslovak Government Prague, Nov. 17.——The police of Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, re- cently discovered a plot in which, they group of men had joined to- * for the purpose of “removing” prominent Siovak and Czech politicians including several members of the Czechoslovak govern- At the head of the conspirac; said, was Augustin Caderna, general of th so-called sky ochranny svaz,” a nation- al union for the defense of Slovakia's autonomy created under the auspices of the Slovak People’s party. Caderna had gained for the plot a number of adherents, mestly dismissed or active civil servants, Hungarians and Mag- | yarophiles Caderna’s organization | divided into three groups, sted of six men, had some sort of They were to decide who were removed and when and where were to be performed. The second, the so-called “executive group,” was composed of desperadoes, chiefly individuals who had been pun- |ished for crimes. These men were to carry out the plots hatched by the first group. The third section constituted the spies, who were to obe tain all the details concerning the per- sons marked for removal. When the plot was thwarted, ac- cording to evidence gathered by the | police, the first group had actually held counsel from September 3 to 10 in Caderna’s lodging about the execu- of the first 10 on the black list, it was sald, was about to be executive group. aders said, eth a number of ment. the police corets “Slove sube The first who, like Cad- higher educa- was erna, | tion |to he | the severe tion plot inded over to the aderna the other FEWER OFFICIALS' TRIPS Manila, Nov, 17.—Trips to Manila municipal officials from the prov- inces at government expense have been ordered eliminated, Only when | such officials are expressly called to the capital on important official busie | ness are they to be permitted. by More than 1261 yards of material was used in making this gigantic American flag, unfurled in It weighs 600 pounds and occupies 160 cubic feet of space when folded. It is 150 feet by 90 feet and the blue field is 49 by 60 feet. Photo shows seamstresses sewing stars Hitherto, the biggest flag “championship” has been held by St, Louis, with a banner Oakland Six Coupe for Four % 1345 you seen this truly fine closed car at its unbelievably low price? See it. Drive it. Then you will know why it is called “True Blue.” Brand New Six-Cwlinder Engine — Four Wheel Brakes Ceniralized Controls — Fisher Bodies Coupe for Four 1345 Prices f. o. b. Pontlac Ask abowt Oakland’s Special Pavment Plan B i e —