Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 16, 1915, Page 10

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K~ TODAY 1 PART Y - GREIGHTON 700 MUCH POR PLOCKY PERU Warriors from Hill Descend on Teachers, Overcoming Them by Fifty-Seven to Nothing, ALL VARIETIES OF GAME USED Fifty-seven to nothing tells the tale of Crelghtons’ victory over Peru Normal yesterday afternoon. The Peru team, while outweighed by their opponents at put up a Creighton’s line, however, easily prevented any scoring at eritical times, The visitors suffered particularly from & touch- king the OUR WEDDING ANNIVERSARY AND I'™M GOING TO GIVE MY HUSBAND A SURPRISE Copyright, 1915, International o News Bervics. .o > | HEAR My WON'T HE BY 4OLLY - HUSBAND - BE SURPRISED MAGGIE - WHAT'S . WE MUST THE GANG ’*LLr) JOIN THE ABOUT ? THE. GUESTS GUESTS ARE HERE Meents for Specht, Armetrong for Gray, Ashley for Honey,' Boyd for Cralg, Mor- n for Shannon, Hansett for Flannagan, "Rourke for Platz, Cunningham for Hennessy, Bren- r Lutes. Officials: Ghee, Dartmouth, referes; Caldwell, Marquette, umpire; St. Clalr, Towa, head linesman. Touchdowns: Platz (2), Nigro (3), Has- sett, Wise, Cunningham. Fleld goals: Platz, Goals after touchdown: Plats (0, Wise | DECISIVE DEFEAT FOR U. OF 0 | Grand Island College Trims Visiting Players by Soore of Seventy- Three to Nothing. SCORING MACHINE STARTS SO0N GRAND ISLAND, Neb., Oct, 15.—(Spe- clal Telegram.)—In drizzling University of Omaha met the de: feat of 73 to 0 at the hands of the Grand Island college today. At no stage did the university men have a chance to score and they succeeded in making the required ten yards only twice. It was the first game of the season for the Grand Island squad and the team showed up strong. The locals were not only much heavier, but also excelled in other lines. In the first half Grand Island plled up & score of 55 and Coach Morrow put in some second team men In the second half. Ten-minute quarters were played, Kamanoki, Klepser for 240-| The constant rain made the ball very slippery, though a grass ground relleved ! the matter somewhat. Grand Island was llet | Penalized frequently by Referee Tully, i it ; ; i I i HE i i fth i 8 11 f ! | il 5 H I E i i § £ : i iy i i | giif i 1 il Biiz ! % z £ g i ] i i i i z H il i £3% 2 i : £ H g sE i i £ HiH the ugh H £ ‘when An | I i | 3 i g g i i i % b ’5 #iks il 3% $s formerly of Doane for pushing and hold- Ing. The locals' backfield machine ) particularly well and end | of from ty-five to fifty yards were frequent. Owing to the slippery con- dition of the ball the forward pass was Ineffactive and was used little. 3 Foohane: =XT May Direct Takes Third Heat and the Two-Ten Pace Event! LEXINGTON, Ky, Oct. 16.—The forty- ird annual meeting of the Kentucky ting FHorse Breeders ~association today with the finsh of the sec- of the 2:10 pace, «§ ried yesterday, May Direct win- g i | F i [i 4 £y ? ', Comet, Calara kson and The Im- 1064, KEARNEY HOLDS BEATRICE TO TEN TO THREE VICTORY BEATRICE, Neb., Oct. 16.—(Special Telegram.)—Outweighed twenty pounds to the man, Kearney held Beatrice High to & 10 10 3 victory here today. The game was played in a drissling rain with a sooreless first half. Kearney's speedy of- fensive was a surprise to Beatrice. Kyle's touchdown and Kilpatrick's thirty-five- yard place kick in the third stituted Beatsice's scores. i on t covered base ball grounds, was so wet that one or_even lost his shoe and nelther Wis able to do its best In the York- hool contest, ) ! Yale is having its troubles on the foot ball field even at this early stage of lhe season. 'The 10 to 0 defeat by Virginia is renkling in the breasts of the Ell ad- herents. . For several seasons Yale has had an in-and-out team, which would show flashes of form on one Saturday, only to play the most amatourish sort of game the following week. Who 1» to blame? The coaches, Cap- tain Wilson and every one else connected with the gridiron sport at New Haven has been condemned for the poor show- REAL FIGHT OPENS IN MIZZ0U VALLEY 3 Btruggle for Title On in Earnest Among Foot Ball Aggrega- tions Today. KANSANS OPPOSE DRAKE MEN KANSAS CITY, Oct. 15.—The struggle for the foot ball championship of the Missourt valiey will get under full swing tomorrow. Practice games with minor teams are out of the way and from now on until the curtain faus on Thanks- #iving day the elevens of the valley will be fighting for high orders in the grid- iron sport. The Kansas Jaybawkers will be put through a conference test tomorrow ‘when they tackle Drake at Lawrence. A comparison of strength between the Uni-| versities of Kansas and Nebraska teams may be reached after the game. The Cornhuskers plled up & big score against Drake, but the Iowans twice crossed the| olds | Nebraska goal lne. Olash at Colmmbin, versity of Oklahoma will clrsh at Colum. bla, The Tigers expect to run into a! bard game. With last Saturiay’s defeat | &t the hands of Washington university kifresh in his mind, Coach Schuite has been sending his charges through a astiff dally practice. He believes he has im- proved & number of weak spots. ‘Washburn 1s not exvected to give the University of Nebrasks much of a battle n Lincoln. The Kansas Aggies will meet the Kan. #as State Normal school, which last suffered & defeat at the hands of the University of Kansas eleven. Followers ©of the sport as a result will be able to ‘de- | Becure a line on the relative strength of once, 'and ot 28 TS w same. the Aggies and the university players for their contest & week later. Ulose Fight Expected. ‘Washington university and St. Louts university will play Wabash college and The University of Missovri and Uni-| l{l i OCTOBER 16, 1915, DON'T YOu KNOwW WHAT DAY THIS 1S 7 & a) i DOANE TIGERS WHIP HALLIGAN'S BOYS Negotiate Twelve-to-Nothing Score on Cotner Team in Hard Game, JOHNSON OF DOANE FEATURES CRETE, Neb., Oet. 15.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Coach Schissler's Tigers defeated Vie Hilllgan's Bulldoge here today on a muddy field in a drenching rain to the tune of 12 to 0. Doane outplayed its opponents in all de- partments of the game from the sounding of the first whistle and had it not been for the condition of the fleld, which made open playing impossible, should have overwhelmingly defeateq the former Nebraska star's proteges. Time and again a Doane man would get. into the clear, only to slip and fell, on accourit of the insecure footing. All the playing of the entire first half was In Cotner’s territory, and the greater majority of it was inside their forty- yard line. Thé half ended with the ball on Cotner's forty-yard Iline. New Pep in Second MHalf. The two teams came out for the second half with a new pep instilled into them. On a play on which Doane should have been awardeq a sefety, the officials de- clared it a touchback and Cotner took the ball on its twenty-yard line. With the ball in the middle of the field ia’ Doane's possession, Brumbaugh, the Cot- ner captain, was sent out for roughness, and although Doane should have profited to the extent of half way to the goal line, no penalty Was aMessed. But the Digers, were not to be denled and on & criss. cross, Kindig went thirty-five yards. A few bucks put the ball within strik- “ALEX \pfiLSoN ing made by the Blue eleven.' ‘Whether or not Captain Wilson s to blame ls an open question, 3ut this one thing is true, Wilson had not been play- ing the game this year that aid last year. Early in the season he was shifted from quarterback to a halfback positioa ou account of his 195 pounds of welght, but even this shift, with Thompson at the pivot position, failled to bring the bolstering up in the team that was ox- pected. Looke like a real blue season for Yale, ‘with both Harvard and Princeton hitting & good stride just now. Both games are expected to be closely contested., An interstate contest to be decided is the game between the Missourl School of Mines and the Kansas B8chool of Mines, at Rolla. The Misscurl eleven is said to be in good shape. 'Athletic Carnival to Take Place of the _ Fall Street Fair An Industrial exhibit of Omaha for the Auditorium, open to the public during Ak-Sar-Ben festivities, is a sugsestion the Omaha Manufacturers' assoclation will make to the board of governors of Ak-Sar-Ben. This was roughly outl ned &t a meeting of the assoclat.on at noon @t the Commercial club rooma. It is planned that good manufactured in Omaha could be exhibited there at that time to advantage, and that demon- strations could be given. Further the assoclation will suggest that to take the place of the street fair, an athletic carnival be held, when ath- letes from all over the state and sev- eral adjoining states be brought here in competitive work on & carnival grounds where an admission fee would be charged »nd prizes would be offered. This fea- ture, they believe, would bfing large crowds and help to make up a parade fund as the carnival does now. Lawrence Smith was before the aso- clation at the meeting with his tenta- tive proposition for a permanent indus- trial exhibit in Omaha. He reported that he had seen some forty or fifty mainu- facturers who were willing to co-operate to provide rooms for such an exhibit as near Sixteenth and Farnam as possiole, where exhibits of Omaha-made goods could be shown all the time. The home patronase committee was {n- ! structed to arrange for & meetng of ‘mnm“m-‘n this subject some t me | perbaps within & week. i Foot Ball Results. ' e Purshouse vue, l;“hflh.-l..". island co.ege, 73; University of It & Piker 0, — ing distance and Klein was given the taoll to make a touchdown, but he fum- bied and Edmonds recovered the ball over the line. Edmonds ‘nissed gooal. Doane’s Center Leads. In the fourth quarter, while House car- ried the ball over for the second touch- down, goal was missed. The individual star of the game was Captain Johnston, Doane's big veteran center. He played his position in all state style. Nickle and Klein hit the line lke veritable ma- chines and it was on their line bucks that Doane surpassed. For Cotner Zimmerman, the big half- back, took honors. Had it not been for his gains on their shift formation, Halli- gan's puplls, would never have made thelr downs Schissler's men, although outweighed ten pounds to the marj in the line displayed excellent teamwork and fought like tigers throughout, Lineup: o ommERABONE B ney for lace, Mickln for Kindig, Kindig for Mickle, Mickle for Koester, Wallace for Kinney, Dewitt for Jelinek, Haytell for Kindlg, Johnaton for Newmon, Hagerman for Brumbaugh, Kennedy for Zimmerman. ly, Nebraska. Umpire: Eager, Ne- braska. Head linesman: Kobes, Crete. Touchdowns: Edmonds, Whitehouse, 'Kearney Normalites Blank Central City KEARNEY, Neb., Oct. 15.—(Special Tel- egram.)—The Normal team defeated Cen- tral City here today in a slowly played game on a muddy tield, 39 to 0. The vis- itors were apparently not at their best and wtih three men out of the game on account of injuries they never threatened the eKarney goal. Shields was the indi- vidual star for the Normals, accepting a forward pass for (ifty yi down. It rained during the the game, Lineup: CEN. Cr Waggener Bennett . Wilde Wards Hunt Hockett Right Hanson Meyers H. Mey TR Y YN T o 4 With the Bowle o o IS ilss!aag g ssagsst s 8l niiiiilga | BEEEEE o § Drawn for The Bee by eofge McManus SURE1TS MONDAY - WASH ‘DAY - WHAT ABOUT IT? Landstrom 188 52 Boord 114 476 Hayes 183 519 Kelner . 15 608 819 2,608 T. 2,5% Games Played Today On Foot Ball Fields Of the Middle West | | CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—~The following are the important foot ball games scheduled for tomorrow in the central west: :Vlwonlhl against Purdue at Lafay- tte. eIl.iirmll against Ohlo State at Colum- bu 8. Indiana against Chicago at Chicago. Northwestern against Iowa at Iows City. ‘Bgum II)‘-kou against Minnesota at Minnea; 8. Case ‘::uu\n Michigan at Ann Arbor. Carroll against Michigan Aggies af Enst Lansing. Freshman against Notre Dame at Notre Dame. Weatern Reserve against Ohlo Wes- leyan at Cleveland. Kenyon against Cincinnat! at Cinein- nati. INDIANAPOLIS iS TO GET ‘NEXT CONVENTION SEATTLE, Wash,, Oct. 15.—Ths execu- tive committee ofvthe National Women's Christian Temperance union decided to- day to hold the next national conven- tion in Indlanapolis. The date, to be fixed later, will be in November or De- cember, 1016, .. AR R .32, .35, .351 and . | ) PAWNEE RACES ARE CLOSE Two-Sixteen Pace Goes to Five Heats, with Four Horses Contending. OTHER EVENTS OF INTEREST PAWNEE CITY, Neb,, Oct. 15.—(Special Telegram.)—Yesterday’s racing program for the Pawnee county falr was run off | today, as rain interfered with the sport | yesterday. The fair will continue over | Saturday on account of the rain. The track was heavy today and no fast time was made. After the final heat of the 2:30 trot today Earl Beesley of Syra- cuse, Neb., who was driving Len Medium, was fined $10 by the judges for pulling his horse. Following {s the summary= Pacing, 2:16 class, purse $%0, mile heats: Belle Robertso B Eilal 311482 14235 32763 B14d 766 8ar 6176 Tdr 9 8 8dr 17%, mk,'l’udy: : 53, 3 12214, porotting, '2:30 " Class, ‘purse” #%0, “mile eats: Alexandria . 1121 Len Medium 3412 ‘odd Wolsey 3244 Allle Axwood 4333 Running, three-eighths-mile dash, purss 1 §25: Stalby, first; Merrifield, 'second; }’gow, third; Bob Logan, fourth. Time, 29%, Running, three-fourths-mile dash, purse §75: Blue, first; Concha, second; Merri- field, third. Time: 1:26. - Chicago Defeats Jap Team. TOKI10, Oct. 15.~The Universi of Chicago base ball team today defeated the nine of Kelo university, R 1 401 Calibers Winchester Self-Loading rifies are not cumbersome, com- plicated or unsightly, but simple, handsome and well- balanced guns. Their use permits rapld shooting with putnecuncy.ndonmountofthenmalgyndn- of their operation, they add much to the pleasure of rifle shooting either at target or game. For hunting game which is generally shot on the run, a Winchester Self- Loading rifle is particularly handy and effective, ‘The four different calibers in which this type of Winchester is made are suitable for hunting various kinds of game, the cartridges being of the most modern type, giving exocllent penetration and great shocking effect, If you are going to buy a riflo don't fall to look over the Winchester BSeli-Loaders, FORD OWNERS 25 Total PHI Davenport $10 Simplex Starter :no P & B Flexible Rider 8 sate Guard Hand Horn SPECIAL During the rest of this month all three articles for $17 LLIPS & BETZ t., Omaha, Neb.

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