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8 "l BEROM ATA SAFURDA Y, NOVEMBER 14)"1Th BRINGING UP FATHER HUBEY - (VE FOUND AN DON'Y TiE Youwr IN THE EAST TODAY Princeton Plays Yale and Michigan Meets Pennsylvania Aggre- gation, — CRIMSON AND BROWN = CLASH NEW YORK, Nov. 13.-—~Another series ©f foot ball history making contests 1s sot for eastern gridirons tomorrow. In several cases it will be the final oppor- tunity for competing elevens to fix their status for this season. Pinceton will close its schedule with the battle against Yale and Michigan in playing Pennsyl- vania, writes “finis” after ita record. Other games of importance include Har wvard against Browns, iSyracuse against Colgate, Cornell against Washington and lee and Dartmouth against Bates. New Haven will be the mecca of the foot ball faithful, and while the Tiger ever, there si nothing in the record of en to indicate that BILL BRENNAN, Crack players of the Creighton team. KEARNEY NORMALS TROUNCE OMAHA U Western Team Wins from Plucky Squad from Metropolis by Twenty to Nothing. TWO PLACE KICKS PLAY PART t Williama, 6 to 14. rtmouth, @i not play, t Carlisle, 0.to 84 at Lafaye 17 to 0. . leyan af Now York university, 20 1l Swathmore, 6 to 0. wllhlllloftnd Jllllrr:on at West Vir- ‘l(l;h Wesle; FRv (orth, Carolina A, "and at George- Al 10/ 0 ag:‘nu unuunz All Btars at New York, t play, Ala%m at Exeter, 7 to 78, Quakers and Yosts E_. fooled the. Blus 3 ward pessing game and ST Spring Now Plays | smmeer, s, xor oo g ! place kicks won the game for the Kear- o Upon Each Other ney Normal, 20 to 0, today when they " Yale Cause Appears Hopeless. — met the University of Omaha eleven in ‘Unless Shevilin and his assistants have | PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 12—~The Unl-|an evenly played match. The Normal worked an eloven th hour gridiron mir- | versity ef Pennsylvania and the Univer- | band played the accompaniment und & acle, the Yale cause appoars almost hope- | sity of Michigan foot ball teams prac-|crowd of rooters numbering 1,00 jolned Jess. For the Blue to arise and defeat |ticed signal today in a preparation for |in the chorus. Both teams were forced Princeton tomorrow would the their annual game tomorrow on Frank- [to punt freely, being penalized often and line fleld. The Pennsylvania players ‘were driller behind closed gates at the scene of tomorrow's game, while the Michigan players had their workout on & field near Wayne, the suburb where they are stopping. New players have been perfected by the coaches of each of the rival teams and adherents of both appear unusually optimistio of the results. Pennsylvania will start with an almost entirely new back field. Miller has been switched from end to full back, and the half backs will be Rockefellar and Derr.)y Bell, who played quarter in the Dartmouth game, wil start in that position tomorrow. Har- ris, the Pennsylvania captin, will not be in the lineup t the opening of the game and Hopkins, left end, who Was wcting captain in the Dartmouth contest will againt act in that capacity. In the Michigan camp it was siad that all the players were in good shap, but up to a late hour tonight, Coach Yost had not decided upon the exact makeup of his team. Opposing Players At “Purity Banquet” MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 12—Foot ball players of the Universities of Chicago and Minnesota who will battle for supremacy on Northrop fleld here to- morrow dined together at their annual “purity banquet.” Members of both teams were in excellent spirits and ex- prossed confidence of victory otmorrow. Bach team was given as hort worout this afternoon, concluding their prepara- tions for the contest. With the possible exception of Captain Blerman, Gopher left haifback, all men were said to be in good condition. While no officlal an- nouncement was made it was expected that Bierman, whose injuries have kept him out of scrimmage for more than two weeks, would play at least a part of the same. Fair weather is the forecast for to- morrow and a fast field In prospect. E i i losing their downs often because of the defensive. A forty-five-yard pass accomplished the first touchdown after steady gains on the part of the Normal and the secord by long gains and a final center line plunge by Carrig, The two place kicks were perfect as kickeq by Carrig. The Omaha boys were placed steadily on the defensive, but while making some good persistent gains, were Leld tight when getting within | close proximity of the Normal goal. The Normal goal was not In danger at any part of the game and Kearney neared its own goal but once, when the desired touchdown was not made. Forward passes were not resorted to much by the Omaha boys, although Kear- ney made some good gains by this play- ing, also losing several and sustaining heavy lossos ‘The forward passes of Helder to Shields, which have been a feature of the Kear- ney team's plaving this season, served ain today to make possible the victory, although line plunges were responsible for the steady and long gains. But for heavy penalizing of the Kearney toam a third touchdown wouid have been pos- sible, the players coming within twenty yards of the goal, the penalty belng at- tached for holding. Omaha played clean foot ball and the same treatment was returned By Kear- {ney, making & very clean game, despite the fact that it was not as fast as the usual college contests. 4 4 (114 team against Brown, which from Yale last Saturday, 8 to 0, it exist for comparing and abllity of the Blue and it since tht leading players be watching the Yale- test, the result of the play will be robbed of much Strong Fuces. & strong southern team in Lee, but there appears to be little chance that the southerners be able to check the victorious foot will indulge In & and appear to be evenly Colgate has not lost a game or But one from & scoreless tie with ‘The rivalry between Colgate is extremely keen and the in one of the best ¢ flashes of strong foot ball this while the Army has Maine uni- opponent. A third Maine lgure In the day's gridiron tes meets Dartmouth. Judg- E ! Adams . Sulllvan Referee: ton. Umplre braska. (Columbia Defeats Yale in Boat Race NEW HAVEN, Conn, Nov. 12.—-Co- lumbia defeated Yale in a mile and seven- eights race on the looal harbor today by four lengths. The unofficlal time was 10:40. Coombs, No. 7, in the Yale shell col lapsed during the race and the Columbia crew paddied over the finish line. 3 Morgant! Crelgh- Potter, University of Ne- i : - £ i i T I i | e NO DEVELOPMENTS IN BASE BALL. SAYS GILLY CHICAGO, Nov. 12.-President Gllmore, last of the Fedepai lewguers to depart after the series of gatherings that began institutions met on the grid- |in Indianapolls again today, sald there had been no developments in the base ball war situation. Conferences here yester- day, prior to the departure of G. B. Ward of Brooklyn. Edward Gwinner of Pitts- burgh and W. E. Robertson of Buffalo, were oh bus‘ness pot connected with peace moves, he reiterated. » i | ‘ ‘ H Chattancogs Makes Deal. | The Chattanoogs club of the Southern num has closed a deal for Pitcher I, J. | Herbert of the Okiahoma City club. I O'Neltt In Wanted. l Rumor from Syracuse has it thet Mika O'Ni who managed Stars this sea- ....‘f-"-.-u 1o lend %‘umh-nv. | 281y i o1 Copyright, 1915, International Newas Bervice NAS ¢ WILL You AveRican ':(:?g"“;’ ;"L"‘S! WRITE omLIGE - TAURANTY. PLEASE BF DwNIF| - hged MAOAME?P WHERE AL L LET'S EAT You KNow S veRy ‘A\l‘;:.IL"D WAITER - I}Z“;?)?:‘v;ws 7100 bl HERE. INSITE | | WHAT I GO’ HeRe | BRING ME THE COLTOM! R OF THAT. TO ORPER - A BOWL OF oo g MAGGIE Y v DON'Y Yer « it::;« Beer CABBAGE SR WiLL You OMAHA LAD WHO PLAYS TACKLE ON YALE TEAM TODAY. HUSKER WILL LOSE Bear Dope Factory in Both Camps| Working Overtime and Neither Team Has Chance. KANSAS PULLS HOODOO STUFF The hush before the battle, the lull before the storm, finds the rival camps of Cornhusker and Jayhawk out bear dope in a manner that would make A, \Alonzo Stags, the world's greatest alibi| artist, turn a lurld green so envious would he be. According to the dope| jmmerging from the two camps, both | ‘teams put together couldn't even give Yale a battle and that is going some. McCook fleld of Lawrence, Kan., will be the scene of two horrible slaughters according to the aforementioned bear stuff. Nebraska will get licked by at! least fourten touchdowns and Kansas will be trimmed by at least eleven. At| the time of golng to press Stiehm was two columns ahead of Oleott, but Oleott | is galning fast and by the time the| referec's whistle blows the race of “"GREIGHTON HOPES pessimists should be a dead heat. “Ruamors” Are Clrculated. The Cornhuskers landed in Kansas City last night to spend the evening and forthwith a bunch of ‘“rumors” were! started, No. 1. Chamberiain will not play. It wes sald Guy has a bum leg and there was no hope for him to start and that Stlehm was trying to keep this dark so Kansas wouldn't find it out. No. 2. Rutherford is all crippled up. A couple of undertakers were sald to be following Dick all over Kansas City,| Everything is in readiness for the foot they conaidered him such a g0od business | ball game today between Creighton and prospect. | Notre Dame, and preparations have been No. & The Cornhusker line is a bunch ™Made by the local management to take of holes. i cl;" of the c:om:’. Hfl:.:‘u":"::;: l:: No. 4, 5,67 89 10, et cot. The Corn- | '*hers are signed up, v huskers have gone stale, they are too that the Creighton stands will be taxed chesty, they are on the blink, the | opeoraci) g a e n ® | The Notre Dame team ran through light couldn't beat a bunch of school kids,| 3 | signal practice at Rourke park yesterday et cet. |afternoon, while Crelghton took its final Kansas is right behind the Huskers|workout on the college campus. Mills in this line of stuff and to read the|SPent most of the time in coaching his Kay See papers which will be published |™en on various forms of defense and for the well known public to read this NOW to break up the Hoosiers' expected morning, Would make a guy think of the Attack. MALCOMB BALDRIGE. Stage All Set for the Clash with Hoosiers on Local Gridiron This Afternoon. TEAMS IN FINAL PRACTICE - T0 SCORE IN GAME {In Omaha than in- any other city. | won every match except two, and those European war. The sporting pages will reek with somber tales of fatalities. Kansas Is Hoodooed. But Kansas has got one on Nebraska. Kansas is pulling superstition stuff in the bear dope. Give it a listen. Looking back into the dark ages the records show that the Cornhuskers wers victorious over the Jayhawk for seven uninterrupted years from 1897 to 1%03. The last victory Kansas enjoyed over Nebraska was in 199 when Tommy John- #on broke away for an elghty-yard run and the solitary touchdown of the game. In 1910, 11, 12, 13 and M, Nebraska has defeated Kansas. Five times in a row. Thus Kansas followers gloomily predict Nebre victories In 1915 and 1916 before the aspell broken. You can't beat this line of reasoning 80 it looks like Stiehm's pessimism is useless. It has just been learned the Kansas coach is a gent named Olcott. His first name {s Herman. He wears a “Y" on his sweater. This should make the odds on Nebraska heavier. A Kuy named Hermon who wears a “Y" which stands for zero, ought and nothing in 1515 foot bell, would jinx most any team, Nebraska Is Favorl Despite the rumor factory which 1! turning out the bear stuff at sixteen columns to the hour, Nebraska reigns favorite over its anclent ri Students ‘with gambling proclivities ‘e prepared to risk their dough at odds of 15 cents against a nickel on the Scarlet and Cream with no takers. A visit to the various life-saving ations and pool rooms reveals the fact that the state of Kansas is practically bankrupt this year. 'Tis is & sad condition of affairs for the student who figures on working. his way through school by the process of con- tributions from the college youths of Kansas. P. 8. Otoupolik just sprained his wrist In the rush for the din'ng room and Ne- braska's last hope for victory vanished. , Joe Berwer Fired, X Outfielder Dick Bayless and Infielder Joo Bergor have been notified by };::non ‘oust league club that they :’;: Cards Sign Warhop, The St. loou‘l‘ National league club hay slgned_Jack rhop, f | Now rorsty h'n: ormerly with the Filhuy Root was York the recent comstitutional conven- discussing in New “But there was one “happily it saw reason lat n—but one of self-sacrifice as hlll"' wife sald to him one evening, X I ‘know, John. dear. this h ¢ of living & terrible, but @0 yorr "rasily think we can get along without & servant ' rinbly, Tt} bt Y, i, if the woist eo e-"o the eookl can get . Smith _answered, ise. Why, hang 1o the werst you | Apparently there is no doubt in the | minds of the visiting players about their | winning. although Coach Harper makes no predictions to that effect. Captain | Fitsgerald, with more assurance, serted: “We will score two or three touchdowns {in the first half and then put in our {second team men."” | The Notre Dame players almost look ias If they could carry out their leader's prediction. Big, brawny and strong, |every man appears a glant, and no doubt {Coach Harper has devised plays which | bring out everything each player has got. | Up to the Men, | Coach Mills, when asked about Creigh- ton's chances, stated: | '“We have done everything we can; it all rests with the men themselves now." That the Blue and White will fight to | ithe finish goes without saying and Notre | Dame will fee] it earns every point made by its representatives. The Indlana team comes to Omaha with two successive victories to its credit, one | over South Dakota, 6 to 0, and the other {over the Army, 7 to 0. It will be Crelgh- ton's prime effort to aecomplish what these two teams falled to do, score against | Notre Dame, and there are many Omaha | rooters who belleve that Mills' machine (Wil turn the trick. The University of | | Nebraska is the only school to score | against the Hoosters this year, Quigley of 8t. Mary's college, Kansas, umpire in the National Base Ball league, will referee today's battle. The other officlals are: Brennan, Ames, umpi Lester Caldwell, Marquette, head lines- man: Ghee, Dartmouth, field judge. | Following is the lineup the two coaches : will send In to start the Rame: 1 as- Drawn for The Bee by George McManus BIG MAT CONTEST AROUSES INTEREST Omaha Wrestling Bugs Keyed to Fever Pitoch Over Approaching Stecher-Hussane Bout MANY WILL GO TO SEE EVENT Interest in the approaching wrest- ling bout between Joe Stecher and Yousiff Hussane, which is carded for Lincoln on Thanksgiving day, is be- coming intensely keen in Omaha, The relative ability of Stecher and Hussane has long been a bone of con- tention among local followers of the radded mat game and they are look- ing forward to the day when su- premacy between the two will be es- tablished once and for ali. A couple of years ago Stecher and Hus- sane battled for some forty minutes with- out a fall. An altercation with Stecher's followers, alleging that Hussane bit Joe, followed, and ever since that day a de- gree of bitterness has existed between the two camps, Omaha 1s more than ordinarily inter- ested in the coming match, because Hus- sane has probably wrestied more often He two were draws, in which a fall was not secured by either man. The Turk grap- pled with the elder Zbyszco and Pat Connolly for over two hours, all other matches he won easily. Yousiff has a large following in Omaha Lwhich belleves he can throw Stecher. Also the Turk has a large bunch of enemies who are eager to see him dumped and they believe Stecher is the man. As a result, every wrestling fan in the city Is very much worked up over the evemnt, and it is probable that a thousand persons will go from Omaha to Lincoln to see the match, it Many expressions of regret that it is not possible to stage the match in Omaha on account of the prohibitive rental price demanded by the city have been received by Gene Melady, who is promoting the event. Otto Floto of Denver is the latest to condemn the action of the commis- slon. He declares it is a matter of “pea- nut politics” by “‘short-sighted city dads,” and further declares that the merchants of Omaha should take steps to prevent other wrestling matches going to Lincoln or Kansas City when they could be held in Omaha. “It means thousands of dol- lars to the merchants of the city where a big wrestling mateh like the Stecher- Hussane card s stage sald Floto, “and Omaha should not stand for such a loss because a few politiclans want the whole financial ple, crust and all.™ Gothenburg Forfeits Game to Lexington LEXINGTON, Neb, Nov. 12.—(Special | Telegram.)~In a game of foot ball here today between the Lexington and Goth- enburg High school teams, the latter team was defeated by a score of 1 to 0. Referee Jones of the Kearney Military academy of Kearney warned Max May, one of the Gothenburg players of his lllegal playing and threatened to put him out of the game for another offense. The next play May repeated his tactics and was ordered from the fleld. then- burg refused to comply with the referee's decision and the game was forfeited to Lexington by a score of 1 to 0. BY <oLLy YOU HAVE TO BE A EDUCATED <UY TO EAYT IN THERE! 'NOTRE DAME TEAM ARRIVES IN OMAHA Coach Harper and Twenty-Two of His Charges Here for Game with Creighton Saturday. MILLS PLEASED WITH SQUAD Twenty-two strong, sturdy and sinewy young men of South Bend, Ind., arrived in Omaha this morning te carry the colors of Notre Dame ! ogainst Creighton Saturday after- ncon. The Hoosiers were met at the depot by a delegation of Omaha Notre Dame alumni, who welcomed |them to Omaha ‘and made plans to entertain them during their brief visit here as much as Coach Harper will permit. Coach Harper i{s a very mnonco mittal person when speaking of h! foot ball team. Harper never fore- sees a victory. All he foresees is defeat, and then if his team wins he is joyous; if his team loses, it's all 0. K. because he expected to lose. However, there s a suspicion that Harper does not intend to lose to Creigh- ton. One defeat in Nebraska is enough. ‘While Creighton Is expected to put up a game fight, a good judgment would that Mills' men will find the wonderful interference Harper has taught his charges too much to cope with, No Hard Practice, | Harper will not put his men through any hard practice this afternoon, but will be content to give them a brisk signal drill and then let them rest until the game, when they will have thelr work cut out for them., [ Viex Buys Farm, Jimmy Viox of the Pittsburgh hatkened to the vice of Fred and has bought him a farm. kY Ellis a Winter Manager. Rube Ellis of the Los Angeles team will manage the Brawley team of the Im- perial Valley league. The Stewart-Toozer Motor Company Offers an exceptional opportu- nity to anyone who wishes to purchase a used car., We have marked down the prices on all of our used cars to make it pos- sible to dispose of them in a hurry, as we need the space for new cars. Our selection of used cars ranges from Ford and Dodge to Chalmers and Plerce- Arrows. You can save money by buy- ing one of these cars right now. If you cannot call in person write for list of cars and prices. STEWART-TOOZER MOTOR COMPANY Distributors of Chalmers and 2048-52 Farnam Street Pierce-Arrow Motor Oars. THE 44 | | NOTRE DAME. | CREIGHTON. | Baujan ‘RE RE . R.T.RT Rydzewski | Fitsgerald (C).RG | O’'Donnell | Keefe . ! Stephan El | Cornhuskers Start | for Lawrence, Kan.‘\ LINCOLN, Nov, 12—Ths University of | Nebraska foot ball squad of tiewtny-nine !men in all, led by Coach Stiehm, left tuis |noon for Kansas City, Mo., on their way to Lawrence, Kan., where they will meet |the University of Kansas team tomorrow In the annual fot &ame of the two schools. The Nebraska team will spend the night at Kansas City, going to Law- rence Saturday morning. Midwest Games Today. Today's midwestern games and scores of last year's contests where same teams played follow: Nebraska at Kansas, & to 0, Drake at to 1 Notre Dame at Creizhtun, did not Play. Alabama at Texas, ¢i1 not play. Ok'ahoma Aggies at Baylor, @ to 6 Washington at St. Louis, ¢ to 0. Last For Tender Feet It has & low, broad heel, wide shank and plenty of toe room. Comes in Black Oalf with vis. 2 Glized Eangarco ad viet Hid: n " The is real comfo:t trivle A's to double B's. 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