Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 5, 1915, Page 46

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BOWLERS RETURN 10 0LD ROUTIN Wit hthe Middle West Tournament a Memory, Loca] Pin Tumblers Start League Schedules. | TOURNEY WAS BIG SUCCESS! With the midwest tournament off their minds, Omaha bowlers are settling down to the regular routine of league rolling. Of course, the pin tumblers are glad the tourney is over, but none regret holding it here. The huge success of the big event made the labors connected with it light and caused all thoss bearing the burden to feel amply repald for the en- ergy spent, The success of this annual midwest event stands out most prominently in the number of entries, the total of which llrl surpassed that of all previous years and | the number of visiting teams was greater | champion. He goes into detall and gives than any before. The prize money, too, was the largest ever given by the asso- clation. The organization, management and entertalnment easily outclassed all former tournaments. Visiting bowlers, all veterans at the game, and with for- mer tournament experience covering a pe- riod of several years, are loud in their pralse of the manner in which the tour- nament was conducted and all vow that |THERE 15 o BANTAM CHAMP Charley White Declares Neither Kid Williams Nor Kewpie Ertle Lead in that Class. BOTH ARE FAR OVERWEIGHT NEW YORK, Dee. 4.—~Those who really desires an authoritative answer to the argument now raging as to whether Johnnv Erte or LTy 1110 to the crown as bantamwelght champlon should consult Charley White, the famous referce, whose word has been law in the prizs ring for many years, “Ne ther of them s the bantamwel~ht champion,” declares Mr. White. over, the men they defeated wers not even bantamwelghts and there never has bantamwelght champ on since Danny Dougherty knocked out Steve Fiannizan several years ago.” That, it seems, wculd practieally end all argument. Tt Mr. White doean’t eut us off with the fint footed stntement that there (s no such thing as a bantamwelgit been a the reasons therefore “Practically every one of these so-called bantamwelghts,” says Charley, ‘“are fighting at the featherweignt limit, and some of them are even above that, which is 115 pounds. ‘“T'h's thing of men fighting for a cham- plonship at a false weight,” he added, “4u largely responsible for what might be called a decay in the boxing game. At “More- | | THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE DECEMBER THIS IS THE SHATTUCK MILITARY SCHOOL GRIDIRON SQUAD, which won the prep school championship of the Northwest. Shattuck, which is located at Faribault, Minn,, is a favorite among Omahans and has a big alumni in this city. Reading, left to right, are: Upper row, Davenport, manager; Strohmeier, Kennedy, Graves, Rouse, Ward, Cur- rie, 8tephens, J. A. Foster, coach. Middle row: rick, Radford. Bottom row: | | Foster, Lovell, Guiterman, Bagley, Wi- Baskerville, Bundy, Hankenson, captain, Harlan, Warner. TAKES HAMMER 10 HAUGHTON New York Writers Declares Crimson Coach Violates Rules of Game | \ in Order to Win. 'COACHES FROM THE SIDE LINES NEW YORK, Dec. 4—~Writing in the Evening Post on faults in Harvard's completely effective is the modern Har- | vard foot ball system that it would seem |the Crimson could win its victorfes with- out the ald of certain questionadblo ad- vantages which its coaches see”fit to take In the course of an Important con- test. At least, I think that all fair- | minded followers of foot ball, whether Harvard men or not, will subscribe to the theory that it would enhance the in- terests of good sportsmanship if the Crimson would try to win without the | asaistance of its foot ball mentors and ‘without the employment of dllatory t tics when the game is nearing its close, and the tralling team has, all things be- ing fair and equal, a fighting chance to better its standing. There cannot be the slightest doubt that the frequency of Harvard substitutions, particularly at best advances, had for its object the bear- ing of instructions from Percy Haughton to the field. A Harvard man who was in a favor- able position for viewing proceedings ‘n THEIR WIVES B0 Women Have Everything Their Own Way and Come Out with Three-Game Victory, oot ball system, “Fairplay” says: So|NEALE FAMILY PROVES STARS, Dad Huntington sprung a new one when he staged a family champlonship match |between five marrfed men and their {wives, As usual, the women folks had |everything their own way, even the gal- lery, and came out on top with a three- | game victory. The men put up a good | battle, but they found the heavy hanci- {eap too much to overcome. | The Neale family proved to be the |stars in the match. Mrs. Neale rolled high total for her team with a 492 count, including a 201 game, and Teddy himself (led the men with a 648 total and a 283 |single game. Mrs. Murphy also starred by rolling a 213 game, which was high |for the women's teams. In this game she rolled a stronger game than her | husband, fuch to the amusement of the crowd. Mrs. Kehm also rolled a higher times when the Tigers were making their | score than Charles in the third game. The match was well attended and |QAfwes.- < of iInterest prevailed, and rooting in- duiged tn throughout its prograss. Next week a team of unmarried men will roll | against a team of women who have not the 1915 middlewest tournament held in|ieast that ls my opinion. These boys in the vicinity of Haughton says that re reached the matrimonial goal. The : core: Omaha will never dle in their memory. |the various classes have been allowed to k8 o s Mg o ok e e THE MARRIED WOMEN. ; To many {8 due the credit for the suc-|overlook the exact welght so often that sent out to the fleld and his words ot n Jst. 2d. 8d. Tot cess of the undertaking. The large out-|the dividing lines are obliterated, and deprecation of the tactics were strong. Neal.. 12¢ 161 4% side entry was caused by the strong, |until we get back and make the several e o wa He cites the speocific e of a substi- 5:’?[’1‘., :% m :’.fin united offorts of Victor B. Parrish of the |classes distint and clear-cut the gume T : A ¢ T % 8 1 ‘e‘;':ch:: ";'hle':- g "':"‘"‘ ,h“:‘l'" “h"': Mrs. Bland moe Publicity bureau of the Commercial elub | Will never be 8o popular as it was In the 'L s F < 0 d 3 n a few minutes | Mrs. Huff. 17 12 4% and Local Tournament Secretary Carl J. |04 days of the Horton law," In-ps hps lne to | HREE-CUSHION RECORD BI’ltonS I' el‘lng man entered the game he gathered the | Handicap . et 74—9 2 Cain, A Nantom Limlt 105, M d Wh G : | MADE BY ALFRED DE QRO eleven about him for a conference, the | motals ............... 965 884 1002 251 Mg Loon) Entry List. Mr. White explained that the welchts ea OWS; 0 Urins |, Guns from Japan obvious inference being that he was im- THE MARRIED MEN.' The sise of the local entry, too, sur- | for the rospective classes were dect'el y CHICAGO, Dec. 4—Alfred De Oro estab- Parting to the team messages of instruc- 1st 1]9;, '-‘34 T prised many. To Willlam F, Weber, upon by the Amateur assoc'ation in 1858 At Betzel S Grack |lished & maw world's record at three-| . . 0 of the Associated y|tion from the side lines. The incident of ™ 0 547 chairman of the local entry committee, and adopted by the professionals, all cushion billiards .onight, when he ran "rnoxxl: Moy, 1.-TThe ' Beitiasy ‘n’ “”'m; sending Harris in to relleve Wallace for Bl 145 48 g X “tiv. , Nov. 1—The vern- B 132 4B Dick Grotte, C. E. Terrell, L. M. Holliday being based upon the old London prize | Lee Meadows, the young right-hander | fIftY Points In thirty-five innings. The| =% 0 o1lolq™ dera with the Kure & Moment or two is another case m M 24 68 and George Zimmerman is due the cred t ring rules, According to these rules the |of Miller Huggine' Cardinal pitching | Previous record was thirty-six innings| “/o0 T o o the Muroran Steel|O!Pt Harris also is named as a mes- oty S for this. This quintet with hard labor bantamweight lmit is 105 pounds, the |staff, was the innocent victim of Umpire |foF the fifty points made by Weank | Clo 0 000 Tl clC e of 40 three- | *NS°F from the coaches. aed i ™ M° . bullt up the local entry to ts large pro- | featherwe'ght limit 115 pounds, the light- | Byron's wrath during a game in Pitts- | 0¥ 0f New Orleans in & match with De | FOES B E8 TERECOR'E B de are the Bvads Bistet Rute. y lst. 24 84, Tt portions. The large proportion of the | welght 131 pounds, and wo on. burgh B2t @b vy 196 type invented by the Japanese mavy,| . ¢, Tules stipulate strictly against | Gricaser ... o9 Uy 1% 30 entry itself presented many perplexing | “Now," he expiaincd, “thers fan't a w>-| Byron was calling balls aad sirikes | De Oro's record was m,:d(- I the e | e andred pune will be made at the | CCCHINE from the side lnes, and whils | &, Lepinsii o e Droblems In the way of arranging the | called bantamwelght of prominence to-|In a manner that frritated not ofly the 1',’(".:(..3,'::,, f‘,,.l:h'. m;:, latter tonight | Kure arsenal and 100 at the Muroran|TAnY coaches evade them, it would ap-| Hollingshead 200 15 18 8T schedule, but when Association Secretary dny who can make 106 pounds, and most | P/AYers engaged in the pastime, but the | 3 Bteel works. All accessories will be mun-|P8r that Harvard offends most griev- | Fickard a0 u7 1™ 8 George C. Lowe of Kansas City and of them would have difficulty In getting bench warmers as well. Bruno Betzel fin- scored/ thirty-five points in thirty-four ously in this way. And it is not becom- 4 LSy 3 ight. | Utactured by the Kobe Steel works. A Totals . 1964 local tournament Hecretary Cain, ably under 115, the feathorwelght limit. The ::':'“:‘“.‘:‘::imthn: SRR ok b :‘:“‘(‘)‘r: ';"‘:(h“::"":"":x"‘" oAbl B s g N gl g v P lntflw the :rr‘n::erllty which stands as tro SUPERI; & condemnation from o ” modern ron leader. Haughton's ‘:.M“‘ ::“ M"‘""‘.‘ ":’“"l“:n’.:”:’.'.‘; f"‘.'r"::;"_‘!"';'- e d"'l’w"::‘u';‘ d:“::-lh‘-rl' bench and forthwith yelled, “Hey, Byron, | The match began yesterday and the ‘{"V:'h ’}‘3:"“}"“""“’”" thet the guns are | ., tige, sreat as'it is, would be :re.ur Boshris . | A i " |Why don't you stay at the hotel? You |totals for the two blocks are De Oro, | for the sh navy. & atl *| E. Vernon. (R A TR Mt st steuad- | T o Ot Yoe & Heht |could call them just as well from your |100; Klockhefer, 85. The final block will | The Kawasaki Dock Yard company of | ° m‘:"":’;"fl‘l'::"h:"‘:‘ Medip ot eosirw | Semiec ous scheduie ever 'made up was run off | Welkhts and fight at 10! Yes, and get| . ., be run off tomorrow night. Kobe has conttacted for thé manutacture Hald, play. th d "““" once on he | T oy without a hitch or break. away with it. It is all gy o and the | “onuining to the bench, Byron noticed | of & large quantity of shells for the Rus-| =& PIay the g vl R ik The entertainment of the visiting | ®® best thing that can be done 0 im- ¢ys¢ Meadows' countenance bore a large | Brother to Try Again. san army. The company has started the | o 'Ies uPon clean playing and de- otals . bowlers was left to Chet Weeks and it Wrove the boxing game and make the g, which the keen-witted arbiter re- | Grover Alexander's younger brother, | work of erecting a big melting furnace at lemeanor on the gridiron—why not Tournament Dust. would be waste of time and space to mention all the good things which could be sald about the successful manner in ‘which Chet did the work. sport more enjoyable is for the referees amd club managers to Inmst upon a rigid adherence to the weights us called for in the rules.® If the rules are not to be garded as a symptom of gullt, ““Tuh tha club house wid youh, yuh fresh busher,’ cried Byron while pointing a finger to- 'd Meadowe, who failed with several teams the last | season, is going to try it again and his ned with the Paris club of the Western | soclation for next year. ' - Wendell in Gotham i*s branch factory in Hyogo, near Kobe. An order for 10,000 tons of copper and 5,000 tons of sinc has been recently placed with the Mitsul Bussan Kaisha by the 80 farther? As to the delays caused by Harvard in the progress of the contest, there are delays that may legitimately be caused through punting and the throw- Who shellaced the alleys? All prize money checks were written and in the mail one hour after the tour- nament closed Monday night. Omaha teams didn’t do so well, but the S ed Retits o enforoed there 18 no use in having them.” | “Why, what are you chasing me for?" ip 8 byt ing of farward passes. But, in the final | individual bowlers: anpeas well ub the many, ‘It has pla # — queried the goggle-eyed pitchor, “T'll | MeW\INendell, GlASL CAther Mn4 N0 | "y ta understood that the company has | JUaFters—although playing no part in the b T bt S o greatness of Bmy Sulhvan Is show yuh." chirped Byron, “yuh can just |in New York, is in the fight business | cccepted the order only for 5,0 tons of |2Utcome oOf the game—Harvard's actions | o™, f oot iken, Tore 5, rand success ‘who formerly Y pay a $10 fine for being too fresh, and if 32:.0::';}"' He is managing Young Mike | copper. The annual yleld of copper in|Wer® decided unfair, and had the referce | ture tournament companies. i b puripiv oy som e art Wlth ‘nl;: another grunt outer ya T'il slap a BRSO AL S, Japan amounts to 60,000 tons, but it ap-|Peen a8 strict in this respect as he was | The large sliver trophy has been sent created a shin plaster on yuh." Meadows re- Cubs Fire Two, pears that the supply for several months {0 the Carnell-Harvard game, when he | !0 Glen Fisher of Chicago, the all-event g A £ ‘ %;gigs | i In aie- in t | i £l L % E ‘the fame Matty, Bender, et al The Shotgun, Too Billy Sulllvan i1s somewhat jealous of have trap shooters. The old ‘White Sox catcher claims to be some handler of the shotgun himself. John Ritchie says Billy is all he claims to be and then some, and then tells a story ‘been acqulrin treated, but that night he wrote a letter of protest to Governor Tener and the Natlonal league president revoked the fine a few days later, Such is the life of a poor recruit. Dinge Sprinter is After One Loomis The Chicago National league club an- nounces the release to the Milwaukee assoclation club of Catcher Robert O' Farrell and Outfielder Jack Fluhrer. Willlams Loses Out. Mutt Willlams, some iron man pitcher, was the first member of the pennant- winning Millers to sign a contract for the season of 1916. Braves Get Chancey. ahead has been fully booked. On. the other hand the turnout of zinc is esti- mated at 1600 tons. In ordinary times 1t would not be difficult to enter into a contract for the supply of 5,000 tons, but leading refineries have orders placed up 1o April next. Besid: the military ereenals are also taking an enormous eupply of the metal. The Russian sinc order will therefore not be met in this penalized the Ithacans at least once, he would have done justice to Princeton. Still another point lies in the number- ing of players. Princeton players with numbers on their backs showed a regard for the pleasure of the spectators as to | the identity of the Harvard player who did thus and that, and, it might be said, the press stand had only the vaguest ldea. Numbered players give outsiders a champion of the tournament. The women's feature in the tourna- ment made big hit and will bably be a regular annual feature in the Mid- dlewest assoclation. Charley Rels won a prize in the tour- nament by rolling lhepr:t:wcl[ all-event total rolled by an Omaha bowler. It was a g ball and case put up by the Brunswick-Balke-Collender company. The cost of conducting the tournament was around $2,600. Fourteén hundred of this comes from the entry fees. The Iter K. conntry, clearer idea as to wha admission fees netted $500 and the check for . the . game that gives Sullivan and himeelt the laush. | Npw YORK, Dec. 4.—Howard P. Drew, | of the Hastor Braves nansincss thot son o S Lok {nk 1o’ the way. of & :n:h..m iae Gebtadgers mhi o tane: cnmasios in- established, and last but’ not The newspaper man and the veteran{(ne gamtest amateur sprinter in the world, | club has signed up H, L. Chancey. e like, | debtedness will be taken care of by the treatment accorded the visitors by cateher were with the Minneapolis Mil- |5 coming east early in ke £0r tho it Jordan's Mother Dies. but in the larger aspects of the question | 28l of the fots of pins and bowlers' business men and bowlers aha sent them lers In their training camp at Hickman |purpose of taking fiing at the dasher | . Jncksonville Slgns Athlete. (s, Dother of inflelder Otto Jordan, | (his, polnt doss ot stand at ail.against |axpects to pull’ theoush with oo avah away well pleased and with a desire to last apring. One day there they got hold | who beat him in the 100-yard dash at the | juntie “announces. that it has . gied |of the Southern league, died At Pitte. | omoiesy elements which call for tho |break, D Rits o bout 10 e sxpected return again. of Joe Cantillon's favorite weapon. 'The |national ehamplonships at S8an Franclsco. | Player Dunning. burgh, Pa. . employment of numbers, and it may be ye, :n‘)"oo:::e bow_l}nx lc:l’mlment. Bowling Notes. Minneapolis manager happened to be|Drew, who Is now in the employ of a hoped that the time will soon come when |, A8 & 'nrld"“;‘;-_w“‘“}Vou.,’,";':;‘;":‘: The Stors :vc discontinued their rab- | away at the time and it looked like a |raliroad in the far west, has been granted both Harvard and Yale will depart from |take your hat off to Harry Eidson, also i s 4 z sood opportunity to try the shooting iron out. & leave of absence for the purpose of making the trip east. Drew will come to Jim Coffey Up Again as a White Hope thelr present attitude, assistant secretary; Charley Kehm, head scorer; “‘Chet” Weekes, chairman of the . entertainment committe -n.l:. as ..l- e u” 4 Sullivan, to show his expertness, took |the Atantle coast with ono desire para- Quakers in England {he, fonl-iine man. AT} stuck fatthtally ‘l'h‘ have a nice layout and much inter- | the §un apart before they started. He mount in his mind—to run a sprint race S, 'nm"n' e u n% (h’e entire tourna- et is belng taken. #ot it together satisfactorily with the nst Joe loomis. Drew don't care L- bl t S . Palthrul nervick, "aets St and thetr They say the holida . but | excoption of one small spring. Neither |® Whoop how short or how long the 1apie to Dllt OI1 |donated, ‘should not be passed: by en: . Belepn e ' gully mor Ritchie could locate where it |Match is, or where it is run, o long as L noticed. seems to be going back. | 4 Te8 Ritnn te ot a, tor|N® can measure strides with the man The 00 2 t' Wiley, Martin, Hayes and Weber were e ilon thoukht o 1ot of that sun, [ ¥ho Was picked by B. C. Brown as the NSCTIPUION | an close contonders for ‘the baoby grize a Boss Cantl e kaods | Winner of the national 100-yard champlon- {1l ‘o Chariey Kehin were' aiso. th There happened to be & sporting §00ds |\, " o colorea fiyer intends to stop race. 80 1n the store in the town and they took the gun there to have the proprietor see if he could adjust the trouble. It so happened that the owner of the store had a dupli- oate of the gun. “Surely, I'll fix it up Jitty,” he sald, much to the relfef of Messrs, Sullivan and Ritohle. ‘The storekeeper took his own gun apart to see where the spring went. Then he couldn't get it together again, The spring wouldn't go back. ‘What tollowed Is of such a nature that over In Chicago golng and coming, so Loomis will not have the excuse that he cannot get away from business to come to New York to race. The Los Angeles speed merchant Is perfectly willing to hook up with Loomis in one of the Windy City armories If Jo¢ cannot make the trip to Gotham, Jack Johnson as we will draw the asbestos curtain over the scene. Halcyon Days Will Return, Says Barney Barney Dreyfuss was seated at his desk, leisurely tearing up attendance re- ports at ball games played several years sg0. He came across the reports of the Pirates' eastern trips fn 1910, 1911 and 173, and commented upon the figures contained therein. The attendance at one series in New York, when the Pirates and the Gilants played a single game on Saturday, double- headers on Monday and Tuesday and a difficult position. We should wish 10| acceptance as a token of friendship. As flul:w on Wednesday, totaled close New Use for Golf support those outside our membershin |4 gtudent in 1865, Senator Konl bougkiess to %0, by ““We were paid over 320,000 for that se- ties,” replied the Pirate magnate, as he deatroyed the slips. “They don't come that way any more—anywhere. The crowds were slim last season. But they'll come back. The law of average applies here as elsewhere. Base ball may have on off-season or two, but the fans never forget the sport. and better times always fcllow these periods of depression.” B. Owens 150 to 90 Bennle Allen, world's pocket bil'ard champion, defeated Billy Owens in the afternoon game by the score of 150 to W. Allen played up to his reputation and msde & high run of T4 balls without a miss. Owens' best run was 38, Score: Allen—1, 0. 13, 29, M, 74; total. 150 Oweng—2, 13, 14, 14, 18, 5; total, 0. Bennie Allen defoated Harry Shepard in 8 consistent game, making many long of ¥, unfinished. Allen gave an exhibi- tion of fancy shots after each game. Beore: Allen—8, 14, 11, 10, 234 8, 3 2, 9, ©; total, the evening game, 10 to 3. Allen played " shots and combinations and a high run ’Recru_iing Officer Jack Johnson, erstwhile king of the smok s & recruiting officer, booming business for the bally Britishers up In Glasgow, Scotland. 141 Artha, however, fsn't & regulap recrulting officer. He's only a volunteer. Passengers returning home from Scot- land piped the news about the lighting haunts of Gotham tonight. They say Johnson and his white wife are running a blg white touring car through the streets of Glasgow, doing publicity work for the army, and Incidentally for his own vaudeville act, Fred Merkle Finds Fred Morkle, the Glant's first baseman, who 1s without position, not only batted .2% and ranked sixth last season, but reduced greatly the number of times he struck out, he fanped elghty times in 194 and only | thirty-nine times in 1915. The cold truth is Merkle applied golf methods to his batting last season. He applied the fol- than one, and the golf principle helped | his batting materially. 'INTOSH CHOSEN CAPTAIN OF INDIANA FOOT BALL TEAM BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Deec. 4-~Full. back Freal H. McIntosh today was elected captain of the Indiana University foot- ball team for 1906 He is & Junlor ¥ s old | Beatrice Foot Balj Team Feants BEATRICE, Neb, Dec. 4-—~(Speclal)— | The annual Orange Jand Black banguet was held Friday evening In the Commer- clal club rooms and was attended by | about one hundred persons. The announce- uperior in playing that | (Correspondence of The Assoclated Press.) | LONDON, Nov. 20.—For the English | Quakers the possibility &< conscription in | Great Britain offers a very serious/ problem. It has ever been sugsested that | there is danger of a split in the ranks of the church. A committee from the central organizition s now ensaged in | sounding every male communicant of military age as to his Intentions toward the society in the event of conscription. A circular which has been sent to thess posaible subjects of conseription by the | committee says: | “Whatever the future may have in store for us we are at least faced with | the possibility of military or Industrial compulion. . Should this actually come | about, we assume that friends will stand | fast to their Jesus Christ as they under- stand them, be the consequences what | they may. We must uphold Mberty of | consclence, a right won by mueh suffer- ing In the past, and not lightly to be re- linquished. “Should friends In any proposed legis- lation recelve favored treatment, which 18 not extended to other consclentious ob- jectors (as has been the cass in the | militia acts) we feel we should ba in a | as far as poasible, and some frienfls feel it might te right for them to resign their Statue of Lincoln Among Possessions Of Russian Official (Correspondence of the Assoclated Press.) PETROGRAD, Nov., 10.—A full-length statute of Lincoln, with an interesting history, has been presented to Rev. Franklin Gaylord, head of the Russian Young Men's Christian assoclation work. The story of the statue is this: Among Rev. Mr. Gaylord's callers the other day was Senator Anatole Feodoro- vitch Koni, a member of the imperial council, as well as the senate, who is Just celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of his public service. He s a staunch friend of the Young Men's Christian assoclation and Rev. Mr. Gaviord was one of those asked to speak at the cele bration of his anniversary. It seems that the conversation between the two men turned on Lincoln, and the next day, to his surprise, Rev. Mr. Gaylord re celved the Lincoln figure from Senator Konl with a polite note reqyesting fts the statue and had given it a place or honor in his home for fifty years. Dur- membership to this end. “This is a practieal merits earnest consideration: but it | should not be forgotten that it might | prevent us servinz the soc'ety in other | directions and its destrab'lity must ba | caretully weighed acainst the force of | the argument that if Quakers are given, | and acoept, exemption, there is every | method which Each rec'plent of the cireular is asked & meries of questions as to his intentions “In order that those who wish to stand out ‘n the mvent nay be able to keep In close touch with the com- m'ttee for rapid communication of ad- vice and assistance.” AUSTRIAN RED CROSS GOING | TO WORK IN THE BALKANS (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) VIENNA, Nov. 15.—At the request of the Bulgarian government and the queen of Bulgaria, the Austrian Red Cross is fitting out two volunteer relief and med!- |ing the Benator's student days Lincoln was immensely popular sive youth of Russla. because Lincoln had followed Emperor Alexander 11 as an emancipator. Many of these statues, which were well executed in hard, pol- ished plaster, three-quarter size, were sold among Russian students, and doubt- less here and there in the homes of some with the progres- low through to his swing—started out reason why the convictions of other |of the old families in Ruasia similar evi- B (] a]] B t with it in the spring and stuck to it all cons-ientious oblectors should be | dence of tribute to Lincoln may be ennie en beats season. Merkle is a sticker in more ways simflarly recognized.” found Suits to Order, $18.00 $10 Suits, reduced to. ...8$30 $35 Suits, reduced to. ... 8§25 $30 Suits, reduced to. .. 820 A like reduction on all over- coatings. We must reduce our stock and keep our tailors busy, MARRIED MEN AN‘?( ) \ 3! \ We use good linings and guar- antee every garment perfect in fit and peace. MacCarthy-Wilson Tailoring Co. 815 South 15th St, JIM COFFEY. By dolng a come-back and knocking out Guuboat Smith in the fourth round ‘ At Madison Square Garden on Monday night, Jim Coffey, the Irish idol, has once again rehabliitated himsel? n the hearts of the fight fans, and is contem. plating a campaisn which Coffcy and his manager hope will land him a bout with Jess Wilard, the champion. Coffey cal bodies for service in the Balkans. The one will take charge of the new hospital with 500 beds that has been established in the Gladstone Gymnasium school in Bofla. The other will be avall- able for field. work, The Bulgarian government’s telegraphic request emphasized the need of a large relief expedition to the Bulgarian theater | of war. , 4 ment of the eclection of Eraest Hubka'! Shepard—0, §, 0, 5, 8, 0, 0, 7, 4, 15; total, 4. | as captain to succeed Clarence Kilpatrick s now waiting for a return match with Frank Moran, who knocked him out & couple of weeks ago. In Monday's bout the Gunner did not show much of his o!d speed, so the dublous ones are saying that Coffey has not improved so much over his form when Moran handed him & knockout punch on that famous “glass’ Jaw. Pirates Sign Rookle. ! club has anno .rr.k“?fhrm':'. ’ c:-':fi"s release. 4 LYY ¢ » L s e S A o

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