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< If's a STEWARTS ™ BY TWO TOUCHD Y fo Oregon and Here’s Good Luck to the Huskers HTON 15.700 | oF ROURKETO ATTEND I FOR WESLYAN SP ORTS SECTION - ALL LEAGUE NEEDS Cornhuskers Annex tive Mullholland Inter- ~ 2 Will Go.to Minor League Con- Missouri Valley Vic Forward Pass and & / vention and Major Leéague Defeating Kansas A hns for Touchdown. | JE | Meets for Talent. SIDES FUMBLE BALL | RIDDELL MAKES L( 'HOLLAND lfi;{ WARPATH = | BY FRZE—HUN | ton, 14; Wesleyan, 0. Base ball is supposed to be a sum- Lincoln, Neb., Oct. 14. husky Methodist warriors | 5! \ mer sport, but it's going to be a win- —Doc Stewart’s band of iversity Place almost scalped | . _‘ [ter business with one W. A. Routke huskers captured their eges of Tommy Mills at| N i during . these months OIld Man | Boreas leads the league. souri Valley conference by winning over the Ka 14 to 0. A year ago Gi field yesterday afternoon might have been successful bt been for a diminutive lad 1916. For Pa has something of a per- plexing problem ahead of him and OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER he's going to have to spend several of desperate, diligent and un- ng toil to settle it to the sat- {isfaction of the Omaha fans, who are |more or less of a critical bunch. Pa |is going to have to explore the en- | tanglemerfts of the bush and invade | the fortifications of the major leagues |in search of talent to replace ef ht Imen he has lost to clubs of higher | classification, and that is considerable fullholland, a newcomer to and playing his first year LI DARID RESTA WINS in the fourth quarter. as more than half over. The | | od 0 to 0. Wesleyan had the | ANOTHER AUTO RAGE was working its way down: in a network of brilliant open | 1 5 play. | Methodists attempted a for-| Oaptures fain & Co. trounced th to 0. The Manhattan crew coin this afternoon hea greatest aggregation of cver assembled at the ricultural college. It Ii to .its glowing advancg gave the powerful Hus| Dbattle from whistle to Both of the Nebrask “FLOP IT OVER, WILLIE”—Willie Ritchie, once lightweight champion-boxer of the world, is learning to be a sure enough high flyer at Redwood City, Cal.,, where this picture was taken just as Willie was “turning her over” for a flight. Chicago Gasoline } f’l ( ™ ‘ S y 8 ,_Ogden for | wraf: i | ly injured the end of f pelled to resort to a punt. Wells | : : Clumen, o it o, osaius for | Williams made gains of from ten to | X 5 | so severely injured near the met a year ago a salary i - booted the pikskin to Nebraska’s ‘{}‘:fl,doi;nli?‘e 53}:2: \‘Ga‘:incfazdvb;" !ehde Pt e Y.ong Tor Hale, Tevlin ynr'b"?-“nn-fir‘x. fifteen yards almost everf' time on | s“},‘.‘:’v‘ir‘f‘)als' Summary‘ionh Caroting, | the fourth period that he had to be | 600 a n{onth fi,u vo!:d.y lro“l:l:’d de- thrty-yard line. The Kansans got|went fo third on a passed EalE e | Hardlannert for o apiaton. - Tuchdowns: | this play.” Both teams plugged. the | parie .. 'Love | carried off the field. The Indiana|clares Omaha and Lincoln ' disre- the ball back a moment later on Ne- | d field The | Mullolland, Long. Goal kicks: Plats, |line most of the time, however. | Wheele team was accompanied by more than | garded the rule from the first da b ) scored on an outheld error. € | Attempted drop kicks: Platz (2), Cozler.| Naivh, t did h ing. | Dadmun 600 rooters, who made the trip on a 4 : i raska's forty-yard mark through agarewac fact and well played from | Bucccestompaesos: Grelghton, 3 Wesloyan, Neither team did much punting. | yerris | ! 5 of the season until the final ¢urtain | fumble by Cook, which Barnes re- [fhe starte Loomis has an all.amateur | % Re(f,‘re;?h Johnaon, Feru. " Umpire: Mul| Fierce tackling was the rule. The | 8now is"““l LIain, i fell. To this Holland attributes the covered, but it didn't do them any|team and Hildreth hires but one man, e af quarterse 16 minutes, gups . (l:avf\“ Coolid Proctor | runaway race in the Western league | good fo rthey could not gain an inch. | Pitcher White. The latter was in- = T P. r;’i‘{;‘.g\'}m, mstrlrrg;rl)‘r:.m | Robinaon . -"'h""'““IMOraln Prepavres with the Rourkes and ‘Links doing Wells punted to ‘the Cornhusker's vincible in the pinches, though hit| Future Heroes of Gridiron Day ... Cooper | Burnham Folger i the running. fifteen-yard line and Gardiner prompt- | fairly hard. Score: s f J. Kinnler . Thayer | R. Horwes Hitysiromony For Glash Wlth So, 'tis now said, Mr. Holland is L | . : e F|ght Way to Vlctory 8 Kinnfer Johnson | Casey F.B. «+._ Tennant displeased, vexed, irritated and (Continned on Page Two, Column Four.) |roomis 00000000—0 § 1 Primrose Young | Bcore by periods— 5 , vexed,. irritated and pro- e Hildreth 0100000°—1 § 3| Three stalwart young boys stormed | Cushing Kuster | Harvard 16 0 7 0—23 Fulton at Madlson voked, yes he is even piqued. He has Q k W . bT"'b."d " Wiison, Gelb. Stolen | The Bee office Saturday and Ioudly‘}}:fiflm’“ oo ;Jom'.:; North Carolina. 000 t: 0‘—0 sk"fik):d the shrill cry of war, It : Hendri , Stanley. Double plays: i 4 8 . 4 ;N - Tufts, Brown. Ul : p— s a i uager yvarriors e 2 ot am A o Wilsan_to | demanded that the sporting editor | bunlap e R s T s Vi . ‘ shall be a fight to the bitter end and Dunn. Base on balls: Off White, 1. Struck | listen to them. Simultaneously they |Stewart (C | b o Tutts tHead| New York, Oct. 14.—Frank Moran LOSG to SW&I‘thmOI'e oRec By Ghasiaion; (1) bx Wbl 8 | told of a foot ball game which the St. | Shatnholta At st e it or | | .| (Contlnued on Page Two, Column Five.) Fiy , 8. v } sman: ., Da . me o " PR A SRR \‘;ary's Avenue Mfrc‘wams won from| R”“”“““""_ el 3 mingien, Scoring: Harvard, | !135 afl"fl(‘}' i‘“l. o th; K’:f“ 3“? ’: Ah]l& ic a,rds i ——an i 5 » dtern for Day; reole for Redfern; , Horween, Burnham, C. A.[In carnes rainng for his contes R h ]s : D) 0 the Chicago Street Merchants, 6 to 2, ! lien for Cushing; Williams for Falos. Drop | Coolld Is from touchdown, Robinson : ; Pigdephi, Ot 16 The Sty | Ames Cyclones | e e Senonl srounds. Nathan S, Fovort St St Byt Co10, £20 CULMMISTY BATY | againat. Fred Fulton at' Madison High s more college foot ball team, ¢ J Aledson, they said, wormed his way Benjamin. Head linesman; Dutcher. Timer: | Phinney for, Harte, Bewer for Fhinne.|Square Garden, October 25. After um G p q i - ’ ' Dutcher. Time of quarters: Twelve minutes. | D 1 Dadmuns, Sugar for Ha tls, | v : 4 G E\};rB:ilif?a(:g;'t'htc}']f}r{%’:;ls‘i‘;ypg;nfc’:;:: Blarnk a;yhaaWkeI'S | :ihmugh 3 l);eap of éegs lfor a toach-]\ e ot el Thorndiks for Sager, m:“.fl; Snow, l((lck;-v boxing six hard rounds with two And Ooé) Shot a Ak IYEEBIy own, and Herman Siegelman made a C ardu for Lovell, H. Goolid¥e for C. A. Cool- | sparring partners in an improvised G. M elvnmiclevenlion nranintie e P Ames 1 HlOSH 14—(Special Tele-, safety. One litle fellow, woh wames Church Has Best idge, Phianey for H, Coslidke, Murtay 07| gymnasium on White's farm, “some-| ot n ey oilvanias defeat was primarily | BramJ)e—Ames Aggies walloped Kan- | that the game was rough, showed two . : for Burnham, Horne for Horween, Wilicox | where in Staten Island,” the big| o v A consyvany CRUWAR D2 Y 'sas university here today, 13 to 0.|teeth missing when he grinned. Yea,r n Exlstence for Casny, Minot for Willcox; North Caro- | Pittsburgher jumped on the scales.| New York Oct. 12—Alma Rith- due to a fumble of a punt by Quar- |77 0. e D lina, Crawford for Ram Curry for ) 5 ards has another year at Cornell; H ter Back Bert Bell in the ~second | o p,;MEq KAN: B . . Tandy, Ingrim. for Hagsll, Ramsay for He startled his companions by tip- I8 ‘the 'world's gk ledged hi fi' period ik ANEAR. S Kid Snipes, Omaha Pug, Des Moines, a, Oct. 14.—The best | Erector, Williamu for Johnion, Coleman for | ping the notch at 195, Imagine Mor- i cham)pio: _}h';")“’b;ogf, o m 3 2 5 ; : : , Ja., Oct. 24 Folger, Bellamy for Fitzsimmons, Black | ; ighi 9 i fon. - e The Swathmore score which then |Fhalk - ablen Will Essay Come-Back | year of the thirty the|National Benev. | tor Tonnent. 1“];‘1"’3’\’:2"‘\331’:?hll(ial:ll)li:‘a‘i‘ worked | Stockholm ~invasion of 1912, who i resulted stunned the Pennsylvanias. Minor | Timmy Fitzpatrick, who goes b the | olent Association of the Church of | T T ! 15t oF 1 flesh. | caused one of a few sensations at the | In their desperation to win_the Smith Y. P it goea Ny Christ has been in existence has the oft eight pounds. of surplus flesh.| & 0 0 b Ring i i P y Burton | euphonious and belligerent title of ’ £ ale t() Ontlnue Moran will be in the best condition | Olympic games by cashing in an un- o i ) 'were counted in the firg first quarter, after abo of play, Ted Riddell g pigskin after an Aggig raced seventy yards for In the second quarter by a series of short, but] rushes lugged the ball dle of the field to t line for the second tos tain Corey kicked the g Aggies Hold i But in_the third and ters the Kansas Athlet! Nebraska lads to a s Cornhusker warriors w fensice in both periods ball'in Kansas territor th) of the time, but either tl lacking or the Aggie def$ strong. In the final quarte! ers carried the ball to the A o headon into an impenetrible wall of Aggies and -Cook experienced the hole in the other side of the line. While a tingle of dissappointment was felt by some of the Corn- husker roots because of the small score, the Cornhuskers, on the whole, put up a good game. In the third and fourth quarter, it is true, the punch seemed to be lacking and symp- tome of bad generalship were fre- quent, but it ils still early in the year, the holes made by the passing of Chamberlain, Rutherford and Abbott same_thing when he tried to find aTWisconsin Men Tramp through Defense and Pile Up 8core of 28 to 3. LINE PLAYS SUCCESSFUL Madison, Wis,, Oct. 14.—Coach Withington’s Badgers had little trouble in disposing of South Dakota State. college today, winning, 28 to 3. I | ss. [t was just a short, little nd when it started success inevitable. But suddenly the ullholland, the smallest and player that Creighton has had al years shot into view, ,skill- uding the protecting interfer- aptured the pigskin in the air ampered thirty yards up the br a touchdown. Platz easily the goal. Pass Nets Score. r as the score was concerned ne was ended. For none be- that either side would come th such vehemence as to sweep nother touchdown. Both teams ayed a ragged open game hout three quarters, fumbling htly, intercepting and breaking lses repeatedly. But four passes ompleted, the last one, Platz to with but a minute and a half y in the last quarter, counting rard end runs from the center of the ield, but when he attempted drop kicks following each he failed utterly. The ball swept back and forth, first with the Blue ind White and t“en with the Btack and Red. Fum'f g was frequent and costly and maired the playing of both sides. Twice Coz'»r, the Methodist end, tried the drop kick, once in the third quarter from the forty-three-yard line and again in the second quarter when the ball was less than fifteen yards from goal. Both kicks went wide. Blodgett and Hudson, halfback and Classic from Johnny Aitken | by Narrow Margin. |EDDIE RICK GETS THIRD - Chicago, Oct. 14.—Dario Resta captured the winner's share of the $15,000 grand American purse today and went into the lead in the season competition for the 1916 Ametican championship purse of $13,500 by | winning the 250-mile automobile race | here today. He failed by a small frac- |tion to equal the new world's record |of 104 miles an hour established at the Astor cup race at New York. Resta's time for the 250 miles was 2 hours, 24 minutes, 16,58 seconds, a rate of 1039 miles an hour. Johh Aitken finished second, halfa lap be- Wilbur D’Alene, was- badly burned when gasoline, being poured into D’Alene’s car at the pits, flashed up |as it spilled on the hot exhaust pipe. | Billy Chandler also was burned in extinguishing the blaze. D’Alene re- entered the race, but quit before the one hundred and twenty-fifth mile, Wilcox appeared to have won thir place when an accident put him out at fhe two hundred and forty-eighth mile, Rickenbacker finishing third, | Galvin, Lewis and Henderson finish- |ing next in order, while the ‘'other eight cars which ‘crossed the finish task But Pa has already buckled down to the work and has laid his prelimi- nary lines of att The annual convention of the National Associa- tion of Professional Base Ball leagues will be held at New Orleans, starting the second Monday in No- vember. Pa has already purchased transportation for the excursion to the Crescent City. A number of minor league owners are hard up this fall, inasmuch as the ason of 1916 was far from a bonan- za, and Pa believes he will be able to pick up a couple of athletes with- out mortgaging his. park to get them. Goes to Big Meetings. But the journey to New Orleans is not the only junket Pa intends to make. He will also go to the two major league meetings, one of which will probably be held in Chicago and d line. They had two @y 1 g o N AW 5 {val:ich“to make The ik tanceseuton ) o pton’s second touchdown. hind. 11!1§‘11-;|I\lc‘|c|;n?:§ ln\;s:k:;nothcr wintner 3 ‘ - ‘ AT H e $ S&1 av —~ the first attempt Gardiner plunged ' DAY n carri::f'}x:‘?: hg'l’lm(:"l] t::;or; finyflli:'ez- Ralph, Hedlicc, mechanician for next year, you can see that,” declared Pa. “What would have happened to me this year if our club hadn’t béen a championship one? You can see where I stand. I've got to have an- other winner.” Loses Eight Men, A couple of infielders, a couple of outfielders, a ¢ouple of catchers and a couple of pitchers is all Pa has to close his lunch hooks over before April rolls around. Ernie Krueger goes to the Giants and ‘Bobby Marshall goes batk to St. Paul. Thus the Rourkes will not has not been filled and the Corn- z : . line were several .laps behind the have even one experienced ‘backstop. husker machine hasn't assumed the [ Simpson started at _left half for :glrlbt;cck, cl:lye(;.lm(i]t‘:& cogi':]:c::fl‘\“f'i'; three leaders. Ray Miller-has 1,2,“ drafted by (_-‘g. smooth-running proportions it will | Wisconsin, scoring three touchdowns, ured in heaving their only two suc- lumbus, thus léaving an immense gap with a little more practice. Defense Holds Own. But, while the offensive needs im- provement, the defensive ability of Stewart's men stood out all during the game. Only on two occasions did the Aggies succeed in making first downs and both times long forward passes turned the trick, One was for twenty-five yards and the \other for twelve., Not once did the Kansans succeed in penetrating the Cornhusk- er line, and at no time in the conflict did they threaten to score. » In the first quarter the closest the Aggies got to the Cornhusker goal was the thirty-yard line. In we sec- ond qaurter they never got out of the first coming within five minutes of play on a run of thirty-five yards. Line plays advanced the ball early in the second period and Simpson was pushed through five yards for the sec- ond touchdown. Similar tactics earned the third touchdewn for Wis- consin near the end of the second period when Berg was pushed through from the three-yard line, The ‘fourth and last touchdown for Wisconsin was made by Simpson near the close of the third period, after which the whole Wisconsin -second team was substituted. South Dakota made its only score in the fourth period on a drop kick by Dunn from the twenty-five yard cessful forward passes. Slocumb, tackle, was knocked out in the first quarter and had to be replaced by Steves, who was' shifted from tackie to end. Hughes was shifted from the backfield to the line, which ma- terially altered the Wesleyan offense. Platz Is the Star. As usual,Kaiser Platz was the star of -the ércighton team, although Marty Flannigan got awav, with a few thrillers.. Sleuman showed wonderful driving. power and both Hull and Mullholland distinguished themselves at-the ends. McCarthy, giant tackle, was an adept at gathering in fumbles, whether they were of Creighton or Wesleyan, and many times saved. Blue Bellevue Second Team Wins by, Safe Kick From Mutes The Nebraska Institute for the Deaf lost to the Bellevue: Reserves [yesterday afternoon at.the Douglas | county fair grounds, 3 to 0, After two I touchdowns had been made by Belle- vuea nd both disallowed by Referee Seeley on the ground of offside plays, Captain Stewart of Belleyue drop- kicked the ball over from the ten- yard line in the final period. Captain Andy of the institute also made a WILVLIE RITCHIE @ Fure ) GRINSON DEFBATS NORTH CAROLINA Harvard, With 8ix Regulars on Side Lines, Victorious Over Dixie Squad. GHICAGO HUMBLES INDIANA WARRIORS Bc.ore of Twenty-'l‘wo to Noth- ing. Eliminates One Cham- pionship Contender. at first. Kewpie Kilduff goes to the Giants, The loss of Kewpie is not bothering Rourke much, though, be- cause he can put Marty Krug at short next yeat and Harold Irelan on second; “Earl Smith will'be with the Cubs and Shag Thompson returns to the Athletics. In the box ' North goes to St. Lotis and Marty O'Toole back ‘to Columbus. | McGraw to Help, Pa has the promise of Muggsy Mc- Graw, that he' will let him have a crack at a couple of youngsters. And as Muggsy has some pretty hifty athletes deposited at various: places around the country, Pa believes he will get at least one or two of cham- their own territory. In the third per- | line. and White rooters from the sorrow of | touchdown_after a seventy-five-yard T Ry I 't at | 3 iod they got the ball as far as Ne-| _, SRR losing the ball in their own territory. [run, but Umpire Benjamin's whistle| TWENTY-ONE TO NOTHING |[EREHART BADLY INJURED Jaog::up timber from the . Giant braska's thirty-yard fine &y virtue of | Fi]lreth Takes the —|Lineu: had blown before the play started, b3k B, i . ; ‘ the twenty-five yard forward pass, but CREIGHTON—I4. | WESLEYAN—0. |and Amdy was called back and. his . A debal Rourke spent | considerable coin in the fourth qurater they never es- e Carthy EERT Sroves | team pen?;lizcd for holding. Cambridge, Mass, Oct. 14.—The| Chicago, Oct. 14.—The University | purchasing talent ‘last spring and in- caped the shadow of their own goal R\Ibbel‘ G’&me Of Eayie vesroei LG 10 . ‘Buckner | ' The game was foungt on old-fash- | Harvard foot hall team, with six regu- of Chicago foot hall eleven tr|umpl'\ed‘ tends to do it again. Pa's traveling posts. That shows the strength of S - F L * o | Stapieton RGILG W luamty [ioned lines:almost throughout., The lars on the sidelines, defeated the over Indiana university in the first expenses alone to the three meetings the Cornhusker defense. €ries rrom Loomis Sultho R -giSteves | deaf team was the lighter and faster, University of North Carolina, 21 to 0, game of the “Big Nine” season here "vtvl:‘altt?-n‘:lizr:r:dssl'?gOIC;;;:l:t‘et;ybek;::'ll: Fumble Proves Fatal. defended The Cornhuskers the Corey kicked off to Sullivan on the | Aggies’ thirty-yard line. Kansas tried | to break through the Cornhusker line, but failed miserably and was com- | played a fast but erratic game. Near- Hildreth, Neb., Oct. 14.—(Special.) | Flanmagas east goal at the start of the play and | _pjiqreth won the rubber game of [S'euman ... the series with Loomis here Fridayik\‘rcllhlcn . afternoon for the championship of | south-central Nebraska. The only Culber*son Hughes . _Hudson .. Blodgett Hale Score by quarter Vesleyan . w0 0 0—0 Substitutions: Carman for Hughes, Hughes for Steves, Steves for Slocumb, Kahn' for Kid Snipes, is going to essay a come- and when the players settled down to real foot ball they showed class. Andy madé a long run of seventy-five yards and two long forward passes netted | twenty yards each. Bellevue's best | play was the “nut shift” with the ends carrying. the ball. fiscal year just closed, ac~ording to P. Picotte and | |today. The . Crimson attack, built about the eel-like rushes of Casey and the plunges of Horween, with an forward pass, accom- | . | occasional period and one in the third, with re- plished two touchdowns in the first| | today, winning by a score of 22 to 0. | The defeat practically eliminates Tn- | diana from the championship race. 1 Chicago tore ragged. holes in In- diana’s line for steady gains. Erehart, one of Indiana's stars, was L of his meteoric career when he faces the lid of the exchequer. Holland Talks War. . Jack Holland, down in St. Josefh, is mixing up a lot of jwar medicihe. Jack announces “that the lid is ‘off.” When the Western league magnates expected victory oyer a classy field Ried s - ly all those who carried the ball fum- 5 Poster | H the annual report submitted to the na- 4 h ith a le £ 6 f f - o hack. He has signed up for a tangle | & . Nard's 8 with a leap of 6 feet and 4 odd inch- b{e‘ll' and ryorc than half ‘thcdagtempll; Y L with one Kid §._.|mcrp A Fremgnt’:"’[”a] convention of the church here umber ystem JJ::: “:‘lil?lri?:lctllnn"l,"(r];:\km";:l\:;l:;i es, is the man Jack Moakley is pin- at forward passing resulted in wi o ; : A , oday. .. — : ning most of his {faith to v | Wednesday night. Jimmy used to The report called attention to & new nfonths ago. 8 _to score ten overthrows, Score be one of the handiest lightweight ha, Neb., with an average family of New York, Oct. 14—Yale players FranK appeared to be a bit down- points in next year's, intercollegiate by quart Straight, E i Ames ... 0 6 o0—13 H s ' | world’s record for low infant mortal- e ¢ i ins . b Lall wags“in:s{dédn!d (“:S'h;""?d foot | Amen o § & 5Z'% pugs in the business and he says he's| 0T % TOCOTy AT A e Omaal~ have worn numbers at the bowl fate- | c.s¢“over ‘some unfavorable reports | Championships. “The old master: will % ged in by both teams, | “GiNC iions: Ames—Adams for_Jeffs, better now than he ever was. He's|\Yr 320I08: I{ andh will lrmxlmm: to wear them | Zinied his way since his miserable have “another corking combination, throughout the season. except in the last period, when Penn- Davis for Paige, Tucker for Aldrich, Paul for training diligently and if his dope is One humble which he expects will continue where sylvania, pressed for time, and d“p”‘1:.:::&-(l"n"‘-'Kt'{r::llgwf‘lrrrr{::l{kr%rSK:w[:f”K"‘fi:ffi right and he means business, we'll | thirty-five babies under 1 year ‘old. | “Thank you, EIi” is hereby dirccted ::’;"x;’::‘:s‘fl:h !’»“]Q- _'larvll((”l)_lllo;\. Mo'r— the stars of May last left off.. ‘The ate to win, resorted-to long unsuc- |ror Pringle, Palkowsky for Vernson, Boll gee some lightweights hiking for the | has broken the world's record for low | from this quarter. Captain Black, | jicrg estimati come back’ in the pubs| g ons’ coach and trainer is quoted cessful forward passes. | for Shinm, R. Kuble for Smith, Todd for *°f * 3 | mortality. Its record for last year was i 2 |lic's estimation, and he avers he will] ;o"g;; i P o L aign Alarich. Goat tall and uncut these winter months, ¥ says an observer of the game, is cer ' as saying that Richards must come | Fonter e "Jones. Umplrs: Birch —_— " |three-quarters of per cent' of izl};{l a talking leader. His outcries, grly m[% h;fr(l stihe kimws’ h{’w t0 pl-| through in both the shotput and high s 2 chdo pes. | Umplre: “Birch, 5 = i ) 3 r.. HIs outcries, | b off Fulton inside of five or six|; e iR Wik B S5 Dog-Darcy Looks Like Best |3 o areat | hanks- 10" {h ‘acousic propertes of |21 0 jump "o help bolate the. thacans’ The report announced as its great- | the bowl, were heard far and wide, st team score. - in Hard Fought Fray New Haven, Conn., Oct. 14.—Yale Gophers Sv;il—lp la NOrth Da,kota, champion it looks very much as if Bet in Middleweight Class New York, Oct. 14.—If there is such thing as a world’s middleweight Australia is his habitat. When Des est single achievement, “the opening on April 11, 1916, of the Christian Church hospital in Kansas City. While not a part of the association’s work,” said the report, 'as are its while his theatric demeanor kept the | spectators in trare good humor. | " No National league nine—not even the Phillies—he said, ever talked more rapidly and raucously than the Rumors Persist That ™ Tinker Will Lose Job Chlcago, Oct. 14—Rumors that Jo- Richards added a few points to Cornell's figures in corralling the ti- tle this year., He got them in his two specialties. After putt'ng the shot most of the afternoon, Richards downed Iehigh today, 12 to 0, in a ‘ other institutions, this hospi Wi . 3 B. Tinker wi i i Y g 4 s 4 ) pital was Tet¢h players. Le Gore, he |5¢P . Tinker will be deposed as| didn't have a b hi; 1l before desperately fought game. The feat- : ) T 1:_ | Darcy knocked out George Chip there r Carnegie Tech players. L ' Chi Nati have reathing spell befor ure was a)scnsalional 65-vard end run Minneapolis, Oct. l4—The Uni a day or 'so ago, scoring a victory stanted tostered andimuts possible by adds, is a blazing star. He thought r:‘:;:gccrlul?;:;’t‘:seasz:nnl‘|s:x?/c noat“l?cn:r: henad to battle Wesliy s CUIRIR through a broken field for a touch- down by Legore. Half a dozen Le- high players tackled him, but he| shook them off. Bingham made Yale's other tauchdown on a_fiiteen-yard | plung through tackle. Neither goal| was kicked. { Lehigh could not pierce Yale's Iin¢ | came in the final period when Me-| for any appreciable gains. Once, a| long forward.nass allowed the visit- | versity of Minnesota overwhelmed North Dakota university, 47 to 7, here today. The Gophers had little diffi. culty in breaking down their oppon- ent's defense, while on the other hand the North Dakotans pounded the Min- nesota line with little success. North Dakota’s only touchdown Kay, snatching up a fumbled ball, raced sixty-five yards to the goal. that marked the climax of a sensa- tionally successful qualifying cam- | paign, he came pretty ciose 1o crown- | ing himself titlgholder of his class. i | Another Pocket Billiard Tournament Staged Here Ness Reynolds will stage another big pocket billiard tournament for the championship of the state, starting | officers of the association.” The total receipts from all sources, said the report, during the year were $202,385.94, a_gain over any previous year of $66,573.75. The amount re- ceived from churches showed a gain | of $4,828.08; from Bible schools, $5,- 611.01; from fees and trust funds, $6,- 310.72; from annuities, $8,300, and from individuals, $32938. The “pres- sure of the association's financial I'the line revealed occasional evidences of slow thinking. The Elis tried only | one forward pass. Carnegie could gain only around the blue wings and never enough there to cause thrills of dismay on the part of the blue partisans, Lindsay Wins Both Games. Lindsay, Neb, Oct. 14.—(8pecial.)—The Lindsay High school foot ball team took | a tast game from the Looking Glass team, officially denied. While President Weeghman is known to have been dis- a])polnt:gi with the showing of his club during the last season, he asserts that he has done nothing whatever on plans for 1917 and that he does not know what will be done. Several base ball leaders have been mentioned as’ successor to Tinker, amgng them being Jack Hendricks, Frank Chance, Larry Doyle and Dick and-several others for the high ju honors. Oler turned the la‘blej! rgg Richards. Next ye.r the Brigham ~Young university champion will nol be easy sailing for him. lowa’s Line Like Wall = And Grinnell Blanked have Oler to contend with. It should: ors to get within striking distance of Towa City, Oct. 14—A lcomifi'; the line, but Yale held. Game Goes to Glitner, Gibbon, Neb., Oct. 14.—(Special)—The | Gitner foot ball team was awarded today's need has not been _entirely relieved, | 1o 4. yesterday afternoon. At basket bali ay n 1y | however, because $56,287 of the sum | the Linawiy High achool girls won from There will be selected six |received was not available for imme. | the Looking Glass aggregation, 6 to 3, Cornlea Trims Battle Creek. Wednesday evening at the Subway| | Norfolk, Neb, Oct. 14.—(8pecial Tele- ! parlor. | gram.)—In one of the fastest games of vall ' contestants from the following best| diate use. played here this season the Cornlea team A defeated the Battle Creek club, § to 7 in players throughout the state: Billy Kinsella. Kinsella” long has been [holding line which prevented Gtif-" identified as scout for the New York |nell college from scoring thratighout Nationals. most of the game, spelled defeat for There is said to befa general feeling | the scarlet and black on the lowa. Coe Beats Monmouth. " elve inni 1t w he final . g o . : , Ta., , 14 : b 3 A Jigs 3 e 405 0'on Sccnunt o Gibvon reun | 0L UL ol itk (1, AL £BS 0 Owens, Harry Shepard, Elmer Lar-| Beatrios focond Win. [ coficdar, Raptds, J ot MoMonmouth | in the National leagde against Tinksr field today, the state university elevén R ther was forced (o use two out- |\ }e"Tothlea club, The event was held son, Heinie Harsch, Kenneth Sciple,| Beatrice, Neb. Oct. 14.—(Special Tele- | game with Coe college here and loat, 26 to 3. | because of the part he played in 6r-|winning, 17 to 7. The Grinnell 'squad siders on account of some regulare being |under the ausplccs of Norfolk's second auto- Andy Swanson, Harry Mooney and |gram)—The Beatrice second foot ball eleven !{nnmmfln'n score came In the third perlod, | panizing the Fc(r ral league during the | was outplayed RiCEn out of the gume. rofused to play, moblle show, which “was concluded after three days' successful run, For. this reason Gibbon and outgenéraled P S e {winter of 191415, throughout.. ... 'Jsss Reynolds. defented the Fairbury second tekim Hero this | when a pipe kick counted from the twenty- | stternoon, 46 to 0. 1flvpylr ne... Coe scored wimost at will,