Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 29, 1916, Page 34

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

fHE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 29, 1916. — Another old Scot known as Bobbie Wore kilts that were classy and nobby. He got just one sight Of a middlewelght fight— It 18 easy enough to be pleasant when triumph makes you strut; % 4 The mam worth while will stand and smile with both his optics shut. =3 e b P b ol CENTRAL HIGH 700 |PURPLE CRUSHES ~ SPREDY FOR YORK| DRAKE'S ELEVEN | BADGERS HUMBLE | MAROON WARRIORS HARVARD LOOKED AHEAD TO VICTORY OVER CORNELL—Hope was high among the advocates of the Crimson. Defeat of the Massachusetts Aggies, 47 to 0, made the Harvard rooters feel that the Crimson eleven would be pretty sure of victory over Cornell in the contest of Saturday, a hope that was justified by the issue. This picture shows Harvard at practice. Wisconsin Overcomes Chicago Morearty and Smith Lug Pig- | Northwestern Continues Win- ) at Madison by the Score skin at Will While Mates ning Streak by Beating of 80 to 7. Prevent Hostile Scores. | Towa, 40 to 6. EDLER SURPRISE OF BATTLE | |YORK STARTS OUT FAST MURPHY RESTS HIS STARS Madison, Wis,, Oct. 28 —Wisconsin vanquished Chicago on the gridiron this afternoon, 30 to 7. Chicago was unable to gain by either tricks or straight foot ball. Edler demonstrated his avility to fill Simpson's shoes and Central High schoo! maintained its| Chicago, Oct. 28—The Northwest- long string of victories by downing|ern university foot ball eleven con- York High yesterday afetrnoon by a| tinued its winning streak today, de- score of 55 to 0. feating the Drake university eleven, ' It was a case of too much Morearty | 40 ‘to 6, in one of the speediest con- ! | all through the game. Morearty was | tests ever played on the Northwest- was one of the surprises of the game Simpson entered the game for Wis-| consin in the third period and aided in | up the score. irst period: Wisconsin won the toss and chose to defend the west responsible for two touchdowns and was continually lugging the ball down the field for big gains. The York| tacklers seemed unable to cope with his style of open field running. Smith, at right half, was only slightly be- ern field. Coach Murphy of the Purle squad, used twenty-seven players, giving his stars a chance to rest after a safe fead had been rolled. Cigrand frac- tured his ribs in the last period and goal. Setzer brought the ball to the | hind “Mory” in ground gaining and | had to be carried off the field. fflfl!“}“:“-)'lrd line and was ’\1‘1,‘? “"‘ i o e was responsible for the other touch- | Thomas, who replaced Smith at cen- B Edier g the pal to the thity- HARVARD BATTLE MNE. e OSE down. : ter for’ Northwestern, and Strong, fP trd, lll.lfll t i all to the I”E Y York started the game with a rush. | center for the visitors, were put out { ive-yard line. dler gained five S———— IR S ======= | They kicked off to Iversen who fum-| of the game for. exchanging blows. = yards' around left end and Bergh put = X | n T —— bled the ball and a York man pounced | The lineup: Szl a0 PR ATHLETES HIT CRIMSON DEFEATS |SYRACUSE LOSBS :rioniisd e Thin, Ed‘l:rr ;:HBI th:f:w; ‘On"r “:"fi\"cf DENVER WHIPS | on it. They carried the ball to the| = TRAL B s | e SESSS fifteen-yard line and attempted to |Nge ... ‘Randolph I yard lfll;-i ik i o GREIGHTON BY drop kick on the fourth down, but| Robertson . Zanger i Tayf ;" 8] lhm"";‘] “'i_l i . [THA ELEYEN TO WOLYERINES failed. York kept the ball all through v ‘s,;“l“g i b aylor go J e )la_ t‘l)“ aniscl 1 AID OP FUMBLES the first quarter. w.m); 3 nah;c(n | Hn: 'A'}u'm';u"("uf’e"m'u'i‘ h:‘rheec 'L;yyfl‘;’r 3 e Omaha woke up in the second quar- | Allbaugh Brumbach of the field. A forward pass, Taylor Thirty-One Players Have Hit (Cobinted oot Puge Onts) Lo Weaienen, Reyls. Bags nt) Michigan Wins by Thunderbolt Len'ag‘l’édtf:';’:i Cu‘::;fl":;’e‘l’;'ng“;f i g:nnh Fliimgwood to Keeley, netted fifteen yards. Olson| 400 in Big Leagues Since i ———| goal. Score: Harvard, 9; Cornell, 0. Offensive in Last Few eriod, when Morearty took the ball | Blackbora F.BF. Rl nnmed eight yards to the twenty-yard despair into the hearts of Creighton |~ Harvard continued on the offen- e s sath o1 tha ! tield around - - i ne over tackle. Edler took the ball Their Organization, fans by skirting the end for a twenty- | sive and Robinson tried another field Minutes of Play. right end and, evading the entire York | (} High 01 torfifi twellve yard line. Olson kicked i :“,‘i’:";)"":'gfl“'“:‘ ‘f";’ Ff B““fl;" f"ROX’Cd goal, standing on his thirty-yard line, bfck field, scored %he first touch- ommerce lg a field go ¢ &t er of twelve yards. Ander-|put it was carried a few feet wide of 2 3 ¢ tobheiod Wisonsiy u on| FIPFEEN N ONE SEASON|gon guie s i sl | i g £ x| ENDS POURTEEN.THIRTEEN| O oucrtgn gt | 1708 Shrtout fo wenty-y . Olson at- 5 5 ¢ / on its substitutes. Kelly replaced An- i i i . temptad a field goal, but failed. After| What do you know about a base | put the !“V‘dd"‘ ‘l" “%‘ lead. Milton | derson and Ryerson took the position | Ann Arbor, Oct. 28.—A thunderbolt ;’,‘.fi'flffl‘fi":,?:: bzts(;?;'::"i:l:;efi;:s(: Gl‘elghton La;ds several scrimmages, Chicago got the|pall season that produced fifteen | %! ain misse 1701. Score: Denver, | of Zander. affense, launched with lightning sud- quarter, one by Smith and the other bali on the twenty-yard line, Kelley ? ¢ r Creighton, 7. Tatvard. twice b - d in the last f i § : broke up & run around left end, but | PAstimers w“h, a batting average of | bcnvu: added its third touchdown | jine dfr::rsh;x'c;air::da:g :::n(’l?igllfl plc:;c;:v‘enM‘ic;ig:;'s fo‘ztt;::lllu::vgn by]MO"";yih Goal e kicked after | e High School of Commerg®: de- Chicago gained on a penalty for off-| 400 or better? You guessed right. |in the third quarter. After several in-| out of hound to the ten-yard line. | two touchdowns for a 14-to-13 victory Dnfi oS Se't:u% ov:ns. d P feated Creighton High, 10 tg*0 Fri- side plax Setzer gained eight yards| It happened in the olden days of big effectual plays and several exchanges | Hoffman gained ten yards on a play | over Syracuse here this afternoon. : or]eartz, mich; P EYH efr ano egr' day afternoon on Creightfn field, on an end run. Chicago's ball on the | jeague pastiming, in the days of of punts on which Denver had the on %f“y’ i (fiam" or Omaha, | iy, hard fought game. BW: Leaven- f Y outside Harvard's right tackle and | Syracuse scored three points in the | o 4 thirty-eight-yard line, Agar failed to edge, the Methodists got the ball on | Benedict added five more for a first | first period on a goal from the field ;‘::hfor %T{g“ll"he"’i‘::;a"d Van De- | yorth street school boy#i#n all stages ain on a run around right end and | Which grandfather likes to tell of how | Creighton's forty-five-yard line, Mr. i ! : St thelzime ol thei > tzer was thrown for a loss of ten | they pickled the pill. / Anderson promptly staged a thirty- %‘:m‘;m, I;E;:'\f'r:;; a‘;,rgl;‘;s;l‘dro“;,%hmfl! }fi'u:fi;eh;:{ anLr:hél,‘edr?;ix;gk ‘i,f{,',‘c’fl 3:?.‘:,{‘ .Hma “;’_ L_é,cmlz R nems,e d?:p]a ing % hnderful ?;ll’:[;? £ Y“'&h' Edler 'Cg“d a loucgdlo}fln Od" Thirty years ago the National ':gm:“" ::,)‘dA. dnrward p“:i from | field mark by three yards, where |sailed over the cross bars. A few | Faynter L ko ference by the weld in carrying f al 'Y';g:,'l')'lf ll'unslrouq ‘;1} €nd, | jeague and the American association | o240 :ter whi(fi\ e):i'rmtk ’a‘m’ gme Cornell was fighting in Harvard ter- | minutes later Rafter received a for- | Krough Richaragon | the ball. o InuIHO' Chlm' IO(;» core: Wiscon-| 14 the spotlight in base ball, as do 15 thie rest of the way. to 3‘:"0"1 I,'" ritory for the first time. The Ithacans | ward pass and dashed twenty yards | Hinchey . .|R.G. Yates | Creighton 9 chance to score g After de: ¢ B Olson | the National and American leagues | To make it good yAnderlogmh '““l' here called on some of their trick |for a touchdown. Meehan then made | [yersen N iR Ratkar |icame ug the thid” quarter, when Coyle - lllu:r five ylrdllc;:'l::“:‘eik lac;?e today. It was then—in 1887, to be | Milton aside agd kicked loll“h’i&?l; plays for two rushes and made only | the goal. The Wolverines developed oler i:; lhotou fll"l‘l‘;“t}l" ya{‘(,l]se, tl;‘::'vms 4 hmrl gained thirty yards on a for- exact—that the hardest hitting on [ making the count: Denver, 19; Creigh- slight gains. Benedict, on the next|a strong offensive in the last period, Smith . JH.[R. VunDeull"?g; schgol' was like a stone waa‘fic?u rush, fumbled the ball and Thacher | recovered for Harvard. Casey ward- | ed off Cornell for a twenty-yard run. | Score end second period: Harvard, 9; and once it was successfully under |00 oee QB Bowers | ping way, the Yostmen resorted to open| Substitutes: Omaha, Philitps for Iverson, foot ball. Forward passes put the|Iverson for Haller, Shepherd for Harper, Comp for Morearty, Keiner for Hinchey: | Al ward pi Edler gained four yards, | record came to pass. In that year |ton, 7. fi:mn. the ball on the twemy-yué the American ociation records Payne Pulls Trick, ¥ i i kicked off to C 5 e, and Olson advanced it ten yards | showed eleven p Keu with a batting | It whs immediately after this touch- el le minutes of play Carlisle over left tackle, Olson scored a touch- | average of 400 or better. The players [ down that Payne pulled his offside | ball on the Syracuse twenty-yard line. | g0 7% 0r % " Neal, G, Glasser for Fu.k forty- ; “m Seore:. Wisconsin, 16; Chi-|were: O'Neil, Caruthers and Robin- | stunt which prevented Creighton from Cornell, 0, A penalty cut the distance in half, | sforgan, F. Morgan for E. Morgan, E. Mor- g ":)E"y rfl!(lhtrun nround. lcfé Y f S i f and then, on a fake kick, Zeiger car- [ ®an for Yates, Reed for Bowers. 2 eighton twenty-yar i son of St. Louis: Browning and Mack | scoring the touchdown which would Crimson Team Steadier. ied the bail Maulbetsch kicked | downs: Moreart iere the Catholic boys held Kicks to Graham, of Loulavill ons and SW"?'“?: have at least tied the game and might| Taken as a whole, the Crimson |ihe goal. The winning. touchig MR oponents for three downs. On ’BE ford and Orr of the goal. The winning touchd Third period: Olson kicked to Gra- | the Ahlet have brought victory if Platz had|cleven showed far better team work rth Milt Morearty, brother of ham, who was downed on the forty- | Metropolitans; Burns of Baltimore, | kicked the goal. and steadiness than the heavier Cor-| " inadeust befqrotieiwagy " Morearty of Central High five-yard line. Line plunges and an|and Burch of Brooklyn, . Mills' men seemed to come to life | yelf ¢ oty e A TR PR L e bY o gh, end run netted Chicago fifteen yards.| The same season the National [in the fourth quarter and they pll¥ed ek :':,‘tb’3,“(,‘"j):,'npu&"“"’th?adl':’;a"ci Puglhstm Fleld sk and boote the ball for a y e. The herce’s next score came in the ham failed to gain, but McPherson | league kicked in with a quartet hitting | like demons, but it was too lat 4 h § 3 through f‘l‘lh! tackle for eight | in the .400 set, the players bzinlli An- dlmlTe had been done. Long began ?fi:yfi:zta;e:?:d vtehrey ‘fi?;"éfidegfimg Y]elds Poor | : 8. Chicago's ball on Wisconsin's | son of Chicago, Ferguson of Phila- [to call for forward passes and the|; " Cornell territory. The comefi irty-five-yard line. Krenz then went | delphia, and Brouthers and Thompson | Blue and White crew worked a dozen | yoam hegan to show flashes of its real 1 Berg. Graham carried the ball | of Detroit. of them and managed to make one|¢ o i ihe second period, but poor to Wisconsin's fifteen-yard line. A| Only once since that memorable | touchdown. A handling of the ballphlock‘ed !hep ats rd pass left the ball on the five-| season of 1 as there been more | After a couple of punts, with the | oooeeto score. Harvard gained 125 line. Hanisch went over for a|than two 400 wallopers in one year. [ball on Denver's forty-yard magk, a| .o icin team rushes .g,imf Coraall’s quarter, after several line and end runs by Conhiser, pnd Dewey, when Carlisle fifteen-yard run for a touch- florearty kicked goal. ¢ and Conhiser played a fine pd did most of the offense Can anything be stranger t| fact that only one real white —Jess Willard—has been de during the last six years? 0y Higgins kicked goal.| In 1894, Duffy of Boston, Th forward pass from Platz to Mulhol- . 5 In the old days th ilistid i R m lg"m; cmc.‘to_ 4 of Detroit, m{l Delehlm;" .ndofll:.:z‘: land netted fifteen yards. Then came 82 in seventeen attacks, were full of iaixt-cleas‘;u el:v;' st eleverén;l;g:ngr;eup, % :' On a kick Olson | of Philadelphia, slugged their way |two more in rapid succession for fif- Harvard Scores Again. —Sullivan, Corbett, Fitzsi ELE. Cogan t the ball on the twenty-yard|into the champion circle. Since 1912, | teen-yard gains and the final pass| Third Period—On the kick-off by {{ffriea, Sharkey, Choynski, ‘sd tan over for a touchdown. |the last time Ty Cobb turned the |from Platz to Flannagan resilted in| Horween, the ball went over the goal | Ruhlin, McCoy and a host of Wis- | trick, no big time leader has hit |the touchdown line and was brought back to the | But today the bulk of those 7. 3 far .400. But Denver got together for the|twenty-yard mark. Muller made two | themselves fighters are little I pas It would seem that the National [rest of the period-and strive as they | attempts through the line without |than joke battlers. s, gave Wisconsin i league gave up the business of de- |did, Creighton couldn’t score again.|more than short gains, Shiverick then | During the last four years do! son kicked the goal. | veloping 400 swatters, when the The(,kgfa‘ on. kicked to Murray, who ran the ball | dred—and ~more—have aspir \B.|F.B. Mebonaid n, 30; Chicaj wear the heavyweight crown. American league came into existence. | grennan ... have had the best of care, th The parent organization hasn't owned | MeCarthy a 4&) hitter since 1899, when Ed |Don™® 0 . Sim ¥ a0, 4 _A_‘?'”J{,‘,’,‘:.‘Z;n (c.y | back 120 yards. {iorween immediate- CRIOK : ; i Mon referee; Burford, Bunger | ly kicked from Harvard's forty to o of Taog Usworth | Cornell's twenty-five yard line, There | of teaching, powerful physiques! lfi= I;ldehhl_nty and Jesse Burkett hit for ayne . éni‘rgéfi was no run back, none CO“IE be ranked as the eq Aggles Defeat the high mark, Three American |fuf} Hatsonik |~ Several substitutes had been fl"}’. of the old-timers. i D leaguers, Lajoie, Cobb and Jackson, | Lo Mahoney | brought into play. Murray, at quar-| Jiff Coffey, Gunboat Smith,§ orth Dakota Farmers have turned in a season's batting ‘Apjunger | ter for Harvard, and Bard at left Morris, Andre Anderson, Fran nsing, Mich., Oct. 28—Ef- card with an average of .400 or better. Preston | guard for Cornell among them. Cor- |ran, Fred Fulton, Al Palzer, C of the forward pass when All told there have been thirty-one t % 1 nell held the ball briefly. Shiverick | Weinert, Jim Flynn, Fred Mg e visitor's goal, enabled astimers who have hit for . r | Bren: 'g‘.’b""l'o&-rr.a?sl:&.:fm:’liuv‘:‘:wfu;'r'g. '7-' kicked to Casey, who carried the ball 2‘}[ Relch:'l’orky lynn, “Boer” R} pll eleven of the Michigan . better since the big show was or, Anderson, Flannagan (3 Gobls attef| thirteen yards to Harvard's = forty- Bearcat” McMahon, Charlie M Bl college to defeat the Rivers Finds Cincinnati ized. Seven have been rep oD, ebramion Himphees ™ mowierNe: | nine-yard line. Again Casey dashed |Dan Daly, Jim Savage, So ota Aggies, 30 to 0, here among them, Ross Barnes and braska. = Head Mnesman: Campebll, Ne-|twenty-three yards through Cornell's | Kearns, Sailor Burke, Tom Kenn aight foot ball could ac- rdake, scattered defense and Harvard had | Arthur Pelkey—there you have Burkett, who stayed in the 400 set e r} Is Regular Hoodoo T?Wn three seasons, and Ty Cobb, Ed Dele- N b k % y the ball on Cornell's twenty-three-|names of a few of those who Joe :R!ver'* the California light-| hanty, Sam Thompson, “Pop” Anson | NGDI'ASK8 Glty ngh yard line. Five yards were added by | boomed to be the ‘“champion weight, is off Cincinnati for life, he|and "Harry Stovey, with records of f 1 Casey and Horween. Murray tossed a | champions.” "And what have t says. Joe has fought in the Ohio|two season each, Puts Grlmp n Souths forward pass twenty yards to Casey, | amounted to? How long do you si tle against Michigan Ag- pllege’s veteran iine. Springs. , 8. D, Oct. 28.—(Special.)— foot ball team played a ro- metropolis twice and has met with| Ty Cobb is the only present-da who brought it within two yards of | pose any one of them, would h h Hot Springs, S. D., Friday two serious injuries. Once he fell|player, who stacks up with the old- PR the Cornell goal. Horween pushed it | lasted with Fitzsimmons, Corbd ted by the narrow margin of and hurt bis feg; another time a foul | time sluggers. Ty may not be so | cNebraska City, Neb, Oct. 28 —| within inches of the line and later |Jeffries or even Sharkey or McCl L e R L blow almost finished him. wicked with the bludgeon, but even ;_ISP“"I Telegram.)—Nebraska City | carried it over. Score: Harvard, 16; |in their prime? ame today was a splendld "“F mh:lhil ilkriny l;‘oodoo ‘:own,” grandfather will have to admit that HlI:}l: !‘;""30‘ defl;";d South Om‘lh: Cornell, 0. —_— Toot ball and very "even ' said Joe while packing his trunks pre-| his batting average year by year com- FEE L YORLELERY in. N 10 i i b s vy mien jof AL ratory to returning to Chicago. | pares hvgnbly \5hh thouz zf the old | E8me, 12 to 6. Nebraska City has Com:;!d:ncihange o Th"d-' . Fulton Knocks Out e Rt S::Irn‘:'.m Alllancs hen I fought Ritchie Mitchell here | boys. not lost a game this season, The ade two substitutions, efeated Scottsbluff by a sub- and tled Ch Normi i e - Dickson for Jewett and Brown for| Anderson of Chic 1 hurt my leg so badly that I was out ‘oday a 400 clouter is indeed a visitors started with a rush and : wn for a2 | of the gase all summer. Recently iluc rare bird, Perhaps some pastimer of | Jcored a touchdown, Dworak over the g“‘,f"'smf,‘e‘,‘;'k Hr‘;;“ Lok h“‘]‘:"k‘fi‘:zf( = g e i L o ling, in the first few minutes of play. 5 “lai i 4 ty, | sistent game. The wobk of Smith at | line. : Fulton of Rochester, Minn,, knocked et on. b for she time beng. 1wl ke back 1o Genegtabihe at of the | 2. and Hobere at"quarter was he | | There was litle change in he third | Ble G0 umd of 3 schedul ten. 3 h b N eature. th made tou b i arvar playe efensiv . 2 confine my efforts to the east. major leagues' 400 batting marks. first being (L,. Hoh:rg, i|c\ n?ew 2::;25 football most of the time, while "(?:,‘,'_ round bout tonight. From the start N\ i s has been matched to meet| Batsmen who have made an average 2 Saht s | pell : s of the round the Rochester heavy- b ( Y o Benny Leonard in New York City on | of 400 or better: "‘:"l:’_'!‘:f 2 sondiny g fe,.,iv‘,"‘iii,.';fli,:,“°°"“" of its of- | Seight pummeled his opponent an wrt WL |LJ e | / ‘ :‘ ’ ( 5 November 9. o Llner and club Avar. vour, [ RS R DS ! "I Fourth Period--Starting from mid. | then he seit a right to the jaw tha g o W h ! w‘ * g taomia i oeneents M 1T ] NERRARKA CITY. south mion. | field, Harvard moved the ball five | PUt, Anderson out for the count. - n . flll‘d Wants to Floht, Atl 69 7 h . v £ . yards on two rushes, failed in a for- Fulton then picked up his antag- ward pass, and th "|onist and placed him on his chair. ween 1‘30 ski&'f “}:“ll“ c:":l;!,' ol?aceogf Fulton was untouched. Anderson seven yards by Shiverick, Cornell w»dlghfid a2iands Eultong2iziatis started a drive from the fifteen-yard GIREK: line. H. Coolidge went i in- A Athlatin Ranaf n‘:; and Sllx)&;ngrfn;‘c]“)[it;:“soffr I’;“}Te Nonpare" Athletic Benefit { Cornell drive was blunted by the| Rajses $100 for Lithuanians But Can't Find Opponent it New York, Oct. 20.—Jess Willard | Zoaier, ‘Baltimo " has bobbed up with the statement that Rebingon, At Lov ; I be ready to defend his world’s | T title against all comers after he winds his circus engagement next month. for you to Luy* $17 TAASE madx RgorSTRRTD who will be a suitable opponent C an Bowen ; 4 1 Dunlap, St. 1 R Touahdow! Hobers, Smith, . | Crimson offense, which held three 2 3 f*::‘:l'lm.? b;e'\e 'ci"-;n?im seems ta conb, Dewrott .. 430 911 | osls Kicked: Beason (), Time of quar- | Ttahca rushes to a net gain of three [ The athletic benefit entertainment P ulton, a secon: routhers, Detroit. 19 Nebraska City, 1; South High, 6. Referee: | Yards. given last night by the Nonpareil club rater, who has done nothing so far to ',‘."‘;“’"- Philadelph warrans a match for the title. A |cond berreir Willard-Dillon bout would be ridi- | Burkett, Claveiand culed hecause of the former's weight, | Stensel, Pittsbur, Another clash between the _gigantic | Ratermrons, ' Motromeiiin champion and Moran wouldn't draw a | Anson, Chioago. . ... corporal's guard. The other heavy- |Slarke Pittsburgi Kilne, Wesleyan, Umpire: Long, Holdrege. Shiverick, kicking from his thirty-|of the South Side for the benefit of 1 ’ Styleplus T Head' linesman: Long, Peru. vard mark, sent the ball to Harvard’s | the Lithuanian_relief fund was very u MR Ty Here Fa,ns is 0 thirlg~y,a(rd Iinc,dfrnm which it was success'ful.l . One' hundhred dollars R run back ten yards. Murray sent two [ Was raised in cash at the entertain- | cl th’ ) ) ne lays into the center of tf‘\’c Cornell | ment, which was given under the o e That is Really New ine for short gains and then Har- manngemcnt__(zf William P. Lynch, vard again had Horween kick. . weights, who say they would relish | Juumon s it 2 irm’ i a battle with Willard, possess no i‘.fi:"&".?f. b ot The fans of the bay cities were Tel CornlBall SNW LT Compla'm't is ri ht now B Pl ot ne ) pucte o yThe fane of the bay cities Were | 1t yag Cornells ball on its thirty- Held Not Discriminatory 4 . . mission will not permit Willard_ to | BATa®% Chicago. R 3 EANEY [’.0" ¢ MIng of a1 giv vard line. Crimson substitutions . N T b will not Barnes, Chicago, Rt amage suit by Alice Butler against [} "} Ay Hastings, Neb., Oct. 28.—(Special hat they are the ight again in this state, Meyerlo, Philadoip 03 the Pacific Coast Base Ball league to ARG auserans. gaalter Sowih) g )—The I Orr, Metropolitan. prid h h R 1 8 rushes had been stopped, Cornell[ ¢ C8ram.)—ihe nterstate Com- best Clothes you novi“ Hurt Saier’s Thompson, Detrolt 03 earn that at Recreation park, San |iived and a Harvard man cAught | TAeE0e seominission has ruled in_the Burkett, 8t. Louls 01 Francisco, on April 23, one of the |the ball, Harvard then made a for-|cas® Of Beebe & Rungon Furniture o buy for $17.00 Ey’.; May Be out of Game 403 coast league players did “carelessly, d s s ¢ Co.,, Omaha,, against the Burlington h Habla T 19 e, maith o negligently and unnecessarily hit and ‘I:Ili;m l"sshu;‘:m"gc M‘?mn 3d"‘ls' railroad, that rates for transportation anywnere has been F : 'm:n %?y!h:ee hi::/‘lg g:l’:l't:nt’:m?lill i M ;tr;ke one, of the base balls’” with his oF Hivensd was‘ st i:p::xlen scr:m"l;‘ll: of a}glnrlold of furniture from Omaha estabhshed beyond N i R R e + Philadeiphia o i ;| and taken off th€ field limping. His |0, Fiorence, Ariz, have not been uestion SO b iy 3 . RS he teams were Oakland and Ver- : 4 shown unreasonable or unjustly dis- v . Specalsts declare that the Rifle Club to Hold non, although plaintiff did not specify | narg *Smeq Soore ot o gt | riminatory, and the complaint 1a dis- || + OU NEED NOT B Rt 1o ordet to brin: relief“t‘o h:: i which side’s efforts were so futile. forward pass and Cognell ‘gnin:«‘;v:l:; Juissed. STOP AND PON - | eyes. Saier is a great reader and also A Blg Tul‘key Oot xflfffif'r ‘:‘I:. ;:ll'lnc"“:ly‘sw "h pires | oL on et eight-yard line, only to Crestan High Smothered 2 & frequent visitor to “Movie” sho scrved kel d!}?"lrfo- piac (Ide!;t- lose it-when Sweet recovered d fuin- | @henandoah, 16, Oct. 3h.—(Bomial fole- Dett THE QUES- which habits are blamed for the condi-| The Greater Omaha Ri ved section and hii yeargold BE- | ble and ran to a touchdown. Score:|8&ram)—With three regulars ineligible, TION OF “Wh UERE of his: cyes 1 Omaha Rifle and Re- | atrice Silva on the nose, breBking it, | Harvard 23: C 1,0, Mi h Shenandoah High smothered Creston's play ere eye vfi ver club will hold a big. turkey | and blackening her eye, " Algfe Butler | fLarvard. 23; ornell, 0. Minot kicked | and scored six touchdowns, winning its Shall I Spend M, Gate at si:’i(: the 5?}"4!)' g'recedmg Thanks- | is her guardian, i 'l‘l?c lineup: o Pl S 7 A L Rkt oran M ” v The Bmafin.""rf“:;él‘? $ range in East The plaintiff declares th ' CoRNELL minutes of play. Drizsling rain fell during oney? ibbons-Dillon Bout i B (l).r“l}:e event close [ Proper protection given L ande: | the &ame. : 5, Each e inel ; s L / noters of the ten-round no-de- | turkey shoot will be fi\'e"ts’;)t(\(:'(‘( e (a :,3::11:“'] gl v STl Wine e 3 mbet\veep Mike Gibbons | target A ‘at 200 yards, any pmfiu::." i i Dadmun Carry | Géneva, Neb. Oct. 28.—(Spsclal)—The bk -‘e -'l'-m--e Yy position, . r | Gene ar - in St Pnl'lll'hbfthw:'mwN?vefi- .b’elyn‘r:l':& ;‘: erne(!," t-‘\ lnkhllmm-r will u,.nwo'g.f"'l‘;f"'u (i':;ll:n'l:lnll ra | Rarter Seklay | In & xn"ll“;:‘ )‘m"d"‘;"::"::"' l:;lulrl"]: ovem- ants on the range, so [ High wohool foot ball team ated the | Robinson & A s IOty Tof MYwardl o Dt f s : o L cpectthemaich 1 draw | he” markarin G cxpec 1 | o ek e s M gt o S a b e CR )| Tor you to buy is right now touchdowns, \| Horween " “Musller Bverybody reads Bee Want Ads

Other pages from this issue: