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< xthousan 10 BRINGING UP FATHER KE - WHAT ARE YOO TYING THAT ON ME FINGER FER? | WANT YOU To Do SOME THING For ME AND | DON'T WANT YOU TO FOR - THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, Copyright, 1916, International News Servica | REMEMBER SHE WANTED ME T SOME THING BOT WHAT . ™ ‘WAS IT 2 4 YoU TIE THIS ON ME FINGER 1916. R §\ 4 Drawn for The Bee by George McManus M (V1h) TELL ME You TO MAI 1 DO YOU MEAN TO FORGOT You DIDN'T - <IVE ME ANY GYCLONES LINE UP - FOR CORNHUSKERS Ames Tean May Put Nebraska Boy at Left End to Strengthen’ Line. BACKFIELD IS~ CRIPPLED Ames, Ia, Oct. 29.—(Special.)—A Nebraska youth from Chadron may get into the Ames-Nebraska game at Lincoln next Saturday. His name is Seidell. The coaches this wetk brought him over to the first string from the varsity serub line to take a try at left and to see how he works for Jones, the veteran left end, in the phalanx. He has shown up well and he may be a relief man for the star and crippled regular end. The coming week will be a rough one for the Cyclones. Nebraska will get no game given fo them. The team had an off day in the game with Missouri, was not near the team that squelched Kansas, and the coaches are trusting to luck that two off days don’t come in succession. In the scrimmage yesterday Head Coach Mayser burnt up the backs with criticism. Mayser threatened to get a taxi line on the field to get the men back to scrimmage and he roasted first one man and then an- other, One back tripped hjmself catching a forward pass, and Mayser cut him with the keen sarcasm that “the “ball knocked the boy over over." | Changes are pending in the Tine, it seems sure. Who of the regu- lars will pigeonholed for the Corn- husker game is a mystery. The crippled back field men, who are badly needed for the Husker argu- ment, are being handled lightly, May- ser is not encouraged by the jimmed condition of many of his backs. The seat sale for the Ames-Towa r&e opens November 6, the Monda ollowing the Nebraska < game. X tickets already have been |old,. Inquiries and checks have been coming in to Director Clyde Williams, thick and fast, for six months. The concrete and wooden stands, seating 10,000, have been put in order for the big state struggle. 'Speaking Dates of Republicans Chester H. Aldrich—October 30 Alma. Henry J. Allen—Tuesday, October 31, Lin- coln, 8 p. m. W. E. Andrews—October 30, Antelope county, Orchard, night meeting; 81, Knox county, Verdal, afternoon meeting; Nio- brara night meeting; November 1, Verai- | gre, 2 p. m.; Winnetoon, 4 p. m.;. Crelgh- ton, evening mesting; November 2, Cum- ing Went Polnt; 3, Hooper; 4, Cole- ridi Arapahoe, afterncon meeting; In- dll& & evening meeting. E. Barclay—October 30, Mason City, '1:,“ P. m; 31, Berwin, 2:30 p, P, m, 2:30 p. m.; Anselmo, P m. Anson Blgelow—October 30, Grant, night meeting (B. A. Hastings in charge); 31, Im- parial, night meeting; November 1, Waune- ta, afternoon meoting; Palisade night meet- Ing; 2, Culbertson, afternoon meeting; Tren- ton, eeting; 3, Benkleman, night meetl . Arapshoe. Norrls Brown—Otcober 30, Laurel; No- vember 1 Central City; 2, Palmer; 3y Hob- ron; 4, Falrbury; 6, Kearney. N r:..'-l Burkett—October 30, Ulysses, ;. Bhelby, Gresham, night t 9 a. m.; Exeter, 10 11 & m.; Ohlowa, 1:30 p, p. m. ember 1¥ Thayer count: Byron, 2 p. rang, Graftons § ¥, Deshler, m.; Chester 4 p. m.; Jetterson county; 3, m.; Beatrice, 12:30 ». m.; Filley, 2:30 p. m.; Virginia, 4:30 p, m.; Wymore, § 'Al. Pawnes county, rmour, 11 & m.; Burchard, 13 Steinauer, 3 Table Rock, 4:30 p. m; pom; s Pawnee City, 8 Robert W. Devoe—October 30, Bialr, 8 m.; 31, Fremont, § p. m,; November ?‘ Schuyler, 8 p. m.; 2, Columbus, § p, m. A. M. Hare—October 30, : 31, Ber- trand; November /1, Eustis, evening meet- ing; 2, Moorefield; 3, Farnam, Walter V. Hoagland—October 380, Spen- cer: October 31, Butte; November 1, New- port, evening meeting; 2, Al ¢ o.;‘ 3 ey nsworth; 3, . ris—~October 30, Decatur; 31, Logan; N ber 1, Waterloo; 2, Wayne; !,.Pla.m,;‘ x‘unmn, . R. McKelvie—October 30—Otoe 3 November 2 and 3, Dodge county. George W. Norris—October 307 Central City; . Bt. Paul; November 1, Broken Bow’; Kflolhonhurl; 3, C“lf' Lexington; 4, Grand Island; 6, Orleans, Holdrege. €. Petrus Poterson—October 30~—Dixon county, Maskell: 31, Knox county, Center, afternoon meeting; Bloomfield, evening meeting; November 1, Crofton, afternoon meeting; ‘:“l." :vonl‘u‘ m;;llnl: 3 and 4 earney county; § and 6, Phelps county. E._ M. Polla tober 30, Dm’cnn(ycr. 31, Webster county, November 1, 2 and 3, Clay county. 0. 8. Bplliman,—October 30 Cumro, evening m 3, ?“Mo' nlnornoon moeting; ' _evening meeting; November 1, Etna, evening meeting; 2, Tallin, ovening meeting; 8, Arnold, evening meeting; 4, Cliff Table evening moeting. Frank A gerton—October 31, Amherst; | November 1, Miller; November 2, Elk Cre G. N. Anderson—November 3, Riverdale: 4 ton. | Dave H. Mercer—November 4—Auburn, | 0. F. Byron—November 2, Colfax county. Henfy T. Clarke—November 4, Geneva, < e Tt ‘| . Cure Your Cola. 'le'. King's New: Discovery will cure your cold, 1t In antiseptic Wnd soothing, kills the cold gorms. All druggists.~Adv, OLIPHANT COF THE Oliphant, the all-around athlete and by the sturdy pig-skin warriors when grounds in fiew York. [ S Oliphant, Army Fullback R AR ARIMY, ©mwrFrim SER, army full back is counted on for much they mecet the navy at the Polo NO CHANGE IN THE MISSOURI VALLEY i|Oonference Race Remains in the Same Status After Saturday’s Games. | TEXAS IS ELIMINATED None of the football games played Saturday had any bearing on the Missouri Valley conference race, but wide interest attached to the meeting of Missouri and Oklahoma, in which . | Missouri continued its winning streak and afforded ground for belief that the team may be a real contended against Nebraska for premier honors. In the far southwest, Texas vir- tually was eliminated from considera- tion in the state race by losing to Baylor, The Texas Aggies repeated last year's victory over the Haskell Indians, While Oklaho 'masdefeat was the third straight for that team this year, the Norman contingent found solace in considering prospects for victory over Kansas next week. Oklahoma de- feated both Kansas and Missouri last year, The game at Norman Saturday also seemed to forecast an heroic struggle between Texas and Missouri the coming Saturday, the first time those two teams have met since 1906, when Missouri _triumphed 6 to 5, Texas defeated Oklahoma this year, 21 to 7. Kansas was credited with holding the Kansas Ag¥ies to a scoreless tie, but statistics of the game show that the farmers outplayed the university men in virtually every department, In what were nothing more than t‘r]aclice affairs, Nebraska defeated esleyan 21 to 0. St. Louis found Williams and Vashti an easy victory, 36 to 7. Oklahoma A, and M. defeated the Warrensburg (Mo.) Normals 16 | to 7. Washington had more difficulty th the Missouri school of Mines, winning 7 to 6. N Retired Union Pacific Employe Dies in Hospital Hugh Flanagan, 75, of 3912 Burt, retired Union Pacific employe, died in a local hospital yesterday from hardening of the arteries, \ ALL EYES ARE NOW ONTHE BIG GOPHERS Minnesota Scores 236 in Last Four Games to Total of , 14 by Opponents. OHICAGO OUT OF RACE / S Chicago, Oct:29.—Scoring 236 points in its last Sour games, as compared with a total of 14 points registered by its opponents, the University of. Minnesota foot ball eleven appears to be as firmly entrenched in the lead for the “Big Nine” championship that none of the three other contenders is conceded much.of a chance to dis- lodge it. Minnesota made its first start in the western conference race yesterday, buying Towa under a 60 to 0 score, and eliminating the Hawkeyes from further consideration. The Gophers from Illinois, mext Saturday, should gain another victory. Wisconsin by its 30 to 7 triumph | over Chicago, {(illed the last chances the Maroons had of even finishing close up in the race. Although Wis- consin played a tricky game and is conceded to be better than a year ago, critics believe it will have to play in much improved form to hold Minne- sota to a close score. Northwestern Wins, Northwestern ran over the heavy Drake university, winning 40 to 6. Cigrand, one of Northwestern's backfielders, suffered two broken ribs }aml will be upable to play again this | season. Illinois won its first game of the conference season by downing Pur- due, 14 to 7, in a rather loosely played contest. Purdue is considered hope- lessly out of the running. Results of the international contests ;“thc Michigan-Syracuse game, and | the clash between Indiana and Tufts -—were big surprises to close follow- ers of western foot ball. | The fact that Indiana scored a | touchdown on Tufts—the only touch- | down registered against the eastern | eleven this season—is hailed as a triumph for Coach Steihm's players, | for the entered the game with the ex- | pectation of being trounced by an | overwhelming score. 0D STYLE GRIDIRON | PLAY WILL NOT WIN 0ld 8chool Mefl;d of Advan- cing the Ball Not Enough to Take Big Game. CORNELL IS OUTOLASSED New York, Oct. 29.—Foot ball play was swept through the gridirod gamut from superlative to mediocre and was | interspersed with thrills, marked the | week end games wherever eastern elevens competed. Almost without exception the com- peting elevns showed that another two or three weeks will be required to ‘put the teams on ecdge for the games which mark.the climax of the season. Still aniother development o the day's play was the demonstration that no team, however big and power- ful, can hope to win from a rival of reasonable strength with an attack based entirely upon the old school methods of advancing the ball. “In a broad view of Saturday’s contests it will be seen that almost without exception the team which showed an attack equally divided between line plunging and skirting, coupled with a perfected overhead offense, was the one which emerggd the victor. Cornell went down before Harvard by a surprisingly one-sided score. With one of the biggest and most powerful teams that has entered the Cambridge stadium in many seasons and with the wagering 5 to 4 in their favor, the Ithaca players failed com- pletely to live up to the expectations of their supporters. Cornell Outclassed. Outclassed as individuals and ma- chine play, Cornell was never in a position where it seriously threatened | Harvard. The Cambridge first and second string men worked with in- dividual dash .and team harmony, which was completely lacking in the Ithica eleven. Harvard's aggressive- ness and generalship appeared to take all the snap and strategic out of the visitors early in the game. The Cor- nell eleven was slow and uncertain in runnhizg off its plays and the handling of the ball was little short of atroc- ious. The Crimson showed a Haugh- ton gridiron machine that promises 40 be a worthy rival for both Prince- ton and Yale later in the season. *Next to the Harvard-Cornell game, chief interest centered in the play o!‘ teams came through to victory, the, showing of the Tigers was not by jany means convincing as that of the Ellis. Princeton managed to win |from Dartmouth by the margin of |four points, but it was due to the '{:rqwess of an individual player, as! as frequently been the case in the | | past. i | | Yale Shows Progress. In defeating Washington and Jeff- | erson decisively, Yale made marked rogress, for the Pennsylvania cqm: ination plays a game hard to h in check. It is conceded to be one of the most expert in the country in the use of the forward pass. Yale while holding the visitors to two touchdowns in this aerial attack, piled up more thaw. double that score with an offense that embraced both the running and overhead methods of ad- vancing the ball. Mulligan Spreads - Terror Into State On Eve of Big Game WEEK'S RESULTS. Central High, 26; York, 0. Grand Island, 34; Ken'ne{’i T Nebraska City, 14; South High, 6. | A new terror, has swept state high school foot ball circles. At Beatrice and Lincoln the spell is most felt. For Harold Mulligan has demonstrated the infalliability of a hike formation end run that is just as dominating and destructive as the speeding Chamber- lain was to any of the teams Nebraska met last year. The Central coach has built up a owerful offense around Morearty, §milh and Maxwell and has developed this play from an apparently ineffec- tive formation in three weeks' time. The phenomenal way Captain More- arty and Halfback Smith made their way through a scattered field Satur- | that Omaha’s bid for the state cham-' pionship has doubled. While Central startled the eastern district, Grand Island doggedly claimed its own on foreign ground. Defeating Grant Parsons’ Kearney eleven by a score of 34 to 7 is no mean job. Coach Harding still has a fighting bunch and the game with York next Saturday will produce an- other light on his team's standing in the conference. In Jones, fighting end, he has a man of all-state timber, while Davies, fullback, and Odum, tackle, are not to be forgotten. York, on the other hand, has played all of lits hard games and is ready to pile up! ) { i Princeton and of Yale and while both | = day in the game with York means |— THE BEST PLUNGING HALF- BAOCK. GEORGE M¢<YAREN. Bob Maxwell' says so, therefore there can't be any doubt about it, If Bob Maxwell, after twenty years of foot ball, doesn’t know a good player when he sees one—well, no one does. “The best plunging halfback,” is what Bob said about George Mec- Laren of Pittsburgh when he saw him in action recently. Bob said he thought MclLaren had developed more speed than any other, and ad- ded that McLaren hits the line harder than «most men. Altogether, Bob considers the Pittsburgh half- back one of the sensations of the season. a few wins, beginning with Aurqra November 11. York meets North Platte Thanksgiving day. Nebraska City, undefeated this sea- son, handed the short end of a 14 to 7 score to Coach Patteon’s South High spunks at Nebraska City Fri- day. As usual, the Souths neglected to work after they had’garnered a touchdown in the first few minutes of play, and consequently were forced to bit the dust. Smith, speedy colored end on the Steven's combination, is undoubtedly of all-star calibre. His playing, last year was a sensation and he isn't going far astray this year. Cambridge and Harvard both won overwhelming victories from Beaver City and Clay Center. Beaver City was the chames of the southwest dis- trict last year. Cambridge has a strong eleven and will probably play her schedule through without a de- feat. Alliance is also another team that has not been defeated by a Nebraska team. Gothenberg and Lexington, two strong eleven’s, have sufefred defeat against roductions and ‘so are eliminated rom recognition. Both teams boost men of all-star timber, however Join the Swappers' Club. Membership 1is tree. Call at Bee office. TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT Every Kind — Prites Very Low Over five hundred machines to select from. Rent applied on purchase. Central Typewriter Exchange, Inc. 1905 Farnam St. Phone Douglas 4121. Nebradka | Coursing Meet to Be Held in Omaha * Last of the Week Omaha's second annual coursing meet will be held this week at the Douglas county fair grounds. Events will be staged Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday “afternoons. Omaha's first coursing meet was held last year and proved popular. If the event is a success this year the national futurity stake will be held in this city in 1917. The Omaha Coursing club is conducting the event. The following kennels will be repre- sented: Morian, Barta and Thornburg, Fair- bury; W. B. Flack, Grand Island; Gal- | beth Brothers, Madden and Shanek, | Superior; Ostendorf and Hammer, | Bison, OkL; Andred and Pease, Beat- | rice; Scott and Aschner, Sutton; Avery and Jones, San Francisco; Lifc | and Segate, Beatrice; Kuse and Cook, Cook, Neb.; W. S. Moonlight, Eureka, | Kan.; J. E. Wright, Grand Island; C. S. Root, New Richland, Minn.; N. S. Salisbury, Wichita, Kan.; Virgin and Srak, Utica; Ragan and Wood- worth, Utica; Paben and Van Winkle, Talmage; Dudley, Waddel and Ober- land, Clay Center, Kan.; Bryant and Everson, Alma, Kan.; Holmes, Thies- sen and Barden, Wymore; J. S. Peo- ples, Wichita; Viox and Misegadia, PIPER” The long, brisk hike through the woods gives you the biggest kind of a tobacco hunger. Then S the time you just hanker for tobacco in its of “PIPER.” CHEWING fruity, spicy flavor is different from any other tobacco—the exclusive and unique “PIPER” flavor is thoroughly pressed through the plug, so that every chew is delicious (and lasting. Try acutof “PIPER” and judge it for yourself, S5c and 10c Everywhere most appetizing, satisfying form—for the comfort, pleasure-and refreshing zest of a tasty, juicy chew PIPER Heidsiack TOBACCO “PIPER” is made of the world’s -highest grade chewing leaf—ripe, mellow White Burley, care- fully selected and fully aged. 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