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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 26, 1916. 3—S OME rather severe criticism of | Dr. E. J. Stewart, the new Cornhusker coach, have been heard from Nebraska sup- porters who were disappointed because their favorites were given a gpound trouncing by Kansas, It is Dr. Stewart'’s system, new to the Mis- souri valley, that caused the criti- cisms. That is onl{1 natyral, though. Stewatt's system had never before seen in the valley and the sim- ple deduction of the lay mind would be that it is a failure because it didn't beat the Jayhawk. But the foot ball student is not criticising Stewart, or his system. Foot ball experts all over the country almost agree that Glenn Watner of 'Pittsburgh is the great- est coach in the country, even su- genot to Percy Haughton, Stagg, ost, Folwell and others of the great. It was Warner who made the Car- lisle Indians such great players. When he left the Indian school the redskins quit playing foot ball. A year ago Warner went to Pittsburgh and turted out the best eleven in the east, and he had to make a team to do it, as his material wasn't overly profisin This year Pittsburgh re- peated its 1915 success; it hasn’t lost a game and is believed by many to be the best eleven in the country. And Warner is a coach who, like Stewart, uses no quarterback. He uses a system, while different in a few details, that is fundamentally the same as employed by the Cornhusker coach. So the system must be all right; if it wasn't Warner wouldn’t use ft. It wasn't the Stewart system that won for Kansas. The fault was with the Nebraska team. The Corn- husker backfield is weak; it hasn’t any driving power, it hasn't any quick thinkers, it hasn’t any performers de- pendable in a pinch; in other words it hasn’t any Chambetlain, any Ruth- erford, any Halligan, any Frank, any Potter, any Towle. Those were the boys who made Stiehm’s teams great. Do yot those fellows would have failed to beat Kansas with the Stewart system or any other system? That's the answer. Petcy Hadghton may not be the greatest coach in the world, but he certainly is the king of the alibiers. A week before the game with Brown Percy broke into scare-héad type with an announcement that he in- tended to take his entire first eleven to visit the Yale-Princeton game, leav- ing a striug of scrubs and subs to battle the Brunotiians. And Percy did just that th And Brown wal- loped Harvard, 21 to 0. Which would lead one to suspect that Percy had a hunch Brown wodld take even his varsity warriots to a trimming, so he prepared the neat and nifty advance alibi. Which is a very keen piece of work from a Harvard standpoint, but it does look a little bit like bush leagtie stuff to the unprejudiced. Therée dre probably a lot of base ball magnates who haven't been earning the regulation 6 per cent the last few years, but Phil Ball and Chlrle¥ eeghmann, ex-Feds, are ptobably the two leading mourners i the big show. Ball and Weegh- mann have both sunk well over half a million dollars in base ball, and so far as can be learned haven’t drawn much out yet. Base ball is more than a pastime and a business;it's a gam- bling venture, too, and a man has to watch his step and be pretty lucky to earn dividends. And if conditions continue in their present state they’ll have to watch their steps closer and be still luckier as the years come. We have heard a lot of predictions that Notre Dame will walk all over Nebraska. We may be wrong, but our gtiess is that Harper's men are g to run up against some stub- r opposition. The Nebraska line is a good one. It can be counted upon to hold_its own with the forwards of the Hoosiers, Notre Dame may beat Nebraska, but it will be only be- cause of the superiority in its back- field, and with that Cornhusker line fighting for évery inch we don't ex- pect to see Notre Dame run up any overwhelming score. Not content to arouse Mr. Fultz to the boiling point, the big league magnates evidently want to see Davy go into a fit. They are talking of introducing the twelve-month con- tract, thus binding the players’ serv- ices for the entire year. Davy would only have about seventeen hemor- rhages simultaneously if the put the plan over, and we can see where Mr. Adamson will be called upon to save the world from another strike. There is little likelihood that the thajors will cdnsent to the minors’ est for a new scheme of control in base ball. Under the present sys- tem the major} are the “works.” They have their own court of final appeal, and thcfi are not likely to grant the little fellows any power if it is possi- ble. So, for a guess, the minors can Iac:np on making resolutions until both Paris and Berlin fall, and about all they’ll get is the “utmost consid- eration.™ We are pleased to see that the Western league has paid $400 to Jimmy Kane. The Kane case was a peculiar bit of work and Jimmy, it seems, was a victin. He was kept ount of a job, and work like that doesn’t sit weil with the average fan. The Wester'n league made friends by giving Jimmy what he had com- ing to him. The base ball public saw some startling trades last year, but if re- rom now circulating are true it is ikely to see still more startling ones this year. According to the reports every club in the two major leagues except the Giants, Red Sox and Ath- letics are willing to make swaps of players. The National le:fue has decided to overlook John cGraw’s charges against his players. But we have a hunch McGraw won't overlook them, and a couple of big league athletes, for & guess, will be jammed back into the bush before spring. RESTAWINSTITIE | FOR ANOTHER YEAR | Italian Who Oaptured Omaha | Race is Declared Champion 1 Driver of the World. | AITKEN NEXT, RICK THIRD For the second consecutive year Dario Resta has captured the title of champion motor driver of the world. | Datio won the honor by a narrow | margin over Eddie Rickenbacher in | 1915 and this year he led Johnny Aitken by just as narrow a margin. Resta won the championship when he piloted his blue Peugeot into first | place in the Vanderbilt cup race yhile Johnny Aitken broke up in both the Vanderbilt and the grand prix. gohnny would still have a chance to | eat Resta if he would compete iul the Ascot park race Thanksgiving, | but it is the narrowest kind of a | chance, and Johnny didn’t think it | worth while, so he did not enter the | event. | Resta has 4,100 points. Aitken has 3,440. The winner of the Ascot park race will get 700 points. If Aitken should win this race he would raise | his point total to 4,140. But if Resta should earn a place in the Ascot park classic, he would beat Johnny. And as the prize money is not much of an inducement Johnny packed his car and beat it back for Indianapolis. When Johnnny failed to enter at As- cot Resta withdrew, which leaves a rather light field, with only Ricken- bacher and the Mercer drivers, Pullen and Ruckstell, to provide any class. Wins Five Races. One peculiar thing about Resta's victory is that he earned all his points by capturing first places. He was first at Indianapolis, Chicago, Omaha, the second Chicago race and the Van- | derbilt. He did not win a point in any other race, So in every race Resta | finished he finished first. He either | won the race \or broke down enroute. Aitken won four races and finished second in two others. He also pi- loted Howdy Wilcox’s car home in first place in the grand prix, but this was after Wilcox had driven the ma- chine into that position and Howdy got the credit for the race. Rick is Third, Eddie Ricketibachet has third place cinched. Eddie earned 2,210 points and may add a few more at.Ascot park. Eddie was first at New York and Tacoma, second in Chicago's sec- ond race, third at New York's second race and third at Des Moines. Eddie also captuted some more money in races that were not championship events, such as second place in the fifty-mile race in Omaha and first in the fifty-mile race at Des Moines. A prize of $13,500 will be split up between Resta, Aitken and Ricken- bacher for their season's achieve- ments, and Resta will get a trophy cup. Ralph De Palma ranked fourth with 1,790 points and Wilbur D’'Alene was fifth with 1,120. Howdy swept into sixth place by the grand prix victory. His total is 1,080. Earl Cooper is seventh with 995 and Tommy Milton eighth with 690. Baby Pete Hefder- son is ninth with 667 points and Frank Galvin tenth with 645. Class of Omaha. The class of the field in the Omaha classic guly 15 is shown by the re- stilts of the championship race. Of the drivers who finished among the first ten six took part in the Omaha event. Resta, who woti the champion- ship, won the race. Rickenbacher, who was third, took part, as did De Palma, who was fourth, and D'Alene, who was fifth. Tommy Milton, who was eighth, and Baby Pete Hender- sofi, who was ninth, were the other two. Johnny ‘Aitken, Howdy Wilcox, Earl Cooper and Frank Galvin did not race here, Cooper was signed up, but his car wet cuckoo just before the lo- cal classic. This year there were fifteen cham- pionship races held. Next year only eight will be held. The eight speed- ways will only be allowed one cham- pionship race each. This year Chi- cago and Indianapolis held two and New York three. They can hold as many events as they want to, but o}rll)y one will count for the champion- | ship. Ban, Johnson Catches Moose for Cincy Zoo B. B. Johnson, president of the| Americafi league and a former Cin- cinnatian, has contributed a bull| moose to the collection of animals in the Cincinnati zoological gardens. Au-| gust Herrmann, chairman of the Na- tional Base Ball commission and also chairman of the “z00” commission, in announcing the gift, said that some time ago Mr, Johnson prémised to contribute $500 to the zoo fund, but instead spent that amount in captur- ing the bull moose. The moose will be the first specimen of that family | the 260 has had in fifteen years. It was caught in the wooded preserves of the Jerome Hunting and Fishing club near Mercet, Wis. Promoters Notin LoveWith Moran Francis Moran is poised for a ring at the frontispiece of Carl orris, or any other battler of the dreadnought class, but none of the romoters is taking any feverish interest in it. Moran no longer is the drawing card of six or eight tonths ago. That flivver show- ing against Jack Dillon sort of “cooked” him, The Pittsburgher, however, hasn’t forgotten the lesson that fracas taught him. He isn’t in strict training now, but he is in good condition; in such shape that a few weeks of gruelling will put him into tip-top shape. And never again will Moran take any chances of being beaten by walk- ing into a ring conmsiderably over plus in all parts of his frame. |for the Earl Caddock-Mort Hender- Haller, Floyd Paynter. T LINKS WANT NONE OF OMAHK'S GAME Local Gridiron Fans Believe Lincoln Feels it Best to Stay at Home, MAKING ABSURD CLAIMS That Lincoln has a hunch it would be advisable not to play a post-season game with Omaha Central High is the belief of local foot ball enthusi- as! ts. Central challenged Lincoln to a post-season game to be played in Omaha preferably December 9 in or- der to settle the dispute over the state interscholastic ~championship which is now deadlocked because of a tie between the two schools played at Lincoln November 11. Lincoln was offered a guarantee of $150 and Omaha offered to play the 1917 game in Lin- coln, when it is due in Omaha, But Lincoln came back with a de- mand of 50 per cent of the gate re- ceipts. That reply led local fans to venture that Lincoln was just trying to find a way to escape a post-season game without being accused of quitting. The guarantee offer&. 150, is un- usually large for High'school games, and if Lincoln was at all willing to take a second chance with Mulligan’s men, it is believed it would readily agree to it. Lincoln Claims Absurd, Also Lincoln is making some rather absurd claims to the state title, as- serting that an additional four-point margin in Lincoln’s ' victory over Beatrice over Omaha's and a dozen points more on Sioux Falls entitles Lincoln to the honor. Which, to Omaha, and it would seem also to an unbiased judge, is about as ridiculous as a claim the Cornhuskers might make for the Mis- sotiri Valley title on the grounds that Nebraska only lost one game while Kansas, Ames and Missouri all lost one and tied one game, A post-season game between Omaha and iincoln would be a'big attraction. It would bring out a good crowd and would be a boon to Nebraska high school foot ball. Local gridiron fans hope it can be played, but they aren’t very confident. Billy Earle Goes To New Orleansin Style This Time Pa Rourke wasn’t the only repre- | sentative Omaha had at the minor | | league meeting at New Orleans. Far | be it from such. Billy Earle was there, don't forget that. Ever since the minors have been meeting Billy has been an attendant. A minor league meeting without Billy Earle would be like a horse race with- out a bookmaker. Minor league magnates have al- ways known that Billy would be on hand if he had to ride the bumpers or take refuge in a side-door Pull- man. But Billy fooled 'em this time by breezing into New Orleans in grand style on the special train from Chicago. Earle came to Omaha in 1914 for the minor league meeting here. He didn't come on any special train. And he stayed here to toil for Jack Has- kell. As Omaha is a prosperous town, Billy has been prospering and was able to journey to New Orleans in style. Silver Cre& Comin(j to Omaha for Caddock Bout Silver Creek wrestling fans plan to swoop down on Omaha en masse son match at Council Bluffs next Wednesday night. Al Hastings, the big noise in Silver Creek wrestling circles, has purchased ten ringside tickets for his party and informs Dan Reardon that at least 100 will come down for the event. They are all Caddock friends, Notre Dame Eleven to Be Entertained in Omaha The Notre Dame foot ball tearn has been given an invitation to stop over in Omaha aftter the game with Ne- braska at Lincoln Thanksgiviong day, and it is believed the invitation will be accepted, Harold McConnell and C. Langdon are making preparations to row, left to right: entertain the athletes for the Notre Dame alumni in Omaha, A game of golf 1s life itself, with little time for song, Up hill and down with smile or frown you club your way along || CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL GRIDIRON WARRIORS, WHO MADE GREAT RECORD—Bot- tom row, left to right: Arno Harper, Lyman Phillips, Oscar Iversen, Arnold Krogh, Richard Donald Shepherd, John Peterson, Clyde Smith, Eugene Maxwell, “Chuck” Morearty, Owen Comp and Harold Pearson, Myron Hin- chey, right guard, is not in the picture. Creighton Basket Ball Five to Make Long Trip to East Creighton university will make its debut at the sport of basket ball this winter. have a quintet that will be able to hold its own with the fastest in the coun- try despite the fact that it will be a green five. Tommy Mills, be it remembered, is something of a basket ball coach. He turned out good fives at the high | school. And he has some good ma- terial. Dutch Platz, former high school and Brandeis star, will be one of Tommy's floor warriors. Carl Lutes, another high school and crack, is one more. Eddie Mulliolland, end on the foot ball squad, is something of a basket flipper and there are George Parrish and Kenneth Klepser, local cracks of renown. These five athletes are enough to make a first class team and there may be other talent hidden among the university students. A schedule of games is now being arranged. A two weeks' trip on the And Creighton promises to S ——— NEW YORK REARS AN ASPIRANT 0 TITLR Gotham Believes Patsy Cline is Lad to Shear Freddie Welsh of Laurels. IS MAKING GOOD RECORD New YorkE Nov. '18.—Patrick Jo- seph Cline of County Longford, Ire- 'land, and the Bronx, New York, is the latest local aspirant to the light- ‘weight crown that is resting unstead- ily on the. brow of Freddy Welsh. Joe Shugruwe, Benn Leonar Young Brown, Willie Beecher an Johnny Lustig are local boys who have had a crack at Fred's title—but Fred didn’t crack. No doubt “Irish Patsy” will soon have his chance, al- though the event las been delayed. Whifl training for a scehduled bout with Packey Hommey at the Empire Athletic club he broke his hand. This will lay him up for several weeks. Strangely, glew York, despite its immense size, has never produced a world's champion. Terry McGovern road has already been carded. Notre | of Johnstown, Pa., and Brooklyn was Dame, Indiana, Beloit, Drake and sev- | the nearest. However, the old town eral other big schools will be met on|has siways been there with strong this journey. Some big games will | contenders—particularly in the light- also be brought to Omaha played in the new Creighton gym, which has a regulation ¢ourt and room for 3,000 spectators. | Cross-Country and Basket Ball at the “Y” on Turkey Day Big doings are planned for Thanks- giving day at the Young Men’s Chris- tian associatiof. The annual cross-country run will be the feature event. In former years it has been the policy to have this run open to all amateur contestants, but this years the first will be limited strictly to Omaha amateurs, in order to arouse more local interest in the event. The run starts at 11 o'clock. It will be about three miles, At 8:30 in the morning a basket ball tourney will start. A number of | quintets have entered, and Bob Hagar who is in charge of the event, ex- pects an exciting two hours, Caledonians Have Lead In Omaha Soccer League The Caledonians have a lead that they threaten to maintain in the Omaha and District Soccer league. Only two more games are to be played, today and Thanksgiving, and the Caledonians have only lost one game, while the Townsends, closest rivals, have lost two. clevens have won six. of the teams i; aswfollows: Both . L. Dr. F. A Pts. Caledonians . () BN s | AR e | Townsends 6 2 0 24 14 12 Nonparells 3 8 VA8 Chechie .. | SN fever SR B G ) Score of Marksmen Are Entered in Turkey Shoot Over a score of rifle marksmen are entered in, the big turkey shoot which will be held today by the Greater Omaha Rifle and Revolver club on the club’s range at East 200 yards. A choice collection ners. Lunch will be served on the grounds so the shooters can attend prepared to make a day. of it. Mr.Yost Is Just CrazyOverHarley Every time Coach “Hurry Up” Yost sees anything in print about Chuck Harley, the Ohio state mar- vel, it makes him peevish. Harley, who is considered one of the great- est half backs of the year in the big nine conference, was scheduled to go to Michigan, but switched and entered Ohio State. Now the Ohio State team, which is one of the leading fac- tors in the conference champion- || ship, virtually owes its marvelous showing to Harley. Harley, who || is a Chicago lad, has done the miraculous all season. Harley is also a base ball star, ! and only a year ago had an offer from an erican Association team, but turned it down in order to continue college work, their The standing Omaha. Events will be of five targets each at of fowl will be awarded to the prize win- to be | weight division. Leach Cross, Tommy Murphy, K. O. Brown, Benny Yan- ger and “Elbows” MecFads all climbed cjose to the top. Yanger and “Elbows” both knocked out champions—Dbut never while they held a title. Yanger K. O.d Abe Attell | Young Corbett and Harry Forbes, and won oven George Dixon. McFadden knocked out Joe Gans and George La- vigne, K. O. Brown won news; Arer decisiony over Ad Wolgast lndP- be Attell. Leach Cross gave Ritchie a wonderful fight and Tommy Murphy —nearing the end of his career— fought valiently against the youthful Ritchie also. Benny Leonard, catch- ing Welsh out of condition, gave him a bad, scare in their first bntde, but was handled rather easily by the Eng- lishman in their second contest. Knocked Out Mack. “Irish Patsy” Cline has just de- mayided attention by knocking out Allje Mack, the former amateur cham- | pion and one of the best of the local | class, Previous to this the little fel- low had proven himself as fast and clever as any of the boys. He held Benny Leonard to a no-decrston draw 4nd beat the colored phenom, Leo Johnson. He also claims to have had the better of the following men in no-decision and decision matches: K. 0. Mars, Harry Donahue, Bryan Downey, Eddie Morgan, Pal Moore, Johnny Nelson, Buck Fleming, New York Jimmy Duffy and Arrousaz, the Mexican. Cline's only defeat was at the hands of Johnny Kilbane. The featherweight champion knocked him out in three rounds over in Philadelphia some months ago, but that was before he attained his present sensational form. Art Nehf, Boston Hurler, Marries - Indiana Lassie Art Nehf, the Boston Braves' pitcher, married Miss Elizabeth May at her home in Washington, Ind. The bride taught in the Terre Haute schools for the last two years. Coul A L At PUGS ACROSS THE WATER ARE HAPPY American Glove Wielders Are Having an Interesting Time Over in Australia. CLABBY BUYS RACE HORSE Way, way over in Australia, where the boxing game is flourishing under the hand of Snowy Baker, the man who succeeded Hugh Mclntosh as im- presario, the American band of glove wielders is having an interesting time outside as well as in the ring. | Snowy Baker has stadiums in Syd- |ney, Brisbane and Meclbourne, and, naturally, has many fans in all these places. One of his friends, who is a shopkeeper and a rabid boxing fan in S{dney, approached him with a tale of woe recently, “What's the matter?” Baker quired. “Why, some one stole a large ther- mometer [ had placed in front of my store." “Well," replied Baker, “the thief Yl’!!blbly will return it before long, or it won't be of much use to him where he's goinf for 1 understand it registered only 125 degrees.” Jimmy Clabby, the Hammond (Ind.) middleweight, wasn't in Australia long before he learned there was horse racing there, which meant that James just had to string his binoculars over his shoulders, hike to the races, and lace a little bet to make it interest- ng. That was the start, and now Clabby is going so strong on the turf that he is a real horse owner and sports his own colors. The American scrapper purchased the nag a short time ago, but we haven't heard of any wonderful victories by the Clabby one-horse stable. 2 Among other things that Snowy Baker does is get out a weekly book- let coataining news of the boxers, In a recent issue he has something to say about the censoring of news due to the world war, If this censoring business goes much farther, says the booklet, we may expect to see reports ill:“the sporting papers something like this: “Last Saturday at the — Bill —— beat Fatty —— in a twenty-round clash. The former is a native of —— and has gained repeated victories over —— &t ——, In his last contest Against —— he received a kick in the —— which resulted in his beiog car- ried to the —— hospital at —- One of the features of a boxing card recently at the stadium was a blind- fold match, Two glove wielders ap- peared in the ring, were blindfolded, and answered the clang of the gong. in- try pers in the “perfesh” who can’t find their opponents even with their eyes wide open. Of course we have funny things happen in our own rings in coun- try. For instance, at a recent show in Colorado the announcer, a gent with a large voice, actually had the nerve to emit this before a big crowd of fans: “John Sweeney, the local under- taker, wishes to issue a ch;llen:e. He is willing to box anybody, and doesn't care what they weigh.” Johnny Coulon, former bantam- weight champion of the world, recent- ly made a tour of the coast states, contesting in half a dozen bouts. In the various cities they have different laws. For instance, in Los Angeles Johnny found that to box in the four- round bouts it was necessary for him to swear before a judge that he was an amateur. So when it came his turn Coulon had made up his mind that he was going to take a chance on “being an amateur.” He was ordered to raise his right hand skyward, and as he did so he got a peek at the judge, who smiled a knowing look at him. Johnny saw the stuff was off and threw up the sponge right then and there, admit- ting that he was a “pro.”” “Do you know, I think I saw that judge at my contest with Kid Williams, and he was some ringside, too,” Johnny com- mented. Fohl Counts On Gould To be Hurling Mainstay Manager Lee Fohl of the Cleve- land Americans is counting on Albert Gould, a diminutive spitball pitcher, to be one of his leading slabmen next season, Fohl signed Gould before the close of last season after several big league clubs had passed him up be- cause of his size. Gould has plenty of nerve, which is one thing Fohl be- ‘Iievcs will make him a winning pitcher. Another old golfer, If some of the promoters in this coun- ulled this stunt it might be a thing, for we have a few scrap- named 1d take ft or let It alone, t wielding » brassie & wasm't o elasuy— wielding » high ball he shone. ARN PARALYZED RIVAL OF HOPPE jl.eonu-d How'llon_ Regains Use of Member and Is Expected to Give Champion Tussle. WAS USELESS TWO YEARS New York, Nov. 25.-In going over the entry list for the professional handicap billiard tournament for the championship of the world, to be played within the next few months, experts ran across the name of Leon- ard Howison, “They ought to take that name off,” suggested one of the party. “It's not right to make the poor fellow feel badly.” “Take it off?” a member of the committee asked in surprise. “Why, yes; poor Howison's arm has been paralyzed for a year or two." “If you think so," came a rather tart response, “I'll take a little of that 5 to 3 money that he wins the tourna- ment. I saw him play some billiards the other night that was mightly close to Hoppe.” From'a man widely bemoaned as a paralytic to a secondaty favorite for the championship, is quit¢ a jump, and therein hangs a story, one that might make athletes in other lines of endeavor ponder. Bone, . Two or three years ago, while play- ing a match e in Paris with Eouio D'Armon Baratelle, the onestime French cueist, Howison, the Ameri« can favorite, was about to make a daigc:’:l! lb:.t. flHe slid the cue up and down his fingers, preparat to hitting the ball, and then umlly wavered and staggered back from ;l:‘ duble. the cue dropping from his Arm Is Paralyzed. The match was forfeited, and a doc- tor summoned immediately, It was found that Howison's right arm had been ed. . As a professional < buwf'fu?:r. apparently, his career was The arm hang at his side, li d nfleu for mon&h;, but :f'lowm -J‘id no up. rt, after expert, hyag:‘n and fl“::elll‘. were k?'l‘erd, ut it seemed that there would be no relief, It was all the more re- g:mble because Mr. Howison was ginning to show signs of becom- ing an international champion. He has pla; lnccenlul% with Vignaux, Baratelle and other Frenchmen, be- sides the American experts back home, ¢ Arm Shows Life, Finally, in despair, the billiatdist came back to America and consulted specialists here. For months he had not tbou&ht of attempting to use a cue at all. Then one day he found that there was a little life in the arm, He redoubled his cfforts at getting a good masseur, and then, as if by his own efforts, the arm began to . take on real strength. For months he kept at it, and finall: unced to his billiard friends .ia' :flow:rl that he was again, fulng to They were nclined to humor him, but no one seriously thought there was a chance, With the arm coming back slowly, he tackled one amateur after another, and then tried himself out against the shortstops—a good billiard play- er just short of being in the cham- pionship class, but too good for an amateur. After a week of tice Howison took on Tom , Gallagher, anfi buthhim.hl ,50‘;) to zz& i ext he yed a frien match with Ota l&mh\nur, who )illl ticipated in all the championsh tournaments, and Morningstar was amazed at the new form—different from his old style—played by Howi- 7011‘.“ oreover, Morningstar was de- eated. OVERCOAT days arc here. Your health demands an outer garment of quality and weight. The suits and overcoats made by us at $15.00 have put really high-class clothes within the resch of many men. A splendid array of fine suitings and overcoatings from whiech to make your choice. Come and Look Them Over. Corner 15th and Harney Sts. Caddock vs. Henderson Enarl Caddock Mort Headerson 184 Lbe. permitted. Finish Wrestling Match Council Bluffs la., Auditorium, Thanksgiving Eve., Wednesday, Nov. 29, 8:30P. M. e e ——— 200 Lbs. Earl Caddock, the wrestler with a thousand holds, and Mort Henderson of Altoona, Pa., champion of the International Tournament at Madison Garden, where he appeared as the “Masked Marvel.” A draw will not be First-Class Preliminaries. Ladies Invited. Reserved Seats, $1.00 and $1.50. Ringside, $2.00 On sale at Merchants’ Hotel, Omaha, Neb., and Clark’s Drug Store, C. Bluffs. DAN B. REARDON, Promoter. F o L