The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 21, 1912, Image 6

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    ONE OF WISCONSIN’S BEST END PLAYERS j
Cspt. Jcsepn Hoeffe'.
! ff •: raj s. r.f ' • *» rr.iversitv of Wisconsin football
wjij * . .da! u 1 | si*., n d irir.s his high school days at Green
Ha? ... i raian- nt fixtar" at left-end since his fresh
tfcai . it ■ :.<»» a s. ...or a: 1 re: sidered one of the most reliable
■-••e sa the • am a deadl> tackier, and fast in getting down the field.
“KECXIE- MOLL IN COMMAND
Farmer Wisconsin Star Succeeds Mar
q_ t F. Morr as FootbalS Ccacb at
Purdue—Tearr Neglected.
A bomb was eiplod-d ia the Purdue
football camp. when the board of di
rectors of the University Athletic
■MoriaUon dismissed Marquis F Horr.
'ooUm.1I coach, from his posit:or. and
tamed the coaching of the Boliermak- j
■e squad oter »e Coach Reekie" Moll,
who has charge of the bock field only, j
Uroritr G. Dunlap, an instructor in the ;
university, who has been coaching the
freshmen, was appointed varsity line
The action of the directors, white it
nar ttifiBtisrd. was not entirely
lariprrtai, for »t was generally re
-Kwtkse" Moll.
ported that an Investigation was being
made of the conduct of < oai h ilorr
with a view to either disciplining him
or releasing him from Purdue's em
ploy * Improper conduct" is the lan
guage used by the directors in its re
port ordering the dismissal of Horr. j
It Is charged that he has so conducted
him seif as to make his future connec
tion with the university undesirable.
Perdue's poor showing when every
body expected a championship team,
led to the drastl- action The ac
tion it Hi declared, is in no sense re
taliatory. neither Is H due to a desire
for punishment for inefficiency. The
directors feel that the football squad,
owing to Coach Horrs misconduct,
has been neglected
Conch Horr came to Purdue from
Northwestern a year before last He
bad preilowly achiev d fame as a
player on the Sycamore university
eleven. b**irg selected as all-American
tackle two consecutive years. He
went to the Olympic games several
year* ago and was a star in the weight
events.
Sweden Lost Money on Olympics.
The promoters of the recent Olym
pic gam-s in Stockholm lost $243,004.
The Income from the stadium, includ
ing season tickets, was about $270,004.
On the dsy of th>* marathon. $22.78$
was taken tn at the gate and adding j
to ’his the season tickets for that day.
tb* total receipts was $34,128. which j
U the largest *um ever taken in
Sw«-den for a public affair The Swed |
tsh gave-iiment will make up the de- I
•dL
. .. 11 1 "
Marvelous Sw.mming Record.
Peter John Newell, the aged Samoan '
swimmer, mho for more than twenty
years held the record for long distance
and endurance swims, broke his own
record by remaining 37 hours and 12
minutes in the water without support
of any kind and without partaking of
food Newell's great feat was accom
plished on his. sixty-eighth birthday
anniversary.
Carpentier Is Handy Guy.
Carpentier is a mighty handy guy
for American fighters to have hanging
sround Paris. They take turns going
over there and making a name for
themselves by whipping him. but they
never meet each other.
Will Train American Invaders.
Patrick J. Cahill, of Chicago, has
been selected as trainer of the United
States Gaelic football team, which will
invade Europe for a series of games.
If the present plans are carried out
the team will sail next July.
SCANDAL IN ENGLISH RUGBY
Many Devonshire Players Receive
Compensation for Lost Time in
Addition to Expenses.
English Rugby football is faced with
a scandal which may lead to a wider
breach in the ffnglish Rugby Union as
that which caused the formation of the
Northern Union In the nineties
Rugby is ostensibly a purely
amateur game in England in distinc
tion to the association game, which is
played largely by professional teams.
Recently the Northern Union ad
herents invaded Devonshire and at
tempted to recruit players from the
existing Rugby clubs. This campaign
led to the exposure of the fact that
mane of ' he Devonshire players were
receiving cc mpensation for time lost
from work in addition to their ex
penses while playing with their teams.
This practice is open among the teams
of the Northern Union, which has re
vised the Rugby rules until the form it
plays .5 i strenuous that professional
players are necessary for a success
ful team.
Some of the Devonshire players who
have been suspended for negotiating
with th*- Northern Union invaders
state tha* the payment for lost time is
ger-ral in the Rugby Union, and they
declare that they will expose the sys
tem at the investigation which has
been ordered by the governing com
mittee of the union.
Thi scandal comes at a particularly
inoppor: me time, as the Sout* Afri
can Springboks have recently com
menced a tcur of the Rugby Union.
England is particularly anxious to
present an unbroken front to the in
vaders in order to wipe out the in
broken series of defeats which the
last South African team inflicted on
the English fifteens several years ago.
During that tour the South Africans
i suffered only one reverse, and that
was at the hands of the Scottish
Unit n. The present invadors declare
that they will return home with a
clean score, and they are determined
to show the Scots that their victory
was a fiuke.
What is your candid opinion of a
newspaper that spells center fielder
“centre fielder?"
It is said that McGraw. Dooin and
Clarke would like to obtain John Kling
if Boston is through with him.
The Boston Braves are to have a
new manager, a new secretary and
several new players next season.
Eppa Rixey. Philly star pitcher, has
returned to the University cf Virginia
and is playing on the basket-ball team.
Ty Cobb announces he may quit
baseball. This may be the first heat
in Cobb's dash for that $15,000 salary
demand.
Postponing a boxing match for two
weeks on account of bike races shows
Boston still remembers the middle
ages of sport.
Harry Abies. Texas southpaw, once
with Birmingham. Won a mess of
games for Oakland of the Pacific coast
league this year.
dark Griffith, after one year on the
job as manager at Washington, had
j his salary raised from $7,000 to $10,
! 'KH> without a fight.
Carpentier, former French title hold
er. renounced his claim to the title.
! Being hit by a thunderbolt Is an ex
j perience one does not wish to have
I repeated. ,
This year's football rules, while
practically unchanged, are, as usual,
expected to make the game safer.
And equally a3 usual will probably fail
; to do so.
i Boxing is still thriving at St. Louis
j and they're getting the game so well
! regulated there now that the promo
ters feel safe in risking their money
on some of the topnotchers.
Charley Carr, who has been man
ager at Kansas City for some time,
says he knows nothing of the report
that Kling will be boss there next
season.
Plank, Benton, McCormick and
Shafer, It is said, are the only Import
ant players who are not enrolled in
the baseball players’ protective asso
ciation.
Boys of the Holyoke high school
have organized a genuine ping-pong
team, and have Issued challenges to
high schools' In that part of Massachu
setts.
FOOTBALL IS AN OLD GAME
Muhlenberg College Team Told of It*
Ancient Origin—Flayed at Least
as Early as 750 B. C.
In the small hours, at the close of
the banquet given by Allentown grid
iron enthusiasts to the Muhlenberg
football team, the players got together
and elected George Blxler of Easton as
captain for next year, to succeed Sav
acool. who will graduate in June.
Bixler has been playing right end and
his fleet legs and his punting ability
were responsible for more than one
victory this year.
The feature of the banquet was the
address of Professor Reese, the fac
ulty member of the Athletic associa
tion. who presented the letter and
sweaters. Professor Reese declared
that football i6 the oldest game, and
the one with the widest vogue through
all the world's history. He quoted i
Scripture to show that the game was
played at least as early as 750 B. C.,
during Homer's time, and among the
Spartans in Greece; then later in
Rome, and finally being introduced in
America in 1608. The Eskimos and
the South Sea islanders play the game, j
In 1315 Edward II. of England issued
a decree abolishing the game, as did
also later sovereigns of England. Dur- i
ing the reign of Augustus in Rome he
ordered the rules of the game re
vised because the game at the time j
was considered too mild. "Shake- j
speare, Chaucer. Addison, Izaak Wal
ton. Cooper and others all advocated 1
football," continued Professor Reese,
"showing that thinking men of their
time thought well of the game, the
same as thinking men of today think !
and speak well of it. The so-called
new game or new method of playing '
the game is nothing but an evolution
of the old. and is not new at all. Its
long-continued uninterrupted history
shows that it is a game of great vital
ity, making of its players fine physical
specimens and inoculating in them
not only true sportsmanship, but man
liness as well.”
There is rejoicing in Allentown
over news from Easton that Lafayette
has put Muhlenberg on its football
schedule for next year.
CAPTAIN PENDLETON
C UUKRVOOO a UKBtR«OOD
Pendleton Is About the Strongest
Member of Princeton's Great Back
Field, and Is Always Counted On
for Frequent Gains Against Its Op
ponents.
FULTZ IS HEAD OF PLAYERS
Former Major League Star Elected i
President of New Organization—
Other Officers Selected.
Directors of the baseball players'
fraternity elected David L. Fultz, the i
former big league star, president or !
the organization at a meeting in j
York the other day. Other officers 1
were chosen and the plans on which
the organization is to be conducted
outlined. Every club in the National
and American leagues was represented
except the two Boston clubs and Cleve
land. The officers elected are:
Vice Presidents—Christy Mathew
eon, Edward Sweeney, Michael Doolan
and Tyrus Cobb.
Secretary—Jacob Daubert.
No treasurer was elected. It was
announced the fraternity will not ap
ply for representation on the national
commission. Resolutions were adopted
requesting the national commission
to invest umpires with authority to
eject from ball grounds any spectator
who abuses a player during a game
and declaring that the fraternity was
unalterably opposed to all forms of
contract violation, all acts of rowdyisip
on or off the field, and all acts of any
nature whatever committed that may
have a tendency to impair a player’s
ability.
_
Marty Krug in Bad.
Marty Krug, member of the new
world’s champions, finds his dark past
bobbing up to bother him. Dayton of
the Central league claims he is still
on its suspended list for jumping the
team, but It is a little late with its
complaint. Krug played under the
name of Craig with Dayton and then
went to the South Atlantic, taking
the name of Krug. He was allowed to
continue in the game by Dayton with
out protest
Liverpool Opens Public Golf Course
Llverpool’s first munclipal golf links
have been thrown open to the public.
The green fee is sixpence per round
of 16 holes, and this applies to all
comer*.
&rounO
& MARGARET E. SANGSTERa:
PUMPKINS) FOP. THANKSGIVING
GATHERING THE. CRANBERRHc
HE household year, like the
year of the nation, has its
red-letter days and its joy
ous anniversaries. Around
Thanksgiving the sweetest
associations of the home
and the tenderest memo-'
ries of the nation meet
and cluster. Do you ever
stop to think how new- this
country is? Should you go to Rome
you would find more old walls and
monuments and buildings that have
been standing for centuries, and still
testify to the past splendor of the
once imperial city. Crossing the At
lantic and setting foot on the shores
of England, the past greets you on
every hand. You are immediately
made aware that our friends across
the water are living among old tradi
tions. while in their ceremonials, as
when a king was crowned with his
queen at his side, they are keeping
up the customs and recalling the gran
deur that have been theirs for a thou
sand years.
Over here, in comparison with other
nations on the globs, we are still in
our childhood and can hardly be said
to have more than reached the begin
ning of our maturity. Yet we have
eight million people, and we jostle
when we walk on the street people |
who have sought us from the far east, ]
from the islands of the ocean, from
northern and southern Europe, and.
Indeed, from everywhere beneath the
sun. To my mind there is something
wonderful and significant and heart
stirring in the thought that a man of :
our choice in Washington in the I
White House presides as our chief ex- J
ecutive over our vast territory and !
our migh-iy mass of citizens. He sends |
out word in November, and lo! the |
whole commonwealth listens and
obeys. By one consent Americans,
native-born and adopted into our
ranks from abroad, cease from busi
ness, observe a holiday and thank
God on the last Thursday of Novem
ber. Everyone does not go to
church, but the churches are open.
There are services, there is exquisite
music and eloquent sermons are
preached, and the nation is thus up
lifted to a higher plane, and there is
an obvious reminder that we owe
thanks to our Creator and praise to
our Father in heaven.
Another charming feature of this
peculiarly popular and wholly Amer
ican holiday Is the assembling of fam
ilies around the Thanksgiving dinner
table. Again look back, not over a
thousand years, but over very nearly
three hundred, and you will see how
significant was the origin of this
annual jubilee. In 1621 Governor
Bradford of Massachusetts issued a
proclamation to the little colony set
ting apart a day of Thanksgiving for
the first in-gathering harvests. Should
you ever go to Plymouth, Mass., and
stroll through the old graveyard there,
tears would spring to your eyes even
now when you saw by the records on
tne stones that Death was very busy
in reaping the first harvest of life in
New England. These hardy pioneers
who came to our bleak Atlantic coast
that they might have freedom to wor
ship God as they chose, were made of
stuff too strong to be daunted by
illness, want, famine or death. The
attacks of hostile Indians in the night
did not turn them from their purpose
of Eettling in the new country, and
women and men alike were heroic in
their scorn of peril and their determin
ation to snatch success from apparent
defeat. The first harvest was scanty,
but they assembled in church and
thanked God for It, and in their homes
they sat down to the best dinner they
could provide. The wild turkey fur
nished the meat for the feast This
PREPARING TURKEY* FOR MARKET
American bird is always the piece
de resistance at a Thanksgiving din
ner. The domestic bird retains some
traits of primitive wildness and. as
every farmer's wife knows, is prone
to wander away, and travels, by pref
erence, In a flock.
Still looking back, we discover that
after 1621 other colonies followed the
example of Massachusetts. After the
Revolution the governors of various
sta' i issued proclamations as Gov
ernor Bradford had done. But it was
not until 1S63 that the day became na
tional. It was then that the president
proclaimed a genera! thanksgiving,
and this good custom has been fol
lowed until the present year.
The old homestead is the rallying
place for Its sons and daughters, if
they have been scattered far afield In
pursuit of business or pleasure. They
make an effort to return to the loved
ones there and no triumph of a Paris
ian chef or art of the finest cookery
has quite the taste of mother's pump
kin pie. Thanksgiving dinners mav
be eaten in hotels and boarding
houses and on shipboard by enthusi
astic Americans, and in city homes
where cousins, aunts and uncles shake
hands and sit together at the meal
but they are best when they are given
beneath the roof where once the chil
dren played.
In comparison with that first har
'est and that first Thanksgiving, let
us glance, shall we say, at the mar
kets of America in 1911. Fruits have
been gathered from the orchards of
Oregon. Michigan. California. Connec
ticut, Florida, and from too many lo
calities and states for enumeration
here. Think of the peaches, grapes
apples, plums, cherries, pears, or
anges and bananas that the great
country produces. We are learning
how to assist nature by scientific proc
esses In farming so that annually our
orchards and vineyards are compet
ing with our mines of coal, silver and
copper as sources of wealth. Our
grains, wheat, oats, rye, rice and In
dian corn yield us enough to feed our
own people and replenish the exhaus
tion of other lands. When the crops
are abundant there Is rejoicing from
coast to coast. The farmers ha'e
many things to contend with. Some
times there is a plague of grasshop
pers or of locusts, sometimes there Is
drought, and again there are floods,
but, on the whole, from year's end to
year's end, the soli gives back In Di
vine multiplication the seed which the
human hand has sown. We cannot sit
down at the simplest Thanksgiving din
ner without seeing upon it contribu
tions from every section of our big re
public.
As women and girls are the tfue
homemakers. It Is well for them to
take a sincere and intelligent inter
est ‘n the affairs of their country. Men
seldom rise higher in ; odness. frank
ness and patriotism than the women
whose influence over them tends to
purity, bravery and truth. We ought
to care about the politics of our coun
try. When we thank God for peace,
wo ought to be additionally grateful
that the menace of war has been
swept out of sight by the wise lead
ership in our councils of . state. When
we thank God for schools and for free
dom of speech and an untrammeled
press and good hooks that are as
plentiful as autumn leaves, we should
again remind ourselves and the chil
dren around us that we owe these
tokens of advanced civilization to our
republican government and to the
goodness and guardian care of Je
hovah. who has given us "dominion
over palm and pine.”
Another word may be In order.
Why should w e compress our Thanks
giving Into one day? Why not be
thankful all the time for the little
things as for the great ones, and
most of all for the dear ones of
hearth and home?
Home Influence Upon Child
- *
Thought From Jane Addams Which
Demonstrates Its Lasting Effect
Is Worth Consideration.
A mother croons an old-time song as
she toils. A father speaks kindly as
home from work he crosses the j
threshold which leads to wife and rest
from labor. The child—the stepping
stone between mother and father, the
connecting link—hears both song and
gentle word.
The father, still toil stained, wheth
er he comes from field or shop, stoops
to kiss the mother, also toil stained.
He speaks softly, mayhap:
“Howdy, sweetheart; glad to be
home again."
She turns a sweat-marked face up
to his, in farmhouse or tenement, and
answers:
“I’m glad to have you home.”
Of all this the child is the witness.
Things of the world are yet new and
strange to it Mysteries still confront
it. Guiding stars it is searching for,
and lo, in the very greetings of mother
and father, in their own loving atti
tude toward each other, this unde
veloped life finds a star.
Such is the influence of environ
ment of two personalities—that of
father and mother—upon the ques- i
tioning child, blood of their blood and j
flesh of their flesh. Haw powerful,
how everlasting, when between moth
er and father, patience, self-considera
tion, forbearance and forgiving are
always kept uppermost in the mind'.
If, on the other hand, the child must
3ee in daily home life impatience, self
ishness; hear hasty or angry words,
from those whom it knows long before
it understands the law of city, county,
state, or nation, what contempt must
naturally grow in its heart for those
things that make for the best of life—
law and order, gentleness of speech,
regard and love for others, trustful
ness and hopefulness
The personal home environment of
a child has much to do with its
future 6tate of mind as to respect for
work, law and humanity.
Advice to Alpine Climbers.
In the earlier part of the nineteenth
century many even of those who had
been up Alpine peaks themselves de
nounced the sport. Regarding the as
cent of Mount Blanc. Murray's Hand
book in the year 1838 stated that “all
who have succeeded have advised no
one to attempt it," and nearly 20
years later noted the "remarkable
fact that a large proportion of those
who have made this ascent have been
persons of unsound mind."
KEEPING DOWN HUMAN SUPPLY
For some time the doctors have
been skirmishing about the idea of
creating life artificially. Life remarks.
The latest reports from Europe in
dicate that this is now an assured
fact and the manufacture of life will
doubtless soon be placed upon a com
mercial basis.
We cannot but regard this as a
great calamity. The tariff, the In
crease in gold and many other causes
have been assigned. The real cause,
however, Is that there are too many
people. There is an overproduction
in human beings. Until we can cut
this down we shall be increasingly
embarrassed by the cost of living
Instead of adding to the possibility
of creating life, therefore, we should
seek some means to curtail it. Be
sides, everybody that is born now
wants to be of some consequence.
Every man would be king and every !
woman cueen.
I'nless we can keep down the total
supply of human beings there is trou
ble ahead.
Wearing Out His Thatch.
"1 notice that the gentleman who is !
now walking on his head for our
edification Is.slightly bald."
“No wonder. Walking on ode's
head must be more discouraging to ’
the growth of hair than all the dand
ruff microbes in existence.”
HOW HE LANDED THE FISH
Expert Angler Saw Situation and With
True Genius Seized the Op
portunity.
“Bob Esam stood six feet six to his
socks, lived In the mountains of West
Virginia and kept a pack of 40
hounds," said a New York angler.
“He was not only a mighty hunter,
but an expert and resourceful fisher
man.
“While he was out on the back
prong of Glady with a party of tourists
they noticed the trout leaping out of
the water after a reddish fly, and not
one of them had any fishing tackle.
While searching in his pockets for
tackle Esam discovered a rubber band
around a wallet. He removed it and
cut it so that he had a piece of elastic
about, six inches long.
“He then cut a small strip from
his red flannel shirt about the size of
the fly the trout were rising for and
tied it to one end of the elastic. The
other end he attached to a pole which
he drove into the bank of the stream, !
s^ that the red flannel bait hung out I
over and about a foot above the wa
ter This done he got back behind a
tree where the trout could not see him
"Presently a trout rose to that flau
nel decoy, grabbed it, and to his aston
lshment its teeth became entangled
in the flannel and he was flipped out
on the bank—and that thing kept flip
ping trout out until there were none
left in that pool, but there were, so
Bob said, 69 on the bank by actual
count.”—New. York Sun.
~ A
In New York.
First Prison Official—We’ll have to
6top giving permits to people to go In
and see the prisoners.
Second Prison Official—Why so?
First Prison Official—Too much con
fusion. They keep getting in the way
of the fellows who are escaping.—
Puck.
JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE.
I took about 6 boxes of Dodds Kid
ney Pills for Heart Trouble from
which I had suffered for 5 years. I
had dizzy spells, my eyes puffed.
Judge Miller.
my breath was
short and I had
chills and back
ache. I took the
pills aboat a year
ago and have had
no return of the
palpitations. Am
now 63 years old.
able to do lots of
manual labor, am
well and hearty and weigh about
200 pounds. 1 feel very grateful that
I found Dodds Kidney Pills and you
may publish this letter if you wish. I
am serving my third term as Probate
Judge of Gray Co. Yours truly.
PHILIP MILLER. Cimarron. Kan.
Correspond with Judge Miller about
this wonderful remedy.
Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co..
Buffalo. X. Y. Write for Household
Hints, also music of National Anthem
(English and German words) and re
cipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free.
| Adv. _
The more the trusts want the less
the common people get.
LEWIS’ Single Binder, straight 5c—many
smokers prefer them to 10c cigars Adv.
Truth is stranger than fiction, and
equally dangerous.
YOU’RE “All
to the Good”
when the appetite is
keen and your diges
tion perfect;
bat what a difference
when the stomach “goes
back” on you, when the
liver becomes lazy and
the bowels clogged. In
such cases you need
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
right away. It really does
the work. All Druggists.
I Pays Cash for Furs
I I Kt Want Tea Mna Dotin’ Worth of Fora
Funstea Brea.« Co. 464 Fontaa BM*_ St Look, Mo.
It Wins
its taay by service
L G. Smith & Bros.
Typewriter
(Ball Bearing—Long Wearing)
In buying a typewriter you want a
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What Wilt it do for met
How Well Will it do itt
HoW long will it do itt
By answering these queries with the
needs of the typewriter owner and user
in mind. theL-C. Smith & Bros-Type
wnter Company has attained the front
rank in the typewriter held.
Some people thiak that a tt+ewriter n»ty+~
tcrieer and that is atl there a to it. Machines
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The Dew Model Fne it hoi sot only foe
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at all points when friction de
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I
WlmoMtih tit importunity to *Jt yon
Writt for frot looi of tor Mr KoStJFrto.
L. C. SMITH & BROS.
TYPEWRITER CO.
HadOWcr Demote ud Fwrign Bm
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