THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MATCCIT 2(1, 191fi. Howson Lot: Cousin Willie Was Going to Be One of the End Men Copyright. 1P1. Inter national News Service. By F. Opper HEI.L0.4UP6E . OUR LODGE i WWVK A UEKl MMOKTAV-1. PECAB HER OMJvtKP v (7MERE JUD&E S TTi aji i rrr-r i u avaiO I i i tt va & sar a . . a - a . sasss a - i a r sp er i - v - v - . . - - a wtss'ffir; yssESFxs&zrz) frm www-tow.- v (TKb WAY FfeoM P05T04 To MILWAUKEE Vv. TXmwRl I cPV cm A i in-"-'f n nr -w vx t i i i i a r is 'r i r - i i n - rr -i - DIAMOND OUTLOOK AT YALE Despite Ineligibility of Several Vet ertu Proipecti for Successful Tear at Eli Are Good; LE GOES IS ONLY STAB LOST NEW TOR.K, March K. With the open ing games of the Intercollegiate baa ball season only a few daya away It la timely to begin consideration of tha prospects of various college and uni versity nine whose gamea tach year ara followed with Intereat by large num bers of alunml In and about thla city. Tala adherent hardly know what to expect of their nlna. Tha loaa of L Gore, Mllburn, Boston, Rhslt. Way and Pumpelly, all of whom ' war countad upon aa regular for thla year'a team, was a hard blow, and ona which waa regarded aa aaauring eld Ell'a presenos In tha ranka of mediocrity thla eeaaon. As to thla, it would be unwlae to pre dict without qualification that the Blue nine will prove easy prey for the Crim ean and the Orange and Black thla season. la truth. It require no great amount of optlmlstlo aptrlt to regard the Tala outlook In bright. If not vivid colors. Of the Qtioque Ineligible La Oore waa the only real atar. Mllburn waa a good average second bea man, with a batting ' average of .222 for the aeaaon. Rhett was a fair substitute third baseman, and Pumpelly a promising pitcher, who In 1915 had not arrived, whatever he might have done thla year. Easton waa not above average. Taking It all In all. tha great losses, and the losses which will affect Tale If unhappily the aeaaon finds her affected at all will be that of Le Oore and that of Way, who waa Tala'a malnatay la the box In Ita cham pionship gamea at last year. Pitchers who remain at Watroua and tTndarwood. both of whom pitched last year, and Garfield and Grant aa recruits from the freshman line. Watroua was seen working against the Giants as wall aa In other gamea last spring, and he looked extremely good, looked aa though a year'a seasoning would bring him wall up to the front In UK. Frank Qulnby, the former coach, thought well of Un derwood aa a potential boxinan. Aa to tha freshman pitchers little la known. If Watroua escaped tha frown of the Tale faculty for associating- with the New Haven Colonial team last summer and realised the propheriea of those who liked hi work last year, he will do great deal for the Ell. For catchers there are Mudge, Munsrn and Jack Bier it Irth. Blerwlrth, who Is a hockey player, appear to have been overlooked by the base ball mentors at New Haven ; he cer tainly played good ball at Hototiklea school. Buah, at first base, la one of the few remaining regulars, an excellent fielder and offensively a man who made a aeaaon batting record of .S4. He is a thoroughly competent player, with a pro pensity for home-rus) drives. Aslda from Bush the Tale roaches must create a new Infield. Of course, eyes have turned to the frcshmsn 1914 outfit. which presents for varsity consideration a proficient combination of lnfleldere in Pnelt, Fulton, fihlpley and Crotty. In the outfield Vaughn, who played left field last year, la eligible scholastlcally. but physically he la troubled with a weak ankle. It la thought, however, that he wilt be able to play. Loading outfield candidates In addition to this veteran are Armour and Holdon, from the freeh- msn nine, with kludge able to doff hi inaak and chest protector and don the outfielder's glove, and Johnson, who Just a, present Is on ths Visibility gridiron. Ivan Howard Hunts Mountain Lions and Bear in the Winter First Bsaeman Ivan Howard, tha Coast first baseman transferred by 8U Louis to Cleveland, la a big game hunter and every winter goes after bear, deer and mountain Hon on the coast. Tha exercise be gets In thla way Is the rosson why Ivan always reports in good condition In the spring. HOLDS BOXING BOUTS IN CINCY BASE BALL PARK CINCINNATI. O.. March .-Thal the boxing game has taken on renewed Im petus here la evidenced by the fact Mat Redland field, the home of tha Cincin nati Nationals has been contracted for during the months of May, June, July and August, by ona of tha boxing pro moters here. It Is the Intention of the promoter to hold open air bouts during the summer. ONES WILL KEEP GROOM ON BROWN HURLING STAFF Fielder Jones has decided to keep Bob Oroom. although he at first waa plan ning to send the former Washington pitcher te ths minors. Jones evidently figures thst Groom will be the same terror to the Detroit Tigers that he waa when he wore a Washington uniform. SULLIVAN TO SPEND SOME TIME ON GEORGE BOEHLER Billy Sullivan, who 1 with the Detroit Tiger as Instructor of pitchers. Intends to make a atar out of Oeorga Boehter, He haa been with tha Jennings foroee for sev eral years and always haa displayed a lot of stuff, but haa lacked control. Bersrer Traferr4. The Naahvllls club of the Southern league baa transferred Pitcher Heine Iterser to the Oalveatoa cluo of the Texas league. Mark tJete I re a Maa. Frsnk Hart, known In baseball circles aa Carlisle's Iron man. baa Just left Car lisle. J'a.. to loin Connie Mark Athletics, tng season. COCHRAN ROLLS HIGH SCORE Omaha Bowler Comei Near 01110; Perfect Game in Sing-lei. to EMERGES WITH SCORE OF 639 TOLEDO, C, March (Special Tele gram.) Toledo came near Its second 300 game rolled In a national tournament to day, when C. M, Cochran of Omaha ahowed 276 In his last game In the in dividual event of the American Bowling congress tournament. A thin cut In the eighth frame of his final game coat him a chance for the perfect score. Ills earlier games were only 177 and 186, two errors and four railroads spoiling his sheet. He wound up with 63 for tha best Individual rsoord of tha day. Hla all events shows a total of 1,811 for the full route. ' O. W. Toman rolled 623 for tha third highest mark of the day, .the Omaha ex pert starting with an error and than going clean until the middle of the last game, when two errors came together on top of a row of three atrlkes. K. O. Bclpie and C. M. Cochran topped tha work of the Omaba men In the dou bles with Lie), the former getting the only error of the series when he broke In the next to the final frame. Cochran had a clean sheet. A Toman and J. Martin cleaned up 1.130, too many spares holding down the men, who shot steady ten pins. Charles H. Brady, captain of Keyatone No. 1 of Toledo, who bowls with his team tomorrow night, today rolled a perfect score. His three-game total waa 124. with game scores of K0, MS and !7. Ths following were the two-man events of Omsha men today: K. O. Bclpls lffl C. M. Cochran li A. Toman 103 James Martin 17T C. J. Coin .l C. K- Terrell 148 Individual events toaar: 177 C. M. Cochran A. Toman ... J. 2ku'tln .... C. J. Coin ... K. O. Hctple . C. B. Terrell ...wr ...170 ...174 ...If ...107 115 179 X . 1911,10 m 24 K4 lKtl 174 176 17 174-1.0M m T-M mo -.'S 2: ISO 6J 1M til K4 223 ITS IM Ul 17S46Z Fal Cebs Is Baek. Terr Haute will use Paul Oobb, a brother of Tyrus, In Its outfield thla com- YALE STARTSJREW WORK Coach Nickalli Spring Surprise by Patting- Edward Harriman at Stroke on Vanity Eight. CAPTAIN SETH LOWE AT SEVEN N EW HAVEN, Conn., March S.-Tale'a outdoor rowing seaaon has started a fort night later than usual, but with two varsity eights of experience and promise boated by Coach Nickalls. Opening the aeaaon of 1916 as Tale'a varsity eight were the following oarsmen: Stroke. Harriman; No. 7, Low, captain; No. 6, Meyer: No. 6, Sturtevant; No. 4, Sheldon; No. S. Kosltsky; No. t. Gllflllan; bow. Hume: coxswain, McLana. Nickalls, whose wlsardry haa brought Tale two atratght victories over Harvard and wins over Cornell. Princeton and Pennsylvania, all in ona season, has made up hla premier eight for the opening of practice with wholesale changes. Per haps the most unlooked-for was tha trial of Edward Roland Harriman at stroke. Young Harriman was varsity sub stitute two season ago. but lost a year from tha squad because of a hunting ac cident. He rowed bow In tha Tala varsity that last fall raced Columbia, losing when Coombs, No. 7, fainted. He was atroke at the Oroton school and will be retained for the present in that position on the Tale varsity. Ths experiment of using Captain Seth Low at stroke will not be continued at present. He will be used at No, 7. He had slm aye been a starboard oar till he waa tried at stroke lsst fall. In the varsity shell laat year he was seated at No. 3. The veteran Cord Meyer, one of the beat oarsmen of recent year at Yale, la again at No. 1 He waa a atroke during hla preparatory school career and It la still a possibility that he will be ordered to set the pace for the eight. The pres ence of ex-Captain Sturtevant In the shell at No. 6 Is a pleasure to the veteran coach, for Bturtevant la a finished as well as a strong oar. With Jim Sheldon again at No. 4 Nickalls haa been able to retain four oarsmen In the waist of the shell who were together for the last two seasons. This combination Is a trump card for the Yale-eight, which will meet Harvard in June. KoMtzky and Gilfillan were In the boat all last fall. Till then their experience had been confined to freshmen and var sity substitute work. Hume, another substitute oar, has been gtven the bow asnlgnment. With the ex ception of Harriman and Hume the eight gives the appearance of a settled combi nation, and the strong oar pulled by Harriman makes It likely that he will be found In one of the two undecided positions. Lipton's Shamrock Yacht Still Boxed in Brooklyn Yard NCW YORK, Msrch 25. Tho state ment by Sir Thomas Upton that Ho hopes to race his yacht Shamrock IV. for the America's cup next year recalls to mind the fact that the challenger Is still carefully boxed and uider sjuard on the Brooklyn waterfront. .Not for a moment since Shomrock IV. waa hauled Into drydock, covered with canvaa and boxed up late In August. 1914, haa the Lipton yacht been without a guard and caretaker. American yachtsmen know no more about the lines snd construction of the challenger than they did when the sloop appeared off Sandy Hook a few days after the declaration of war. There appears to be little chance that the Shamrock IV. will be uncovered during the coming season. Reports from the other side, however, are to the ef fect that Sir Thomas Is keeping In close touch with American yachtsmen and will put his challenger overboard early In the spring of 1917 if international conditions warrant the belief that the America's cup races can be staged. In the meantime It is expected that both the Resolute snd Vanltie will l,e soon in a few racea thla summer In or der to keep the prospective defenders In shspe for the yachting classic when times are more propitious. HOKUFF TELLS CHICAGO HE CAN THROW STECHER Pill Rill Hokuff Is kidding the boys In Chlcsgo again. Big Bill has Informed the windy city public he will bet $50) Stocher cannot throw him. Stecher eonld throw six like Hokuff In less than noth ing and Hokuff know3, but he's copping off some publicity. Welsh and KilbaHe Defend Their Titles In the Same Arena NEW YORK. Msrch 4. In the same ring here tonight, two world's champions successfully defended their titles. Fred die Welsh, lightweight title holder, scored a technical knockout over Frank Whit ney of Cedar Rapies, la., while Johnriy Kllbane, featherweight champion, de feated Harry Donohue of r'eorla. III. Welsh was the aggressor In the first bout from the start, and by the time the fourth round was reached, Whitney's nose waa bleeding and both eyea were closed, so badly that he was forced to quit. Tna first and fourth rounds of the feather weight bout were even, the other rounds, and especially the alxth, being Kilbane'e. Donohue, In the sixth, opened an old wound over the champion's left eye. With a rush, Kllbane overwhelmed Donohue with rights to the Jaw and the two fell to the floor of the ring. Kllbane on top. Donohue waa down for the count of eight, only to be knocked down again for a count of alx when he struggled to tho ropes and waa aaved by the bell. The next four rounds found Kllbane the ag gressor, but Donohue managed to avoid a knockout. Kllbane weighed 13 and Donohue 154. Kirk with Brewers. Jay Klrke, first baseman of last yesra Cleveland American league baseball team, was signed by the Milwaukee team, Weeden Is Manaarer. Bert Weeden has been elected manager of the Hagerstown club of the Blue Ridge league. Loatsvllle Gete Fed. Adolpho Luque, who has been added to the roster of the Louisville ciud. cured from tha Brooklyn Federals. Nixon Seat Baek. The Brooklyn club haa sent Outfielder Nixon back to the Beaumont club of the Texas league. Breton Won't Report. According to report from Chicago, Jimmy Breton will not report to Salt Lake. AFFAIRS ATJOOTH OMAHA Coroner's Jury Unable to Decide i Who Fatally Stabbed John Murphy. SEVESAI INVOLVED IN THE ROW! Death resultant from knife wounds in-i fllcted by an unknown person, was the1 verdict of a coroner's Jury in tho case' of John Murphy, who died Sunday morn ing a week after being mixed up In a cutting scrape at Thirty-third and Q streets. The investigation of the coroner, lasted more than three hour and a' dosen witnesses twrrrrted on the stand. The best that the coroner oould glean; from the entire affair waa that two' knives were In play during the fight and that two men were wounded prob-" ably by different persons. According to bed, he waa cut by a man who ran1 fifty feet east on Q atreet and then disappeared In the darkness. Testifying! on the witness stand yesterday, Dan Pel-' lee, who received five dangerous- wounds In the sides and chest, said that ha ran In that direction. Pelleo being on of the two men cut could not have hadi anything to do with the cutting of Murphy unless he cut himself. The sffftlf amA tn h,v, u.n .mtlmA to the satisfaction of all, according to the sentiment spread among relatives and friends yesterday. The fight was a gen eral all-round affair: winding up In this case fatal to young Murphy. Made City Oossfa. Office npace for rent In Bee office, KU N street. Terms reasonable. Well known location. Tel. South 27. The play. "I'ncle Joan," riven by mem bers of the West Side Interdenomina tional church at their hall laat evening was largely attended. A committee of the local aerie of Eagles haa been working during the week on a program for the big publlo dance that will be given this evening at the Eagle hall at Twenty-third and N streets. Women of the WVst Side Interdenom inational church will hold a home baking sale at their church hall at Thirty-eighth and Q streets this afternoon from 1 to 4 o'clock. William Zander of Malvern. Ia. dis posed of an excellent consignment of hogs raised on hi home farm near Malvern at a sale price of $9.46 per 100 pounds. The hogs were the beat quality seen In stock at the yarda In daya. ALL MANAGERS SELECTED FOR WESTERN ASSOCIATION OKLAHOMA CITY. ' Ofcia.. March . For some time the place as manager of some of the teams ia the Western asso tlation has beea uncertain, but recently the teams announced their pilots for the lilS season as follows: Oklahoma City. Karl Snapp: Muskogee. "Heinle" Maag; McAleater, James Humphries; Paria, John Killman; Sherman. Walter Fraals; Tulsa. Howard Pries, and Forth Smith, a. Thomas. UMPIRE-BAITERS DE TROP ON THE CLEVELAND CLUB There'll V a umpire-baiting by the In dUaa this season. Manager Tobl will stand for ns senseless kicking. When an umpire is believed to have booted one the playera will be expected te enter a kick, bat he doesn't intend that they shall stand around Ban Johnson's hired aad enter lute a ioog-wtndsd argument, i. m m sTSaaw. a w. m a TmT I Maltless Alcoholfree A rannew evera MANN few G EVERAtf JatUJ tma las fa-ha Beverage Co. 0sAHA,Mg.tASHA Making an entirely new and novel Beverage from the choicest Ameri can cereals, without malt, without fermentation, without sugar, not brewed, containing no alcohol, being tax-free; not a "beer," "near beer" or "temperance beer," with a flavor and taste of its own and being in a class of its own. For sale at all drug stores, hotels, restaurants, soda foun tains and soft drink establishments. . Omaha Beverage Company 6002 to 6016 South 30th Street South Side Station OMAHA, NEB Phone South 1267 Family Trade Supplied by WILLIAM JETTER 2502 N Street Phone Dourlaa 4231