TMK'.'HciE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, APRIL 11. 1919. SHAG THOMPSON JOINS RANKS OF HOURKES ON HAND Entire Team Pulling Jor Owner to Put Over Association Deal Even If It Means They Will . 1 Have to Leave Omaha. Starting last Monday, the Rourkcs ball club began dragging, in until now nearly all the players are on hand. . Shag Thompson arrived yes terday morning, giving Manager Ja'ckson a full outfield. The rainy weather has prevented the. team from working on the field for the ; last couple of days, out they Have .been; tossing the , pill under the grandstand and their arms are pret- - ty well loosened up. Bill expects to have a linup of regulars to oppose ; the Armours, whom they meet in . their first practice game Sunday. When Bill Jackson first landed in town he promised that he would furnish Omaha with a hitting ball ; club, and, judging from the early ' work of the bunch on hand, he will 1 do it Every one of the boys, even the pitchers, are laying on the ball right heartily, and they smack it to all corners of the old ball yard. Mack. Btshang, Donica and Thomp son haven't had a chance to get any batting practice yet, but they are all noted clouters, and the rest of the bunch show signs of being heavy clubbers. The fielding, even at this early date, is pretty nearly perfect. There are few niisplays made by the infielders. . "... t r ,V New Infielders. The two hew infielders, Cable and ' Xranda, gobble up everything that 1 Cdmes within any reasonable dis tance .of them, and when they get their fingers arotfhd a ball it doesn't get away from them until they throw it. Their throwing thus far has been par excellent. Jackson, at fitst, hasn't had to move a step to get any of their throws. Cable slaps the pill down on them at second after Corderman or Hale make the r throws to catch base stealers. Both ' catchers get the ball away quick and it lands just at the right height when it reaches Cable at second. Army, Navy and Civilian Boxing Control Board Faces Difficult Problem , ' . : By JACK VEIOCK, International News Sports Editor. New York, April 10. The newly formed army, navy and civilian board of boxing control has appar ently bitten off too big an assign ment, j True, the board is parading an im posing arrajj of sponsors, from Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood on down the line to a number of well known college presidents. Yet just how the board hopes to acqtfire control of the fistic game is difficult to fathom. ' , i Apparently, those who were re sponsible for the formation figured that the lining up of a number of . leaders in army, navy and civilian life was all that was necessary to ' put it across, and there is not the shadow of a doubt that its purposes are to be lauded and that its aims will work for the good of the game. But the sponsors of the new cr - ganization pulled a palpable boner' when they attempted to wish them . selves into power as the dictators of nation-wide boxing'without tak ing the active men in the game into consideration. No one man can be pointed to as the maker of boxing in this or any other country. The game is so old . that in tracing its origin into the hazy past there is plenty of room for argument over who was original ly responsible for its inception. In the United States there are hundreds of men who keep boxing ' to the fore as a major sport,1 and they all act independently of one another. The closest tie that bindi the many active participants in the game together is the code set down : by Lord Queensberry, which is uni versally accepted. , For this reason the new boxing board apparently has a tough row to hoe; for aside from the apparent . futility in attempting to dictate to . individual boxers, let alone the hun dreds of promoters and managers who run their own business affairs and spend their own money, not a single boxer or manager and not a promoter has been called into the ' council of the board. Having organized and obtained a charter under the laws of the state cf New York, the board will have to go out and try its hand at lining up the numerous clubs, athletic organ izations, promoters and the boxers themselves. Its work as an organ ization is only begun, and it may succeed. ' Stockholders of Toledo Club Clear Difficulties Toledo, O., April 1X Difficulties of the Toledo American association controversy of stockholders were ar ranged Wednesday and players were ordered to report here at once for training. President Hickey of the American association, who has been here, no tified all other A. A. club owners that the Toledo club is all set for the race. , Roger Bresnahan wifl remain as manager of the team. A new club v president will be elected. Owner Rourke of the local West ern league club has been angling for the Toledo franchise, but now that the owners have settled matters, Omaha must do without an A. A. V club at least another year. v Cubs Win Easy Game. Phoenix, Ariz., April 10. The Chicago Cubs on their training tour had no difficulty winning from the f Great War Veterans Base Ball team , here today, 7 to 2. A capacity crowd saw the game, in which Vice Presi dent Thomas R. Marshall pitched the first ball, which Governor Campbell failed to catch. The Cubs left tonight for Tuscon, where they arc scheduled to play tomorrow. INDOOR SPORTS "P.KaJs I'LL. OE OuT Of TUG A-N in (0 DHS TO ftfvmC B OiiNOS IN TH W"JP Office wii-v- GeRyjn Sport . By KID many local' friends of Earl Peryear, the Denver bantamweight, will be pleased to hear that in a 10-round bout at Peoria, 111., the other night, he shaded Jack Wolfe, Jimmy Dunn's Cleveland title con tender. Most of the reports sent out were to the effect that the bout was a good draw but a Bee corre spondent at the ringisde wired that Peryear was clearly entitled to the :-hade. Wolfe has been making great strides in the bantam class in" the past year and getting the better of him, Peryear has put him self in demand all over the coun try. Earl is a fast, clever kid, with a reasonably good wallop. The Omaha Western leaguers held a fanning bee in the lobby of the Rome hotel Wednesday evening. Various plays and players were dis cussed but the main topic was the proposal of Pa Rourke to take over an American association franchise if he could get it. The players won dered where the Western league club would be placed. Some of them said they'd like to play in Lin i i NEXT ONE OVER BULLSHEVIKI IN SPORTS. ' WHOOZUS, Conn.: The quoit situation in Whoozis threatens to shake America to its Rockefeller foundations. A couple of for eign looking lobbs blew into town and were easily spotted by Mayor Gipp, who was elected to his high and dizzy office by reason of having tossed seven straight ringers. Len Finn says he ain't so sure about that high part of the office, but he's certain about the dizzy business. Anyway, these two slicker looking guys look up Lem, who is hard to find since the Riggs house bar has been turned into a soda sanitarium. Lem ain't been much in favor since councils hired him at $2 per diem to keep the hawks away from the mayor's chicken roost. It turned out later that the chickens would have been safer if Lem hadn't beert hired to watch the hawks. . These two guys must have found Lem, because that night at the , semi centennial meeting of the Whoozus Quoit and Chewing Tobacco asso ciation, Lem got up and threw a nimble quid of tobacco at the mayor. The mayor is used to that, but what made him sorer than a wholesale distiller was that Lem had borrowed the chew from him. There are marks of Lem's false teeth on every plug of chewing tobacco in town. We don't mind lending Lem a chew of tobacco, only the sucker cheats on you. First he shows you just how much he is going to bite off and then he controls his false teeth and moves 'em forward when he's biting. This enables him to bite off twice as much territory as a guy with sta tonary teeth. Another thing what makes it so tough is that councils voted an appro priation for Lem's teeth after he lost his in the mayor's eating house on a municipal steak that was more municipal than steak. It don't do any good to hold your thumb on the plug when Lem is biting off a chew un less you want to write with a limp for the rest of your life. , Quoit Soviet Gum the Parade. There wasn't any reason for Lem tossing the quid at the mayor, but Lem claims you don't have to give reasons in Whoozus because there ain't any reason for being there in the first place. The mayor was right in, the middle of his usual speech about what the present mayor has done for Whoozus and how quoits have prospered under the democratic ad ministration. The mayor was urging a consolidation of the Quoit Pageant and the Whoozus welcome to the returning Home Guards, who will return home just as soon as the turnkey gets careless. They got into some kind of trouble up at Ruttville while guarding the Ruttville brewery when things looked blackest on the western front. Anyway, they guarded the brewery like Lem looked after the chickens. Then they went downtown and started kicking Fords around. Lem hollered that they ought to have the two parades separate to give their high hats a chance to cool off. The city councils voted an ap propriation for those kind of high hats that you pull on over debries. They're shaped like wastebaskets, and the derby makes the rim for them. They look funny if a guy happens to be wearing a brown or a pearl derby, which -was what Lem was hinting at. , Then -the two out-of-towners who were egging Lem on started to make a buzzing sound with their mouths. They called it giving the mayor the Grand Buzzer. It sounds like on of those no-rim cut, over size tires blowing out, and it made the mayor sore. This put the parade on the blink. It turned out later that the slicker looking birds were a couple of suffleboard manufacturers whawere trying to ruin the grand old game of quoits, which doesn't require any equipment except a couple of shoes off a dead horse and two spikes off a dead railroad, like the kind that used to run through Whoozus. Lem Ungrateful. These two-quoit bullshevikis hired Lem to pour soup on the parade, and Lem sure slipped the mayor the kiss of Judas, only being in the sixth row from the platform he did it with a quid of tobacco. The mayor was' considerable peeved about the whole thing and labels it ungratefulness on Lem's part, considering that Lem's only visible means of support is his profits from watching the hawks and a pair of crutches that were voted to him by city councils. . There is some talk about the mayor calling an extra session of coun cils to pass an amendment to the Lem Finn crutch bill to repeal Lem's crutches. However, Lem's friends in councils are practicing the grand buzzer with their mouths and there promises to be some fun, as some of them claim the mayor wears shoes that are eight sizes too big for him and that was how he was elected to his high and dizzy office. There used to be so much inching up over the line in the quoit page ants that the mayor passed a bill for all- contestants to stand with their heels on the line. Then he bought his big shoes and inches up inside of his boots. That's how he threw those seven ringers right during a dead lock in the balloting. - Nobody knew how he did it, as his boots didn't move a bit and he was getting "closer to the spike every toss. Lem Finn .figured it out on his cuffs which he got by mistake from the Chinee laundryman just before he was interned under the Whoozus enemy alien-bill that carried the rider for Lem's false teeth. Copyright. 1918, Intern"! WM 1 l mm wjmmmm 'r :. : YiV. V A rj) v--. , ,rC Y Shorts GRAVES. coln, others favored towns further south, while three or four of them were in hopes that Prexy Pa would keep both teams right here in Oma ha. It was the consensus of opinion that an A. A club would be suc cessful here and many seemed to think that an American association club and a Western league dub could be operated in Omaha with no great difficulty. They seemed to think that .an inter-league cham pionship series would be . staged right here in Omaha if the A. A. club was strong enough to win the double A. ' pennant, never doubting their ability to garner the Western rag. . . , ... . -. ' -.' i i The oldest of the Shelton farmer boys, John Pesek, , has two matches booked for next week. Monday night he will meet Herold Christen son in' a' finislr match at Sioux City, la. He will jump back to one of the Nebraska , towns on Wednesday night for a finish go with Julius Reif, who lays claim to the heavy weight championship of Kansas. After these matches, husky John w Drawn for News Service. will continue training in expecta tion of a match with Wladek Zbyszko at Gordon, Neb. The busi ness men of that hustling little town have offered Zibby $6,000 to meet Pesek. The same offer was made to Stecher and Lewis, but no response was made by either of these two, so now they are trying to get the big Pole. .. The manager of the Pesek boys announced ,that he would like to match Charley against Jack Rey nolds, the welterweight champion, when the latter makes his trip through this stale and he will wager $1,000 or as much more as the cham pion cares to post, that Charley can beat ' him. Vernon Breedlove says he wants another crack at Reynolds and he will bet some money that he can pin Reynolds, despite the differ ence in their weights. Ray Wood wants a crack at Jack, so it looks like he would have a merry old time if he should come around this neck of the woods for a few matches. 1 I The Bee by Tad With all these fellows wanting a crack at the welter king, Al Fiori, Bluffs promoter offers to guarantee Reynolds six matches in the Council Bluffs auditorium, providing he wins each of them. Every time Jack wins a match another one will be booked for him to take place within two weeks until he has had six matches. One week from Tuesday, Charley Pesek will get a return match with Adam Kreiger of Lincoln at York, Neb. Some time ago, Kreiger was awarded the match on the referee's hasty decision after each had won a fall. This time, the Pesek people declare there will be no room for any decision but one, declaring Charley the winner. The "little old man" of the local wrestling fraternity, Jack, Tolliver, slipped and fell a week ago, throw ing his left shoulder out of place causing him to cancel his engage ment to meet Erwin Carroll at Lin coln this week. Jack thinks his SLATTERY WILL MATCH PESEK WITHUONDES Manager of Shelton Farmer Boy Willing to Take on any of the Best of Big Fellows. Mart Slattery, manager of the Shelton farmer boy wrestlers, John and Charley Pesek, promised a few days ago to write sn answer to Gene "Melady's offer to staee a match between John Pesek and Jim Londes but saia when he 'would start a letter, he'd get so mad about it that he'd tear the letter up. He waited until he came down to Omaha with the wrestling brothers when Charley met Barney Bum ham in the Council Bluffs audi torium and wrote the letter in his room at the Paxton hotel and de livered it personally. It is self-explanatory and is herewith given: "To the Sporting Editor of the Bee: Had a proposition to make in regard to a match between John Pesek and Jim Londes, but will not make it at this time as I see by the sport sheet of the Bee that Clarence Eklund is after Londes hot and heavy. I personally know that Ek luud has been trying to get a match with Londas for the last three years and as I sincerely believe they would make a great match, do not wish to do anything , that might prevent them from getting together and settling their controversy of long standing. "Gordon, Nebraska, a little sand--hill town with perhaps 1,000 popula tion, has offered a $10,000 purse for a match 1 between Fesek and Zbyszko. They have picked out Zibby for this match, because at the present time he appears to be the best man in the country, at least dur ing Earl Craddock's absence abroad. "I have already accepted the terms for Pesek and I told the Gordon cat tlemen who are trying to stage the show, that if Zbyszko did not feel that it would be worth while for him to come out and wrestle on a percentage basis, that Pesek would wrestle him, winner take all. This shoulder will be as good as ever in a few weeks, but it is doubtful that he will be quite as good as formerly, for he will favor that bum shoulder a little every time he goes in the ring, detracting from his usual bril liant mat work. THOUSANDS of ton GMC Trucks in all kinds of work are performing constantly and dependably. Merchants, department stores, contractors, market gardeners and dairy farmers Railroads, telephone and express companies, big corporations all find this ton GMC adapted tojtheir needs. Cities are using them in all branches of work fire, police and health departments. ' . The Government uses -them for mail service; the army for ambulances and transporting Merchants in small cities need them for their speed, power and ability to climb grades, for' making long trips into the country under all road conditions. In ail phases of activity the ton GMC is a capable, all-purpose truck. Its pneumatic tires give it easy riding, longer truck life, its simplicity of structure reduces repairs, permits easy adjustments. It gives that dependability of service making for the consist ent month-in, month-out performance which shortly pays back its original cost Let us give you facts and figures on what the ton GMC is doing in actual service; let us prove to you what it can do for your business. GMC Trucks are built in six sizes 34-1-1 V2 an 5 ton capacity. Nebraska Buick Auto Co. OMAHA LINCOLN SIOUX CITY Factory Pontiac, Michigan goes to show that John is not pick ing the easy ones. J "I understand that Earl Caddock will be back in the states in the near future and that he will defend his title against any man in the world. Will he wrestle John Pesek? If so, I'll post $1,500 and Pesek will wres tle, winner take all. Caddock and Pesek are of about the same weight, both fast as lightning; know the game from A to izzard and undoubt edly would make the greatest wrest ling match of all time. "It's up to Mr. Melady; let's giv6 the public a real run for their money, l'esek is ready. , "MART SLATTERY." Exhibition Base Ball Games. Spartanbug, S. C, April 10. R. H. K. Xbw York Nationals ....4 8 0 Boston Americans 1(1 Batterlfs: Rnrne, O. Smith' and K. Smith; .Toff. 8ha, McNeil and Walters. Tulsa. Ok!.. April 10. K. H. E. Cincinnati Nationals 8 14 0 Tult-a Westi-rn l-eauuo 0 10 2 Battsrlfn: Oerner, Luquo and Karlden; Allen, Salisbury, .Sparks and llanlon. JarkHonvlllp, Flu. April 10. R. H. E. rtrooklyn Notional 8 T 0 .Now York Anii-rlcuns t S 1' Batteries: Trade, Cheney and Kruoger, Qulnn. Shore and Ruel. Houston, Tex., April 10. R, H. K . IS 8 .4 10 1 : Harris. Chicago Americans Houston, Texas League Batteries: Jnbertson and T.yn'n Oanltner and Myatt (10 Innings). LANP The final test of a hat is wearing it. Who ever wore a Lanpher till it wore out knows how long the best hat ct will last. -J H 3 f ' - V. (t49 Merz and Donica Show Up for Pre-Season Work Out, Already t in Form Two more Rourke players; Ottc' Merz and Harry Donica, blew into town Wednesday night and reported to Manager Jackson and Pa Rourke that they were ready for the pre season workouts. Both players looked to be in good form physically and each said he anticipated no great trouble , in rounding into playing condition with a couple of days work. They will throw the ball around with the bal ance of the team under the grand stand at Rourke park today. The infield is too wet for any play on it. Today's Calendar of Sports. Raring: Winter meeting of Cuba-American Joekey club, at Havana. Spring meetlnr of Business Man's Rac ing association at Hot Springs, Ark. Hprlng meeting' of Southern Maryland Agricultural association at Bowie, Mr. Athletic! Central A. A. V. Indoor track and field championship at Chicago. . Boxing; Fred Dyer vs. Jock Mnlone, 10 rounds, at Milwaukee. Pal Moore vs. Fekln Kid Herman, ' 10 rounds, at Racine. -- Morris lug vs. Eddie flnkmaa, 4 rounds, at Neattle. R ATS 1