Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 28, 1919, Image 41

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Kabibble Kabaret
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VMMY -THE ly.MPvNBC "CHE UftK OV.1
BASE BALL, GOLF, BOXING
WRESTLING, SHOOTING, TENNIS
' ' ' 1 v '- ' ' .f ' ,
OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 28, 1919.
5 D
All the Latest Sport Hews
All the Time
r 3
! -
TIGERS STAGE
RALLY IN TENTH
AND DEFEAT SOX
Yeach Triples m Extra Inning
and Scores on Following
Single Sox Regu-1 '
' , lars Best.
Chicago, Sept. 27. Detroit staged
tenth-inning rafly today and de
feated Chicago, 7 to S, in a game
featured with free hitting. Veach
opened the tenth with a triple and
ut Detroit ahead by scoring on
Heilman's single. A sacrifice and
singles clinched the game. Man
iger Gleason gave -most of his
regulars a rest. Score: -
. " R.H.B.
Detroit .....t 0 1 Tj 0 3 0 0 0 2 7 13 0
Chicago .... 811000000 513 0
Batteries: Ehmke. Love and Alnsmlth;
Noyes, Mayer and Lynn, Schalk.
Indiana Win Easily.
Cleveland, Sept, 2T. Cleveland ' won
easily from fit. Louis today, 11 to 3, bunch
ing hits off Wright In the third and
fourth. Uhla won his tenth game of the
eason. He was presented with a gold
watch. Score: K. H. E.
St. Louis ....0000101 10 J U 0
Cleveland ...00360020 11 14 1
Batteries: Wright. Van Gilder and Bil
lings; Uhle and Thomas. , ,. .
Senators Win Two. ,
Washington, Sept. 27. Washington won
both games of a double-header with Bos
ton today, Russell being charged with both'
'defeats. Ruth's drive over the right field
wall in tho first game was his twenty
ninth home run of the season and one of
the longest hits aver made on the local
grounds. Scores: -
First game: ; R. II. E.
Boston ........ 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 6 6 0
Washington ...0 0080001 7 11 0
Batteries: Russotl, Hoyt and Walters;
'Jordan, Erickson and Agnew.
Second game: , R. H. E.
Boston 0 0 0 0 9 1 0 0 01 S 0
Washington ....0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 4 1
Batteries: Russell and Sctvang; Courtney
, ind Agnew. ,
Tanka Win Two. , i
Philadelphia, Sept. 27. New" York won
Doth games today from Philadelphia, 4
to 1 and 9 to 2. In the second game
Shawkey equalled the late Rube Wad
dell's strike-out record, fanning IS bats
men In the first eight Innings. Griffin,
who got four hits and a pass, was the
only man who could fathom his curves.
Wlngo fanned four times. New York
bunched hits on Kinney in the first game
and won handily. Scores:
. First game: i R.H.E.
New York .... 0 1000102 0 4 s 0
Philadelphia .1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 1
Batteries: Quinn and Ruelf, Kinney
and. J. Walker. . w a
Second game: 1 ' - R.H.E.
New Yorlt . .'. .1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 9 12 2
Philadelphia ,.0 1000000 1 2 7 2
Batteries: Shawkey and Ruel; Martin,
Eckert, and Styles.
Notre Dame Backf ield
Especially Strong,
With'Dutch' Bergeman
Notre, Dame, ind., Sept. 27.
(Special.) A number of references
have" been made by tiewspaperists
and others to the effect that while
foot ball players who have returned
from the front may have faced the
barrages abounding there without
flinching, they nevertheless have
another proposition when ' Dutch"
Bergeman of the Notre Dame back
field bangs into the line. v. '
That's what several of Coach
Rockne's men admitted as j they
groped their way back to the show
ers after the second scrimmage of
the season staged between varsity
squads. Bergeman's uncanny abil
ity in picking holes was the pre
dominating ; feature of the scrim
mage. .Time and time again he
wiggled and squirmed "like human
gelatin before the outstretched
hands of his opponents pinned him
to the , ground.
The result of the conflict was a
scoreless tie. X. Coach Miller of the
freshman squad will have Jiis athr
'letes in condition to battle the var
sity Monday afternoon and there
after they will furnish the opposi
tion. . ; ',
Lack of driving power was the
chief criticism Coach Rockne had
to offer. - He was enthused, how-
ever, over the progress his squad
has made the past week. 'The first
. contest of the season ,is that with
Kalamazoo here next .Saturday.
South High Alumni Is
Too Much for Packers;
Score Is 30 to 0
The sight of five Cornhusker uni
' forms garbing so many of Coach
Schulte's crack freshmen ar the Uni
versity of Nebraska, : proved too
much for Coach Jimmic Patton's
? fightin? South High school proteges
l yesterday. The annual game with
- the alumni was lost, 3Q,to 0.,
' Short quarters availed nothing.
The deduction of the gigantic B.
Nixan, one of the most powerful Ne
bras a freshmen in many years, from
the line availed little more.;' '
Jimmio Etter, quarterback of three
years fame, scored three touch
. downs, Wallace Banner, who was a
; sensation as a halfback hereabouts in
5 the two years past; one more, and
Capilite ,a veteran center, "made" by
, Patton, another. Only the shortness
of the periods kept the grads from
scoring more. . .
Rhiley Wins Race. , . (
North Platte, Neeb., Sept 27.
(Special Telegram.) King 'Rhiley
of Oshkosh romped "away with all
the prize money in the auto races
of Lincoln county fair Saturday.
He set a new record by making
a mile in 1:05. He won every
race in which he was entered. f
Ice Skater Dies.
Milwaukee, Sept. 27. Charles
Fisher, nationally known ice skat
ing champion, died today. He was
35 -years old and prominent as a
skater for the past 16 years.
An English automobile builder
who . specializes on colonial trade
enclosed his magnetos and carbu
reters in water tight compartments
.and tests his cars by running them
through .water,
Jrnm The
IfiortindMfaf
m " :
1 V
M M I
This is the tale of a taxi trip of
three fighters and a sport writer.
It is all fact, of the most amusing
kind. - The trip started in a taxicab
and wound up on a freight train.
Recently-a hurry call for an ath
letic program for a soldiers' home
coming celebration came in. The
sport writer was hired to referee the
events arid secure the talent. He
was instructed to get a pair of re
turned soldiers for a boxing bout.
He did. Two ex-soldier colored
boxers, heavyweights, were booked.
One of them backed out at the last
minute. v,.
. Too late to catch the morning
train, the matchmaker hunted all
over the stock yards, in a heavy
rain, for another' scrapper. , He was J
unable to get the man he wanted,
but hired a pair of lightweights and
hustled them to the railroad station
in a taxicab, late in the afternoon,
neither of them stopping for togs..
Hired Another Taxi.
Arriving at the station, one of the
original heavyweights met thera and
climbed aboard the train with them.
Arriving in the town, another taxi
was hired to take them to the fair
grounds. The grounds were, desert
ed and the taxi drived was ordered
to take them to the committee chair
man. ' An hour's hunt and he was
fecated. The boys had run out of
cash and the leader had to get a
check cashed so they could eat.
The taxi driver was waiting, all
this "time for his money, but he
didn't get it, yet. He accepted an
other (fare' while the scrappers and
the manager went to a restaurant
While they were eating, the taxi
driver c"ame in and was instructed to
wait at his regular stand until they
had fixed things with the chairman
of the committee.
Matters were adjusted and the
boys had their expenses paid, even
though they did not perform (the
celebration had been postponed on
account of the rain). ,. A train to
Lincoln left at 11:35 that night, and
they rode it, arriving in the state
capital too late to catch a train for
Omaha that would get the boxers
home in time to get to work in the
morning.
Travel on Stock Train.
, A stock train,, leaving at 1:30
o'clock, was bejng wade; up in the
Lincoln yards. The four, scrappers
and manager, jumped the train and
rode behind an oil tank until out of
the Lincoln yards. They climbed a
box car behind the oil tank and rode
there until the train stopped in Ash
land. ' i
v From "Ashland, the now disgusted
quartette, rode -on the front of the
oil tank, with a hog car in front of
them as a wind break, as far as Ral
ston. The stock train was held up
in Ralston for a half hour and the
motley1 crowd of fighters climbed
down to stretch their legs and shiver
on the ground. When the train again
continued its way, they climbed back
and rode into the Omaha stock yards
at 4 a. in. in time, for work.
Some Trip.
That was some taxi trip. Started
in a taxi, rode a cushion one way,
another taxi, another cushioned
train and then taxi-ed home on a
freight train, with the odor of hogs
permeating the air around them.
For information as to the identity
of the riders, ask the Sports Editor,
of The Bee, Eddie Gillen or Jimmy
Drexel. They will tell how Jack
Thormlon, the colored army boxing
instructor, .trembled whenever a
lantern light showed within a block
of him.
Marsh Made a Mistake.
Recently Joe Marsh, manager of
Marin Plestina, the giant wrestler
whom all the big fellows are appar
ently afraid of, wrote a letter to the
sport editor of The Bee. In this
letter he accused Jim Londos, the
Greek champion,' of agreeing to lay
down to John Pesek. Marsh has
made a serious mistake in this. The
writer knows for a fact that Londos
has long, been after a return bout
with Pesek and4that he really thinks
he can beat the Shelton.man, and
that he will be on the mat on Oc
tober 2 with blood in his eye. .,
Plestina's challenges have gone
unheeded for a long Jime, but not
long ago tyart Mattery promised
some Omaha friends that he would
sign Plestina as soon after he could
get a match with Earl Caddock or
Joe Stecher, as anyone could wish.'
Since none of the other big fellows
would meet Plestina, Mart could not
see why he should be picked to send
his man against some one the others
feared, until he. too, had made his
man a top-notcher.
, . Made Poor Showing.
Only' a few short years ago, Ples
tina appeared in Omaha and made a
very poor showing. Omaha mat fol
lowers do not forget such things
very quickly, and they will have to
be shown that Plestina is the man
he now claims to be.'
It is very likely that they will soon
get the chance to have this shown
them, for a one-time conqueror of
Plestina wants to meet him again.
Charley Peters, now sheriff of Sarpy
county, once defeated Plestina, and
he . feels that he can dp it again.
Whenever his duties as sheriff will
permit him to take the time to once
more get in proper condition, he will
be ready and willing to take Ples
tina on. .
American Association.
At Kansas City First game: R. H. E.
Columbus 1 13 t
Kansas City 10 12 4
Batteries: Sherman and Stumpt; Evans
and Lalonge. .
Second game; R. H. E.
Columbus 0 7 0
Kansas City .12 19 0
Batteries: uanovlc, Pecos and Wagner;
Johnson and Lalonge, Monroe.
At Minneapolis , R. H. E.
Louisville S 10 0
Minneapolis .- 4 13 2
BattsrlHs: Tlncup and Meyers; Roberson
and Ow ensi
, At Milwaukee -, R. H. E.
Indianapolis .,10 1) S
Milwaukee 6 IS I
Batteries: Cavet and Henllne; Northrop
and Marshall.
At St. Paul, Minn. ' R. H. E.
Toledo 0 1 0
St Paul ; 4 g 2
Batteries: Brady and Kelly; Foster and
McMenemy. i , .
ft )
f i
HEAVY HITTING
BY CHAMPIONS
DEFEATS CUBS
Reds Bunch Hits in two In
nings Which, Coupled With'
; Two Walks and Errors,
Give Them Game.
Cincinnati, Sept. 27. The Na
tional league champions again de
feated Chicago today by heavy hit
ting in two innings. Four hits were
bunched off Martin in the fifth for
two runs and four more hits came
with two walks and two errors in the
seventh, yielding four runs. Before
the game George Wright of Boston,
Cal McVey of San Francisco and
Oak Taylor of Atlanta, the three sur
viving members of the famous Reds
of 1869, appeared on the field and
tossed the ball ' around. They are
here for the world series as the
guests of the local Chamber of Com
merce. - ,"
, Score: , R, H. E.
Chicago '. ..0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 I 0 i
Cincinnati 10002040 '7 11 2
Batteries: Martin and O'Farrell; Rue
ther, Bressler and Allen.
Braves Swamps Dodgers. .
' Boston, Sept. 27. The major league
season here closed with a Boston victory
over Brooklyn, 14 to 6. The players did
not take the game seriously and the home
team made 17 hits and Brooklyn seven,
four of the latter for extra bases. Score:
! R H E
Brooklyn ...00020012 1 6' 7 4
Boston 0 3060150 14 17 4
Mamaux and Krueger; McQuillan, De
maree and Gwdy.
Giants Blank Phils.
New York, Sept. 27. The New York
Giants won an easy victory over the Phil
adelphia tail enders today, 6 to 0. Neff's
pitching and hitting featured. Ths two
clubs will finish the season with a double
header tomorrow: . '
Philadelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 4
New York .. 1 1012100 6110
Hogg anch Adams; Nehf and Snyder.
1 Cards Down Pirates.
St. Louis, Sept. 27. St. Louis made It
two straight by defeating Pittsburgh to
day, 6 to 3. The first three Pirates at
bat scored three runs on four hits off
iyierdel, but the locals came back in their
half of the first and scored four when
Schultz, Smith and Stock singled' and
Hornsby cleared the bases with a home
run. Score: R.H.E,
Pittsburgh ....3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 S 12 0
St. Louis 40000010 x 5 10 1
Batteries: Cooper and Schmidt; Sher
dej arid Goodwin, demons.
Results and Standings
National League.
- Won Lost Pet,
Cincinnati 9
New York 86
Chicago 74
Pittsburgh 70
Brooklyn 67
Boston 67
St. Louis f.4
Philadelphia 47
Yesterday's Results.
Cincinnati, 7; Chicago. 4.
New York, 6; Philadelphia, 0.
Boston, 14: Brooklyn, 6.
. St. Louis. 6; Pittsburgh, 3.
Games Today.
Chicago at Cincinnati.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis.
43
63
66
f.9
71
82
82
86
American League.
Won Lost Pet.
Chicago 88 01 633
Cleveland 84 64 609
New York .., 79 69 672
Detroit 79 CO 660
St. Louis . . 66 70 485
Boston 66 81 409
Washington 63 84 487
Philadelphia 36 103 259
Yesterday's Results.
Detroit, 7; Chicago, 6.
Cleveland, 11; St. Louis, 3.
Washington. 7-4; Boston, 5-1.
New York, 4-9; Philadelphia, 1-
Gaines Today.
Detroit at Chicago.
St. Louis at Cleveland.
Boston at Washington.
' AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
' ' Won. Lost,
St. Paul 95
Kansas City 83
Indianapolis 84
Louisvilhe , 82
Columbus 69
Minneapolis 70
Toledo 67
Milwaukee 6?
Yesterday's Results,
Columbus, 7-0; Kansas City,
Indianapolis, 10; Milwaukee,
St. Paul, 4; Toledo, 0.
Minneapolis, 4; Louisville, 3
68
64
67
67
80
80
89
92
10-12.
6,
Pet.
.621
.565
.556
.550
.463
.467
-.390
.383
Many Professional Grid
Teams Being Organized
New York, Sept. 27. Professional
foot ball elevens are being organ
ized in many centers in the west.
Canton and Massillon, O., the pion
eers in the professional game, al
ready have signed their players.
Cleveland and Moline are the latest
additions to the professional ranks,
and it is possible that next season
will see the realization of the major
foot ball league idea, which was
broached just before the war.. The
proposition was to organize .profes
sional elevens, in all the major league
cities and to play the games in the
ball parks under the supervision of
the owners of the base ball teams.
While it is doubted whether New
York, with so much high class col
lege foot ball offered in this sec
tion, would take to professional
contests they ought to be very suc
cessful in the west
"WO
ll If
WlTU"DlWS"DAEft
IN the old days the shimmy was still known as malaria, man was weak
and drink was raging. Now drink is weak and man is raging. In
those days there was a big stone fringe around Wall street to keep
Injun commuters out. They ought to put that wall back again to keep the
bonds messengers in. . v
Since Woody has been gypsying through the west, over 1,000,000
washers in Liberty bonds have evaporated. One 14-year-old, cerise
cheeked messenger nicked a ten-thou bond and elop);d with a chorus flap
per. This is a record for the track. Another bird faded away with
enough thousand-dollar bonds to paper a room." After having lived
straight all his life, one 7-year-old kid did a Houdini with $50,000 worth
of chorus plasters. Trusting a messenger boy with Liberty bonds is just
like sending a cabbage leaf by a rabbit . - V V :
v - - v : ;' r...
, Kids nowadays collect Liberty bonds like the old-time kids used to
hoard cigarette cards. Where we played marbles with trbllers, moonies
and agates, they now play with square marbles with spots on 'em.
There used to be some reason for saving cigarette cards with pic
tures of Lillian! Rusell, Pauline Hall or some member of the Black Crook
company on 'em. They were worth 'their weight in scrap' iron. You
could always trade Edna Wallace Hopper for a gob of partly chewed
licorice wood. Delia Fox was quoted at par in fishing circles and was
good for a minnow that would live five minutes out of water with rea
sonable care. Which is the only place where the bureau of engraving
has shown any judgment. The bonds would disappear much faster if
they had chickens on 'em instead of eagles. 4
Any kid who parted his hair in the daytime was staked to the old
Dutch rub. Now, a kid's head is all part and ;no head. Where an old
fashioned kid would be robbing freight cars or swiping lead pipe, a now
adays kid is learning to dance. No winder the modern boys go wrong.
Where an old-time tad would chase Mohawks almost as far west as
Jersey City, a new-fangled kid crowds his little sister off the chair when
he hears a mouse squeaking. If a leaf falls off a tree, he runs into the
house. ' 1 -
When it came to running errands, the old-timer was honest. You
could trust him with a bottle of quinine, a package of hairpins or a pound
of powdered camphor. But a Wall street messenger is somethin else
again, as the old lady said when she crubbed the canary and found that
it was a sparrow. -
You can trust a bond messenger just about as far as a dead horse can
run. The lads think they call 'em Liberty bonds because you can take
liberties with 'em. ' v-.
CANDIDATES FOR
CREIGIITON GRID
TEAM LOOK GOOD
Trio of Quarters Battling for
Position and a Pair; of
Centers Have an In- V
r teresting Battle. .
With the arrival last week of
"Mike" Driscoll, quarterback for
Montana State University eleyerr for
two years and all-Western quarter-;
back m 1917, Tommy Mills faces an
acute problem in the selection of a
quarterback for his 1919, squad.
J. Clifford Long, the greatest quar
terback evtr turned out at the local
school and "Mickey" Harmon, who
as part of Mills great 1918 back field
dazzled Creighton ,. fans with v .his
team-management . will 1 vie with
Driscoll for the position of quarter,
back., v ' '
Harmon was quarterback for the
Blue and White last 'tear. His ac
quaintance with Mills methods and(
the work of Leahy, Mulholland,
Condon, Manley and Moonan, the
remainder of (Mills' wrecking crew
backfield, coupled with his ability to
return punts, makes him a real con
tender for the pilot position. "
The greatest array of backfield
material ever gathered under Blue
and White banners is now practic
ing nightly at Creighton. Gene
Leahy's line-smashing and end runs
have made him known at Creighton
as a peer in gridiron circles. Leahy
is fullback and will probably do the
punting.
"Tank" Manley, Eddie Mulholland
and Jimmie Condon, who alternated
last year at halfback positions, are
all lined up this year for foot ball.
Frank Lucas, another of last year's
backfield men, is trying out this year
for an end. v
Cy Lynch, captain and star quar
terback of the Cyote eleven last
season, 'is also trying for an ;end.
"Spec" Campbell and Turk Logan
are other .candidate for the ends.
Bill Nemzek, last year's star
tackle, is sure of a job at tackle this
year. Ole Paulsen, tackle of the
Great Lakes eleven last year, will
probably make the other tackle.
Tom Cavatiatigh, former Dubuque
college guard and sn all-Iowa star,
is pretty sure of a guard position.
Mike Healy and Charlie Little,
members' of the' 1918 Vjuad, are
other aspirants to guard positions.
Brox and Bentlage Contenders. I
Johnnie Broz, Mills' scrappy cen
ter of last year, who was known as
the lightest college -foot ball center
in the country, and Bentlage, former
Dubuque star, are contending for
the center position.
Bentlage weighs about 185, while
Broz weighs 138. But Broz makes
up in fight what he lacks in .weight.
When Mills selected Broz last year
from a bouquet of beef to take the
position of center, Creighton fans
looked dubiously on the selection.
When Broz locked horns with 200-J
pound opponents he displayed
ability that won him a narne
Creighton and the fans looked- ' 1
ferently on Mills'choice.. v
Ted Riddel!, former end for the
state university, is " coaching the
line, while Mills is v directing his
efforts td the work of the back
field. The high school team will
face the varsity in scrimmages this
week and - on Saturday the Fort
Omaha eleven" will appear for a
practice game. --
Welter Mat Champion to
Witness PeseR-Londos Match
Jack -r, Reynolds, welterweight
champion of the world, writes from
Denver, Colo., to Jack Lewis that he
will be in Omaha Thursday. Jack
is returning to his home in Cedar
Rapids frflm Denver, and when he
heard John Pesek and Jim Londos
are to wrestle here Thursday he im
mediately decided to stop off and see
the match.
"That will be the greatest wrest
ling match ever held in ,this coun
try and I don't bar the.Gotch-Hack-enschmidt
match or the ..Stecher
Caddock match when I make this
assertion," wrote Reynolds. "Be
lieves me, I wouldn't miss H for a
huttdred-dollaor note." ,
nnnfiF tip.frs
UUWUk llVft-IIV) ;.M
WITH STECHER
HERE THIS P. f.l.
Ex-Champion 1 Wrestler's Ball
Team Plays Armours 3
' ;at Rourke
- " Park.
-IT:
5 -
, Joe Stecher will be in town with .
his famous team of balf tossers, th :."
Dodge Tigers, today,' when the. ;
clash with the Armours at( Rourk ,
park iru-a double-header. - 1
It be a good chance for every .
bo" 'o see the ex-champion wrestle.
4 .ie takes a very active par il
".: ball game, being manager, an i
first baseman of his team, whift rs
Brother Anton covers secdnd base1
Joe has been engaged in base ball
all summer as this is one of his pel
diversions to keep in physical trim
He has won at least three games for
the boys with his mighty bat , ?
Joe says if they don't ?. beat : th
Armours two games they are not
doing anything. ' A- large following
of fans from Dodge county are ex
pected down to attend the games
The club leaves Dodge at 6 a. m
Sunday via automobiles. ' '
Popular prices will prevail at these ,,
games ana everybody will have '
good opportunity to look the ex- -champion
over as he will soon b
engaged in sortie big mat matches
probably taking on Pecek and sev.
eral others. - s
The Armours are in fine trim aftet
the St. Louis series and with Dyck
Graves and Franek they ought t
make a good showing. . .' , ,
First game called at 2 p. m.
1'
II
i
ml
t
Valger Wins.
Cleveland. Sept. 27 Bennjf VatV
ger of New York won the newspa
per decision overyMay: Brook of vi
Cleveland" in a 10-round bout last"
night.
With the Bowlers.
Union Pacific League.
Team Standing.
W L Pet.
Valuation Dept. v 6 1 833
Nebraska Division 6 1 833
Car Records 4 2 667
Division Engineers 4 - 3 667
Supt. Transportation 3 .3 - 600
Passenger Accts 3 i 4 333
Jllsc. Accts 1 5 167
Shops 0 6 000
f
Omaha Grain Exchange League.
Won Lost
Alber Commission Co.
Nye Schneider Fowler Co. . .
Maney Milling Co.
Updike Grain Co.
Omaha Elevator Co.
Hynes Klevator Co 1 .
Rothschild Grain Co
M. C. Peters Mill Co.
Famam League.
Team Standing.
- W
Auto Delivery 8 .
Farnam Alleys 7
Willys Lights 7
Mina Taylors 6
McCaffery Motor Co 4
Baker Ice Mach. Co., office 2
Betsy Ross Salesmen 2
Baker Ice Mach. Co. Shps. 0
Ladies Metropolitan League.
Team Standings.
. . W L
A. B. Sweet Shop 3 0
Omaha Printing Co 3 0
Payne Inv. Co 2 1
Omaha Towel Supply Co... 1 2
Union Outfitting Co 0 3
Bowen Furniture Co 0 3
Individual High Game,
Aver.
1000
' 778
778
667
. 444
223
. 323
000
Pet.
lonn
1000
667
333
000
000
Mullck
Individual
Mullck .
Individual
Tlllson .
High Total, Mrs.
High Total,
Mrs. -Frank
190
Frank
.... 478
Mrs. J. W.
478
Foot Ball Results
Hanover, N. H., Sept. 27. Dartmouth,
40; Springfield, 0.
Providence, R. I., Sept. 27. Brown, 27;
Rhode Island State. 0. : .
Amherst. Mass., Sept. 27. Amherst, 8;
Bowdoln, 0.
Philadelphia, Sept. 27. Pennsylvania,
16; Bucknell, 0. . , -
West Point, N. Y., Sept. 27. Army, 14;
Middlebury, 0.
Morgantown, i W. Va Sept. 27. West
Virginia, 61; Marietta, o.
South Bethlehem. Pa., Sept. 27. Leigh,
67: Villa Nova, 0. . .
Burlington. Vt. Sept. 27. Vermont, 41;
Clarkson, 2.
Cleveland. O., Sept. 27. Final: Case, 40;
Baldwin Wallace, 0.
Ada, O., Sept'. 27. Ohio Northern, 13;
Toledo University, 25.
Pennsylvania, 18; Bucknell, 0,
Harvard, 53; Bates, O.
Rutgers, 24; Vrsinus, 0.
Central High, 20; Creighton High, 0.
Alnmul, 80; South High, 0. .
Akron university, 28; Hiram, 0. J
Oberiln, 20; Heidelberg, 0.'
Mount Union, 81; Canton High, 0.
Army, 14; Mlddleburg, 0.
University of Oklahoma, 40; State Cen
tral Normal, 0.
Kendall college. 1S2; Oklahoma Bap
tists, u.
Kansas State Agricultural college, 16;
Baker university, 0. .
Haskell Indians, 71; Kansas University
01 vommerce, v.
WORLD'S SERIES
BASE BALL GAMES
.' ' ' ' '
on the
Electric Score Board
at the
AUDITORIUM
v ... . . .
Direct Leased Wire from the Grounds.
i Admission 25c i:
THE steady game-getting quali
ties of Winchester Loaded Shells
have made them the favorite .
shells f experienced shooters. v
' Under all weather conditions they
play true to form, shooting a strong,
even spread of shot. The Winchester
waterproofing process prevents swelling
from dampness; special lubrication of
the paper fibres prevents brittleness
and splitting in dry weather. ;
The secret of the famous Winchester Shot
Pattern is in the control of the gas blast from
the exploding powder. This in turn depends
upon the wadding in the shell. , r
, The Winchester gas control mtetn
' .The Winchester system of wadding and load
ing is the result of repeated experiments to
determine the most effective control of the
gas blast. The base wads of Winchester Shells
2 are constructed to give what is known as pro
gressive combustion to the powder charge. The
ignition' spreads to the sides, in all directions,
as well as forward. : ;
; Under the heat and pressure of thisprogres-
sive combustion, the tough, sprin gy driving wad
expands and fills the bore snuglyr completely
sealing in the gas behind. In being driven
through the bore this wad offers just enough
resistance to the gas blast to insure complete
combustion of every grain of powder, s6 that
, the full energy of the whole powder charge is
developed at the muzzle. Thus none of the shot '
charge leaves the gun until it is being driven
by the maximum energy and velocity possible
from the load. " " ; .
At the muzzle, the expanded," snug-fitting
driving wad is slightly checked by the muzzle '
choke or" constriction, while the shot cluster
travels on unbroken by gas blast or wadding,- (
making the hard-hitting' uniform pattern for
which Winchester Shells are world famous.' '
Uniform shells., iFrom primer to crimp;
Winchester Shells are so balanced in construc
tion as to insure the maximum pattern possible
from any load. .The broad; fish-tail flash from
the primer gives even and thorough ignition;
thedrivingwadscompletelysealinthegasbehind
the shot; the siiffhess of the crimp or turnover:
. at the shell head is. varied exactly according
to different loads, great care being taken
never to stiffen it to such a degree that it offers
undue resistance to the powder explosion.
. , . ,
f Clean hits and more of them ,'
To insure more hits and cleaner hits iiTthe
field or at the traps, be sure your shells are
Winchester Leader and Repeater for smokeless
Nublack and New Rival for black powder.
Leading hardware and sporting goods dealers
in every community carry Winchester arms
and ammunition. They will be glad to assist
you in detent ining the particular load best
suited to your purpose. Upon request, w will
send you, free of charge, our interesting booklet
on Winchester Shotguns and Loaded Shells.
1. '
1
:,tj
Wincbtiter Repeating
Arms do., Dept. g
NcW Haven, Com.,
U.S.A.
etting . : ".. ' V
!ona.. -1
... . ,'
Th$ Winchctter system of wadding. TK midinf KCpandt ewnly, moling to lha go Moil all
. (A way to th mwule, wftsr lh voiding is checked 6y iht "chaW or constriction, Th Att
elutttr IrattU on ahead unbroken. Actual tent target SSO ptlUU out a ifX or Tift uj (A M
tkatot o. of 7ii chillod) tVl tV-inck circU at 10 yank. .
' Wort J Standard Cum and Ammunititm