Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 279, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 November 1912 — Page 3
m PJaw ; : =■ I Lameness I Sloan's Liniment is a quick ■ and reliable remedy for lametj ness in horses and other farm ■ animals. I “Sloan’s Liniment surpasses any- ■ thing on earth for lameness In horses ■ and other horse ailments. I would I not sleep without It In my stable.”— ft Maktijc Doyle, Jf 432 West 19th St., New York City. Good for Swelling and Abscess. H Ms. H.M. Gibbs, of Lawrence, Kan., I R.F.D.,No. 3, writes:—“l had a mare ■ with an absoess on her neck and one ■ 60c. bottle of Sloan’s Liniment entirely ■ cured her. I keep it all the time for ■ galls and small swellings andforeyery- ■ thing about the stock.'' I SLOAN S |Linimeni I is a quick and safe remedy I for hog cholera. Governor of Georgia uses ■ Sloan’s Liniment for Hog Cholera. ■ “I heard Got. Brown (who Is quite a ■ farmer) say that he had never lost a ■ hog from cholera and that his remedy ■ always was a tablespoonful of Sloan’s ■ Liniment in a gallon of slops, decreasI lng the dose as the animal improved. ■ Last month Gov, Brown and myself I were at the Agricultural College ■ building and In the discussion of the ■ ravages of the disease, Gov. Brown ■ gave the remedy named as unfailing.” ” Obbkktkr.” I Savaiwah Daily News. fj At All Dealers. *so„ 50c. Sc #I.OO. H Sloan’s Book on Horses, Cattle, Hogs and Poultry sent free. I Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston.
DREW THE LINE.
Mrs. Wood B. Swelle —Do you oar* for pate de foie gras? Old Man Newriche—No, ma’am, I draw the line on grass. Baled-hay breakfast foods are my limit!
Hard to See Under Water.
There is no scientific Instrument of the “Bcope” character which enables one to see down to 50 or 60 feet under water. When the sun shines vertically over water, a box or bucket with a glass bottom is often used to look Into the water. A cloth covering to exclude light from the box or bucket is sometimes employed. But without electric or some other light in the water these devices are not very satisfactory.
Escaped the Worst of It.
The worst things are the afflictions that have never happened. Bobby had Just been soundly spanked for falling into the creek. “Gee!" he exclaimed, rubbing the seat of punishment, “what wouldn’t I have got if I had drowned?” Unfortunately charity doesn’t seem to possess any of the qualities of a boomerang.
Thin Bits of Com Toasted to A delicate . Light Brown — Post Toasties To be eaten with cream and sugar, or served with canned fruit poured over — either way insures a most delicious dish. “The Memory Luigen” Poihn Cml O. LkL Battle Gesk. Mick
COACH STAGG OF MAROONS IS RESOURCEFUL
Alonzo A. Stagg, Coach of Chicago University Football Team.
It would take a brainier man than any critic present at the recent Ma-roon-Purdue game to tell whether Chicago had a good team or a poor one, for Chicago played marbles rather than football. Only one thing was shown, that Chicago must better -its tackling. Aside from that there was not a strong or weak point brought out V Chicago showed herself the most contradictory team in the country in this game. At times the Maroons did some brilliant work in particular lines, but on the aext occasion they were given came through' about as gross an attempt as possible. More
WRESTLING IS ROUGH SPORT
Inhabitants of Iceland Fond of All Sorts of Outdoor Games—Horse Racing Is Popular. E. M. Newman, the traveler and lecturer, tells an interesting story about a wrestling bout that he witnessed in Iceland last summer. “The inhabitants, or rather the sporting fraternity in Iceland, are very much interested in'all sorts of outdoor sports,” said Mr. Newman. “They have developed a sort of catch-as-catch-can style of wrestling that is as unique as it is rough and is entirely different from the game as it is known in this country. “Each contestant has a strap firmly fixed about his loins. The wrestlers get their grips on this strap. Tripping and body holds are absolutely barred, the object being to raise the opposing contestant into the air by means of the strap and then to drop him on his back. It is a very rough sport, broken bones being the rule rather than the exception. Wrestling bouts are yery popular in Iceland. “Horse racing is also a popular sport'with this northern people. In Rekjavik, the capital of Iceland, there is a splendid race course where meets are held at regular intervals. The Iceland ponies hre very similar in appearance to Shetland ponies but they are sturdier and fleeter of foot. Great excitement prevails In the city while the races are on, the people coming from all parts of the island. ' "Betting is wide open, fast and furious. It is no unusual thing for a man, who has spent months on a whaling expedition, to wager his entire earnings and all his possessions on his favorite pony."
Football Shakespearians.
"Down! Down!*’ —Henry V. “Well placed.”—Henry V. “An excellent pass.”—The Tempest. “A touch, a touch, I do confess.” — Hamlet. “I do command you to their backs.” —Macbeth. " “More rushes! More rushes.” — Henry IV. “Pell mell, down with them!”— Love’s Labor’s Loßt. "This shouldering of each other.” —Henry VL • “Being down I have the placing."— Cymbeline. “Let hlrif not pass but kill him rather.” —Othello. “ ’Tis sport to maul a runner/*— Antony and Cleopatra. “I’ll catch It ere it come to ground.” —Macbeth. “We must have bloody noses and cracked crowns.” —Henry IV. “Worthy sir, thou bleedest; thy exercise hath been too violent.” — Coriolanus. “It’s the first time that ever 1 heard breaking of ribs was sport.”—As You Like It.—Boston Transcript.
How Boston Landed Bedient.
Jack Dunn, manager of the Baltimore Orioles, is the man who caused Bedlent to get his job with the Red Sox last spring. He offered $5,000 for him to come to the Orioles last December, but John I. Taylor thought if he was worth that for the Orioles he was certainly worth that to the Red Sox.
Job for Kitty Bransfiold.
Kitty Bransfield, who took the management of the Montreal team with the understanding that be should not be held to the job more than the one season, is now said to be willing to continue as team leader for the Royals and Montreal wants him back, for the team made a great showing in the final month of the season.
than one critic was of the firm conviction the Maroons.were playing possum for some of their “bonehead” work was so coarse that it is difficult to see how men who ever had seen a football could have been guilty unless it were intentional. Coach Stagg was said to have given the Maroons at least a half dozen intricate forward pass formations for the Purdue contest, but if he did that, the weakness of the Lafayette eleven enabled Paine to treasure these plays and have them fresh to use in future contests. However, the resourcefulness of Coach Stagg must not be Sinderestlmated.
WOMEN IN TENNIS CONTESTS
California Players Make Overtures to Secure Leading English Experts for Winter Games. California lawn tennis players are making overtures to the English association with a view to bringing over to this country a team of the leading
May Sutton.
women players to compete along the Pacific coast during the coming winter season. Ever since the successful campaign which May Sutton made of the English courts a few years ago, finally winning the all-English championship, there has bien an effort to establish an international series for women of the United States and Great Britain.
NOIES of SPORIDOM
Tyrus Cobb declares he will bat over .400 next year. George Simmons has been turned over by the Highlanders to Rochester. Manager Frank Farrell of the Nets York Yankees has reserved 34 players for next season. Hugh Bedlent, star twirler of the world series, has decided to spend the winter on a farm. Cy Young has received an offer to manage the Portland team next year, and may aoeept it. A New York paper says Frank Chance is now mentioned as the next manager of the Brooklyn team. The directors of the Three-I league have boosted the salary limit to $2,500, a S6OO increase over last season. They have started playing polo oh bicycles at St. Louis. Next they’ll be playing shuttlecok in aeroplanes. Stagg doesn’t believe in building air castles until he construpts something tangible in the way of a football team. Manager Jake Stahl of the Red Sox, whp has about five psr cent of the stock, cleared up about $35,000 this year. Speaker’s earnings for the year amounted to something near the tune of $14,000. Joe Wood gathered something like $13,500. The Gophers are scouring the woods hunting for spies. Every particular knot hole is being examined with a field glass of high power. Bobby Veach, the Indianapolis player, played sensational ball after joining the Detroit Tigers, and will, no doubt, be on the job in Tigerville next season. ' :; /
NOW SEEK YANKEE COACHES
Germans Start Movement to Bring Athletes Up to Point for Competing With Americans. Germany is guarding against being found in a state of unpreparedness when the next Olympic games are held in Berlin in 1918. No more will the youth of the Fatherland confine itself to sports such as fencing, weight lifting and gymnastics. A movement has been started to bring the German young men up to a point where they will be able to compete with the best athletes the United States can furnish. , A systematic hunt is being made for two trainers who combine all the good qualities, of Mike Murphy, Ernie Hjertherg and Lawson Robertson. It is, of course, impossible to find such men. but the Germans are determined to have none but the best, and they are willing to pay the price. Before the United, States athletes lfeft the continent, several of the stars and one of the Olympic team received offers to take charge of the German candidates for the next Olympic team. While none cared to accept, however, it is only, a matter of a few months before this country will be minus a pair of its most prominent trainers and they will be found in various parts of Germany looking for promising material with which to form a team for 1916. The beautiful stadium which is now being built outside of Berlin will be opened next year in the presence of the kaiser and King George V. of England, together with all the royalty of the German empire. Athletic and gymnastic events will be held covering a period of three weeks. _ Already more thin 25,000 men and women have signed applications for permission to take part in the opening ceremonies. General von Bredow, of Harzburg, will at that time present to the kaiser a book, the title of which is “Olympic Games and German Sport,” to which all the noted sporting writers of Germany have contributed articles on sporting topics.’ The opening of the stadium will he part of the celebration in honor of the kaiser’s twenty-fifth anniversary and every effort is being made to develop a strong enough teaA to show the war lord that Germans are not content to stay behind other countries in athletics.
$1.50 FOR PITCHING GAME
Hugh Bedlent, Hero of World’s Championship Series, Received Bmall Sum at Start. Hugh Bedient, the Red Sox twirler, made his first appearance in Warren, Pa., with the Falconer high-school team against the Warren Independents. Bedient attracted the attention of R. J. Schumacher, manager of the Warren team. Later, when he booked two games with the Meadville intercollegiates, he telephoned to Bedient: / “I have two games for today, but only one pitcher. I’ll give you one dollar and expenses to come and pitch the afternoon game.” “No,” was the answer, "but make it $1.50 and I’ll go.” ( That was the first game Bedient ever pitched for money, and he won. Later he broke the record for strikeouts, pitching a game of 22 innings at Corry, in which 24 batters struck out
CAPTAIN MERCER.
© UNKBXX» aUHSUWHD University of Pennsylvania Leader and One of Its Strongest Backs.
Three Honored Veterans.
Christy Mathewson, Hans Wagner and Ed Walsh are three honored veterans. Though this trio has been playing for years they are still being selected on ali star aggregations.
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English Btump Speech. A correspondent, “Old Brlney,” sends us the following specimen of frenzied stump oratory: “Feller blokes! Thanks ter th’ guv’ment, yer got yer d’mlnishin’ wage, and yer little loaf, an’ all that. Wotcher got ter do now is ter go ter devil-ootion and local anatomy, an’ go it blind!” (Loud cheers.) —London Globa. Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxative. Adv. Paradoxical Promise. "I want you to pay down.” “All right. I’ll settle up.” The mild mellow quality of LEWIS' Single Binder cigar is what the smokers want. Adv. Most of our so-called good Intentions are base imitations. Mrs.- Wlnslow’a Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic,2sc a bottle.**. Don’t brag about yourself; Jolly others into doing it for yon. A CURB FOR PILES. Cole’s Ca'bolissive stops Itching snd pain—and cures piles. All druggists. 25 and 55c. Adv. A voice used too much in scolding Is not good to sing with.
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