Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 21, 25 January 1922 — Page 9
c GLOVES, QUAKER FIVE AND COLLEGE BOYS WIN NET CONTESTS The Indianapolis Gloves won a hard fought game from the Starr Piano team on the "Y" floor 'in the first game of the Community Service basketball league Tuesday night. The game was hard fought throughout and the Gloves rallied in the last few minutes af play and dropped four baskets through the nettings for eight points, which gave them the victory. The score at the first half was eight to seven in favor of the Gloves. Neibuhr and Hawekotto were the leading point getters for the winners, each making "six points. Owens led the Starrs in he scoring departmen, making three goals from the field.
The lineups and summary: i ... 1 4 r i . Glovet (17) , Hawekotte. . . Nlebuhr Weaver Allstadt Starr (11) Owens ,.F Byrkett , . Hoover . . Kohnle Schepman .G Brunner G Bescher for Kohnle Field Goals Hawekotte 2, Niebuhr 3. Weaver 2, Owens 3, Byrkett 1, Bescher 1. Foul Goals Hawekotte 2 Weaver 1, Schepman 1. y Referee Brehm. The Quaker Maids had little trouble defeating the Kaysee quintet by the reore of 18 to 7, in a Comunity Service game on the "Y' floor. The Kaysee's could not hit the basket in the first half and were held without a score at the half way point, while the -Quakers were scoring 11 points. The seven points collected by the losers were made in the last three minutes of play. Phillips led the attack for the winners, makinpr three field goals, whils Geler and Klinger played the best tjv the losers. x The lineup and summary: Quakers (18) Kaysees (8) Phillips F. C. Metz Porter F ....A. Metz Brlstow C Geier Heaton G Pahner Fuller G Klingcr Substitutions Monroe for Heaton; Aiken for Porter; Snyder for Klinger. Field goals Phillips, 3; Porter, 2; Brlstow, 1; Heaton. 1; Monroe, 1; A. Metz. 1; Geier, 1; Dahner, 1. Foul goals Porter, 2; Geler, 1. Referee McBride. Completely outclassing their opponents, the Business College five handed the Betsy Ross quintet a neat lacing to the tune of 20 to 7. Tha Betsy Ross five did not play its usual brand of gime, or the score might have been somewhat closer. The score at. the end of the first half was eight to five in favor of the College lads. Benson and Mulligan lead the scoring for. the winners, making five and four goals from the field, respectively, Reid scored the most for the losers, making four points. The lineups and summary: Business College (20) Betsy Ross (7) Benson F Mansfield Mulligan F Medearis Nlckolson C Reid l.envelle G Leo Martin G Belssman Substitutions Smith for NIckolsou; Dunham for Lee. Field goals Benson, 5; Mulligan, 4; Iavelle, 1; Medearls, 1; Reid. 2. Foul goals Medearis, 1. Referee? Brehm. CAMERA SHOP TEAM MEETS BOSTON MEN IN CURTAIN-RAISER Boston Independent basketball quintet will come to do battle with the Richmond Camera Shop Kewpies on the Coliseum floor in the curtainraiser Wednesday night. The game will be called at 7 o'clock. This contest will be a feature attraction, inasmuch as each team has won everv contest thus far this season and is'anxious to finish with perfect records. Boston fans boast of an invincible team and will be on hand to support their team to the limit. Several stars will appear on the Boston team, including Samuels, Davis and Ballinger who have been playing on the team for two straight years. Samuels appeared in a Legion uniform against the Junior Chamber of Commerce five of Indianapolis and his ability to skim over the floor is undisputable. He jumps center and plays an under-basket game of ball. The local "Cute" Kewpies will take the floor with their regular line-up and will put up their usual high class style of play. The following will be the line-up of the Kewpies: O. Monger and Brehm. forwards; Sauter; center; I.ohman and Eikenberry. guards. FACULTY GOES DOWN BEFORE HI SECONDS High school's faculty basketball team went down to defeat before the Hi seconds in the curtain-raiser Tuesdav night in the Coliseum by the score of 22 to 14. Stenger scored all the points for the teachers, assisted by the clever passing of Little. The seconds opened with a rush and continued their bombardment of the aoal until the entrance of Little when things tightened up. The score at half time was 17 to 10 in favor of the Seconds. Numerous substitutions featured the contest which consisted of four 10-minute periods with two minutes intermission for rest. In this way, the faculty was able to keep up the pace and strangle down the score of the Seconds. Line-up: Faculty (14) Stenger Heaton Biistow Cant well Seconds (22) .F Good .F. ; Rizio ,.C Walls .G Hiatt VanEtten .G Minnick Field goals Stenger 6, Good 4, Rizio 1, Walls 3, Hiatt 1, Thomas l. Foul goals Stenger 2, Walls 2. Substitutions Little for VanEtten Makey for Cantwell, VanEten for Makey. Makey for Heaton, Cantwell lor Brlsiow, Davenport for Hiatt, Thomas for Rizio, Eubanks for Walls, Rizio for Good, Porter for Eubanks. Referee C. Torter, Richmond.
Sensational Speed Skater
f NEW YORK, Jan. 25 There probably is no boy in the metropolitan district who Is not better equipped for skating than was Charley Jewtraw, the sensational speed skater, when he first took up the sport. Charley boasts Lake Placid as his habitat, and it isn't a far cry back to the time when he used to share with a chum a pair of steel runner9 which were a fiftyfifty proposition as to ownership. Charley managed to make particularly good use of the 50-50 skates, and while "Who's Who" in sport doesn't say anything about the speed attained by the pal it is replete with the doings of Jewtraw, who is a veritable human cyclone on the ice. Few and far between are the reports of his being beaten. He has cut considerable ice in the medal winning and trophy gathering department of the game, as shown by this unusual photograph. TWO TIP-TOP GAMES ARE ON TAP TONIGHT; SEATS SELLING FAST Earlham will meet Miami university Wednesday evening in the first basketball contest or athletic event of any kind held between the two schools for several years. Coach Mowe, in accord with his policy of scheduling the best games in sight for his basketeers has booked the Ohio aggregation, believing that they will furnish some real basketball on the Coliseum floor tonight. The Earlham-Miaml contest will start promptly at 8 p. m. A curtain raiser will be played between the Camera Shop Kewpies and the Boston Independents, beginning at 7 p. m. Tickets for the games are being reserved at the Starr Tiano store, and are reported to be selling fast. The Miami quintet is known to be a fast aggregation, having defeated the Richmond American Legion basbpt i tossfrs earlier in the season on the Coliseum floor, 39-20. in this game the basket shooting of House and Milders of the Ohio team, combined with the clever guarding of Essig, back guard, proved too much for the ex-soldiers. Quakers Prepared. In some ways the Miami team plays much the same style of ball that the Wabash Little Giants put up last week a lightning five-man offensive. Coach Mowe has prepared his men to meet this style of play and during the past week has smoothed over some defects that were in evidence in the last game. In cise the Quakers are in shape tonight to stand the pace they undoubtedly will show the Miami quintet an interesting evening. Captain Goar has been able to practice during the past week, having recovered from the se vere cold which hindered him against, Wabash, ninsnaw aiso iias uuu into shanp and has been hitting the ' with daan v nrrnrai'v. uaivct v. . . j j The proDaDie lineup is Earlham Miami Hinshaw F House Hadley F Heater.. Townsend C Milrters Goar G Wire Beardiy T...G Essis Waite Hoyt Granted License to Mary (By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Jan. 25 Waite Hoyt, who pitched the New York Yankees to two victories in the world's series with the pennant-winning Giants, is to be married soon. He accompanied Miss Dorothy H. Pyle, 23 of Brooklyn, to the Brooklyn marriage license bureau yesterday and took out credentials for signing a life contract. He gave his age as 22, but refused to say when he planned, to take the critical step. Friends, however, said he would wed before starting south for spring training with his team. ' . Sunday School Fives Battle On "Y" Floor Tha Whitewater Friends forfeited h0ir tramp to the Grace M. E., when they failed to appear on the floor at the scheduled time Tuesday evening, causing only three games to be played in the junior Sunday School league on the Y floor Tuesday evening. The first game went to the St. Paul Lutheran, No. 2 when they trimmed the First M. E. five by the score of Id to 4 The West Richmond Friends defeated the South Eighth Street Friends by the score of 10 to 4, in the second The final game went to the Second English Lutherans when they whipped the First Christians by the score of 9 to 8.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25, 1922.
PAL MORAN BEGGING FOR ANOTHER CRACK AT BENNY LEONARD By FRANK G. MEXKE Down below the Mason and Dixon line they poke a stocky, youthful Italian at you and remark: "Here's a bird that will take Benny Leonard if the lightweight champion ever will give him just one more out ing." In that way they introduce Pal Mor an, slugging descendant of Italy, now the pride of the Southland and the particular joy of New Orleans Moran, they insist down that way, has improved remarkably in the past year or so. He is pleading with Fred Digby, who pilots his pugilistic des tiny: "Get Leonard for me." Digby's trying to do that but in a way a little different than most managers use. "Pal got a shot at Leonard a year and a half ago and wasn't able to put the championship away," he explains. "I told him that the only way he'd ever be sure of getting another crack at the title was to beat up everybody else that wanted to fight Leonard, by which simple process he, would force a public demand for another LeonardMoran meeting." And Moran has been operating along those particular lines. Through more than a year of fisticuffing he has taken on and clubbed into the defeat column nearly a score of foemen Never Sent to Floor. Moran, whose real name is Paul Miorana, is a New Orleans product. His father was quite a bare knuckle battler in the long gone days. The youngster has inherited the iron jaw ana Tne concrete stfmach of his father. Jn six years ot Tim -warfare, although opposed by the hardest hitters in the game including Leonard, Jackson, Mandot, Dundee, Hartley, Fitzsimmons, Cline and Hanhan no man ever was able to send him to the floor. The Italian began his career in a four round preliminary to the Dundee Mandot affair in the Crescent City six years ago. It was only three years later that Moran, who had gpne alons in meteoric fashion, was sent against the same Dundee in a 20 rounder. Moran's fight against Dundee that night proved his greatness. He became the best card in the South. He finally fought himself to ranking among Leonard's toughest rivals. The champion gave him a fight in East Chicago and won it. But Leonard tried with everything he had to drop Moran and Moran took the Leonard wallops, grinned and tore in harder. Afterward Moran went back to New Orleans and decided to do some loafing. He became a bit rusty from lack of action. Comes Back with Hurrah. But Moran has come back with a hurrah. Around the New Orleans district they claim that he is at least a 50 per cent greater fighter than he ever was before more aggressive, a master in the art of sluggery. faster, an improved ring general "and a sure thing to beat Leonard." Digby says: 'If Leonard doesn't think that Moran has quite achieved the point where he is entitled to a return match. all T,pnnnrd needs to do is to name i the fellow Pal should whip to get the! final polish on his reputation. Pal will Hn it And that jrnps tnr l ip. terocious Lew Tendler, the rushing Rocky Kansas, the walloping Charlie White and all others. "Moran -will make 135 ringside at 2 p. m. for any of the outfit. And if Dundee will be so nice and kind as to give Pal a real smack at the junior lightweight champion, Pal will do 130 at 2 p. m. for him. Could anything be fairer?" ( Copyright 1021 By KinK Features yuilicatr. Inc.) PENNSY LEAGUE Crew
I I : I Bowling . J i
Player 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Leas : 137 137 137 411 137 Killen 92 IIS 141 331 117 J- Rees 149 118 141 411 137 Hasemeier ...169 207 16C 542 1X1 Riner 157 128 171 45(J 152 Handicap 208 208 208
Totals 912
912 916 967 I Keystones 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. ! 177 203 186 560 1S9 .172 167 155 494 165 .151 217 138 506 169 .145 144 167 456 1521 .147 172 162 4S1 160 I 164 164 164 I
Player j Gallagher tt ji nuiiuivai) Totals 956 1067 972 High average Green. 189. Hight scort; Gallagher, 217 T. N. T.'s Player 1st 2nd 3rd Lohse 144 144 144 Kirkpatrick ..131 164 145 Thomas 1S2 182 231 Kluesener ...136 201 151 Tl. 432 440 595 488 507 Av. 144 147 198 163 169 Sweet 1S9 147 171 Handicap 196 196 196 Totals 97S 1034 1038 Roundhouse Player 1st 2nd 3rd Scott 195 166 137 Canan 152 165 135 Heidelman . . .191 132 158 R. Reis 14.8 160 148 Berg 141 152 206 Handicap 178 178 178 TI. 498 481 4S1 456 499 Av. 166 151 160 152 166 Totals 1005 953 962 High average Thomas. 198. Hight score Thomas, 231. Panhandles 1st 2nd 3rd ..168 214 176 Player Broderick '. . Johnson . . . Barton Foley Fitzgibbons Handicap . . Tl. 55S 486 513 474 566 Av 186 162 171 158 189 ..144 ..179 ..171 ..172 ..162 167 175 146 1S8 167 136 197 , 197 162 1G2 Totals 996 1053 Pennsys Player 1st 2nd 1034 3rd 131 171 173 145 152 124 Tl. 486 521 443 476 470 Av. 162 174 148 159 157 Smith 167 Diltz 200 Parker 137 Snaveley ....159 Castelluccio ..159 188 150 172 159 124 Handicap .124 Totals 946 926 906 . . . High average Fitzgibbons, 189. High score Broderick, 214.
Chips and Slips
Speaking of Mlddleweights. Mike McTigue deserves a crack at the middleweight title name your own holder of it. McTigue's change from a ham and swatter to almost a finished scraper is interesting. Six years ago Mike endeavored to fight the best men of his class and proved a bloomer. He met Harry Greb in Cleveland, Ohio, about that time and the only thing Mike had was a corner to sit in. Now he has vie tories over the best of the present day crop to his credit. ' Jeff Smith, Al McCay, Angie Ratner, Sailor Petroskey, Battling Ortega. Jackie Clark and Johnny Klesch are some of his victims. ' And Byran Downey, who has a hold of at least one leg of the middleweight championship, will tell you that Johnny Klesch is a tough lad. ' As for that bout with Greb,. Mike got another chance at Harry and woko up the fistic world by flooring the Pittsburger. The battle was a good draw. Panama Joe Gans, dusky middleweight, might still be accusing the world of being afraid of him ,but for the fact that Mike gave him an awful trimming. All of which is some record to be proud of considering that the world gave him up as hopeless at one time. Hagerstown threw a scare into the Red and White in their game on the Coliseum floor Tuesday night, playing them to a standstill in the first half. The locals went into the game overconfident and it took them until the second half to get the machine to running smoothly. i Irish Mulligan broke into the Community Service league Tuesday night and thrilled the crowd with several long shots from the center of the floor, for two point markers. His Ions basket shooting rather took the morale out of the Betsy Ross team. Two good games of basketball are promised the basketball fans of the city, Wednesday night in the Coliseum wrhen Coach Mowe's Earlham college cohorts play the Miami university five in the big game of the evening and the Camera Shop Kewpies take on the Boston Independent five. n The Business College five gained a firmer grip on first place in the Community Service league Tuesday night when they trimmed the Betsy Ross five in the last game of the evening. "Do you think I shall live until I am ninety, doctor?" "How old are you now?" "Forty." "Do you drink, gamble, smoke or have any vices of any kind?" "No. I don't drink, I never gamble, I loathe smoking; in fact, I haven't any vices." "Well, good heavens, what do you want to live another fifty years for?" Purdue is making preparations for her next, conference battle, which wil be with Iowa, at Lafayette, Saturday night. If Purdue wins this battle she will be in a tie for first place with the miuuesui iivt-. aiuiuuu Old Gold and Black has not lost a game this season, they have only won three while Minnesota has won four conference games to date. Kennedy dropped two pretty ones in from the center of the floor in the Hagerstown game that made the net. tings swish as they dropped through. It also put a little necessary pep into the team play for the remainder of the game. WRESTLERS CLASH. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Jan. 25. Johnny Myers, of Chicago, and John Kilonis, of Norfolk, Va., will meet here tonight in a match for the middleweight wrestling championship, under rules providing for 15 rounds of 10 minutes each. One fall will determine the winner, and if there has been no fall by the end will of the fifteenth round, the judge decide on the.' winner. The annual consumption of flour in the United States is over a barrel per person. Bread is one of the two or three most important foods. Our Washington Information Bureau offers you free an official Government booklet telling all about bread. There are three reasons why you should have a copy of this booklet: First: It tells you what part bread should play in your diet, and how to recognize good bread. Second: If you bake your own bread, it tells you the best way to bake it not only white bread, but potato bread, rice bread, corn meal bread, and nut bread. Third: By learning to use potatoes and corn and rye and rice and rolled oats In your bread, you not only add variety you supply necessary food ; elements in which your diet is other-; wise deficitnt. i This is a free Government publication and our Washington Information Bureau will secure a copy for anyone who sends two cents in stamps for i return postage. In filling out the coupon print name and address of be sure to write plainly. 'Do not send the coupon to The Palladium. Mail it direct to Washington. v. kj. ) Frederic J. Haskin, Director, The Richmond Palladium Information Bureau, Washington, D. C. I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy of the booklet, "Baking in the Home". Name , Street City . State
Learn How To Make Good Bread
HOLLAND BILLIARD CHAMP EXHIBITS SKILL IN U. S.
!3 5 ' MirtVifcViiMi. 1 1 ft 'iiv.nnf Ary Boa at the table, Ary Bos, youthful Hollander and amateur balkline billiard champion of Europe, is now in the U. S. to play special matches with Edouard Roudil of France and take part in the national amateur balkline tourney at New York Jan. 30. He is credited with being one of the most brilliant cue artists of the day. DECIDE RICHMOND'S ENTRY INTO LEAGUE WITHIN TWO WEEKS Richmond will enter the proposed Three! league if local officials can possibly see their way clear to an even break for the season, Elmer Eesemever. a member of the local committee, said Wednesday. Details of the proposition are be ing threshed out, he said, and the matter is being considered from every possible angle. A meeting to determine whether or not Richmond will enter, will bo call ed within the next two weeks Durins the season that Richmond was in league baseball, the team play ed to 36;S31 fans. To make the season a go this year the team will have to play before 42.000 fans. With the increase in rates it will cost the local club an increase of 25 percent to operate. Included in this increase will be an increase on the lease of the park, higher railroad rates, and an increase in the mileage of the proposed league. Whether or not the league will be an eight-club league depends entirely on the decision of the Richmond club. Springfield has been offered the other franchise, and will accept providing that Richmond enters. President J. J. Cleary, of the Terre Haute club, addressed a meeting at Springfield last Sunday of business men interested. Three thousand six hundred dollars was pledged towards the forming of a Fans association. They are now ready to go, providing Richmond enters into the league. Had Good Players If Richmond had not been forced to give up the baseball proposition here during the war, the club would have been on a good, firm financial standing by this time, as it had several promising players on its roster. A good sum could have been realized from the sale of Goldie Rapp, for whom John McGraw paid a good sum. Pillett, a lengthy hurler that the Richmnnd elnh nhtninorl frnm tho Pinrinmona ciud ootainea rrom tne (incin-; natl club, was sold this season to the' Detroit Tigers for $40,000. Another man that was the property of the Richmond club was Schiek, an outfielder, who was purchased by the Seattle club this year for $15,000 and two players. Incidentally there are now seven other ball players who were the property of the Richmond team that season, that are now connected in some form with major league base-; ball. Everyone of these men would : have brought at least the waiver to the Richmond club, and possibly much ; more. j Final decision of the committee will I be given here within the next two! weeks. Representatives of the league and men from Springfield will be here. The Kewpies will have to depend largely on their speed to trim the larger Boston aggregation. The Boston team will outweigh the Kewpies about 10 pounds Jto the man, but the lads will overcome this by their speed.
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WIDE AND HANDSOME; UPSETS HAGERSTOWN Hagerstown high school basketball team lost to the local high school basketeers in the Coliseum Tuesday night by the score of 32 to 16. The game was decidedly better than the score would indicate. Score at half time was 15 to 8. The opening of the first half saw the Red and White quintet getting off to a flying start and scoring four points in rapid succession, before the Hagerstown crew could connect. The local five continued its bombardment of the basket and run up a score of 13 points while the opponents were garnering three. Hagerstown was beginning to feel the effects of the pace which was set on the larger Coliseum floor and fought hard to keep Richmond from gaining the edge. The work of the entire Blue and Gold five was indeed quite a decided feature. They had a different style of play which told the story of their success in the invitational tournament which was held at Hagerstown last week end. H. May was the chief field goal scorer for the Blue and Gold five with three counters to his credit. His teammate, Root, was especially good on foul goals with eight marked up. The guarding of Wichterman was a decided factor in the Hagerstown machine. He broke up many plays and started the ball down the floor only to have his teammates lose it when they had an opportunity to score. Rost Stands Out Although the entire Richmond out fit worked as one unit, one man stood out in supremacy over the heads of any other player on the floor and that was "Dan" Rost, the forward, who shoots baskets better when he has two men on his neck than when he is free. Rost connected with two field goals in the first half of the game and then came back strong in .the second period for five counters which tells the tale. His offense was the best of any player on the floor in the game Tuesday night. Kessler and Kennedy played their us-ual strong" game and worked the ball all over the floor to pass to the pointgetters on the five. Harkins connected for two field goals and played a better game than he has played for some time. He showed the effects of being ill during the past 10 days. Schumaker was substituted for Harkins in the secondjialf and conected for one field goal. The locals will meet the fast Columbus high school team on the Coliseum floor Friday night. The game will be the biggest drawing card of the year. Line-up Richmond (32) Hagerstown (16) .F H. Ma .F..: Root .C Cain .G Wichterman .G Doughty Rost Harkins , Kennedy Kessler ., Greene . Field goals: Rost 7, Harkins nedy 4, Schumaker 1, Root 1, H. I, KenMay 3. Foul goals: Rost 4, Root 8. Substitutions Richmond: Schumaker for Harkins, Foutz for Kennedy, Spaulding for Greene, Amick for Kessler, Noland for Rost, Greene for Spaulding. Harkins for Xoland, Kessler for Amick, Kennedy for Foutz. Rot for Schumaker. Hagerstown: Hayes for Cain, Cain for Hayes, Stohlff for H. May, N. May for Stohler, Hayes for Cain, H. May for X. May, "Stohler for H. May. Referee: Palmer, Indianapolis. Sll6EXTRAEGS PROFITA MONTH Mrs. Ropp Get3 114 E33S a Day In. stead of 25. Figure It Up. "I have COO liens, including late pullets Oot old enoush to lay, and tad been pet&ng 25 to 30 eggs a day. Then I tried Don Sung and am now pcttinjr 107 to lit egsrsaday." Mrs. E. B. Kopp, Littles, Ind. This increase of 7 dozen a day in the middle of winter, at 60c a dozen, makes S126 extra income per month. Don f-nng for her 200 hens cost about S2. It paid her, 4 i and we guarantee it will pay you. j uive your nens uon tung ana waien resuits for one month. If you don't find that j It pays for liself and pays you a good profit besides, simply tell us and your , money will be cheerfully refunded. j Don Sung (Chinese for eps-laying) Is a scientific tonic and conditioner. It is easily given in the feed, improves the hen's j nenun ana makes ner Mronger ana more active .It ls guaranteed to get the eggs, BO matter how cold or wet the weather. Don Sunar can be obtained promptly from your druggist or poultry remedy dealer, or eeDd 60c for a package by mail prepaid. Bcrrell-Pngger Co., 214 Columbia Bids, Indianapolis, Ind. We Sell and Recommend Don Sung OMER G. WHELAN The Feed Man 31-33 S. 6th St. Phone 1679 MMiiiiiiitui'iiiiilitiiniiHiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiillililtitMiiitinifiiiiiitntflintiiMiiinHiiit 1 Tailor and Cleaner I 1 for Men Who Care I I CARL C. YOUNG ! i We Call and Deliver I I 8 No. 10th Phone 1451 BiiiHiliiiiiiiuiHiiiiiinitiHiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHimtiiimlHUHHiiiiHiiniTI niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiitiiitiniiiiiiiiiriifiiiftiiiiiiuiiiitfiHiiuiiiitiiiiiMiiintMiiniiiiiuiH i SHOE REPAIRING l I with Rock Oak leather will prolong 1 I the life of your old shoes. Ask us.' 1 j DUSTY'S SHOE REBUILDER I 1 11 N. 9th St. or 504 North 8th St. iftiiifiiiliiitiiiiiiiinHHiiiiitiiMiiHiiMtniHitiiiiiiiiMHttiunuiiitniiiHiifimtitiiiiii Ice Skates Sharpened at
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PAGE NINE
Pardy Will Discuss : "Persian Period" Tonight; Beyl to Give Address' "The Persian Period," will be thej subject of Prof. Alexander C Purdy's . taiK ai me meeting or the community ; Bible school Wednesday night at 7:30' o'clock in the high school auditorium, i Last week Prof. Purdy talked on; "The Exile Period." He pointed out) why the Northern Kingdom preceeded the Southern in its fall. Also how the Hebrew ceased to be a factor in polit-1 ical history and how he came to be a i Jew in name, and how the prophets; prepared the people for the fall of the kingdom and the temple at Jerusalem and then for the return. Prof. Beyl will follow up his address of last week on "The Purpose and Aim of Religious Education." He emphasized the fundamental principles as being to prepare the young life for work and service In the kingdom. To develop in the mind and conscience, the right idea of God and the proper appreciation of Him. To show the presence of God in the world and to find a revelation of Him in the scriptures. He said, that a religious education, that does not effect the life, that does not cause one to strive for higher ideals, is empty. - The public is urged to attend the meeting which will start at 7:30 and. end at 9:30 o'clock. Police Court News ARREST INDIANAPOLIS MAN. Leroy Beard, of Indianapolis, was ar rested by police officers here at 2:45 o'clock Tuesday afternoon charge with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. He was held for the Indianapolis police. CONSIDER DRAFT PROPOSAL. (By Associated Press) . . CHICAGO, Jan. 25. Club owners of the American association met in special session here today to consider the acceptance of the new draft proposal made by the baseball advisory board. The proposal carries a price of $7,500 for every player drafted from the organization, an increase of $2,500 over the former price. When a cold is neglected it attacks the. lining of the lung s then its pneumonia. Father John's Medicine treats colds and ; prevents pneumo Why Colds Lead to Pneumonia l i a because it lourishes tho system and drives out the poisonous waste matter any other "way of treating a cold is like ly to lead to pneumonia. Not h "cough syrup" or "balsam" dependfew V tf upon UUU&Ui ous and weakening drugs, but a f o o d medicine and body builder. A Clean Shave uives you new pep. 5 skilled barbers Ilarter's Shop In the Murray Bldg. STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! These are dangerous days, but you need not lose one day's pay if you have one of my accident and health policies. Protect your amount f rom per week. income for anv $10.00 to $100.00 Also write any kind of coverage on automobiles. F. H. H1GIILEY General Insurance 304 Union National Bank Bldg. The Bank of REAL Srevice 2nd National Bank TRACY'S Where You Save on Every thing You Buy You Hear It Everywhere I'll Meet You at - KNOLLENBERG'S 6 Lb. Wet Wash, economic, relieves you of worry. Satisfactory in every detail. Home watfer Laundrv Phone 2766 BOSTON STORE Quality Always
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