South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 3, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 January 1918 — Page 8

Tilt ltlAY KVK.ni, JAl'AIlY 3, 19X9 THE SOUTH BEND NEWSTIMES POLLY AND HER PALS No helmets for Neewah's head! 2XIT. IitcruUootl Kw T-rO HULL iUttKz H16 J I To ilk d r ThE TUöuedN 7L M F Commercial League Quintets Stage Two Hot Games at Y. Gym. no iEc oxi m m ii IT UOkS.ViföilüU ßnnxf Hr" v MA''""il ML, MAM,

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TTt guarding and faster floor work contributed largely to the Srhith A Wherrett IS to 13 victory ovfr the FAbo f.ve in th Commercial league Kitrnn"; at the Y. M. ". A. Wednesday night. The game vis loosely played ?t time, but was hard fought throuehout the whole 30 minutes of play. So started the coring shortly after the first whistle by shooting a free to?s and Chadborne rame hark a moment latr with one, tieing the count. Then the Smith & Wherret five hecan to pull steadily away from their opponent with the aid of some fast floor work by Capt. Cohlrrjeyer, who, with I). Shanafelt, If il their teams' -eoring with three barkets apiece. Th nrt half ended with Smith i; Wherrett in the lead. 1 r to 7. but !n the second half they took a derided slump and wer only able to register on basket and a foul .g.tlr.st the guarding of R. Shanafelt and Hrandstrater of KIbels. So'jidey and KIbel. however, were the only men on the losers who could reem to hit the rir. at all. Sousley cueing two pretty shots from mid-floor and Libel on". Sousley l-d M.- team's scoring with a total of n in- point.-: to his cred-

Jir.eup and siiinmary Mnltti A. Whcrrrtt, 1H. 'looderioimh intMK is. . . SouMiev Turwanl. I. ShannfMt Capt. i:nei I'orwarvl. iVdiimeyer O'apt. Snyder (Vnt.-r. Julinson H. Shanafelt Juard. udbome Mra.dstrater Guard. IJasket. Cohlrneyer. : I) Shanaftlt. 3; SousN-y, '.ondcnouKh, 'Z !:ihfi. L. Pre throws Sou.-dey. ' 'iiadhorne. '2. Keferee Smith. la;u-rs. 22; Spin. 2. The aicle - of ('apt. i'orhevety in hootii!!; fre thrown w.is the bitr factor in the victory of the 'lauer train over the Spiro-:. The tloiihty aptain only missed one free throw. aInp: six out of seven trj's a.nd thereby larvuir. his t-am on the top of the heap :n the oinrner-iaI league race. The came was a battle from start to rinish, with the srore. .see-sawin.s: back and forth, and every minute was full of thrills for the supporters nf the two teams, Floth fives showed real basketball all the time. specially the dribblintr of Rhodes The ft Michigan and

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Copyright. 1917, by New,pper and the clever basket hhootinc; of Trumbo and Cochcvety. Time and aRain durinp the first half Rhodes dribble. 1 the ball from dancerous territory clear to his own basket, where it usually went through the loop. The first half ended with the Splrox a little to the pood with 11 points to their opponents' 8. but a lone: coal by Corhf vety at the start of the second half tied the .core and from that time until the last whistle the result was in doubt, first one team in the lead and then the other. Just before the call of time the Mauer acrecation forged ahead and held their advantage until the finish. Cochevety led in points scored with 1". with Trumbo a close second with 8. Lineup and summary: flauer. 2'2. Spiro. 20. fochevety (Capt.) i:nedahl Forward. Chad borne .McKndarfer Forward. 'iartieid Trumbo (.'enter. Kckrnar. Xicar ( I uurd. Nyikias (('apt.) Rhodes (iuard. li.iskets Trumbo. t; Cochevety. McKndarfer, Nyikias. 2; Chadborne. Cartield, Kncdahl. Free throws Cochevety, 6; Fncdahl, Rhodes. Referee Smith. Time of halves IT, minutes. MATCH CHIP AND DILLON IMTIjCTH, .Minn., Jan. Chip of New Castle. Ra. . .eorge and Jack Iillon of I rid iana polLs have been matched to box ten rounds here on the nicht of Jan. jfi. it was announced Wednesday. They will wei'h in ut If.;: pounds at three o'clock.

You'll Be Glad to Keep the Whole Year Through he Christmas Money Club at

American Trust Co.

Lay asiJe a definite sum each week and anticipate the needs of next year at Holiday time. The method is simple and the results are amazing. It encourages the saving habit and every member of the family can join and be equally benefited. There are various classifications takine: care of anv amount vou wish to save weekly, from one cent to five dollars. START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT! Join Now. There are. but two back payments to be made in order to catch up with the rest of the club members. The details are few and will be explained upon application. The convenient location of the American Trust Company is a point to be considered in taking a club membership. Everyone passes the corner with the Big Clock and it is easy to stop in, at least once a week, and keep up your payments. $82,000 PAID TO CLUB MEMBERS IN DECEMBER, 1917. DID YOU RECEIVE YOUR SHARE? The coming year wili see a greater number enjoying the benefits. Arrange to join now and be among the thrifty members of the 19 IS club.

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Wa&hington St. At the Sign of

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Future Senric, Inc. Gre.t Brit.in $ BOWLING SCORES WEST SIDE TOIKNEY. Single. Klerien 11.", 141 14 1ST, l.V 42.". i i::2 I Il.imli'-up 44 44 Totals ..... t .Trdinson IlHndl:ip . Totals no 2S 42t) i;s !. IM -M4 00 1 Single. 211 II niiiii sh llamli ap LT1 lsT. 23 r,o.-, Total 2:14 224 2X S h'jelle II;iliilt'-:i p Totals 21:5 210 1T1 0 IV 1I2 4 ich; l.177 G r.C 1S3 07 Cixmier 212 Handicap 4 Totals 21; 1(2) 4 17.1 2i J Hi.-h.inl" Handicap Totals 211 .V4 -1 220 1.;) Ioublrw. 111'. 1 y .... 15Ö J. I'wzep . J. Fe:irkis II;in1icup I20 V2S l.V, .noo mm 4 Vi Vi r.os Hui ."-4 SO 153 Totals 40. 407 .1. Norris . I. Johnson II.iiMiieap . 11'. 1..2 11-s 12s 14i US 121 111 IIS ToUN Casniler Fti.diaids ll.i ndi-:ip Totals Hennings S( liriell. ll.indi'-ap Total :W :S3 Ml 1122 24; 200 l. 101 YD 1.5 IV. 10S lo 40O 1:2: ..I 4T.0 .1V4 12.V. 4V5 um; l.vt 20 42! 144 is; JO :.os Ibis TOl'KNAMKNT. STA(. FHKS V.na OS US 104 r.70 ut the Big Clock

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Mathews Ill Itabh i: Seh wart 12 Klinjrle ;;:; Han.Ji-ip 1S4 114 loo 11.? 12; lsl 12; no 110 141 ls4 '234 4(V, .2 Totals 7s', M5 2Vtf niTKTAUÄ ELKS Mir I.autl. ... Casrnler . Holland 21)1 22.3 ls I.V. lr.i 1M l.Vt I'M 1 40 1(4 V.2 4 4.2.0 ; Nelmelle Iii Iianl. IIjikII. :ip Totals '.M2 24S PISTON. WeN strom Kike Itnrke .... .Mahjer STriKItAKKi: l.U 140 102 l.V, 111 122 i:,; 111 140 171 ."-"0 407 .""." 424 17:; oä iy 1.-J! 14.; 171 171 liullickntad is ; Handi'Mp . Totals Mis Xf2 sir, isitj i:i.ms. sTniniiAKKit--I'dckelhaupt 12 Kimble .... 1.-.2 112 14! 142 i:r4 122 1ST im Hi'l 1.14 ISO 122 177 12 io; 147 lss 122 ."12 :.4l 44 is 42rj Ur2 ma: Sheld .... l.n Konda W. (Junter Handicap .. Total Ml s.si; 014 2;u iroi'XDS, STXT tyJW K V.U .Miller 174 P)l Hohner 12S 171 S-!imitt im; 24.3 Sttnletaker 12." 142 Zilkev 1'20 l.V, Handicap :o 2ul 121 170 141 1',2 00 420 110 4s Lis 2i7 Totals 074 Oft; 27tO IXSITKVTKKN. tUdVI.'K Itusse 141 i::t 110 i:a 101 il.s 11s :.72 11:; :ä 14:5 zw ir.T .v.2 nr2 4V4 101 073 Stewart I Toelstra 141 12.1 iu101 .2 . .Myers Iewis Ha ndlcap 1 Total 'iti:nj:ius Brhardt Krause (Jreening . MO S. '04 2010 ltTl 170 i:;o 2U'l 42 473 Oos 4 42 iU4 414 12 17.". I'd 10 14s i;2 101 13 IS Us Mueller .Mohn . Handicap 14 s Totals IVS4 VX 10O4 2l'S3 CHOKA'S TOl'UXAMKNT. Pozen ....

..156 1 4 i 1 .3 2 4 Z 4 . 09 50 I'll 631 .210 205 211 631 , . 91 110 106 315 , . 96 96 96 2SS .190 206 202 603 .120 190 181 491 . 39 39 39 117 .159 229 220 60S .164 166 13Ö 465 . 20 20 20 60t .1S4 1S6 155 525 . 1 .3 7 159 170 486 .24 2 4 2 4 7 2 .181 1S3 194 .358 .207 212 170 3S9 .. 17 17 17 51

Total . . J. Kearkis Handicai Totals . E. De Hos Handicap Totals . ; Handicap Totals Da vies . . Handicap Totals Smith Totals 22 4 22 9 1S7 640 Doubles. P. T.schida 12.5 158 109 4 40 Kierine 144 140 15:1 437 Handicap 89 S9 S9 267 Totals 356 37 401 11 44 Verein 140 139 166 445 Handicap 44 44 44 132 Totals K. De Hose J. Tschida Handicap ..337 335 268 1040 ..1ST 151 1 46 478 ..190 158 190 53S . . 6S 68 68 204 Totals 439 77 404 1220 CUBS TO MAKE ONE MORE EFFORT TO GET HORNSBY CHICAGO, Jan. 3. The Chicago National league club is going to make one more effort to obtain Roger Hornsby, the su. Louis shortstop for whom Pres't Rickey is said to have refused J 75.000 recently. Pres't Wees'hman of the Chicago club has arranged a conference at Cincinnati next Monday, previous to the National commission meeting when he and Mgr. Mitchell will endeavor to persuade Rickey and Mgr. Hendricks of .St. Louis, either to sell or trade their star. MAIL GIANT CONTRACTS NEW YORK, Jan. 3. The New York National league baseball club announced Wednesday night that contracts for the coming season have been sent to all players on the Giant rosier with the exception of Capt. Charles Herzog, whose contract has another year to run. According to the officials of the club the contracts sent out Wednesday call relatively the same salaries as in former years. h."lemontree

Patent Office.

AL TRAINS MOKE All Other Freight Set Aside to Relieve Suffering in East. WASHNT.TON, .lan. 3. Solid coal trains were ordered moved eastward ahead of all other freight Wednesday nieht after conferences between the director general ut rallj roads and the fuel administrator on further plans for speeding coal to New England and other sections short of coal in the midst of a blizzard. The railroads were directed to give preference so far as possible to shipments from mines nearest the destination to curtail hauls and promote efficiency. The organization of a great army of laborers loaned by cities and corporations to unload coal and other freight at congested terminals now is under consideration and some thought even has been given to the possibility of having soldiers assigned to these tasks if the civilian organization proves impracticable. Transfer Knginos. Transfer of locomotives from the Lwest and south, where congestion is not serious and weather less inclement, was planned by Director Gen. McAdoo and his staff. With the equipment will come a number of employes from these districts to assist the over-burdened east. Reports of frozen boilers in locomotives and trains stalled in snow led to special consideration of a plan of augmenting the available motive power on trunk lines east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio river. An immediate embargo on movement of a number of non-essential products also was discussed. Despite the weather freight actually is moving faster than before the director assumed management, according to reports from interstate commerce commission inspectors. j Congested switchyards are being 1 cleared without regard to old prior ity orders. Irtmis Nine Coal Ships. Xine ships were pledged by the shipping board to carry coal from Hampton Roads to New England. Director Gen. McAdoo devoted almost his entire time Wednesday in consultation with members of his advisory board and Fuel Administrator Garfield. Tomorrow he will turn his attention for a while from operating and tratfic problems to discuss the labor situation under government operation with heads of the four railway brotherhoods, who were Invited to confer with him. Tl. y will be told of the pressing necessity not only for retaining all present workmen but for drawing new employes into the service and for sustaining a high order of ef ficiency under the government s operation plan. GOTHAM STILL Sl'ITI.'RS RUT RELIEF IN SIGHT NEW YORK. Jan. 3. New York city today continued to suffer from a combination of near zero weather and inadequate coal supply. Spurred to even greater efforts, however, by weather bureau warnings that a storm was bearing down upon the city fuel administrators and those in charge of transportation facilities were able to give assurance that the situation is rapidly clearing. Utilization of the Pennsylvania railroad tunnels for hurrying coal under the Hudson river from terminals in New Jersey, it is believed, will prove an important factor in solving the problem. Inability to transport this fuel acros? New York bay because of labor and weather conditions had balked the relief measure of city, state and federal authorities. Lack of heat caused the closing of more than 50 schools in the creater city today. It is believed most of them will be able to resume their cla.cs schedules tomorrow. Attnck TriK-k Drier. East side residents who have been dependent for fuel on yards wher coal is sold in bucketful quantities today attacked truck drivers at four of these places after bein? told there was no coal for sale. At one yard the rioters forced their way through the gates and carried away live tons of coal before police could interfere. Ten degree? above zro was the highest point to which the mercury roe today. Early in the day one degree above zero -va. recorded. A. H. Wiggin. federal fuel administrator for New York, tonight issued aa order curtailing eUn,:

lichtinj '2 ie:-cent in olfice buildings, apartiuf nt houses, hotels, flubs, restaurants, stores, lofts and uiercantile buildings.

THREE BOYS DIE IN FIGHT IN STORM ON LAKE ERIE TOLEDO. Jan. 3. Three boys perished and one man was terribly frozen in a New Year's day battle with a storm on the ice on Lake Erie between Marblehead and Kelley's island. The dead are: George Krujr. 14 years old; Mike Zebekie. 12; Joe Ontko, 13; all of Marblehead. The boys, with George Priest, 22 years old, walked from Marblehead. four miles across the lake to Kelley's island, Tuesday. They started on the return trip at noon. They encountered a northeast gale, a blinding snowttorm and zero temperature. At 7 o'clock Tuesday night members of the Marblehead coast guard crew saw a man half a mile off shore on the ice. They brought him in. The nan was Priest, dazed and frozen. He said he had left one of the boy's dead body on the ice and the other two had started back to Kelley's island. Telephone information is that the boys did not reach the island and that the gale had broken the ice in the channel. Rig fires were kept burning all night along the south shore and whistles in the stone quarries were blown constantly. Coast guards searched until late last night for the boys out on the lake and resumed work Tuesday morning. They said that the boys probably perished and their bodies may have been carrier farther out into the lake by ice floes. Reorganize Gun Bureau; Business Men to be at Helm WASHINGTON. Jan. 3. General reorganization of the ordnance bureau, with experienced business men at the head of important divisions under the chif of ordnance, was Announced Wednesday night by the v.ur department. The new plan under which it is proposed to make the bureau of great working unit modeled somewhat after the British ministry of muni tions, was outlined to the senafp military committee recently by Maj. i Gen. Crozier. chief of ordnance. while he was being sharply questioned concerning delays and deficiencies in supplying rifles and cannon. It now has been approved by Sec'y Raker and put into effect. Gen. Crozier. whose renomination is pending in the senate, continues as chief, and no change is made in the assignment of Rrig. Gen. Wheeler as acting chief while Gen. Crozier served on the war council. Col. Samuel lioberts, formerly executive manager of the National City Rank of New York, is named chief of the procurement division, one of the brat.ches into which the business functions of the bureau are divided and the name of a civilian to head the production division will be announced in a few davs. HOMELESS GIRL FROM JAPAN ALLOWED IN U. S. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. The wanderings of Dania Lucia Iauberg. a homeless 14-year-old girl, who recently arrived in Seattle from Yokohama as a stowaway on a Japanese fcteamship, came to an end Wednesday when the immigration bureau relaxed the immigration regulations to admit her to the United States for adoption by an American family. The child's parents formerly lived in New York. Investigation of certain papers which the child carried, including j a letter given her by a man n Yok- I ohama and which she was instruct- j ed to mail in New York, reveals i :hat the documents were of an en- I tirely harmless nature. The secret service suspected at first that they . were written in rode and perhaps had some hearing on the war. 20 TO 30 REPORTED DEAD IN MEXICO TRAIN ROBBERY TUCSON. Ariz.. Jan. 3. A trai:: j on the Southern Pacific railroad was attacked this morning Z2 miles, south f Kmpaline. Sonora. and ; from iö to ZrJ p.i-"e peers v.ere illed. according to alices receied today. The conductor and an e-pres-iiie.en:rr were airon those killed. Some of the pi.en -er were from Tucson, ut their nmea : b.tve aot !i.-fc.i earned. 1

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NEURALGIA For quick results rub the Forehead 4 and Temples with THE STORE FOR MEN WASHINGTON A V ISN UK. WARNER BROS. Seed and Farm Machinery 114 E. Wayne St U.I f KOMEOP GOOD CLOTHE S J3.STCü. MOS. .

Broken lines djQC fancy Boots J?0 f Guarantee Shoe Co, J.P.McGILLCO. ra OualihrShwBroalrgj-i "The House that 1uaIity built." ""O noN.Hlclila.nSt. --i I "SOLE SAVERS" j- - ; . Don't P&y C&xh for Your Clothing Yozr Cretin t Co4 at GATELVS comvict m i wuslc. ADLER BROS. I On Mlchtz-an t VrähtTtom E : Rinne im. I FRCE AUTOMOblLE ITXC CTORX YOIl UXTT ASTD FLTRVICK. ! j Ride to and from tlxe rtort. CHARLUS ß. SAX & OO. 1 The Latest in LADIES' WEAR Advertisers make profits from I T- fD volume not prices. j 139 S. Michigan St.

1 rhat Are

You?

We are paying out money to thousands of people in South BenJ people who are thrifty, prosperous but people who are earning no more money than you are earning. They are people who have savings accounts; people who realize that the value of a dollar is not what a dollar will buy but what a dollar will earn. Every dollar that is put into this bank earns four per cent interest for the person who puts it in. Why don't you put some of your dollars into our savings account where they will earn more money for you? Don't try to do all the work yourself, make "your dollars go to work tor you. Make them help you get ahead. Open an account with a dollar. All accounts opened before Jan. 10 draw interest from Jan. 1. Start before the tenth and tret the extra interest. Saving Power Beats Earning Power. The South Bend National Bank 103 North Michigan. Next to Wyman's Store.

OFFICE 108 V. Colfax. Bell 3332. R. N. BEEBE Cleaning Plant. 231 E. Tutt St. Bell 1444. Home 1446.

HARRY L.YERRICE Funeral ''J" CmrrUr rtLI. MOTOR EQCIfMENT We Payin; 1I i Vi f. 4 i

Directorf--

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