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3 .V loftlhnini 433 Kansas Ave. 433 Kansas O Ave. OMIROW on Wi inter iviercnanaise THE TOPER A. DAILY STATE JOTTBNAL- OCTOBER .18, 1912 I upeiiiiig 50c $1.50 75c $1.00 Mens Shoes $3.00 Heavy Fleeced and Wool Top Shirts, Cherry Heavy Knit Sweater Overalls, Wearwell Solid Leather Work Ladiesl shoes, sizes 2 y, to 4, Ribbed Underwear Vale Flannel Coats, All Colors Make Shoes 1,000 pairs to dose 39c 95c 45c 75c $1.45 98c $1.25 10c $3.00 10c $4.00 B0ys' Fleeced and Ribbed Flannel Gloves, Knit Corduroy Pants With Men's 10c Heavy Beacon 0 Union Suits Wrists Cuffs, Full Peg Work Sox Dress Shoes bchool Shoes 95c 6c $1.95 8c $2.95 $1.45 l.OOO $25.00 Hand-Tailored Suit or Overcoat Suits $14.75 $22.50 Hand-Tailored Suit or Overcoat $11.75 Closed Out To Us by W. S. Peck & Co., at About One Half the Regular Wholesale Price. - On sale tomorrow at these prices $15.00 All-Wool Suit or Overcoat at $8.50 KICKS 1 4-c S2 LA3NEHY5 The entire regular Washburn back field -will be out of the game with William Jewell at Liberty, Mo., Satur day. This announcement from Coach Driver today followed the sickness of pterg which took a more serious turn last night. The coach was forced to ix-nd in a substitute backfleld. He drew Rogers out of the line, thus weakening it. The substitute back field makes that portion of the team weaker and slower. Myers, Tomlin eon and Lowe are out with injuries received in practice. Berg caught cold on the way home from Denver and now Js in bed with a high fever. The Blue team is pretty well shot to pieces. If the Congregationalists defeat Wil liam Jewell Saturday they will be the luckiest as well as the gamest bunch that ever played under Washburn colors. The Missourians are cleaning up everything they tackle this year. And they are strong exactly where the Blue team is weak. Naturally the coach and members of the team are depressed at this condi tion when a week ago prospects were so much brighter. The hole at center remains to be filled, neither Whitcomb or Shaw showing in a satisfactory manner. There is a chance that either of these men may yet fill the hole made when Barrett quit. Barrett gave prom ise of playing the center position in A very pleasing manner. The coach himself doesn't know the lineup at this time. All he can do is pick the men who will do their best. It is impossible to be "choicy" about players when the hospital list assumes large proportions. The team leaves tomorrow at 8:15 on the Union Pacific for Kansas City. From Kansas City the players will go to Liberty by automobile. Tonight the practice hour will be devoted to signal practice with a lesson on rules after upper. The Kansas State Normal football team will leave tomorrow morning for Manhattan, where the teachers will meet the Agricultural college Satur day afternoon. Coach Crispin has been putting his warriors through a gruelling daily practice for the past two weeks since the game with Southwestern, and the men will go into the garae Saturday in good shape. Several shifts have been made In the lineup 3ince the last game and the machine is working smoothly. Morgan has been taken from the half back position and placed at full. Wooster, who played sensational ball at Winfield. will take Morgan's place. Grayum has been shifted from full to end and Brenneman, who has been playing the end position, will alter nate with Hill at quarter. Coach Crispin says his men will go into the game to play ball from whistle to whlstie, and he expects them to give good account of themselves against the heavy farmers. Crispin will rely on old style football, as he wishes to save his plays for the crucial game with the College of Emporia. A squad of seventeen men will go to Manhattan. Coach Heil of the High School team expressed himself as anything but pleased with his team in their Thurs day workout. Heil works like a con centrated edition of Tost, only more so He drove the High school regulars through the most severe practice they have yet had and If they do not make a showing against the Josies tomorrow the Missouri team must be a classy ma chine. But the coach would express no hope. The players had to get down and work if they were to win he said. Nevertheless the team looks good and may be depended upon uo give a good account of the local school. The T. H. S. men are rounding Into better shape. Three are particularly good according to the practices this week. One of them is Hoatson. And all of them are looking better in the work than they did a week ago. The players are confident they will take the meas ure of their opponents. The game Is a Missouri Valley championship contest and the locals are anxious to put it on the good side of the ledger. One of the officials of the game, which begins at 2:30 o'clock on the Washbun field is Barney Reilly, who played base ball on the Holland team last season. Reilly will referee the contest. He Is from the Handover school and knows football as well as he does the diamond game. The other officials will be Mil ler. Kansas, umpire and Henderson of Oklahoma, head linesman. Meanwhile the Blue squad has the Den ver victory to back them and have had a good week's work. A lot of new stuff has been worked out and th old plays brought nearer to perfection. Washburn stock rose like an aeroplane in Topek.i when the Ichabods beat Denver. If the players can boost it again Saturday by a win the Congresrationalists will likely prove hard fox the Kansas conference teams to stop. The players and the coacp realize this and will do their utmost to bring out the Blue students for another shirt tail parade. There are some weak places in the Washburn lineup and the game with Denver and this week's work has shown the coach what they are. There was no way to locate them save in work with other teams and the coach had to bide his time. He knows them now and has been able to plug up some of the holes. Others he has still with him. If th3 Missourians find them it will be hard for the Blue to win. Otherwise there is a chance. But don't look for any big score in favor of the locals if they do con,e home victorious. And don't think there will not be a football game at Liberty Saturday. With the varsity team out of town lo cal attention turns to the high school game witht St. Joseph. Last year Topeka won by an 8 to 4 score and the game wa a battle royal. The game Saturday will be hard fought from start to finish. Thi Missourians will come here loaded 1 r grizzlies and will probably find what they are hunting. Coach Heil has his squad going well. Losing their first game to a team that had been playing together lor three years, they got their second wind and whipped the Leavenworth bunch by a ridiculous score. The team seems to have more nearly struck the gait it is capable of sustaining. Saturday's contest with St. Joseph will likely furnish as hard a figh't as can be witnessed in Kansas on that day. There's a lot of nervousness in the Ka. sas camp today. The Jayhawker team goes out for the first Missouri Valley conference game, meeting Drake. There's been a slump in Kansas stock since the game with the Warrensburg normals last week. The Mosse squad didn't show wlut was expected of them. Of course it may be a part of Mosse's plan. One never knows about these Kansas stories. Mosse trained with Kennedy so long that bear stories may be a part of his system. But there isn't any doubt that the bunch on the hill at Lawrence are experiencing 'he unpleasant thrills of uncertainty. Yester day the coaches hadn't decided who would be taken to Des Moines. The Kansas list of games for today shows that there will be some Interesting dope on the situation for us next week. The teams are just now getting into shape and are to meet Saturday in tne initial struggles. The early indications are that there will be considerable change from last year's football map before Tur key day comes round. MATTIGK SAVES SOX. His Triple With the Bases Full Wins in Ninth Inning. K. S. A. C. HOPEFUL Believe Aggies Will Win, but Wonder at Normal Play. Injuries Cause Anxiety to Man hattan Coacli and Rooters. Chicago. Oct. 18. "Chick" Mattick of the Chicago American League team kept his club in the running for the city cham pionship by driving out a triple with the bases full in the ninth inning. When h scored a moment later on a short hit in front of the plate, which Archer tossed to first, he brought defeat to the Nationals by a score of 8 to 5. The series now stands three games each and the deciding game will be played on the American League grounds today. The spectacular finish was in keeping with the rest of the game. Zimmerman's hitting was responsible for four of the Oubs' tallies. His sacrifice fly scored Miller in the first; his home run drive, which hit the grand stand in left and bounded to center, brought himself and Tinker home in the fourth and his double came in the eighth after Miller's triple had sent Good, who was hit by a pitched ball while batting for Cheney, home. The official attendance was 11,893 and the total receipts were $8,962. Of this amount the National Commission will re ceive $896.60 and each club will get $4,033.12 as its share. Score: NATIONALS. Players AB. R. H Sheckard, If 4 0 Miller, cf 4 2 Tinker, ss 4 1 Zimmerman, 3b 3 1 Schulte, rf 4 0 Saier, lb 4 0 Evers, 2b 4 0 Archer, c 4 0 Cheney, p 2 0 Good 0 1 Richie, p 0 0 Lavender, p r 0 0 "Downey 1 0 PO. 2 1 2 0 2 11 3 6 0 0 0 0 0 A. 0 1 4 2 0 0 1 3 2 0 1 0 0 Totals 34 5 8 27 Batted for Cheney in eighth. Batted for Lavender in ninth. AMERICANS. Players- AB. R. H. PO. Rath, 2b 3 Lord. If Mattick, cf 6 Collins rf 6 Borton, lb 6 Zeider, 3b 4 Weaver, ss 4 Schalk, c Lange, p - Easterly 0 Johnson ? Walsh, p. 14 A. 4 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 1 0 0 1 Manhattan, Oct. 18. The outcome of the Aggie-Normal game, which will be played here Saturday, is uncertain. At no time this year have the Aggies known less of the strength of their op ponents or the style of play favored by the team they are to meet. The Normals are in good condition, fof the season Is young to them in point of J games played but not In practice. That me Aggies win win tne uupwina uw J 1 doubt, but by what score, and how, ,no one has attempted to figure out. The lineup of the Aggie team is not a settled thing. It would fit well with Coach Lowman's hopes if the Normal's required only a few of the regulars and some of the subs to keep them busy. But if the Aggies are compelled to send in all their best men to ward off the attacks of the Emporia crowd, it may go hard with the chances of the Man hattan eleven to worst K. IT. in the game at Lawrence the following Satur day. The quarterbacks are climbing into the hospital wagon. Sims was not in the best condition at the time of the Haskell game, although he played good football, and since then he has been out of practice a good deal of the time. Pol lom has his right arm in a sling be cause of wrenched ligaments. Dresser Is laid up with a twisted ankle. However, one or all three of the quarterbacks can be used in a pinch Saturday, and will be if the Aggie chances to win become doubtful. The work here this week has beei largely the developing of an offense. Lowman is never in a hurryy to develop a strong offensive style of play until the men have worked up a defense thai will stand under fire. But this week the Aggies have been running new for mations and experimenting with tha forward pass, that stood ihem in such good stead in the Cornhusker affray. The game with the Normals is likely to be a contest of open field ability, a 3 the Normals will hardly try to gain much ground through the staunch Ag gie line and the Aggies will try their hand at the forward flips that count so much once they are executed prop erly. The Aggie rooters will hold a monster meeting here tonight to talk over tha possibilities of a special train to K. V. October 26. Permanent cheer leaders v.-ill be elected and the cheering put upon an organized basis. Lewis' Sinerle Binder clear: sixteen vears on the matket and always the same rich satisfying quality. Adv. You could buy your coal from the mines and save the coal dealer's profit would you You could buy your meat from the slaughter house and save the butcher's profit would you You could buy flour from the mills and save the grocer's profit would you You could buy your shoes from the factory and save the shoeman's profit would you Of Course Vou VJouSd o Then why pay a double profit on your clothing-. Buy direct from the men who make and fashion the clothes and save the middle men's profit. We sell from our mills direct to you. Class iest styles nobbiest fabrics and shades guaranteed fit at a price you can always afford. $25 and 330 Pure AH Wool Suits and Overcoats EVIade to Your Individual Measure for ' e confine aH onr pfTnra n i iswell$15 suits and overcoats. We make itnem Detter use better materials Hve m SCMOFglOifS 'TJ20$BS " . . j " iiyoita iixc man me oiu saying "like begets like;" for just as the offspring of healthy ancestry are blessed I with pure, rich blood insuring good health, so the children of blood-tainted : parentage inherit a polluted circulation which fosters a. chain of scrofulous troubles. The n sua 1 tiVro r,t -,.f..i 1 are swollen glands about the neck, weak eyes, pale, waxy complexions, sores and ulcers and general poorj health. Treatment should be com men rerl at th first; muitauuuw oorouia lor it may get beyond control if allowed to run unchecked. S. S. S. is the very best treatment for Scrofula. It renovates the circulation, and drives out all scrofulous matter and deposits. S. S. S. goes to the bottom of the trouble and removes me cause anu cures tne disease. S. S. S. is made en tirely of roots, herbs and barks, and is an absolutely safe remedy for young or old. Book on the blood and medical advice free to all who write THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO. ATLANTA.' GA. A-i aiiiliilliiilllliiMMto i Totals 37 8 13 27 12 0 Batted for Lange in ninth. Ran for Easterly in ninth. Americans 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 4 Na!onris -i o-s Summary: Two-Dase bjw-iuimi, o-i-ton, Zimmerman. Three-base nits Miller, Mattick Home runs Zimmerman, Collins, Weaver. Bases on balls Cheney 1, Ritchie 2 Struck out Cheney 4, Lange 7, Walsh l' Time 2-00. Umpires Owens, behind the plate- Connolly on bases; Dineen in left lield; Eason in right field. GOLFERS GOTO LAWRENCE. Topeka Team to Meet Oread Players Saturday. The golf team from the Topeka Country club will gj to Lawrence Sat urday to play a match with the Uiam of the Oread Golf club during the afternoon. Prof. M. W. Sterling, cap tain of the Lawrence team, has teen 'n communication with Dr. A. J. West, captain of the Topeka team, and has been told that the plavers from here would be there Saturday. This will be the fourtU match be tween the Oread and Topeka teams, and was to have been played last spring. The Topekans could not keep their date at that time iiowever, and j the match has been arranged for Sat- j urday. All the previous games have i resulted in victories for iie Topeka j player3. S2.00 A MONTH buys THfS I7XJEWEL SPEUIL ' $16.50 ' Guaranteed 25 Years SEE Topeka representative. MR. R. E. MARLING, at 611 Kansas Ave., 2nd floor, or if you wish him to call, phone him at 1125 Ind. Tou will find Mr. Marling a quiet, reliable, censibla young man, always glad to accommo date you in any way possible. HARRIS-GOAR JEWELRY CO, Kansas City. Mo. UNION MADE ... uiamiau give better style and fit than clothes you pay $25 and $30 for in other stores. Here s Where You Get $2.00 Worth for Every Dollar Yon Spend See our striking line of snappy up-to-date'fpatterns and shades in worsteds, cheviots, serges, scotches and TL3!6 ?Ur Ch2lCe- the style you prefer. That s all there is to it. Our expert tailors will take your "f- Yoor c'-ib made in our sun-lit union shopVby VZVr, 1"gh,r 8kiUed PPy tailore- We will give you a perfect 6t- the finest you ever had on your back or hand back CrSJrtAe Scotch Woolen Mills' way of doing bules, Its the way that guarantees utmost clothes value for your money. 77ms is the name and address of the original genuine $15.00 tailors Remember it. Fight thy of imitators 532 Kansas Avenue. TOM C. mWELL, Mgr. (Copyright, 1912, Leon Sigman.) Mail Orders: Out of town custom ers write for Free Samples and self measurement blanks. LYNCH AFTER FOGEL. Chief of National Wants to Drive I'liilly Owner Out. New York, Oct. 18. Formal charges against Horace Fogel, president of the Philadelphia National League club, based upon his alleged assertions that umpires had favored the New YorK club and that this year's race had been fixed for that club to win, were ordered drawn at a special meeting here of the National League of Base ball clubs. Mr. Fogel will be given an oppor tunity to substantiate statements pub lished over his signature, accusing cer tain umpires of unfairness. The charges also will include statements which President Fogel is alleged to have made at the Philadelphia base ball park at the last series played there with the New York team; an ac cusation alleged to have been made that the manager of the St. Louis club weakened his team, by playing substi tutes, so that the New Yorks could win; and charges made by William Brennan, an - umpire whose fairness was said to have been impugned by Mr. FogeL "If he can prove that the National League race was crooked this year, and that the umpires or the president of the league were parties to it,'' said President Lynch, in a statement to the meeting, "then the umpires should be discharged and blacklisted from ever taking part in organized baseball, and the president of the league should step down and out of his position in dis grace. On the other hand, if these charges cannot be proved, then it is up to the National League to pass legislation preventing this man from representing a National League clu'o in any capacity." John A. Heydler, secretary of the league, was directed to present the charges to President Fogel within five days and Mr. Fogel was given Ave days additional to draw up his an swer. The league will meet here Tues day, November 26, to hear Mr. Fogel's defense and take action in the mat ter. Thomas J. Lynch, president of the league, .presided at the meeting. The clubs represented were Boston, by James K. Gaffney; Brooklyn, by Chas. H. Ebbetts; Chicago, by proxy held by Ebbetts; Cincinnati, by August Herr mann; Pittsburg, by proxy held by Mr. Herrmann; New York, by John Whalen and C. L. Sullivan; St. Louis, by L. O. Hocker, and Philadelphia by Horace Fogel. SATURDAY FOOTBALL, Topeka High school vs. St. Joseph High school at Toptka. Washburn vs. William Jewell at Liberty, Mo. K. U. vs. Drake at Des .Moines. Aggies vs. State Normal at Manhat tan. College of Emporia vs. Baker at Baldwin. St. Mary's vs. Southwestern at St. Marys Missouri vs. Ames -t Columbia, Minnesota vs. Nebraska at Mii ne apolis Chicago vs. Iowa nt Chicago. Michigan vs. Aggies at Ann Arbor. Wisconsin vs. Purdue at Madison. Drury vs. Washington unlversily at St. Louis. Denver University vs Utah at Den ver. St. Louis'University vs. Kolla at St. Louis. J. Harvard" vs. Amherst at Cambridge. Yale vs. Army at West Point. University of Pittsburg vs. Carlisle at Pittsburg. Cornell vs. Penn State at Ithaca. Williams vs. Dartmouth at Williams iown. Lafayette vs. Ursinus at Easton Princeton vs. Syracuse at Princeton. Navy vb. Swarthmore at Annapolia.