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The Dispatch from Moline, Illinois • 13

Publication:
The Dispatchi
Location:
Moline, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

13 MOLINEDAILY DISPATCH: MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 13, 1924. "Independents Register Easy Victory Over Hammond Pro Gridders DIXON LEGION BRIGADE TAMES SPRING VALLEY ALUMNI REPORT I SMASHES BY LI ALIBI AL TICKET DEMAND GAVIN HELP Bill Dixon, Oct. 13. Goat Doig. Spring Valley champion ring artist, and his football-team, the Spring Valley Wild Cats, were tamed here yesterday by the Dixon Legionnaires, 10 to 7, before the record crowd of the season.

AND WHIT GE Ipdications Are That Plan for Train to Cedar Rapids Will Succeed. ST. PAUL EVENS Hoosier Wall Crumples Under Continued Pounding of Island Stars. WTH WIN OUN BUTLER'S SLIP HELPS Is Lefty Groves' Speed Ball Easy for Champions of Association. S.

unu7 vm UMe -1 um oAelA 'F ffmTwiX HHT iff YO POUR MAD A FWE rjquMW UJASHT CT OK Veh-J A ArV How. Ui WfT. UP T7 SEVEtvl ffi aSSL" Ursella's Men Become Contenders for Pro League Championship. Alumni In charge'of ticket sales for the proposed special train to Cedar Rapidd next Saturday report renewed interest in the proposal and are confident of obtaining the desired 123 reservations by tomorrow night. Officials of the Rock Island railroad have granted the committee three days more in which to solicit orders, the original deadline having been last Saturday night.

At latest accounts the solicitors were still about fifty short of their quota but high school students are expected to make up the deficit by tomorrow night. Tickets may ba ordered from Ben and Beder Wood, 521 Sixteenth street, Joe Nelson, Mo-line Plow company, Lester Swanson, Moline office of the Times and Pat Patten, sports editor of the Dispatch. The fare, is CLASSIFIED ADS tell" many a Btory of profit and prosperity. TV TORE than 3000 fans who sat through lour of near-July weather PauL Oct? 13. Excellent pitching by Fittery and Markle combined with opportune hits by their teammates gave St.

Paul its second straight victory over Baltimore here yesterday, squaring the game count in the junior world series at four all. Taking the lead in the first inning against the speed ball hurling of Lefty Groves the Saints were never headed, winning, to 1, and carrying the series to the ninth game, which was to decide the minor league championship, here today. Score: R. H. E.

Baltimore 00001000 01 J5 0 St. Paul 10101000 3 9 2 Batteries Groves, Ogdcn and Frei-tag; Fittery, Markle and Dixon. to watch the Rock Island Independents trim Hammond, 2G to 0, at Douglas Dark yesterday afternoon were convinced when the BABY'S COLDS are soon "nipped in the bud without "dosing by use of witno final whistle had blown that the Is- VA F0 RUB OvmrlT Million art (J Yearly prospect. Las gone to Dr. Twingley's sanitarium to have the hair on his chest tweezered tuid bobbed Abe Glutzsky, the welter tornado, has canceled his bouts for the next six weeks.

He will an exclusive Hoof and Neck Infirmary to have his Adam's apple leveled off. Abe will also Undergo a minor operation to have his eyelashes beaded. lamlvrs must be taken into serious consideration when an attempt is made to dope out the contendere for the 10-4 National Pro league title. Hammond was helpless before the Green and White machine which car-lied the hall for consistent gains almost at will and held like a stone wall a dVffiw. The visitors never gave the Independents any real worry.

Buck liavin was one of the outstanding ligures in Bock Island's backtield. liuck had a great day of plunging, driving through the Hammond wall for extra yards many times. Three times he carried the ball across the enemy goal. Bock Island made ANDIS WRATHY Telling the World By NEAL O'HARA Bull's face. Forty or fifty large specks broke out on Firpo's cheeks after training in the sun.

He has retired to seclusion with six bottles of lotion. Hereafter lie will do his shadow boxing in the shade. Mickey McSwat. the heavyweight Without operation. No detention from bust, nesa or pleasure.

Writ for freo booklet. C. lu BAREWALD, M. D. Davenport Iowa AT BAN STAND Dispatch Short Ads Bring Resulti.

Diamond Commissioner Says President's Statement Answers Johnson. the handkerchief. Tour favorite sport page will -soon chronicle items like this LATEST FIGHT NEWS. The scheduled bout for the middleweight championship last night was called off when Kid Thuggo refused to go on against Darcy, the champ. Thuggo claimed Darcy was wearing a two days' growth of beard whereas the articles of agreement called for both boys to have a shave and massage by 3 p.

m. on the day of the fight. The boxing commission forfeited the champion's crown. Battling Burlingame is training for his next big bout at Madame Gwendolyn's Tark. Avenue gym.

The Battler claims he can make the weight by wearing Sylph brand corsets for a couple of weeks and feeding on macaroons. He is at home to visitors each day at the gym from 3 to 5 pr. m. doing shadow boxing pirouet IM1M the most of a costly fumble by Sol Butler in the lirt few minutes of the same and the slip seemed to affect the morale of the Hoosiers throughout the afternoon. After the trickoCC Hammond punted to Jim Thorpe at mid-field and a few seconds later the Indian booted the ball back to Hammond territory.

Fred Thompson, who wis down the field with the kick, Crabbed Butler's fumble on the Hammond 7-yard line. Thorpe added five yards on the next play and Gavin took the ball over for th first touchdown of the game. Thorpe's dropkick Washington, Oct. 13. Baseball Is in for a stormy winter session.

And some epochal changes may take place in the conduct and personnel of the game before the teams start south next spring. One of these changes may be the retirement from baseball of Commis the touchdown was blocked. sioner K. M. Landis or Byron Bancroft Johnson, president of the Amer ting and aesthetic dancing.

He has Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn for his sparring partners. Jack Dempsey has startled fisticuff cosmos by coming out with a new nose. Jack's old concave model has been jigsawed into a streamline affair. Hereafter Tiger Jack will be handsome combination of Beanty and the Beast.

QueenBberry vocation is getting very fancy when champion's beezer has to be rein id This is first time manly art of self-defense has ever mingled with womanly art of self-preservation. Next thing you know, the pugilistic trade will be demanding talcum in place of resin and the canvas will be lined with powder puffs. Old-time glove thumpers never flirted with plastic surgery. They didn't have noses, chins and foreheads straightened with the knife. They had 'em stove in with knuckles or nothing at all.

John L. Sullivan never competed with James J. Ilackelt in rotogravure sections. The Butcher Boy would have grabbed off apoplexy if the sport pages said he looked nice. Jim Jeffries always resented the implication that his eyes were azure blue.

Jim insisted they were black and blue and nothing else. But now a champion ain't happy unless his profile is like Greek goddess and head-on exposure shows rosebud lips-, I Large alterations are now going on in the pummelling industry. Demp-sey's nose has its cantilever bridge flattened perfect. Benny Leonard parts his hair by Firpo now wears a collar when he sits down to meals. Tou wouldn't recognize the old sock-and-busting pastime any more.

Our fastidious fighters train by skipping rope. Next thing you know, they'll be playing parchesi and drop Youag Biffo, welterweight con tender, will have his hands taped with filet lace for -his fight tomorrow night. The niauve lounging robe he will en ter in is an exclusive model by Blickson. The Soclco-Firpo match scheduled lor the Ritz roof this week-end has been postponed for a month. The ican league.

Landis' Statement Hot. Commissioner Landis said just before leaving for New York: "He (Johnson) tried his best to make this series look dirty. He wouldn't attend the president of the United States attended every game played in Washington save the Sunday game. And, while he (Johnson) snapped at the series from afar, here was what the president of the United States said about it: 'Tin contests which I witnessed maintained throughout a high degree of skill and every evideuce of a high class sportsmanship that will bring to every observer an increased respect for and confidence in our national game. It would be difficult to conceive a finer example of true sport.

"That is jyhat the president of the United States said about it. "Answer Jolnson? I don't have to It has been done by the president of the United States." match was put over on account of an outbreak of freckles on the Wild Hess Punts' to Thorpe. Hess, Hammond's captain, punted to Thorpe at the middle of the opening arid Rock Island started another inarch down the field. Two plays by Gavin took the ball eighteen yards and it could be seen that the Hammond line was not equal to the tremendous pounding of the Island forwards. The second quarter opened with the bull on Hammond's 33-yard line from where end runs by Thorpe and Brndshaw, who had relieved Phelan, took it to within two yards of the goal.

McCarthy slipped through right tackle for a touchdown and Thorpe added a point with a drop-kick. Rock Iluud scored its third touchdown in the third quarter on straight football with liuck Gavin doing most the plunging. Duke Slater took care of the kick-off after Thorpe was taken from the game and Johnny Armstrong entered the fray in the fourth quarter with llock Island leading 20 to 0. Johnny decided to change the style of battle and, aided by Fred Thompson and Gavin, bewildered the visitors with a aeries of brilliant aerials. Armstrong's toss over the goal line was grounded and the ball was returned to the Hammond line.

lieing unable to gain through the Independent line, Fulkorr punted to F. Thompson. Armstrong returned thirty yards around the Hammond right end and Gavin plunged eight yards to the 4-yard line. On the next play lie smashed through for Bock Island's fourth touchdown. Hammond resorted Jpasyiug during the short time remaining to play but met with little success.

Fulkon. Hess and Butler starred for the Hoosiers. Lineup and summary follow: oo GOSSEN PAYS $200 FINE FOR VIOLATING DRY LAW nd! jviues a seco Dispatch Special Scrrlce. Rock Island, Oct. 13.

John Gossen. THE outward and visible manifestation of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) organization consists of certain refineries, buildings, storage depots, service stations, tank wagons and quantities of crude leum and its products. These tangible things any oil company may copy. The refineries of this Company efficient as they now are, nevertheless may be copied by others. Its system of distribution may be The design of its service stations, with their infinitely practical arrangements for service, may be copied.

For all these things are but the work of hands. But back of all these material possessions is something else something fundamental; intangible -whose workings cannot be imitated. This is the will and the1 energy to create; the ideal which inspires and animates intrinsic service. This determination, this will and enthusiasm of heart cannot be copied. It is the unique possession which gives character to the Standard Oil Company (Indiana).

This character is expressed in ideals of -management. A prominent industrial engineer well says: "It is the part of management to manage. It is the part of science to overcome difficulties. Anybody can accept things as they are." The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has never been content things as they are." It will never be satisfied until petroleum is made to yield the greatest possible number of products which shall render a useful service to society. This Company believes that an industrial organization exists and is permanent only because it renders an essential, service.

Itjs the enthusiastic, wholehearted determination to serve, on the part of the 27,160 employes, which has niade this Company a constructive force. It is the harmonious pulling together of this industrial army that has enabled the Company to build a great business upon a foundation of fundamental service. This spirit which is imbued -in the heart of every Standard Oil employe, is the key to the success of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). You will find it manifest at every point. It is inherent.

It is inimitable. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) General Office: -Standard OH Buildlntf 910 S. Michigan Chicago, IIL S12 Sixth street, was fined $200 and costs Saturday when he was arraigned before Magistrate A. M. Klove on a THIS is the speed of the spoken word over JL a telephone line.

Between two ticks of your charge of selling liquor. Gossen en tered a plea of guilty and for this reason Attorney Harry M. Schriver objected to his client being assessed watch your voice could be hurled nearly twice around the earth. the costs which amounted to $0.40. Magistrate Klove stated he would look up the law on this point and if it was found that the guilty plea made" it possible to eliminate the court costs he would remit that part of the fine.

Independents (20) Hammond (0) J-'. Thompson le Sullivan re Scott It Oltz rt G. Thomson Ig Hurry rg Kolls Ilydzewski Kraker rs Fortune Ig Slater rt Xeale It Wilson re Siefers Ie Mcl'arihy uh Hess qb Thorpe Ihb Ihb l'helan ihb Uutler rhb Gavin fb Annan fb J7VERY tele-Jj phone added to our system during the past eight years has required an in-vestment much high-er than the amount represented by our investment for each telephone then in service. -This condition will apply to each telephone added for many years in the future if present price levels hold. Bell Telephone engineers have developed methods of using the electric current in the small quantities needed to carry the voice impulses over immense distances.

These methods are at the service of the American public who use the long distance lines, probably with little thought of thepatient work of inventors and researches of scientists behind their perfect performance. 1 Substitutions Independents Brndshaw for l'helan, Ashbaugh for Gavin, Gavin for Thorpe, DeClerk for Kolls, Burten for G. Thompson, Armstrong for McCarthy, McCarthy for- Brad-shnw, K.Ms for Wilson. Hammond l'alkon for Annan, Best for Robinson, Miese for Sullivan, Watson for Hess, Sullivan for Roberts, Annan for Besta. Touchdowns Gavin, McCarthy, 1.

Points after touchdownsi Thorpe, McCarthy, 1. Referee I G. Moore, Chicago. Tlmpire Meyer Morris, Rock Island. Head linesman Harry Behnamann, Rock Island.

'1 PRO LEAGUE SCORES ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM One Policy One System Universal Service Chicago Bears. 10; Racine, 10. Chicago Cardinals, 13: Minneapolis. 0. Dnjton.

Buffalo, 0. Milwaukee, 21 Kenosha, 0. Rock Islund, 20; Hammond, 0. Carrjin bouquets t' th teacher won't git you anywhere unless you've got th goods. We don't believe we've seen any-buddy light a cigar with a $5 bill since th' saloons closed.

3585.

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Pages Available:
1,403,999
Years Available:
1894-2024