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6 " SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WAS HINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1921—PART 2. 'SPORTS. Georgia Tech-Penn State and Harvard-Centre Grid Frays Hold Big Interest Today OTHER GAMES, HOWEVER, SHOULD OFFER THRILLS OOT BALL in the east today gave promise of a riot of color and a sharp clash of sectional athletic interests. The game as played south of the Mason and Dixon line was to be shown by a trio of college elevens, intent on carrying victory back home with them. From Kentucky came Centre, with the great Bo McMillan and other “praying colonels,” to do battle against Harvard at Cambridge.' From Atlanta rolled northward the “golden tornado” of Georgia Tech, to line up at the Polo Grounds, New York, against the fast Pennsylvania State team. The University oi Virginia eleven was at Princeton for a clash with the Tiger squad. There were other contests of no less Smportance between rival eastern ag- gregations. At Ithaca the unde- feated Cornell team faced the unde- feated Dartmouth combination, at Philadelphia. Glen Warner's Pitts- burgh boys were scheduled to oppose Pennsylvania, while at New Haven Yale and Brown were ready for their annual tilt. Other games scheduled included lumbia against Willlams at New York, Syracuse against Washington and Jefferson at Syracuse. Lehigh against West Virginia at South Beth- lehem, Fordham against Boston Col- lege at Brooklyn, Colgate against New York University at Binghamton, N. Y. and Rutgers against Lafayette at Easton. Fa. Will Attract Thousands. The games today were expected to attract thousand: and attendance figures for the a egate number of | persons witnessing a game in one| day may be broken. Because of the glamour surrouding college elevens coming from distant points to pit their skill, courage and endurance against the same qualities of the hume eclevens, chief attention Wwill be focussed upon the playing of | the southern teams in their invasion of ancient eastern campuses. All the invading squads are known to be high-class, effective elevens, well versed in the modern fundamentals and frills of the autumn sport. Although defeated by Harvard 31 to 14 last season, Centre Collega caused consternation among Crimson coaches and players in the first half of th: 1920 game and the impression made upon both Harvard participants and spectators is attested by the fact every one of the 45,000 seats in the stadium has been sold for today's contest. The Danville collegiuns appear for the second time in two bridge with a straight record tor'es for the season. In thei Kames to date they have not onl impressively, but have prevented op- ponents from crossing their goal line. ‘The southerners will present their strongest line-up with the possible exception of Center Whitnell, who is ineligible, due to scholastic dificul- tes. Harvard will offer what is consider- ed to be a rather weak team, due to 1he injury of several stars in the Penn State game a week ago and the need of guarding others for the crucial struggle with Princeton a week hence. Sare to Be Real Battle. A battle royal is certain to develop when Georgia Tech grapples with Penn State on the turf recently ripped and scarred by the spikes of the world series base ball players. The caliber of the Atlanta eleven-ranks with that of any team In the country. Their speed and power, which have earned them the sobriquet of “golden torna- do” are well illustrated in the record made in flve games this fall in which 270 points have been scored against 14 by opponents. It was not until Georgla Tech met Rutgers a week 480 that its goal line was crossed. Penn State holds a similar position |and rating among the eastern teams. | When the Pennsylvanians faced Har- vard last Saturday only Lehigh had been able to socore a touchdown against the Staters. They led Harvard 21 to 14 with only a few minutes to play when the Crimson staged u desperate rally and by long forward Wwhich tied the game. wrinkles In the way of shifts, con- cealed attacks, deluyed passes and aerial offe:ise will undoubtedly be un- jcovered when these elevens unlimber their up-to-date foot ball batteries. { The southerners are slight favorites, !but =0 closely do the teams appear to | be matched that it is likely that the breaks of the game will tip the scales of victory. Tiger Stars May Play. Lourie and Garrity, the backfleld stars of the Princeton team, are ex- pected to don uniforms again in the contest with Virginia, but their addi- | tion to the eleven will be offset by the | absence of several of the best of the | Tiger forwards. Capt. Keck, Center Wittmer and pomsibly one ‘or two other linesmen will be out of the game, due to Injuries or resting for {the Harvard contest & Week away. { Virginla comes to Princeton with an | tmpressive record and a well coached combination, and it may sary for the Tigers to rush their line | stars into the game, If the third de- feat in three weeks {8 to be avefted. Of the so-called big three, Yale ap- | pears to have the easiest task of the day, for in meeting Brown the Elis! { can’ afford to call into action all or !any portion of the first string players with two weeks intervening before the classic Princeton game. On the showing made this season Brown does not appear as formidable as several of past Prividence teams which have caused upsets at New Haven, and will be confronted toda by one of the best Blue elevens in some seasons. Pitzsburgh Is favored to’ defeat Pennsylvania, although the Quakers may upset calculations by arising to the emergency in the manner of former Red and Blue clevens. Both the Army and Navy have fair- 1y easy g: Annex No. 2. . 1047 B2 104 Womeis 94 i Campbell, lackwell. 2= Rijine. - 119 98 Allen. Fotals. .. 433 3 Totaly DISTRICT LEAGUE. Rathakelier. 3. Blick Iee Co. Bartner... 80 97 100 Gunnell... 99 91 100 Harville. 138 03 97 96 82 tosenberg 11 61 85 8 1z o7 71 77 Totals. ..556 490 565 MASONIO 90 a1 08 3 T 87 90 ™ Handicap. Totals.. 438 472 45 ‘Totals.. 475 434 454 INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. Engineers. Fourth Sectfon. §1 110 104 Griffin.... 96 101 107 08 104 95 Maidens.. 108 91 84 &5 107 59 85 83 102 83 108 50 80 o 83 96 111 90 passes paved the way for a score! The very latest . be' heces- | l { i | | i i N Pelham Country Club. James Barnes, national open the previous course record, set by afternoon after defeating Miss Alexa Stirling, former national champion, | by 2 up. The English woman's card in the morning was six strokes high- er than her record in the afternoon. MRS. THOMAS KINKAID. SUPERMAN GOLFER WINS MATCH WITH SUPERMAID EW YORK, October 29.—A superwoman of the links forced a super- male golfer to unwonted heights to surpass her yesterday at theimnin' her title, yestirday over the hampion, deieated Miss Cecil Leitch, woman champion of Great Britain, France and Canada, by 3 and 1, {measure of Mrs. H. King Cornwell in | in an exhibition match in which he granted her six bisques. To overcome this handicap he played such remarkable golf that he made the 6,419-yard course in 68, six strokes under par and four under himseif. Miss Leitch had a medal score of 82, the best a woman had ever done on the course, three strokes under the card that won the qualifying medal in the recent woman's national championship. Miss Leitch pluyed Barnes in the holes she played in par, Barnes won | holes. WINNER AND RUNNER-UP IN D. C. WOMEN’S GOLF TOURNE | three and lost two, while six were halved. | ‘Third Victory Over American. 1 Miss Leltch's victory over Miss| BATTLES IN “BG TEN" [ NOT OF TITLE CLASS CHICAGO, October 29.—Three of the four unbeaten teams of the western conference play today, while Ohio State rests for her game with the University of Chicago next Saturday. The battle between Minnesota anu ‘Wisconsin, at Madison, Wis.,, was the jmost Interesting conference game, iregards bearing on the conference | title, while Chicago, another member of the “unbeaten four,” followed her Prineeton victory last Saturday with !another intersectional clash, this time with the University of Colorado. A badger victory at Madison has been considered almost a certainty If CENTRAL’S ALERTNESS DEFEATS TECH ELEVEN BY JOHN B. KELLER. IDELINE generals, with their second guesses, can win any foot ball game, but field generals have no time to revise plans formulated on the spur of the moment. Strategists attending the Tech-Central contest, classic of the annual high school foot ball championship series in Central stadium yesterday, repeatedly berated the directors of Tech's play when plans miscarried, and when the game ended, 7 to 6, in Central’s favor, were firm in their belief that the better team lost. But Central deserved its victory, for it was quicker than Tech in taking advantage of opportunities, and when the crisis came had more punch than its rival. Stunned by the spced of Tech’s at- Tech had the ball on the 20-ard line MRS. KINKAID EXTENDED! TORETAIN GOLF TITLE __Although she won the final round in the women’s golf championship of the District of Columbia, thereby re- course of the Columbia Country Club, Mrs. T. C. Kinkaid of Chevy Chase ihad no light assignment to take the the ultimate round. Mrs. Kinkaid won by 2 and 1. and in doing so was pushed to the limit, the match being more closely contested than any in which &he had played during the course of the tourney. Four down at the end of the fifth hole. Mrs. Cornwell began a streak of fine golf that won three straight Mrs, Kinkaid was only 1 up at the fourteenth tee when Mra. Cornwell won the thirteenth with par 3, but the champion became 2 up again when she won the fifteenth. Mrs. Cornwell won the short si the veteran Wisconsin backfield con- tinues {n the form shown »o far this season. Minnesota, however, has de- veloped considerably since her early season weakne and has always grown stronger In the late season games. The return of Trig Johnson to the line is expected to prove an additional factor of strength to the northmen. Michigan and Illinols, both elimi- nated from titular consideration by !defeats, meet at Urbana, In their an- ,nual contest before a “Father's day’ j9rowd at Urbana, 1ll. Both have |shown weakness in personnel and team play so far this season, but are eregarded as fairly evenly matched. Towa 100ks for an easy victory over | Purdue on the latters grounds to- day, with Capt. Aubrey Devine and !the remainder of the powerful Hawk- eye backfield in fine shape. With two weeks rest since the lowans' victory over Nlinols, Coach Jones declared | |that overconfidence was the worst! hundicap of his eleven. The Chicago-Colorado game is ex- pected to indicate the Maroons' chances in the remaining bLi ten games of the season, especially the clash with Ohlo State next week. The | Ohjoans, not considered as of the |snme caliber as their remagkable team }of last season, surprised foot ball fol- lowers by overwhelming Michigan last Saturday, and two weeks' rest is expected to make them doubly dan- gerous. Coach Stagg has indicated he will_save his first string stars as Imuch as possible today, without tak- 'ing unnecessary chances against the |lighter western eleven. 5 | Outside the conference, the Indiana- !Notre Dame game for the Hoosier championship ~ occuples first rank. Roth have been beaten, but these comparative chowings count but little {in the state title struggle. North- western plays De Paul, a minor un- liversity here. ——— GEORGIA-AUBURN GAME IS HEADLINE IN SOUTH ATLANTA, Ga., October 29.—The major foot ball teams of Dixie will be matched against opponents of equal ranking today In more than a dozen games. | "The Georgia-Auburn game, at Co- | lumbus, Ga. should be the (op-: tiner, for both institutions have pow- erful teams und a glance backward shows there has been Tittle to choose | in the pust. Auburn defeated Georgila 70 0, in 1919, and lost to the Red and Black by that score last year. Georgia’s showing against Harvard | a fortnight ago makes the team the favorite in_the of many., but | Auburn has an advantage also in! that its coaches have been able to| “point™ the men for tomorrow's game. | MAKES A 103-YARD DASH | FOR SCORE ON KICK-OFF CLINTON, S. C., October 29.—What is believed to b the longest run on record in South Carolina foot ball took place vesterday in the first quarter of ; the game between Erskine College and | Presbyterian College of South Carolina. Jack Wilson, Presbyterian quarter bacl caught a kick-off hehind his own goai line and raced 103 yards for a touch- jown. 1t was & well executed run and Wilson shook off several tacklers as he raced down the field. Erskine won the game, 1 to Yesterday’s Foot Ball Results. ; Marion, 0. , 0. tack in the opening half, the Blue and White was unable to reveal its power. The Manual Trainers, primed to the ond, launched an offensive that gave them a touchdown in the first perfod and kept play in Cen- tral’s territory continually in the sec- ond period. fumble, at the start of the second half, rked to Central's advantage and from that time on the Blue and White was master. Tech Strong at Start. ‘The Manual Tralners did the hulk' of their ground gaining in the first two perfods. They registered three first downs In the opening quarter two of them in succession, mccount- Ing for their touchdown. Tech start- ed ita peoring drive from the 46-yard line after receiving a Central punt. A 22-yard end run by Shanks and another of 13 yurds by were mainly responsible for the lat- ter's goal crossing. Lut Jimmy Pugh, n of the Maroun and Gray. missed his Kick for the extra polnt and it later proved dimustrous. Tech again carried the attack into Centrul's territory in the second period, but elected to try for goals from fleld and falled In two attempts. It received the kick-off that opened the second half. but on the next pluy MacCartee fumbled and the ball, on Tech’s 26-yard line, was recovered by Childress, Central’s alert There was the turning point. Battered into helpleasness in the first half, the Blue and White nnerl capturing the fumbled oval suddenly became Imbued with new life and swept the Mauual Trainers off their feet. Two thrusts found the Tec line unyielding, eo Central openad its play. Wilton hurled a pass to Duffy and the lutter crossed Tech's G-yard line lLefore bLeing downed. Wilton's plunge put the ball 2 yards nearer the gosl, but Central was poenalized § yards for hiking d had to start play again from Tech's $33- yard line. Rauber's Goal Kick Decldes. 8o keen was the spirit of the Cen- tral attack, however, that the penalty only served to delay the scorlng of the touchdown. Capt. Buckley, be- hind a good Interference, skirted right end to Tech’s 6-vard line. Wil- ton added three more with a craxh into the line, then Buckley agaln |swept past right end for the points!Mount Pleasant boy that tied. Rauber, with a careful kick. contributed the decisive vcure. and White goal. An aertal offensive put Tech deep in Central's territory and plunges into the line advanced play to the li-vard line before the Blue and White forwards held This really was Tech's golden op- portunity for victory. Three times befors the Manual Trainers had elect- «d to try for gouls from field from poor positions, but, trailing and w but few minutes remaining for pla; the chanee for & kick from directly in front of the cross-bar was deliberate- 1y passed. On other occasions Supplee | had failed in efforts from the 37-vard and 50-yard lines, and Price, sent in to droplkick from a sharp angle when | But Tech's first slip, &, MacCartee | left end. i in the second period, booted the ball outside the posts. Long Pusses Succeed. Both teams used the forw effectively. Central attemp One was grounded, bhut the other paved the way to the Blue and Whit scoring. Tech was successful tuwi one puss netting § vards and anoth 24, In the fourth quarter one of t Manual Trainers' heaves was inter cepted and later three successive tosses were grounded. There was little to chonse betwien tha punters of the contending elevens | The efforts of Supplee and MacCar were about matched Ly those of Wi ton of Central. The latter's, ever, were neutralized to o tent by the brilliant runs Cartee after catching the ball jeral times the Tech receiver was {downed by -the last Central player between the runner and the goal A number of players dist'nguished themselves by excellent performances Tee malnstays were the elusive MacCartee, who is about the best gridironer in the series this ycar, and the red-thatched Supplee sturdy ikicker and ball-runner in attack and a tower of strength as tackle in de- fense. Central Linemen Star. Much of the credit for checking th: rd pa ed 1t h advances must be given L» Casey, Central's right guard, and Childress and Johnson, tie lizh: flankers of the Blue and White. Th. Manual Trainers were unable to make |n single gain through Casey's posi {tion, and the alert guard blocked i | Tech free kick that might have caused serious trouble in the third perivd The ends shatiered the Tech inter lences to such an extent that player carrying the ovul genera { was without protection. In the Central backfield, Capt |1ey and Wilton did about everytiing that could be expected of them. They were consistent ground gainers and unusually strong defensively. When it found fitvelf, In the second half. Central's rush’ line outplayed the Tech forwards, and at rushing the ibackfleld gained as much ground us 1did the huskier Manual Trainers i The victory practically assures Cen- itral of the championship this reason (It has vet to play Buriness and West- jern, but from what they have shown 80 far neither will i uck able to xtop the in the struggl- for the gridiron title. Tech will have | to fuce Eastern and Business, and U From then on Central apparently former hus more than un out<ide was content to play u defensive game, chunce zgainst the Maroon and Gray although at times it flashed enough| central ¢ Vosit Tech (8 in the way of attack to match Tech | Childress. et end. ... ! for firat downas achieved in the second Littel cleft tackie.. half. The Manual Trainers fought|Mwuey.. =TT susv) dcsperately and once in the fourth |oeaerord:------ yenter. oo period seriously threutened the Blue | buffx. Right Juhnison oo’k uber Beore by periods: {Contenl .......... 007 67 Wik 0o v oo 800 0 | | Bubstitutions: Central —Stine for Moo | Brinkman for Bouth. Tect Halley for Q sads, Price for Halley, Murray for Price. Coruitck for Verry. Halley fo for Suit fitger 1 MacCartes oal_from o-Mr. ¥ Pugl Tmpire—Mr. WARD LED IN ADVANCING RUNNERS IN BIG SERIES G. C. Whitlag. 92 13 HAS RISE LIKE HOPPE The meteoric rise in the billiard had played in one under par. Barnes had one eagle and six birdies; he played nine holes in par and 'two holes in one over par. He went out in 36, one under par, and came home FRIEDMAN STOPS RICE; NEW YORK, October 29.—Next on the world's championship bantem- welght title calendar will be the just Childress played 'Ransdell and Hamilton played Taylor in the gemi- final this morning. The finals will be played this afterncon. Young, Kelly and Rawlings of the Glants were second with five each. The Meusel brothers had four each, and so did Snyder. No players bunted there have been divisions of the world series money which have given rise to much quarreling and bickering on the part of the players. In voting to allot the money, shares cont 34 105 ol Barnes Has Hard Task. | Stirling was her third this year over |teenth. Il‘uht rtm]r f‘ngo:;;nt won the 1 i ’L’: x{t’ xfl 8| Barnes would have won by xix and |the same player, und her first in \hmfflex‘.:fl';e" i Y i | 133100 105 o, four in 4 non-handicap mageh. Ut country. The English woman won |7 Mrs. C. H. Warner of Bannockburn BY JOHN B. FOSTER, 5 £ o six-b andicap, a form ol X h At L% Bannod 5 s | play in which Mixs Leitc quently | her fi'axfd'?".;" "nn]»X English and 5;‘;‘1“.‘{ s i‘vehxh:‘;zf, sieery IGOLFERS IN CUP FINAL O matter how many times Ruth may have whitied the air da e o 5 Bt adfan championship tournaments. ' st Mrs. J. 0~ % 5 o “ Totats. .59 573 5 Ritners Nl b v frtfnie, who touc 8% o e lumbia in the inal of the fretnignt| -y opEVY CHASE TODAY the world series, there were only two times that he failed to ad King David. {rningham nt that Miss Leilch could elect 8. was slight] fortinQUESAISHODA R NEING il vance a runner when he had opportunity, and that was the bes: JMargerson. S8 190 108 Ta w9 2 fchlugles, . ufter the putts were ] and approaching yesterday —_— { J. W. Childress, R. C. Ransdell, J. i TR { cith i 1 EX atri..... S5 84 x;'x ;l‘;'r::‘ = mlyg "n'.’a - ; 2 munk, Lo T,'.'.T: ..(::I“n‘.:;n uhr:\r ::rml"h,s .“.L"r'.m.fff'i Ll','. l’uuk': ‘;t‘:l\:lx(}:‘m&{dzrx 13, Jlamilton and Harry Taylor w""‘rccunl made by any one of either team who pretended to be a slugger Sbalie il lfi\ ¥ . U1 girokes advantage permitted her fo d before Miss Leitch began play- | é‘;:,’,;,,:‘i",f;n"’,o;"'m':,ml'.’;f,"l;l,“l!:' :3; or really was one. urtner. . ch. She usual}y took a bisque | ing up to her game. | B 5 5 The handy man with the bat in the series was one whose name has | themate S A : S : EALY| at the Chevy Chase Club yesterday e handy man e se as one whose name ha = to halve holes which Barnes had won, |~ Miss Btirling sald that she was| and are playing in_the penultimate | scarcely been mentioned so far as batting is concerned. None other thau : At the turn, Barnes, having played | over-golfed, having played practically 0 s Totale;. 47 08 400 1 der pa tw every day ‘this season, during the round. Childress defeated A. G. Lott | \\ard of the Yankees. Every one knows that he played a great second Powomac, o ) 7 | Meugal piay, But the match was fven, | course of which she has lost two D T R e e et o fauel | base, except that deplorable seventh game, but not every one knows that * 85 01 w2 because Miss Leitch used two of her | champlonships. She intends to play & H. B, Davidson, 4 and 3, and Taylor | he pushed seven runners ahead of him, two more than any other player \ Lo bisques to halve two holes, which he [no more golf until spring. B A PEAY Betented M Talcott, 7 and 6. in the games. SPECIAL world of Roger Conti, French cue marvel, has attracted as much atten- ol Tax-latus tion in Europe as Willie Hoppe's Rrads 2 W spectacular performances in America Norfuie.’. T 17 84 some twelve years ago. Conti will 73 90 play in the championship tournament Handicap. 60 50 30 in Chicago next month. g = Born in Toulouse in 1901, voun Totals...é82 Conti began to wield a cue in his G. P. 0. father's billiard parlors when the top o of his head was hardly visible above 113 100 &4 the tables. He used a stool to make 95 89 85 some of the more difficult shots. In Nelomen... 87 118 106 his early teens he defeated many of tameron.. 94 103 A2 the ablest players in Europe at balk- line. Recently he gave Doruet. one of the ten best French players, 150, and beat him In a 500-point game, running out Herriman 117 87 86 BURBAU OF ENGRAVIN Custodians. Merkowits. U0 88 R'menaver 88 i3 102 104 RUSINESS MEN'S LEAGUE. 89 88| 97 931 Maturo, also of New York, 125 to 113, in in five innings. He is weakest on masse shots, but this fault is overcome by marvelous position play and nursing. REENLEAF AND WOODS TO PLAY FOR CUE TITL PHILADELPHIA, October 29.—Ralph Greenleaf of New York last night won his eighth game in the national pocket billlard tournament, defeating James twelve innings. Greenleaf, holder of the title, will imeet Arthur Woods, Minneapolis, to- night in the final match for the cham- plonship. ‘Woods has won seven games and lost Nat. Flecteln 00 s Mortis... ooty ¥7|ore, and should he defeat Greenleaf it Genaler.... 7197 7 ... | would necessitate an extra matoh. Dutton .. 18 95 @ Gni o " 108 11 ne Jusior e wano.. 56 02 84N, C, A, A. WILL GATHER Totals...478 500 463 Totals...474 415 431 SOUTHERN RAILWAY LEAGUE. Law. sociation announced the date of its Smith.... 112 §8 103| annual convention as December 29, at | Radclife. 0 @3 96, the Hotel Astor. in New York. The 2 " Eitenger-c o8 1;‘;3 112" meeting will begin at 10 o'clock in DeMore’d. !vrkl}ubr.. 90 102 163 the morning and continue throughout Stickoey. Totals.. 486 496 511 TS, 97 108 96 il 102 85 98 Kupper... 107 100 112 Campbeli. 110 111 103 Totals.. T40 404 502 Auditors. Rernhart. 108 98 108 Hutchison 117 100 K2 96 110 17 102 Totals.. 451 488 471 WASHINGTON LADIES' LEAGUE. IN N. Y. DECEMBER 29 The National Collegiate Athletic As- | , the_day. concluding with a dinner iat 7 o'clock in the evening. ‘The matter of eligibility of college players or runners who compete un- der athletic club colors, or for other organizations than their own col- leges, will be taken up, as will the question of proselyting and gambling and unsportsmenlike conduct on the part of players. The fleld and track meet held dur- ing June in Chicago, under the aus. | pices of the association is reported Faraew to have been an unqualified success. Surguy... ! Totals.. BOWLING TEAMS WANTED. Two bowling teams are wanted by \oestern Uulon. War. Dept the Capitol Hill Bowling League that R.¥renzel & 95 Kilmartin & & will meet Sunday morning at 10 TToreiny. .. o ~ &l o'clock at the Manhattan bowling Bitting. .. alleys, 145 B street southeast. The 5T J fim; b e Tews. G35 circuit at present includes six teams. Quints prepared to afliliate should have ives at the meeting.. in 32, five under par. ‘While the match ended at the sev- enteenth green, the bye hole was played to permit the record. A tee shot out of Founds at the third hole cost him & 8 x one over par, and at the par fou.-sixth, his long drive bounced back from a hill, requiring him to pl his second shot ahead of Miss Leitch's for the first and only time in the match. His second left | him with a bad lie near a stone wall, | Jjust off the green. On the way home Barnes had an eagle three and’ three birdies. Iie missed an eagle two at the home green by a hair. He might have had & birdie instead of a par five at the seventeenth except for the fact that | he inadvertently played his second | shot to the eighth green, which ad- |Joins the seventeenth., | Dees Some Great Driving. The feature of his work was his drives, which were from 50 to 100 yards longer than the efforts of the female Babe Ruth of the tee. His drives had not only length but con- trol. For instance, at the 465-yard! “dog-leg” thirteenth hale. he delib- | |eYl(('11' hooked his tee shot around; trees, getting a distance of at least | 75 vards, which paved the way for a birdie three, while Miss Leitch drove jinto the trees and required seven strokes to sink, her worst hole of th match. His ability to hook at will! enabled Barnes to get a birdie three, at the- 310-yard ‘dog-leg” second. His tee shot here curved around trees and went into a trap, 10 yards shor! of the green At the 525-yard fourteenth hole Barnes got an eagle three by a mighty drive that was said by an of- ficial who measured it by pacing to be 310 vards long. Barnes here put his second shot 6 feet from the pin. An accurate index of his driv- ing power was the home hole, 274 yards, where his tee shot made the green, 20 feet from the cup and be- yond it. His first putt skimmed past the hole by a hair. Miss Leitch here was 60 yards short of the green Iwith her effort from the tee, but had 1an excellent second iron shot. In- deed, her approaches were one of the brightest spots of her day's work. ‘They offset in a measure her shorter swh. cks from the tee against Barnes. |, Barnes was the better putter, tak- ing 39 strokes on greens to Mis iLeitch’s 35. He had one remarkable ‘cmp shot from a’trap. At the 356- ard eleventh hole, though outdriven by meventy-five yards, Miss Leitch made the green in 2, twenty feet from the cup, while Barnes put his second into trap. He chipped from the sand| dead to the pin. Miss Leitch, stymied, conceded him & 4 and then proceeded to lose the hole by taking three putts. The cards: Barnes, out 436 335 444—36 Miss Leitch, out 846 344 Barnes, in 344 434 Miss Leitch, in 454 755 Miss Leitch played ten holes in men’s par and one under pat - Gf the | seconds tossed a towel into the ring. i his manager said an immediate ef- BRITON, IN 7TH ROUND NEW YORK, October 29. Snllor, Friedman .of Chicago last night de- feated Ernie Rice, English light- weight champion, in the seventh of a scheduled fifteen-round bout in Madison Square Garden. when Rice's Rice, when his hackers admitted de- feat. was bleeding profusely from @ cut over his left eye, suffered in the second round. He was hardly | able to see his opponent, but ap-| parently was strong and trying to' turn the tide of battle when it ended. | Friedman opened an offensive on the Englishman at the first bell and pounded him at will thereafter. Rice took his punches with a smile and attempted to retaliate, but his blows, with the exception of a few light right hooks, fell ghort. Rice’s plucky efforts were cheered by the crowd, but many were shout- popular young New York Italian, Jack Sharkey. He has been matched to meet Johnny Buff, the present cham- plon, in the garden on November 11 according to announcement made by Tex Rickard today. Sharkey is the boy who fights in New York, shading boxers by u good margin and getting nothing but draw decisions or holding boxers even, and then being tagged by the judges as lorer. Sharkey {s no kicker; whatever decision has come in the past he has OANTS T SEEK GROH: | LSD WANT TWRLERS| There is no reason to believe that| the same the team which won the | { world series from the New York/ ' Americans. Rawlings played good < | the New York Giants of 1922 will be|the ball with as much evrn-uvenesp.iGIAN]’S s, as | more ekillfully than big Snvder and Douglas, which was one of the most astonishing of the batting feat: Ruth, McNallv and Pipp each ad- vanced three runners. Kelly Does Pretty Well. Kelly was ridden a little when he came to bat at the start of the series, but it will be observed that in spite of his ten strikeouts he was hitting so far as moving up the runners, as were some of the others. The player who misecd helping along runners in front of him more in the past have been split in ways | that did not give satisfaction. If the commissioner sends out the checks | the money will go direct to the play |ers who are eligible and If a vote has been taken to give players, not mem ibers of the teams, any sharc of th |receipts. the players will have to cou {tribute it out of their own puckets i e ARE TO TRAIN | kissed his hand to the judges, slapped ball during the series for the Giunts, his successful opponent on the back and he played good ball before, but and beat it to the whowers. A fine if the Cincinnati club can be induced, an_ any one else was Bancroft of | the Giants. Twelve times he had| a chance to push somebody to the next base or to the next two, &nd AT SAN ANTONID AGAIN boy is this little Italian with the Irish to part with Groh—and he says that. ¢e|] down. cognomen, the will not play with the Reds—the twice out of the total of fourieen {York Giantx, He was successful just e first came into fame when he Giants will not be outbid for hisigpportunities. put it all over Jimmy Wilde upon the occasion of the flyweight king's visit to this country last year. But he lost his laurels when Joe Lynch put him away after one of the niftiest battles ever seen in this city. Sharkey services. The Giants believe that they have the edge in New TYork, since the world series came their way, plan to keep the upper hand by put-! ting a stronger team than ever in' ing for the referes to stop the con-|slumped after that battle, and did not:the fleld for next season if the play- test when the blood continued to flow from the Englishman’s eve. Rice weighed 137 pounds and Fried- man 139. As a result of Friedman's victory, fort would be made to sign the Chi- cago boxer and Champion Bennie Leonard for a championship bout. Joe Gorman of Portland, Oregon, boxed eight rounds with Sammy! Seiger of New York. They are featherweights. o ROPER PUTS OUT MORAN IN 6TH ROUND OF BOUT stage a comeback until his last ap- pearance at the garden, several weeks ago. There are many who believe he will cop Buff's bantam title. If he doesn’t, then it's only a ques- tion of time, the fans believe, when some bantam—perhaps Phil O'Dowd— who looks to be the real goods—will take the heavier of Buff's two crowns away from him. O’Dowd’s victory over Joe Lynch at the garden Wednesday night made a hit, even over a big crowd of Lynch partisans. That was because he showed himself to be such a fine all- around fighter. Joe Lnych did his training up in the ! north woods. Behold the result. As a matter of fact, there is mno jinx ers can be found to do it. The other National League owners are perfectly satisfied to ses New York get along.| although some day they may awaken: to the fact that their circuit cannot| talways be supported by ome city. |, The New York Nationais will look out for some pitchcrs as well as for| Groh. No_ pitchers need apply to the) Giants except thoss who have been through the fire and have been tested. In the natural order of things, there jare pitchers now throwing the ball for the Giants who cannot hold on much longer. To try to fill their places with younger pitchers who have had littie or no major experi- | ence would not it in with the policy of trying to put out the strongest, BUFFALO, N. Y., October 29.—Capt, ; Worse than the tall timber for a pugi-, pogsible club for 1922. Bob Roper of Chicago knocked qut Frank Moran of Pittsburgh in the sixth of a scheduled twelve-round bout here last night. H Moran was outclassed throughout and was all in when Roper put over the knockout punch in the sixth. ulégper weighed 191 pounds; Moran, fa. FRENCH TEAM DEFEATED BY OWN POINT SYSTEM The French team's defeated in the Jast dual track meet of England nmll France was due to a new point scoring system proposed by the latter. The English players accepted the Ii’:tem after a debate and won, 123 to 118. The method used was seven points for firsts, flve for seconG, four for third, three for fourth, two for fifta and one for sixth. The English sug- gested five points for first, three tor second and one for third. Had the French accepted this idea they would have won, 50 to 4% - list. The downfall of Johnny Coulon and Ad Wolgast dates, respectively, from.the time when each went into the trees and camped where the waffle hound chases the flea buck and the wing-doodle sings its plaintive song to its young. |J.Illy Dundee is golng to resume It looks as if Florida will have the call for spring training in 1822. The Brooklyns will not go back to New Orleans. There are too many other attractions and too high hotel bills in vance runners naturally were limited: | that villag The Yankees probably will go to Florida if they can find & suitable place. Cincinnati will take Misses Eleven Times. Kelly missed edvancing runners and eleven times and Young fell down ten | 700, % 2 times. Emil Meusel slipped nine times . So did his brother, Bob, for the Yankees and McNally and Miller. Rawlings of the Glants blew nine good chances. Frisch failed in eight opportunities, and in the seven class were Sn;der and Burns, and Ward, Schang, Pipp and Peckinpaugh missed six each and Ma; Smith and Nehf four each. The remainder were scattering. That Ruth should have had but two misses shows how successful he was when there was some one on the bases ahead of him. He struck out eight times, but most of the strike- outs were with empty bases, or else he was the third out, with no one on. Twice he got a base on balls with & runner on, but as a matter of fact, he had fewer opportunities to advance runners than had been hoped for, because of the very good reason that the runners were not waiting for him to help. Scoring s Light. So few runs were scored in games that the opportunities to ad- to a marked degree. Both of the series of 1920 and 1921 were charac- terized by little scoring and where his ring career in Boston next Wed- |y, n preference to Texas. There the pitching is tight, and the men nesday night, Gene Delmont being the lurll::"‘ls Tn Texas that are ideal, but on bases scattered and very few, it opponent. He says that the fight he the owners of some of the clubs do is obvious that the batters are not is gunning for is & fifteen-round bout |not go after them the right way.!going to make much of a showing for with Benny Valger. “Billy Gibson can get my signature any time he shows me that I will get $7,600 out of the battle. That's cheap enough_these days, isn't it?” Dundee asked. Every one who heard the ques- tion seemed to think so. . Fred Fulton is running around the country these days like a ghost, look- ing for a match with any one. every one. But he can't get any opponents. He can't lick the top-notcher, Demp- Bey, but every one hands him a fine chance to clean up everybody els: this appeurs to include practically all of the near heavyweighta Paying a club to train in a village is 1about rwed out. The village has | ascertained that there fen't enough in it to buy feed for the mule and: l!eod for the mule {s much more im- portant in Texas than feed for some visiting ball players. (Copyright, 1921.) MAY GET BIG MEET. Philadelphia may hold the indoor intercollegiate track meet in its big jce palace building March 4. In- races may be inaugurated, dividual competition instead of team | from the the edification of the fans. Davy Bancroft says he never got going right until the series was al- most_over and the fact that he was not batting as he expected to bat af- fected his general play. Mhat iz al- most always the case. If a player can’t hit the ball successfully he will ooze out on the remainder of hix game. La Out Mency. The pl: rticipated in the world series are learning that the checks this year are being sent out office of the commissioner in Chicago. the | That is becauss in the past W YORK, October 29.—The New i base ball champions of t ‘world, will do their spring training 1828 at their old camp. San Antonio. The Detroit American League tean also is expected to condition in th McGraw's, men probably will spend three ks in San Antonio, then go to New Orleans for a weck or ten duys The itinerary for the trip north has not been definitely decided upon. 1t was reported also that the York Yankees were considering aban donment of their Shreveport, La., &pring camp and were seeking a location another town in Louisiana. Former Mascot Sentenced. NEW YORK, October 29.—Beruard C. Conway, twenty, a former mascot of the New York Nationals. hus been sentenced to prison for from ten to thirteen years for burglary. Judge | Crain, in general sessions, In pro- | nouncing sentence, &aid that the i youth had packed as many misdeeds into the last half year as the average lawbreaker does in a lifetime. WILL TAKE TRIP SOUTH. MORGANTOWN. W. Va., October | West Virginia's base ball team w make @ _southern trip next spring in- stead of the usual eastern tour. Vir ginla. Washington and Lee and Van- derbilt_have accepted dates, and the West Virginia officials have asked tngorgin Tech, Georgia, North and i 1 South Carolina and other teams for games. PICK BRITISH FENCERS - FOR MATCHES IN U. S. The British fencing team which will meet the Americans in the United States at foil. xaber and epee. will e . composed of Ma. P. Willough 1by (foil . Blake (epes { captain): E Campbell, captain: Capt. W. Hammond, Maj F. 8. Huntingdon, Lieut. Col. A ley-Martin, Capt. T. H. Wand-Tetley, G. AL Burt and Prof. McFhersca,