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SPORTS SEVEN MARKS REFUSED BY A. A. U. COMMITTEE Also Declines to Honor Requests of Murchison and Cutbill—Ray and Loomis Brothers Are Suspended for Big “Expenses.” & By the Associated Press. EW YORK, November 20.—The national record committee of the N Amateur Athletic Union has rejected the application of Charles W. Paddock of the Los Angeles Athletic Club for records in the 60, 70, 75, 80, 100, 125 and 150 yard sprint and run events. Applications made by Harold C. Cutbill of the Boston A. A. for a record in the 1,000-yard run and by Loren Murchison for a record in the 60-yard dash were also rejected. The committee on championships made the following awards: Senior til December 31 on charges of ac- cepting “exorbitant” expense accounts for in athletic meets Indoor track and fleld championships, participation beld in this city during the indoor season of 1921-1922. Ray, it was shown, accepted ex- penses for his wife and child from the clubs which promoted the meet. He and fleld championships and the na- | was ordered to return to the natlonal tional steeplechase will probably be | registration committee the amount taken by the committee today. | paid for expenses other than his own, Joie Ray, Joe Loomis and Frank | and Joe and Frank Loomis were each Loomis, Chicago distance runners, |ordered to return the amount paid were suspended from the A. A. U. un- | them for expenses Facts About Foot Ball; Buffalo: national pentathlon, Detroit; national junior and senior cross- country, Philadelphia. Action on the junior indoor track WHATS THE MATTER WITH FOOT BALL? “Tad” Jones has been one of the most-prominent figures in foot ball for the last decade. A brilliant player in his un- dergraduate daysyvat Yale, he has since achieved fame as a coach of remarkable ability. His views on the desirability |- of the formation of an eastern conference are of unusual sig- nificance at this time when ‘the suggestion is. being seri- ously discussed among follow= ers of oot -ball. - s fale Mentor Urges Conference in East; Also Favors Try for Point and . Intersectional Contests. ' BY “TAD” JONES., HEAD OOACH AT YALE. LL manner of plans have been suggested as to how foot ball might A be benefited. The formation of an eastern conference scems to me to be the outstanding constructive idea which has been ad- vanced. The suggestians that seek only to tear down and offer nothing [ constructive in return are worse than none at all, and the less heard of PR 1 P them the better it will be for the game. ,SGHAHER AND HBPPE‘ While I cannot speak for.the Yale athletic committee, I am sure that when the time cames this organization will be more than willing to_en- ter such an institution as an eastern conference. There has been a feel- NEW YORK, November 20.—The tournament . fog . the 18:2 balklipe championship of*the world, which has ing among certain Yale men for quite a while that such a development would be very fine for the sport, and, in fact, they have already suggested the organization of such a body. : & . In the past Yale has always been ready and willing to adopt any and all ideas that promised to help the! development of foot ball, and if thei ki conterence proposition is seriously | E presented for consideration 1 don't, think Yale will be found among the missing. _ Schedules May Stand. The people who object to the idea of a conference because they think it would make It necessary for the members_ of this organization to change their present schedules over- | beew In progress during the last week in the grand ballroom of the Hotel Pennaylvania, will close -tomorrow night. Regardless of resulis today the final game will be played Tuesday .nlghl by ‘' Jacob Schaefer, present { i} champlon, gnds Wilifam ¥ Hopye, 1 | former -champlon.. This afternoon SPORTS Paddock’s Application for Records Turned Down : Minors Plan to Retrench |CONTEMPLATE REDUCING ADMISSION TO CONTESTS Players’ Salaries Also Are to Be Reduced—Somej of Circuits May Fight Efforts, but Ma- jority Appear to Favor Cuts BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, November 20.—Minor league base ball club officials ofr N the south and west, and especially those which did not get along! well last summer, have started talking reduction of admissions to* games. These minor league authorities believe that this action must be, taken if they are to get along financially, and they add that, of cours the minor league salaries for players must drop correspondingly with admission prices. | Of course, some of the more pros- | perous minor league clubs will fight It fa mot humanly possible to ' equalizse with the control of mi the pressure of the hands on the club shaft, so kome automatic de- vice must be found by the player to bring about this equalization. It one hand presses harder than the other at the time the ball is struck something unlooked for and unwanted will happen. Usunlly If the right hand. pre- . dominntes the ball will take = Rook. If the left hand In over- . powerful the ball may slice or it RECORD FIELD ENTERS CROSS COUNTRY EVENT A record field of 287 rummers, representing eighteen colleges, has been entered for the annual inter- collegiate cross-country champion- ship to be held at Van Cortland Park November 27, according to the list made public by the 1.C.A.A. A. A. The entry exceeds by three the high mark set last ye: The number of teams entered is the same as in 1921, but four col- legen competing last year have the suggestion, but those who favor it appear at this date to be well in the majority, and success of the proposi- tion is & possibility. The players, naturally, are very much interested,: especially those who are doomed to the minors for the rest of their base ball lives. _Although the Boston Natiomals fin- ished in last place in 1922 there will be no change in the position of man- |ager. Fred Mitchell will be retained. | The falling away of Boston is not at- tributed to the manner in which it was handled, but to the fact that the | players tried to get everything in . Q. Can the side in possession of the | W11 play more than seven men on the | of serimmage | - Yes. Either team can play ax many as they eare 10 on the line of | scrimmage. The only provision is | that the offensive team have at least seven men on the line of serimmage | when the ball ix put in play. Rule| D, nection 1. up and | time s | SO u 11 it count? | Play does mot stop until | whistle sounds. In the event | ix up while a play Ix in| progress the ball i not dead untll | not hear sizn: A pi a touchdown re<ults. 1 A. Yes. The Best Play to Use BY SOL METZGER (Copyright, 1922.) look the fact that where conferences now exist the various members do not ! have to meet on the foot ball fleld. | And, as a matter of fact, in meveral | cases members of the same confer- ence do not meet in any sport. If an eastern conference were formed it would not be necessary for Yale, Har- | vard, Princeton or any of the other, larger colleges to change their sched- ules one bit. The only thing that| these organizations would be asked to; do would be to give their whole-! | hearted co-operation in the confer- ence fight to make athletics cleaner <omething that they should all be | i willing to do without any question. | i Foot ball coaches are in the game ! ! not_only to develop winning teams. to be won on the but aise to develop the men who come| ; : their charge. v 3 haen speedway nmear Los pndel thelr Cnoiie: "physical, moral | Ange Thanksgiving day stands’ haq mental. The establishment of an | between Harry A. Miller, Pacific coast | castern conference would help the di- | designer and builder of racing cars Fectors of athletles 1o Rechrip inl) and motors, and the greatest achieve- | these ends. t vietory "Hills One % | Hoppe and-Erich Hagenlocher, cham: pion: of Germany, will play -the twelfth of a round robin of fifteen The evening. game wilt be - Jacob ‘Schaefer and Wel- Cochran. Tomorrow afternoon Bdouard Horemans, chamnpion of Bel- gium, -and Rogi. Canti, ' champlon of France, will compete. Thus Tar Hoppe is the only entrant who has a clean score of three games won and none lost. Schaefer has been beaten by Horemans. If Hoppe ‘wins from Hagenlacher and Schaefer. fr Cochran, in order to bring about®a tie Schacfer w.l have to defeat Toppe. If a tie for the championship develops it will be played off. Other ties, if any. will be decided by grand averages. At Chicago a year ago Schacfer beat Hoppe'in the final game of the cham- pionship_ tournament by a score of 100 to 26, and, playing off a tie, beat him again by 500 to 346, an won the ker | their systems that Pandora had in her box of ills, | Tt in recognized that some of the | Boston plavers will not keep up much longer with the major league parade. - Young talent has been taken on, and |1t will not be checked if it tries to | splurge. The Boston Americans_also were { cellar men last vear. and Frazee, Red | Sox owner, evidently holds his man- dropped out, while four new entries have been added. The addi- tions are Bates, Carnexie Tech, New York University and Rutgers. They replaced Cineinnati, Holy Croms, Lafayette and Williams on may so turn the face of the club that the boll will be ncooped hixh into the alr. Some players get equal pressure by using the. inter- . locking grip of ome kind or an- other. To others it comes matu- ¥olly, but it must be attained be- fore the player can expect to have ‘ his ball fiy stralght with regu- larity. Talk about follow through! Here |ager partly to blame for it. because Jou see a part of the reason why {he hax had several conversations star, Cyril Tol- with Bill Carrigan, a former man- ahbout returning to Boston. stances from the |ager. i | Hugh Duffy. present munager, has & | contract for another vear. | Frank Chance also has been men- | tioned as a possibility for manager of the Red Sox. The report (uat he * has considered the job is denied, but |in California his friends declare that he has told them he expects to spend * most of his time in the east next® summer. That looks as if he may® g0 back into base ball. One rash man aid that Chance was part of a svndi- tee. has two great rec- ords —he was British amateur stinetion— a German prison—a atill greater honor when it is added -to his splendid war rd. (Copyright SKATERS TO COMPETE. CHICAGO, November 20.—Skaters BY FAIRPLAY. NEW YORK. November 20.—Harry Greb has practically confirmed the report that has been circulating about the bright lights lately about his in- t, John F. Dille Co.) the play hax been stopped or a core has been made. Hall must be dead ment any man in his line of endeavor | has ever recorded. |strength, and the existence of an | sastern conference would do more to i help in stamping out all undesirable ielements than any other one thing | that could be devised. Favors Try for Polat. championship. Standing of contestants: representing nearly every section of the United States and Canada and many from Europe will compete in the national outdoor speed ice skating championship tournament to be held here January 26-28. Trial races will be held in cach section of the coun- tention of breaking Engle, his manager. what the trouble is has not but the chances are the men out in have showed Harry how q Pittsburgh much more money he would have in with George | e company trying to purchase the | Giants, BEDENK IS IMPROVING. PHILADELPHIA. November 21 for a period to end. Rule 6, mec-| For the one victory will tion 13. a clean sweep on the 1922 automobile Q. On forward pass the ‘passer is |racing program. Cars turned out at tackled by an opponent. hut manages | his little factory, or equipped with to make the 3l is legally | power plants built by him, have been passed but not quite reach | winner in every even of major im- eligible man rounding the | portance since the season opened at tentionall 1§ an Ekonest attempt x| made 10 pass the batl torward and it | traveis forward in the direction of a ! player, it ix always ruled ax an in- complcte pass. No penalty should be | fmposed on the case cited above. | ball A. ick from of play One of team yers recovers ball after | it rolis nd team B's goal line. impetus sent it over coming from kic cision on ATt ix a that opponent is the correct de- | ; | ouchdown. The fact | cd the ball on the | it a loose ball. 1 Therefore, vered h hind opp in ruled a touchd n. Rule 6, section 14, Q. titve vour opinton-of this play: Team lined up and-then starts an ar. | Rument. walks up to line of | serinimage < ball back te anather | ing the argument. Latter makes rd run. Is it al- Jowed? No time was out when play was pulled l A. Referee should call time out and charge team with time out should they atart an argument among them- selves. Because of this the play would not be possible under good oficiating. Referee has general over- sight and control of game. Rule 25, section 1. Beverly last Marelr. And his chances in the Turkey day race are more than fifty-fifty. Out of 4 porsible eighteen starters in the gasoline classic at lease nine of them Wwill bear the Miller label. Five cars to be raced by “Cliff” Durant have all been turned out at the Miller factory from stem to stern. Jimmy Murphy, Mulford, Durant and possibly Earl Cooper will be the pilots who will enhance Miller's chances. — MANY RIFE SHARKS. A _total of forty-nine teams and nearly 800 indlvidual riflemen took part in the recent champicnships at Camp Perry. Failure of rifilemen to shatter records is accounted for by the Innovation of placing a V inside the bull's-ave. This year if two men made perfect scores the one with the highest number of shots inside the " “was the winner. Previously the only wayv to decide a winner under the same circumstances was by a shoot-off. CUE TOURNEY ATTRACTS. Seats will be provided for 1,500 spectators at the international 18.2 balkline billiard tourney in the Hotel Pennsylvania, New York city, Novem- ber 13 to 21. ddie Hearne, Ralph | think that the try-for-point after lh'c touchdown {s proving to be a { success, and I belleve that it is a ! Much better feature than the old rule i Which allowed the free kick of the { goal. The present system makes it a | feam effort rather than an individual {one, and in this way it is a fairer fest of the strength of the opposing elovens. The rules committee, | think, would do well to Keep it in | existence. | 5 ' has been a great deal of dis | cuseion on theysubject of intersectional | games. Some bf the closest students of | fhe games think that these contests are necessary to the development of the sport. and other experts hold that such ntests have a Fame and should be discontinued. do no more thau give my personal opin- fon on the gubject: dI am strongly for these games. I thing that they do a great eal'towsrd, nationaliziag foot ball —toward making 1t better 1 do not: believe, however, that these Intersectional games and the various post-season_contests should be labeled “championship games.” There can be no one game of the season so labeled. Un- | der the present conditions it is impossi- ble to decide which team is the best in the country, and calling any one team such is unfair to the others. Future_of Foet Ball = ‘rom the present indications foot lurcolnx to x‘;vw more and more popular as the years go by It impossible even now to accommodate the huge crowds that wish to seo the games. The public is getting to understand the game more and more each season, and the de- mand for tickets to the big games, I Hagenlocher . try to determine the eligible list for the national event. the bank if he was not obliged to cut | J. Bedenk, right guard of the I with hix at manager. i State foot hall eleven, who rece. true enough. as the situa- |z xlight concussion of the brain in the believe, will soon make even the present a i Froaletybe bl Uil bl e T e aanr o i tncines, tion stands. But would Harry be | just period of Saturday's game with” fore, the increasingly urgent duty of all | " Schuefer bas made 1321 points in 40 in- DOG DERBY DATE SET. in in bresent high position had it pennsylvania. is restini comfortab) those connected with foot ball to keep ' nings, & grand average of : = i - ot ben for his ? iad | Physicians declared hie condition was it on a high planc, to keep It free from | Horemans has mede 1 ints in 84 in.| THE PAS, Manitoba. November 20.— | munag.d u lot of good fighters, in- | o5 CHNE S any taint of commerciallsm. | nings. & grand Sape ot AL a0 The annual dog derby of 200 miles|cluding at least one champion, Frank Conti has made 1484 poiats in 80 insings. | for & purse of $2,500 will be held on | Klaus. He knew the ropes. e (Coryright, 1022, North American Newspaper [a grand sverage of 28480, February 2. The course will be the| ™ One doesn’t have to overtax his| Pemmsylvantia's busket ball tea et | g Sochran bas made 1443 points in 67 in-lsame as last vear, from The Pas to|brain. therefore. to grasp that he | has a game with McGill University . (The next article in this series will ',’!"n:mm °3.485 points in 58 |The Pas Lumber Company's camps on | showed Greb many ~tricks about”of Montreal January 1 next in Phila-. 58 m appear in The Star tomorrow. innings, & grand aversge of 35 the Carrot river »~d return. climbing the ladder of fame. delphia. —_— HANDICAPPED Team has ball on oppenents’ 35- yard line, fourth down, 10 to go. near end of a game In which oppoments Jead by. three points and the field ix w0 wet that forward passing and viace or drop kicking is out of ques- tion. The best play here is a high punt, one that lifted ve igh i air and drops about beyond the line of scri entire team can gather aubout the Bpot when the ball i3 to fall, and even § if the opposition signals for a fair ] catch a wet ball kicked high into the air is dfficult to hold, especlally when the psychology of the situation is such as to work upon the mind of the catcher. He knows that a fumble might prove disastrous and that fact may contribute to his fumbling. In other words, you play for a fifty-fifty break on whether or not he catches the ball. If he fumbled you have better than an even chance of re- covering the ball for a first down. —_— NEBRASKA AND DRAKE TIED IN TITLE RACE B the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, 0.. November 20.— Nebraska's victory over the Kansas Aggies Saturday leaves the Corn Huskers and Drak>, winner over Grinnell, unbeaten in thé Missouri conference. The standing: Won. Lost. Tied. TPet. 40 0 1.000 4 0 B o 3 3 e = Uy 1 1 1 [ Grinnell ‘Washington . —_— N the race of life— the nerve-wracking contest for success—the man WITH BAD TEETH rides UNDER A HANDICAP, the extent of which he sel- dom realizes. x x X% as he covers the distance from day to day. to take advantage of EVERY opportunity. *x x x Itis THE MAN WITH A SMILE who forges ahead Why? Because there is VITALITY back of the smile. He has MENTAL EQUIPOISE which fits him He has leart:ed that Kolyl; nos brings to the teeth the NATURAL LUSTRE and pre- " 537’ theE in fiti:t condition, because ssolves the and hygienical cleanges their ENTIRE euvironment.y i We hnvé on file in our laboratories personal over 47,000 American Dentists and 74,000 American Physicians for Kolynos Dental Cream, to distribute among their patients. UTAH AND DENVER STILL BOAST UNBEATEN TEAMS DENVER, Col, November 20.— Elimination of the Colorado School bf Mines from the race for the Rocky Mountain Conference title featured Saturday’s foot ball in the Rockies, Picked as one of the strongest con- tenders, the miners met defeat before the Colorado Aggies, 19 to 0. Denver meantime smashed her way through another formidable barrier in beating Colorado College, 20 to 14. The only undefeated eleven in the Rocky Mountain Conference, in ad- dition to Denver. is Utah University, ‘which defeated Whitman, 24 to 6. ENID CLUB IS SOLD. ENID, Okla., November 20.—Sale of the Enid Western Association base ball club to George Muelbach, owner of the Kansas City team of the Amer- ican Association, has been announced. Radiators and Fenders { ANY EIND MADE OR REPAIRED. Ceres_installed in ‘maks. DIFFERENT MAKES Wl".l'l'sTA'I'l"s R. and F. WORKS 819 18tk 6413, 1488 P. M. 6 BOWIE RACES November 18th to 30th SPECIAL TRAINS leave B v 1 11 pom. Admission to Grands! tand Including Government Tax First Race 1:15 PM. One big sale of ot OVERCOATS for fat men, thin men; “longs,” “regulars”; ' coats for republicans, democrats, prohibition- ists, pink tea socialists, radicals—EVERY- BODY. ‘ . Heavy, medium and light weight coats— every one a champion—and all dewn to a price that will make even a blue-goggled pessis Details tomorrow—Sale Wednesday. . 7th at F The Hecht Co. | The man WITH BAD TEETH does NOT smile. In the first place, he fears to betray his dental defect. In the next place, he has BAD DIGESTION, and bad digestion is the SWORN ENEMY OF A SMILE. The user of Kolynos smiles BECAUSE HIS MOUTH FEELS ‘CLEAN, and also BECAUSE HE IS NOT AFRAID TO SHOW HIS TEETH. most likely by a dentist or’ physi or a scrupulous clean and hygienic acquaintance who is also WlfllNIng OUT in the race. : * x *x He knows that the dangerous bacteria in the mouth —DISEASE GERMS—are very apt to run riot if the: . are not kegf under contral, and that KOLYNOS DOE; ‘" CONTROL.THEM. : The He has been told JUST WHAT KOLYNOS DOES, ‘Any physician or dentist will tell you that decayed teeth are strong predis; cau f many serious diseases, both in ¢! lldreso:nu;gldult:.“ 3 While a GRITTY dentifrice—o i whiten your téeth in a surprhtnily s‘lll:rt'dh::h;—:l.l xposed t immediate accay, ROLYNOY Hrs aentne e > T N A ecay, NOS PRESER g:tlnmynoa :fmthm NO GRIT. S t the mouth bacteria PROD ACID which, in turn, PRODUCES TOOTgcgEgg\E Kolynos DESTROYS, RENDERS I and WASHES AWAY millions of these gmf tifrice can orm. WIN OUT! DO NOT NE&’SE:‘CT OR TRIFLE WITH YPUR TEETH! USE KOLYNOS! NewHaven