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S PORTS. NEW PILOTS ARE NAMED ' FOR FOUR MAJOR CLUBS THE ' EVENING | i Fohl Seems to Have Most Comfortable Berth Underé Quinn With Red Sox—Bancroft Should Make Good With Braves. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. N EW YOR his man ranks is Wa at Mana, piloted in 192 ¥ re November 14—The panorama oi 1924 major league agers has passed in review, and the only vacancy leit in the shington, where Clark Griffith has yet to name | over for another scason with the clubs they McGraw of the G its and Huggins of the Yanke Fletcher of the Phillies and Mack of the Athletics, Robinson, Brooklyn; McKechnie, Pittsburgh tionals; Cobb, Detroit; Speaker, Cle Chance and Fohl do not leave the circle, but swing to other quarters, Chance with the Chicago White Sox and Fohl the Boston Americans. The new and untried managers are shortstop, who will manager the Boston Nationals, and Sisler, who will manage the St. Louis Americans. reputations, a Tn the Fohl xcen Tortabls Nifts thut to ha inx. with of other have been made the most Bobby Quinn vears und a Fohl alwuys has got ey agree on almost and Quinn will he content work in the offic to Tun things on s verything > the executive mit Fohl ball tield Tn Fohl and Bancroft Boston will have a couple of munagers who are reserved almost to the point o i- turnity. But both are liked | who know them Vohl Keeps His Promises. th Fohl's silence m side, e (1 to his friends never pro things that cunnot deliver, he delivers s i a4 type of utr lehed if is a very He b the will give en eriticized wuse of his handling out . Louis element thought rectly in trying meth players, but in haadling both in use had to ertain Killefer, Chicago Cubs: Ricke, I ucither has an easy com- | t. Louis velaud, and Moran, Cincinnati. two players—Bancroft, former Giant | | They are young men, out to make | task ahead of him. win, In other words, he was t vietim of self-satistied second Kues ers Bancroft Should Make Good. £t never has had mana rlence, but he ha about’ runn than mar he ows it n of the sturdie given a lot to the clubs with whi ' he has been conunected. Hut grant- in that he may be brittl he likely to i@ good director for Today he will find that_vounx Smith. who plaved short for Boston in will gl any othier shortstop a merry use Smith is a coming base ball n player, ably k never by neroft Giants did They propped up an out- h hud been on erutehes var and they Jackson on—and don't zood work o Giants to thei knitting when they were a woozy last season. MeGrew makes trades to weaken the Glants 1 th crific hit stuff of the sen- ntallsts does not belous in uthworth, (Copyright. 1923.) McGRAW HAS OVERHAULED CLUB THREE OTHER TIMES EW YORK, Nove Stengel and Bill Cunningham from the Giant roster and the ac- quisition by rued by b: fandom as t mplete rec hat team of Billy Southworth and Joe Oeschger, is he opening move by Manager John is » him or race. for | not lose | litle never | the Jack for ™ N 1904 er 14—The passing oi Dave Bancroit, Casey | " THE STAR’S PANORAMA OF BASE BALL uction of the New York Na- | STAR, WoN 4| GAMES WASHINGTON, Geslern Asseciation MAE 7 TS N Sy, 1923, CHesBRO E YANKS A Pictorial Highlight History of the National Game D. ¢, Only Nationals Now Lack Manager : Three A. L. Teams Yet to Pi | TBELIEVE IT OR NoOT. | SRS e L sl i JAMES SWART \\» f oaterigue soup: == 1.1'"‘" DIED - SUFFERWNG FRoM || DIFFERENT DISEASES — ALL FATAL —July 71925 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1923. \WILSON-REED VICTOR | | TO GET G0 WITH GREB —By RIPLEY BY FAIRPLA | NEW YORK, November 14.—Johnny Wilson, who has been tralning at Summit, N, J, will tackle Pal Reed.| the Fighting Parson, in Boston Fri- day night, and the man who wins will get o Madison Square Garden match with Harry Greb for the middlewelght title. This Reed guy, who is really a | Sunday school teacher, the son of a clergyman, I8 a tough batt! whe in | the past has just fallen short of 'ch.un;.\lnll.‘hlv «l { 1f Reed Biould beat Wilson handily it would me: h the prediction { which have boen made coneerning th Framinghum Bible sharp are being verified. A fight between Reed and | b would be energetic, and with- !out doubt would attract u lurge fol- lowing 1 JotN DeSTeFAND A 68 HARD-BoILED Eges IN SUCCESSION — wuithact Takung & drink ! New Yorks 1919 Speaking of the New York fans, they are piling up to Boston to get a line | on Ted Moore, the British middle- welght, In his' bout against Tommy Loughran. Syracuse critics have gone | 1 wild over Moore on the basix of hix j showing agalnst Volpettie of Wilkes- {Barre, In the Salt city, the other| jpight. The English scrapper pounded ! Volpettie to u frazzle and thi 18 jregarded as some feat, since the Pennsylvanian had been knocking "em | ! cola Syracuse for some time | ! past. ! Moore s d the upstat W bout 1o middleweight e wise guys think he trouble in beating | having to} jwould have ‘r Here's hoping that b.\I DT division, and with a topnotch Brit- lari Loughr is no world-beater, {ruund reb, what al ‘un. Something ix need. !nl l=~\ cavort'ng about in the class the but a good & trial horse for M'TIGUE IS ORDERED l cale'down to x awaken Interest in the middleweight 1 division would scon come into popu- a highly touted scrapper as could be| 1 a okmulges | TO RETAIN MANAGER| NEW K, November 14—Mike | McTigue, world light - heavyweight | boxing champion, has been ordered | by the New York hoxing commission to live up to his three-year contract under management of Joe Jacobs,| with whom quarreled after his re {cent bout Georgia with young | Stribling. MeTigue sough 7 THes AT BAT YO in evads what was u legitin | contract, rging his manager h {not pald him in full for the Stribli | bout, to which Jacobs answered tan accounting. Jacobs compls | that McTigue published a state !that he had inveigled the boxer signing a blank pap which h erward conve: d into a contr: If McTigue does not care to tinue under Jacobs' gement he | was advised by the commission to go | to court, but both me told suc! {a course would mnot sing to the boxing authoritie wer be ple C INOTRE DAME ELEVEN | SPORTS. 29 ck Spring Camps ALL EXPECTED TO LOCATE EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI Yanks Pr_obal)ly Will Return to New Orleans for Box Office Reasons, But Sites for Chicago and Boston Are Problematical. EW YORK, November 14.—T] Americarn to return to Mobile for training next spring, training camp question for all the v York, Boston and Chicago. Tf the New York or Boston clubs deci river they will be the on! ¢ St. Louis have decided s settling the clubs uit except to go west of the Miss I mly organizations of that circuit to do so. Most of the American League clubs will be in_the southeast corner of the Lnucd(htalc«". either in I lorida or close to it. Cleveland will be at Lake land, Fla.; Washington at Tampa, Detroit at Augusta, Ga,, and Philade! phia at Montgomery, Ala. . Just where the Chicago Americans will go probably will be decided in large measure by where the Giants go. If they follow in the wake of the Giants it most certainly will not be San Antonio, because that has been frowned upon as a Giant training camp. Wherever these two clubs go.| They stuck their spring serfes will have more camp until it than the usual attention because of and pluy the the return to rivalry of McGraw and result w Chance, the Natlonal League man- | trained team agers who made things hum in t League season. Hid they organization in 1908. If Chance can in fine condition they neve do as well with Chicago as he did hegun to malke th with Boston the Sox will be a wallop- ® In ‘the race as quickly as thes Ing team and dangerous throughout In fact, they were better se soned at the beginping of the their circuit. | than they were at the finish. Mobile In Hot Enoush. The Browns' decision to go to Mo- bile means they have settled upon a city where there is plenty of h but where there also is an occasion raw wind. And it is the wind which rafses mischief with training camps. A raw, sbarp wind blowing acros the diamond when a player is b ginning to warm up I= likely to put kinks In his arm that will do him more harm than the rest of his train- ing will do him good. Last year the Browns train at Mobile and then set forth on a barnstorming tour of Texas Perhaps they got a little revenue out £ i buit it did not do their playe any good. The C right idea in 19 around time ning to go north r would ht for Cobb Learncd n Less Detroit trained” well last spring but embarked on an exhibltion trin after training was over, and that un- | did about all they had accomplished in Augusta. Cobb sald he n would permit himself to be led into another vent of that sort When all is said and done s are likely to trot back tu W Orleans for the 1324 tralning period. The city offers some hope of attendance at exhibition game and with the Yanks now world ch plons, in addition to being pions for the third time of th ican gue, there would du )T Spring g sient 1 there alw nt population in Ne LOSS OF FIELD GENERAL HARD BLOW TO MICHIGAN started to velands had th Orleans HICAGO, November 14.—Upon the ability of Coach Yost to develop a quarterback who can replace Irwin Uteritz, who is out with s broken leg, depends, in a large measure, the outcome of the Mict i foot ball game Saturday, foot f he Wolverines must win the game and then ove | _mu ] me Minnesota on November 24 to hold a claim to the western conierence . Coach Ryan's Badgers are show a fight in s Stift cor higan. 1 in good con- 1wut the serv pending up hoth compe dition ice of Parker Mick Tte nd NOT T0 GO TO COAST nark the fourth time in McGraw's twenty he has so overhauled his organizatio mately brought National League pen- quarterb: r of ¢ | represented attorne in their E. Ind, No 14 foot baill squad will (Copyright, 1923, in U. S, and Great Britain by North American Newspaper Alliance. All rights reserved.) As cac nants to ers of the game will watch with interest his start of the 1924 campaign. the York club 1 a list of | a4 Wiltse, Ma-! 1 Bower- Dunn, | and | Devlin, han ¥ won the | ships of inn, Mertes, tollowing few ers failed to 1 but thre 0. Wiltse dropped ile he set | combination | by the little about building ti which came to the front with 1 League titles in 1911, 1912 and | ter during those three | Wiltse, Ames, | Dema the r only H remained ut team that broke clear | tional League title. | 1 to Herzog. Fletcher and 191 ion _in- hupp, Per- Holke, Zim- | T, obertson, Thorpe wnd Wilhoi And when they in turn falled to acquire titles in 1918 and 1919 thelr doughty manager scat- tered them to the four winds, On this asfon MceGraw did a more complete job than ever before. for George Burn: singl member of the 19 with the | Giants when they climbed to the Na- | tlonal League top in 1921, and Burns | Giants captured | titles, i be_ this year's feGraw has is prepared players except Frankle Ross Young and ‘Travis Jackson, but whether the | irades offered by other clubs will | vo mcceptable remains & question. McGraw's present effort in this| direction is unique in that it marks | the first time in base ball history that | manager has sought to break up a ! tle-winning combination of one year | an cffort to build u title-winning | combination for the next season The present deal with the Brs cldentally, emphasizes the pecull: te of world-series heroes, for Casey engel, [ n, was the utstanding hero of the Glants dur- ing the recent world championship sumes. M’CARTHY TO FIGHT TO FINISH ON COAST L.OS ANGELES, November 14.—Mon- 3 coast league base ball battlo skirmish in a | ried to a finish, H. McCarthy, that u Salle ritt, McCart merman, & 1en, ext remodel heen quoted 1o trade at Avalon was only fight that will be c: according to William i deposed president of the league. He added that he still considered himself league president and would act as such. “Records of the league fn my possession.” said McCarthy, * will the funds of the league. I shall performn my duties as president with- out regard to what transpired at Cat- alina 1sland. ttle had no right to vote. My position with regard to Seattle is ail the more secure because of the de- cislon of Federal Judge John F. Part- ridge, which absolutely sustains me.” Harry Williams, Los Angeles man elocted by the Big Five faction to sycceed McCarthy, has announced his intention to open offices here imme- diately. BARS EASTERN ELEVENS. ANN ARBOR, Mich., November 14.— University of Michigan's foot ball team probably will not play an inter- scotional gridiron contest mext year, Prof. Ralph W. Aigler, chairman of the board of athletic control, has stated In answer to a request from the eastern school for a game in 1924. Eastern foot ball -:gmsmlnnu are not the rivals of the Michigan team, Prof. Algler satd. 1 remain | nside Golf — By CHESTER HORTON.___ Assuming that with the previous exercivex you have begun the de- velopment of your forearms and wristx, let us now undertake a Iit- tle trip to the land of rhythm. Ouce you step into the land of rhythm ‘in golf all your troubles will vanish. Grasp your left wrist. Now move your left arm to the right about six inches, letting the left shoulder dip just a trifie as Four left arm pulls at the socket. Keep the end of the shaft even with your h As you move the left hand over, shift all your weight 10 your right shoulder. Let our left knee fall fn toward the right and let the left heel come slightly off the ground. See that ¥ou are in wuch a position that you cin 1ift the left foot right floor without making any diffe eunce. Now do that again. That in the wwing. Nothl ters if you get he club right. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) SHORTENED SEASON IS URGED FOR A. A. CHICAGO, November 14—Club owners of the Amerlcan Associatfon at their annual meeting in December will as to adopt a shorter schedule for M24, according to Presi- dent Hickey. He mailed a ten tive schedule calling for 154 games to the club owners for their approval, Previously the league played 168 games. The proposed schedule sets April 16 as the opening day and Sep- tember 21 for the flnal ganes President Hickey said the shorter chedule would permit better weather conditions for the playing of the Junior world series between pennant winners of the International League and American Association. Tle recent series between the Kan- sas City and Baltimore clubs was in- terrupted for five days b ause o inclement weather, and_this delay caused a lack of {ntefest in id. games, President Hickey TITLE FOR TIM 0'DOWD. ATLANTA. Ga., November 14.—Tim O'Dowd of Atlanta was awarded the re's and judges’ declsion over v Silver at the end of their twelve round bout last night. O'Dowd welghed in at 121% and Silver tipped 124% pounde. At the conclusion of the bout O'Dowd was given a belt of- fered as emblematic of the southern featherweight championship. be a- G. U. FROSH GO TO QUANTICO. Georgetown University's freshman eleven will invade Quantico Satur- day, November 24, to tackle the Ma- rine Reserv This will be_the last game of the season for the Blue and Gray yearlings with the exception of the frosh-sophomore battle the first week in December. BREAKS RODEO RECORD. NEW YORK, November 14—Lee Robertson of Arizona yesterday broke his own world record of 16 seconds for roping and throwing a steer when he felled an animal at the rodco in Madison Square Garden in 14 1-5 seconds. e KLEM OPERATED UPON. NEW YORK, November 14.—Wijl- liam Klem, veteran National League umpire, has undergone a minor opera- tion from which he is recovering satisfactorily. MILLIAGEN ELEVEN WINS. JOHNSON CITY, Tenn., November 14.—Milliagan College defeated Lenoir goolleu at foot ball here vesterday, 20 t0 7. ARTHUR CUMMINGS (LEFT). THE INVENTOR OR DISCOVERER OF THE® CLRVE. ARTHUR IS SHOWN MAKIN MR. NEWTO: The story is told of Christy Mathewson that when as a boy he began throwing stones he could beat every boy in the neighborhood and he became so dexterous, so accurate in his aim, that hc often took to the woods with a bag full of stones and came back with a bag full of game. How many important developments thus take place accidentally, so to speak? How many come to light while playing? 1f it_had not been that Arthur Cummings one day began throwing clam shells across the water and watching their antics, the curved ball might not have put in its appearance in the game of base ball as ecarly as it did. But it did arrive, through this trivial play, just when the pro- fessional player and thus TIGERS DETERMINED TO DEFEAT OLD ELIS PRINCETON, N. J, November 14. —A new spirit is rife at Princeton. Last week overconfidence existed among the undergraduates, with the result that Coach Roper said on the leve of the Harvard game that he was { confronted by the most difficult problem of his coaching carcer. This week Princetonians realize that their eleven is much below standard, but they still will not accept defeat at the hands of Yale next Saturday in advance. In the words of the Dalfly Prince- tonian, in an editorial : “Mediocre Yale teams have dei.ated great Princeton teams in the past | through sheer determination to win. There is no reason why Princeton can- not adopt similar tactics this year. This campus has been able to rouse itself to +such fury in times past that by the mere will to win it has overcome tremendous handicaps. “The score of an Army game, or of Notre Dame game, or of a_Harvard me means nothing when _FPrinceton faces Yale. This annual clash is not & mere phyaical contest; it is the struggle of two rival wills, of two invincible spirits. Are we to admit this vear that the spirit of Yale is superior {o that of old Nassau? “All that s essential for victory is to take o leaf from Harvard's book. If we can _arousa the greatest desire for victory Princeton has ever seen we will win Saturday ; if we cannot we will not. “Has Princeton the will to win?" L The lomgest recorded timo that a man has remained under water {s 8 minutes 29 4-5 seconds.- l ! a NO. 8—GREAT CURVES FROM LITTLE CLAM. SHELLS GROW |ZEV-IN MEMORIAM | RACE EXCITES FANS| G HIS DISCOVERY. the whole aspect was changed. late 60's. Of course there have been de- bates as to who really pitched the first curve. Cummings was the substitute pitcher on the Stars of Brooklyn: he was tall, loose-jointed, and flexible in the arm. That is possibly in part why the clam shells curved so, aside from their shape. Cum- mings argued rightly that he could make a ball curve in the same manuner so, when he began to pitch for the Stars, he began to study how to get around the pitching rule then in vogue that there should be no “throw or jerk” So he began whipping his wrist in such manner that the ball started to spin as it ieft the hand. Playing against |SKI TESTS FOR OLYMPICS | |SOUSHT FOR MINNEAPOLIS| by the MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., | 14.—Efforts are being made I Minneapolis Municipal Ski Club to| have the Olympic tryouts for skllng! keld here the first part of January. A team of four to six skiers to r\‘.‘D~r Tesent tho United States will leave | about January 20 for France. \ Minneapolis candidat for this' team inclu Anders Haugen, Lars Haugen, runner-up in the national tournament st year, and Hans Han- son, who holds the long standing Jump record at 235 feet. The Olympio committeo will decide the place for the United States ski tryouts at {te¢ meeting in Detroit Sunday. ‘WILL NOT AID ARMY. WEST POINT, November 14.—Knute Rockne, coach of the Notre Dame foot ball team, has declined an Invita- tion to help prepare cadets for their annual gridiron contest with the Navy, as he could not find it con- venient to get away from his own team, Head Coach John J. McEwan said. _of the game This was in the November MACKS SET.THE PACE. In the American League, Philadel- phia has been in five world series, Bos- ton in four, Chicago In three, Detroit in three, New York in three and Cleve- land in one. St. Louis and Washington are the two cities in the league which have never had a world series. ‘WOMAN SETS RECORD. Mrs. George Duller, wife of an English jockey, recently established a new woman's world record for an auto run. She did ninety and three-quarter miles an hour and averaged the samo speed over a hundred miles, IT WAS JUST LIKE THE APPLE THAT STRUCK ARTHUR THREW A CLAM SHELL AND IT ALMOST CAME BACK AND HIT HIM IN THE EYE. SO HE STARTED TO FIGURE OUT HOW HE'D DONE IT. LOUISVILLE, Ky. November 14— Interest in the Zev-In Memoriam match race, acheduled to be run at Churchill Downs here Saturday. pro- vided t} condition of the i meetd with the approval of Wiedemann, owner of In M was increased materially today publication of dispatches from more that the Rancocas Stauble three-year-old was to leave for Louisville. It was recalled today t when the conqleror of Papyrud and win- ner of the Kentucky Derby matches speed and endurance with In Memo- rlam Saturday in an effort to recom the prestige lost by defe: heels of Mr. Wiedemann's great three- year-old in the Latonia champlonship it would be the firsy mateh race h at_Churchill Dowms since v 1 ien Ten Bro. e rthy into submi: tance of four mile So far In Memoriam, which i tercd h as had only slow work- outs, wi heavy bovs up. r. Wiede mann was here yeeterday to wate his horse gallop a mile in 1.43 3.5 reiterated his confidence in the ity of his entry again to defeat Zev. The race Saturday is for a mile and one-quarter., the Kentucky Derby Each horse is to carry 12 { I Pimlico 1 AT THE RIGHT the Harvard team of Cambridge in 1867 Cummings pitched and tried his new ball. Harvard couldn’t hit him. Thus entered the curve into base ball. There have been reams and reams of print spent trying to explain why a curve is a curve. But it can’t somehow be satisfactorily ex- plained. The fact is merely that it curves: and you either can do it or you can't. The ball has been put through the third de- gree by learned professors of physics, but they give it up by saying that the curve is not only one of the mysteries of base ball; it is as well one of the mysteries of science, for it de- fies certain fundamental laws of physics. 1 \ COAST LEAGUE SPLITS; WILLIAMS NAMED HEAD l AVALON, Calif,, November 14— The Pacific Coast Base Ball League vesterday elected Harry A. Willlams, {Los Angeles sports’ writer. president. | to succeed William H. MecCarthy and | voted to move headquarters from San | Francisco to Los Angeles. Williams | was elected by u vote of five to three, San Francisco, Vernon and Sacramen- | to_refusing to recognize him. The election came after McCarthy | had refused to seat J. J. Sullivan as the Seattle director, in line with his previous declarations that the Seattle | club was owned by the Wrigley in- | terests, which control the Los Angeles | club. 'Sullivan was seated upon the | election of Willlams, and Cal Ewing of Oakland was' elected representa. | tive to the national board of arbitra- tion, After clared Tomorrow: “Who Iuvented the Base the mecting McCarthy de- the outcome Ball Diamond?” H as_ “the ‘worst {thing that had ever happened in any base ball league,” and announced BELMONT TO BE ONE | OF RACING CLASSICS | ravonii ‘eciins & ‘.?.‘;n‘éi“fic‘:g:}é"si inational meeting of in_Chicago. Willlams announced it as his am- | bition to restore tranquillity to the leaguc. LIST RELAY CARNIVAL. NEW YORK, November 14.—Start- | ing in 1926 the Belmont Stakes, one of the oldest and most sought for | prizes of the American turf, win| LS - e 4 e 0 valns v 2 »y | __An athletic meet similar to the Penn- rank In value with the Epsom Derby | gyivania relay carnival, with American and Grand Prix de Paris through the |athletes pitted against British ompire addition of $15,000 to tho 350,000 |stars, will be staged in England July stakes and the lengthening of the 1% 1924 distance from a mile and three fur- BIG ATHLETIC CLUBS. longs to o mile and & half, President August Belmont of the Westchester| 4, 5 Racing Awsoelation has announced. | (o Crited” States San the G i Generous support.” accorded bY !Club of San Francisco, the Los An. letic Club of Los Angeles, the both breeders wnd owners, Belmont : geles Achi - ' Multnomah_Athletic Club of Portland sald, practically cgvor%‘; without m . terial cost the $50.000 guaranteed | GOre, the Chicago Athletic Assoclatl value of the 1923 race and the &s- |or [ilinois Athletic Club of Chicago. {:: ',’,“’:"‘:“ft“‘nc":‘d'jfj“,',‘.‘o',’,}yd;fl‘,’,:d &2 | Boston Athletic Aesoclation. of Boston yans. .and the New ¥ c the basis of past responses of owners e 1 ¢W York Athletic Club of New and breeders, he added, the gross value in 1926 should be between $65,- 000 and $75,000. “In adding $15,000 to the Belmont stakes the Westchester management | is putting into practlce the policy | of liberality that has been manifest ! at every turn in the past and was to the fore recently WHerf the result of the financfal returns in connec- tion with the international race were glven to the public,” sald a state- ment issued by the association. The Belmont stakes, for three-year- olds, was created in 1867. Entries for the 1926 race close November 28. AUTO GLASS FOR WINDSHIELDS OR BODIES. Installod While You Wait. Taranto & Wasman 1017 NEW YORK AVE. NL.W. Match Your 0dd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS | stri e in a contest on the Pacific ast this fall, according to Co: Knute I ne, who sald an fnterse tional ev of that kind t sume the appearance of a profe sional move instead of an intercol- legiate game Rockne's statement was made the course of an address before dents of Central Catholic Hig chool here, in which he assaile professionalism and defended tl regulations covering in d sports. th confidence. “The boys.” Le aid, “learned a les son and it is well that it is onl foot ball game they lost. A defeat like that is not soon forgotten. That defeat will test the character of the Notre Dame foot ball boys. 1f we win next Saturday it will prove the boy have the quality of character 1 b Heve they hav Referring to present day foot ball as compared with the old brand, he Towa's team wili he strongest it has put on the field this seakon, ac- ording to reports from the univers pars its forward- diana passing college through sistent gai COAST ELEVEN ON WAY. SPOKANE, Wash, November 13 | Four thousand students of Spoka schools gave the Lewls and Cla High School foot ball squad & rous- |ing_send-ofr it departed last night to mest High School at \o gridiron game has made great | nd I think the an improvement over the old 1t takes h n to pluy it for an attitude of present open strength of their mental al DARTMOUTH FOOT BALL PAYS. Foot ball at Dartmouth during the 1922-23 seaso ved a net profit of more than $. . No other branch of sport paid its own way. One of the new and 1s mot est sporte .nd Fenders 10 DIFFERENT MAKES RADIATORS ANY KIND LADE OR REPAIRED. | WITTSTATT'S R. and F. WORKS | 319 13th, F. 6410. 1488 P. M. TH4J. HERBERT TAREYTON | LIONPON CIGARETTES Import and Expast ——— Hertert Tareytog