Evening Star Newspaper, January 3, 1925, Page 8

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1925. - SPORTS. Kaplan Now Wears Featherweight Crown : Phils Are Willing to Trade Williams 'EASILY MASTERS KRAMER IN FIGHT FOR RING TITLE Meriden Boxer Beats Philly Scrapper so' Severely Latter’s Seconds Toss in Towel in Ninth Round. New Champion No Dundee. Br the Associated Press. EW YORK. January 3—The world featherweight boxing crown rest on the head of Louis (Kid) Kaplan of Meriden, Conn., “Buzz- saw.” today as a result of his decisive victory over Danny Kramer, Philadelphia southpaw, in a title match at Madison Square Garden last night. Kramer was battered into complete submission by the whirling Kaplan The end. in the form of a fluttering towel from Kramer’s corner, came after 1 minute 11 seconds of fighting in the ninth round, giving the Meriden flash a technical knockout THE NEW CADDY. —By RIPLEY. LEIBOLD AND COVELESKIE -|ACCEPT GRIFF CONTRACTS came into the National fold yenter- y. Fresident Clark Grifith of the world champion Washington club .received. signmed .contracts from Outfielder Nemo Leibold and Stanley Coveleskl, the veteran About n third of the players on ‘the Nationalw’ reserve list mow expects line within a others to fall into few weekn. OPE MAKES HISTORY BY RECEIVING DUNDEE KRG A ROME, January 3.—For the first time in nearly 2,000 years of the church’s history the Pope received a FLETCHER AIMING TO ADD SOME SPEED TO HIS CLUB Reason He Would Part With Home-Run Clouter Who Had Average of .325 Last Season—Team Is Badly in Need of Agile Players. —_——— BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK. January 3—Arthur Fletcher, manager of the Philade! phia Nationals, is willing to trade ( y Willia n 15. the home-run hitter and one of the best batters of the Nationa! Leaguc—if there is a player as good as Williams to be had in exchange for h _Fletcher said he was willing to trade Williams for Jack Smith of the St. Louis Nationals when the subject was broached in a conversation here but that possibility got nowhere. Still Fletch o . bl - Still Fletcher is anxious to add some speed to the Phillies, and he fecls that he can afford to take it on, ev at the expense of losing a long-distance ball killer like Willia. : The battle was onc _of the most spectacular title matches ever seen g e Siatee iy, at the historic Garden. There was none of the usual “jockeying for posi- : ; ¥ Johnny Dutides, once featherwelght tion” by cither principal. Both had everything to gain and nothing to : it El 8 Bmtatitn. GF fhe WIEA. BaW touding . Jose. and. with this in mind. defensive tactics were forgotten. : A ; Europe, saw Plus XI, who gave him nSI 1Ti streaked with blood fror 5 * 0 and his manager, James Johnson, a ‘ h hit that he swatted roken rse and two ba battered special blessing, much to the delight i 2 broken nowe and & BASKET BALL . : e By Chester Horton '»:.'d V“\ V‘H‘:” oy & Do g 3 s ¢ |y That ought to bring luck. 1 hope | ted over that fenee, and the cned by the : - ‘ : A |11 enock out tie next man I fight”| Relaxation in the golf awing docs| iave miade actice of hanging o Lo e nn Arbor—Navr. 1 Michi- \ i .v.»n:x;\.,\-l s nll)\:fl-‘\‘l‘r\vm nn;ile\I(';nu' mean looseness Relaxation ound North oad street waiting 2 an exhibition only in Milan, although | o chase one em and earn Lafayette—Purdue DePauw A hie saw both Venice apd Florence., He | memns the total abmence of stiffmess| 0 - 070 OnC fio o X going to his birthplace, Sciacca.| and rigidity.When | .45 Lijt two or three long ones do Indiana, 31; Cinein- £ s Siclly, where his father lives. you walk at 'an ., right center corner of the | “Johnny Dundee” is a boxing pseu- ordinary gait hils t probabl donym. The boxers real name is are mot loose - hits of the park Joseph Giuseppe Carrorra. the sense of co a outit s one plete abandon of has been a fixture in the Quaker City ‘ The big o ielder of th Phillies entered the ring or have ended sooner ; 4 Blooming Kaplan fought an agare Dntyersits ciless fight, wearing down his oppo- i nent by the power of his drive and 7 | S RN that can 1l the strength and hen cutting him to shreds as the :‘V“\" ‘h g 8 “:“ 1:" \:'ln‘:d t \A" CouEGE Hm:KEY . % ay physieal comtrol.|speed that ner can find for it R S A , FOLWELL MAY RETURN e amt i 1S i M T S whom ped at his feet, carrying with it the| At Boston—MecGill, 2; Dartmouth, 1 7 e hopes to get mors speed from his world featherweight -title, as estab-| At Boston—Harvard, 2; Toronto, 1. 3 E TO W. & J. NEXT FALLI ;L‘“':d"u’,h::fl-;f; inficld and if he can get some one Tished by the New York State Athletic| At Pittsburgh—Pittsburgh, 3; Queens ;! ANNAPOLIS, Md., January 3.—Ac- e s einsi the ';_':_;’\':;d Hhocanain coxn s Commission et University bfftoronto, 1 cording to latest report, Bob Folwell, alixsll clubi your| inings up, he DEures that he can af Exemec Zo0ght gamely, but Haplan ! head coach at the Naval Academy for i bodlly feelln®&|fora to let Williams go, although was too strong for him and crushed 3 Xy five years, will return to Washington | | THE ‘COMPACT |skould be about| wi rare o hevn” time Snater - N under the weigiic of i reien LEAGUE HOCKEY . \ B i ot N Ctr el [aosiemiel ke et mave & Baat e Suclon = Tess attack. . | “In"the five seasons that he has||NOT MEAN |would be were|individual s he has in Williams. The new champion, one of the fust- y been here his teams have been uni- | [STIFFNESS, |you ahout to take| \illiams made TerataiG est featherweights in the game, pa Cleveland—Pittsburgh, 1; Cleve- < formly successful up , when | JIOR RIGIDITYe |u atep. The golf | fore coming to the big leagues at = (kuatkopiighiom it icithe 3 3 ¥ ke was handicapped repeated | swing is closely [ Notre Dame. Chicago was the firs o fn continn By a1 e cnsl Y Paul—Indianapolis, 2; St 3 4 losses of his best players, especially | et . ponent on the defensive from the! pay inifhe BackAnd sta akin to a step backward and a step |0 grab him - | terward. in about the rythm of mat-| Last season he batted .325 and I 1 i R B ural walking. It is mot hard at all |Out 24 home runs. There are ver an of Calif fexw able to do that, so the of St. Paul, in the eighth round of a rhythm in him if he can Yo get hold of s who w lug a Tole in especially L B DEFEATING MICHIGAN PLAY OPENS TONIGHT | e s s Safimesr e L »ou as announced that the win legn. Keep the wwing compact e = within yourself. The real reason the practice awings are o xood is be-| TABLET TO FRANK CHANCE. By the Associated Press. cause you do the natural things—or | . . .. . 3 ' Jet the club do them—when the swing | CHICAGO, January I.—The n would be considered a challenger for the victor in the title event. Her- man has fought several draws with ANN ARBOR, Mich, January 3.- the new champion. | Naval Academy basketers made a e - = clean sweep of their three games on NEW YORK, January 3.—Pennsyl-| goo it count.” Ke L 4 | morial to Frank Chance, late mar & > B8 | v - s th E 5 S e B * tha Chicage . S 1 BY FAIR PLAY. their Western jaunt by beating Michi- vaniu, which opens the fifteenth sea- | (LU P e ittt ager of the Chicago White Sox, B e | son of the Intercollegiate Basket Ball| let 5 = wt'm | be erected in the Cubs' park, will be W YORK, January —Now that | “Previously on the trip the Navs G. W.-GALLAUDET COURT NO l RE DAME IS A I"I ACKED League tonight, at Philadelphia, with e e T e ! e "your | & tublet. President Veeck of the Cub anny Kramer has failed in his am- | quint had disposed of Minnesota, 24 to | ale as an opponent, has won five said after completing examination o Dtion th.win-the.Tetherwelght Hle | 4 g Chicagor 19 o 51 | CONTEST IS POSTPONED | of the titles sought since 1910-11. ST Gesigns submiteed ho probably will bulld himself up as| Navy took the lead last night in the Gharps el AL ten e BY SOCIAI ‘FFMRS NOW e ol e ivens A Loutender for the lghtGelghtifirst four minutes by scoring two fleld | det basket ball teams. that were 4 championships, although the Blue won wi. 1t took & good deal of strain- | goals and a foul. Michigan came fast | cheduled 1o play tomight in the | theirs outright, while the New York- . InE on Nramers bart to enter (helafter that and led at hall-time, 16| former's gymnasium. have heem lers and Ithacans were forced to di- L g at the stipulated poundage for | 12 forced to postpone their comtest. | ko (. Associated Press | vide honors one season. the featherweight division. and it| wavy tied the = o , ; o : S.\x FRANCISCO, January 3—The Notre Dame foot ba!l team was | oot o e e I ey How Walker Won Title Despite Delays at Every Hole count early in the The Hatchette xym fix beink | | second half and the game see-sawed | used for exhibits in commection | | back and forth until the last five min- | with the meetings of the Ameri- | | | | Yooked Friday night as though in zetting down to weight he was weak- | breaking Pennsylvania's four-year ened e = riding alc h of ti lifornia Missions today irc | reign of supremacy. Di outh, e 5e Door time to be lUtes was reached with the score 25 to! eam Aswocintion for the Advamce- iing"along the’ path- of the. Galiforaja Missi today-from Los | teign of supfematy. Destmonth ihe B0, e taok 2 oo ! 25 z ment of Science. weak, for this Kid Kaplan is an arish dra a sho hieh st voung battier, Who can soglk | Labandropheisins long shotmsich The game probably will be staged — Angeles to San Francisco, a bit battered and bruised as the result | [SmaInInE LAgUE entry, Ras ReVer| ypw people can realize the stamina that is required to win a national : it O e ottty s g QI e i g '::vwl)r\‘rfl;\e‘x\~ \(’nr day \:rxlr»r)’ o;.l-rl ,\‘Pamurrl_ ’l'y‘m cager to participate in| The championship records follow: open championship. Cyril Walker, ”‘{ nrcwn.t‘ champion, certain nt mer y i cception awaiting at the Golden Gate tonight. 3 Tear Woa. Lest should be rated among the greatest of the golfers ever to compet What Kramer probably will do now | Hagerty of Michigan came along and Notre Dame cast a flirtatious eye on proposals yesterday for a game | 191011.. i hs ; ; e = tomre will be to carry out his intentions of | RCe & 108 Ve tREReT T 0 o Ak EAST HOLDS SUGHT | with the undefeated University of California team, which “defeated the in the big event, for physical stamina is one of the things which going after Tlrl Terris and other| ;. "crom the side, but once more Hag- University of Pennsylvania eleven on New Year day, but Knute Rockne, has to a much less degree than most of his important rivals e e T e renimar, | werty made @ basket. He tas fouled {Notre Dame coach, visited the Pasadena hospitals and found Harry Weighing but 116 pounds and with no superfiuous flesh, he can tra e, ad e e e feather- | on the play. but mistea both chances. | EDGE IN GRID PLAY | stuehidrcher. his quarterback. with a broken ankic bone in a cast; Joe jauntily through an ordinary day of 36 holes of competition, but whe With just 35 seconds left Day at- | Bach with a strained back and Dill Cerney with two fractured ribs. | m } hits the long grind of 72 holes of preliminary and 72 holes of regular tour- temipted s S TE g i) Rideitae 3 % “The foot ball season is over,” said|the contest were put off until the nament play he kas to call on his will power to keep standard o was strong and carried off to the|p o\ oo Rl 7 - 3 By the Associated Press ockn stre 5 ) 3 : 2 £ . tion f il h ahead of the [ Searcied. of b Dame came to the | Christmas holidays it doubtless would play. It took real grit and determination for Cyril to finish a i e e N e b | NEW ORI Yanuary, 3 —Thielienn ! impossible by Winter S field which competed at Detroit last Summier. % S © first and san¥ the | which the Middle West held in inter- - oithin Alx B o ey One e greates ships for leather, once more putting Navy|iactional gridiron play at the end|°Re 8ame it will be. I'm taking my M S e e Sine O (e grens ent s datifgs To Probably he will be, because it cer: . n | tournament golfer is to have tainly looked as though his effort to |ahead. The game ended just after the (o the regular playing season has|boys back to their studies and will e s i I Aty k : waste time waiting to play just ¥ maice the weight had affected both his | u been wiped away by post-season de- | meet no other Western ecleven FO' R ‘ OOD CO' R I ‘ AMES {atlment of the most weakenin | nis own game is at the peak of it stamina and his hitting velopments of the Dast few weehs| e Niehole . ture. An operation then made him|efciency. Walker was going great ¢ Kaplan, on the other hand. was| OURLING fiTLEAT STAKE. |[and the East holds the top by a ayaduste | much better, but it could not give|Detroit from the first to tr certainly entitled to the verdict, and [ 7% sl scant margin in the final summary|California, refused to consider the him the strength with which most seventy-second, but it is a fact tha as featherweight champions have UTICA, N. Y. January —The | of foot ball conflict tplea of members of the alummi for 7 golfers are blessed. he was held up at every hole, even at one of late, he | Gordon international medal match, | P ' Hagerty of Michigan came along and 2 this, and there is no reason why he hould not do it mow. It will be in- teresting to see whether at an i creased weight he will be better than he was on Friday night at the garden Pacific coast to play one game, and was as good as any Based upon 40 intersectional games | post-season game with Natre Dame His final triumph was a tribute to|the seventicth, where he made the > will never set the world on fire,| the blue ribbon event of the curling|of the season which came to a spec- | Nichols said the California players his will power as well as his skill, | play that won him the title. Auy one 1 the first man possessing real | world, will be contested by DInks| tacular climax New Year day on the|had forfeited two weeks of their although the latter was developed to | can realize how upsetting that was t championship —timber ‘that comes of the United States and Canada at| Pacific Coast, the standing shows the | vacation period and it would hardly OUR games are booked for the entertainment of local basket ball |the highest possible degree techni- a man whose nervous energy must have along is likely to knock him off Montreal February 4. | Zast leading the Middle West by only | be fair to ask them to up the z : cally. Lacking weight and strength, |been near exhaustion |6 points. with the Far West third|balance of their time to fans tonight. The Truxtons meet the strong Alexandria team. |\valker has had to study the mechan- | Many argolfer has lost out in c ‘ “An;i the Soufh last ‘; ‘\'“nh]\'u‘ -‘Iv);uv'-' sponsored by R. V. Knight Co., on the floor of the armory in the |ics of the game thoroughly. The re- | petit for a big title t ough be S Revised statistics of the intersec-| 1e Notre Dame lads will encounter | - > 5 ot S sult has been an accuracy in swing, |ing held up at a critical stage anc “ DIILLAN PAID BIG SUM. | tional play staged exclusively in the 4t San Francisco a round of enter- Virginia town; Calvary M. E. tossers, leaders in the Washington Sunday |\ {i L 2% "™ nat enables him to gei |losing his grip on his game. Cyri Far. West as a holiday feature show |tainment sponsored by the Notre | School League, match their skill with a quint of Railway Expressmen on [as much distance, with good direc- | waited. but with a title almost in his rl‘() PL AY PRO FOOT BALL“:: Seatineo haldinee o on one, Alumni Assocation which will | the court of the Columbia road church; Eastern Athleti Associatiol\’:;flfl. RN kol e wheE L exibp) R clivered 5n drom ahiot s e ed Siace 10k uithel Ty S ST the NotusibE foculer b e Naval R 20S i ve Wire en. His long irons etion. e kind whic e does perfect 3 | past” decade the East has won six|United States Seator James Phelan | Plavs the Naval Receiving Station at Eastern High. and the Live Wires |10€% T P08 CVery small man in | crossed the water hazard, reached the fand lost five of these post-season |Sunday afternoon arc scheduled to meet the Rosedale Juniors in the latter’s gymnasium. the country can't have a chance to|green, ran down his putt for a three lagsice, the Middle Weet has Aloacd | A% cominlttes. of (0 of the| The R. V. Knight five is rated as|of the Railway Expressmen at Cal-|iie mim play and study his game. |and marched on to vietory By tie Associated Press. our, while the Far West has fairest malds San Francisco society | the strongest on the other side of the | VAFY tonight at § o'clock. : g 2 | tured seven and lost eig e | Can provide, led by Miss PegEY | poromac S e e Ehalte =—— «c 0" MeMILLAN. famous quarterback of the 1921 and 1922 Centre | pamas wnaed Tn et cight | O'Netil, Wil meet: the Notre Dame | Loto0ac and the Truxtons are going| - Cerby Bakery Court performers evi- . N I m i | 5 [{eaeny; et SR "¢ | out of their class to play them. Holst, | dently took their New vear deteat| | THE CALL OF v ORS College foot ball elevens, is making an endcavor to remove pro- | The final intersectional stand Ry ST OIn thio'k ancival g e the hands of the Five Jacks seri- P K e hostesses extraordinary durin ir | a member of the crack Epiphany fiye | % t pep his record in order to join the Foot Ball| - | e. ously, for last night they nosed out j e 5’ |stay here. . B e e e Coaches’ Association of America ! Fast. nest.South. West. Won. Lost. Pet.| Kockne has extended an invitation | °f 135t vear; Evans, a Tech Dlayer,| the Petworth Athletic Club, 27 to 22, BY WILL H. DILG McMiila ol 35 asked irernstaten despite the taetaliat he violtedi BOL G i 711" 348 (10 Coach Glenn Warner to bring his|and Pepper. a former Gonzaga bas-|in a battle that was anybody's until| i S ' LR an ks line : desnnc the enanr ated | aidweat 9 2750 342 | Stanford eloven East mext year for a | Keter. are recent acquisitions of the | three minutes before the final whistle. | President, 1zaak Walton League of America. one of the rules of the association in playing professional foot ball. | Far W't 17540 500 Hie velth Notre, Dume: 1| the -baw | Bruxtons A pair of twp-pointers by Goetz and McMillan contends that he was ignorant of the ruling when he clected | South.- 3 4 Bt The ‘Alexendeians) ars uslngsstwo] RAid hear: the) endiof the geme . puf 3 : — to play i Rockne pointed out that .no Cali- | members of the 18 4 Palace Laun- | the Bakers in the lead. Ingley of I HAVE previously discussed the basic principles of warm slceping fessionalism from | it il ! e L e Gantre|iterwale A et O ST EASTERN BASKETERS | fornia team®had ever met an liastern | ry team, mamely Gitlitz and Zazzali. | the winners accounted for six baskets, $3.500 in debt. but more than wiped out | Wednesday eleven on an Iastern field, and that| Manager Humphrey of the Truxtons| The back court work of Drissel, a s b e acnes wnd fans alike were cager | reauests all players to report at the| Petworth guard, was a feature. feathers, to hold dead air. Dead air. of course, is the best non-con ting 32000 for his first professional | Clarley Paddock. Loren Mure OVERCOME GONZAGAM witness such an encounter. station at Twelfth and D streets at — ductor in the world. That is. if we could surround our bodies with a He said he never received and Jackson V. Scholz, America’s Warner 6: ame less | Coach displayed no. en- In a preliminary to the Corby-Pet- g . ; toth e aleng tk v han $500 a game tar sprinting trio. may meet in one thusiasm over the bid. hawever, He| Charlie Tavlor, Milton Lngle and|worth game the Epiphany Juniors|covering of dead air and nothing clse, we could walk along the Arctic : of the Winter indoor track meets : ‘ texplained that there was small chance | “Lefty” Tripp, forward “Farmer” | started what may be another winning | circle in comfort, and without a stitch of clothing on 'u-.‘m—n . /.upntl.n 1\ m.lin K ..{m\ ":""v‘ son ‘R.H-.» cut I»,:m’n rn l|vzh|.‘nh»‘nl basketers added | of Stanford sendfng a team st in | Williams, center: Frank Engle and|streak by trouncing the Fastern All of our clothing, all of our blankets, are used merely to keep dear the University of Iin vstralia from their world journey [& victory to their list of pre-season | the middle of a semester, and that if Miller, guards, will be in the line-up( Preps, 22 to 4. The Easterns were|_:. . & E ith = 4 3 5 i ¢ . , A g 3 . 22 S - s, © vithin their meshes and confined between the dent of the « . r-land will start for Japan January 14 by winning over the strong| it aoalagle Eouls From aeti Iinage, |0 areund us, confined within t ) 1 acterized int ) E onzaga quint, 21 to 16, on the i el o w ers | [AYErs. the greatest sliow en - earth.” nglish tenmie leaders arc expect- | ter's court Bl eacIUPIayes fof U winner Our blankets or clothes are used t s 3 8. figured in the scoring. o7 i g ddress to the o N to invade the United States this Although starting tlie ga Flft, e F: = hold dead air around us in two ways i 0 el Summer i pbraers o CUR | SaihoRel ot . Years of Base FIRST PRIZE SHARED [ st in g 3 convent New ¥ v ccond-string line-up, the’ Bastern- .Y A mpurt in the closing minutes of T PR E R e ot aced thie 1 ' Simpoon and R. €. 0. Williams, Hrit led all the way, the -score -beids s fimires at “100.000,H00 ish doubles champions of 1922 and € At HAIf tire theienme felled Ib belng up. the acors cloth. The weave itself, that is, holds i 4 " ! ‘ for the Takoma Athletic Club int | o RN : o T, s e e maens | o Enright ‘and (O'Donoghiie o One of a Series of Articles by John B. Foster Com- | .54 ‘they rore Gefetted. 2L tora6 by 'N DUCKPIN TOURNEY;’"'.;?'-}'.M' oyt s, the princlple o vorsity of Michigan, t ion | In 19 : he amateur |iosars gave the best cxhibit B A e ek LR |which sweaters are built. The othes champion, also m come " 4 2 . s . | wa s confi g as much dea ail to this cstimate pion ¥ o \floor work, the _former b memorating the Fijtieth Anniversary of the Walter Reed Hospital court. Dray e e - scorer of the game, with three court of the winners accounted for five 2 -Dons = 1 pointed out that the idea is to use non-conductors, such as wool or 3 Aers adle distance i ets, or between layers of clothing. John ¥, (Chiek) Weehan Syracuse | 300 oiiaa antn Tby reits oo enals National League, to Be Celebrated two-pointers. Cyrb Cafe of the Disttict League [kets or between layers of clothing sl T e ontines | e American having the best chance | . = and White Stars of the Commercial % T et e cidents connected with the journey | 1€ JIRERICER RERIRE L0 B e Senss. | team made up of alumni of S % Le Mt e adbn: e e e al|skin blanket, those classics of the Win Qoast this vear. when Syracuse lost | (100%] Kinn- in Madison Sauare fGac | proved to be no match for the regu- | Bets, 15" to 8 ‘and the Congress|blind pig duckpin tournament that|of these two methods. The rabbil-sk to Southern California, 16 to 0. He| % &t Ne L ruesday pight Hiar five at the Georgetown School yes- | XXXL { eights five. 49 fo 4. T. McNally |closed last Wednesday at the Coli- |Dlanket is made of strips of rabbit ski tald of stopping off at Albuguerque Jeut > e | terday, the schoolboys winning, 611 ¢ i) g - RPLeR Lo the Rl ners 1n the dhieiier. _ that are tied together and then wover . : S arriving | ay's Hlinois Athietic Club team-|(, 30’ Dulin, with 12 goals from | E P SRS— ! seum. Curb Cafe, with 1,745, and|basket fashion, to make a blanket. The M., for practice before arriving h ; h 12 goals fro i £ . f mates will be with him | White Stars, with 1,553, totaled 3,299 | mesh is very coarse, and vou c: Bt et “Zuppie: Tu spedling L | scrimmage. and Garber, with seven, B he et the : o Live Wire tossers won a close game e 3 of Mocnan's talk. said R N e s e T HE five most notable. pitchers of the National League would hav#{ Tive Wire tosnera won a close game | [\, % 5 i tran the second cou- | thrust vour fimkers (hrongh auc “My motto in intersectional foot bal! known. are going West.. Wade | While Frisby of theigrads led his included Albert G. Spalding were it not for the fact that Mr. {and Greenwood played leading roles|Ple, Pintas of Knights of Columbus|blanket at any point. But you can { 5 > Yok {heiiwi e “Mallgy and|League and King David of the Ma- |sleep with it as your only covering, in Spalding was named as one of the 10 most famous players because [ for the winners, while Malloy and|Losgue, 813 King, Datid, of, the Sa) men WAR b as Sour o conrin g et P . . P . . e w ntone. = > - % . s Gonzaga Rewerves wore defeated. | of his base ball skill and his skill in organization. Without Albert G.|P®'® Sk 1,659, respectively. zero. The coarse meshes of the blan- to 15, b h Rosedale t ers in | Spa i h i f vati Vi v v v i went to the Stand- | ket, with the millions of hairs that . ! thor Brefimiare it Haatnicine. ‘T“":,‘,I',"f the continuation of the National League would have been VEry| aumouxh hard pressed by the Stan- ool iy Gl dar s St hehe | 611 them, snfomzeds. the dead. air Twenty years ago the annual all-|cuits. “every one of them capable of | zuuy game, Sl S ekl b Ln L 2 X tops, the FElliot Juniors started the|pigirict League and the Pirates of [ which insulates the body American foot ball team selected by | winning in this 'eague,” but would 5 e 2 The Bite """ Who' is named first-as|est apeed possible to produce this de- | new 'year with a 43-to-d% ° victory. [ qp ™ G TUENE GOt S0 o PR LU Topne ciderdown robe consists of two AValter Camp carried the name of [nct name them because waivers had| After trking defeat from theiw |55 ©O0¢ of the National _lmnxu«s‘ Ivery to make it succeed. Most pitch- | pg winners wish to schedule a game |42\ (VOO OF oy a 1,515 wool blankets or pieces of wool fabric Smith at fullback. He w picked ! not been obtained. alumni and the Hyatteville High | Ereatest” is Arthur Cummings, thejers try to get a shoot on the bail by | for Monday night. Manager Under- "“'”?1 °"°;,m' =5 A““x il o "'1“.“‘, o hreaat ,?mm,” ot the elder from the University of Pennsylvinia & Schoul, tossers at 8t. John's College|Man Who made the curve ball pos-|delivering it {rom the ends of thelr|wgod may be reached at Lincoln|ZReS) VeV yoiwoe feams COM-| Juck. THis illustrates the other prin and on the . eleven he Notre Deme foot ball sauad. | gre onine 1o turn the fables when | Sible. and who completely revolu-|fingers with all the force they can|g365 at b o'clock. peted. el G al 1 aia iire ’ Sheviin | of | en route back to its studles at otre they et Buainugd i ay aft.|tionized the pitching features of the | muster. That is not a curve. B T s b L ‘\\‘llllin ; qm“\ - con Princet Hogan of esall | Lame, ill .‘" entertained with an | o005 their new gymnasium. The | Same. 1t -|( were not & fact that Cum- | Cymmings did not piteh an Incurve,] Ottawa Midgets, who took the mca_,_!“w"m"“z thet'Capital 'City Asao- af Chi Stevensor nn and | organ recital in the famous Mormen | §i' John's sehedule follow lnvlnz* 1 his time was a 004 DitCher | 1, did he know anything about the |ure of the Ozark Midgets ina 21-to-19 [ Liviicl 1o rolled five games at the January 10, Caiver( Hafl Colloge: 13, Iy~ | Hurley of Tarvard that time | Tabe Je when it stops in_Salt | he would still ‘deserve the honor of | grop ball, which is the outeurve with | tilt, are seeking games through Man- | ging P ; ! n & g ! ¥ nOF op ball, N E a A g Pln .alleys last night, only 10 hurdling's death kn was sounded | Lake City next Tuesday. The Notre [, fnuuer [0, €4 e Gt the highest award for his discovery of | revarse English, but he was the first |ager Buscher at West 2828, pins separated them in the totals, As H"_I_TOP ATHLETES | Emerson Tostitate; 24, Charlotte ITall, the way to produce the curve, because | pan o tame the outcurve, and from e a result of the bowling President games is this—don’t stop off at all. Killifer, manager of the Seattle club | 1°3M With five baskets. Go to the point and get licked as soon | of acific - Coast League, an- | as possible wounced he had been promised a trio - lof performers from the grand cir-| and Hurley, Crimson back. W one | Dame eleven went to California by of the last to be sariously injured southern way to defeat Stanford, | Charlotte Tiall. | base ball changed in every way after| pis heginning started the present Lot ¥ In; . o e > % I nis be s s has selected the lowi maen (e o18 stxieor s, Bmiihe | 37 to 10, In & New Vear duy Folman A ek e eairvecame o “common uke” " | Kiioar 5t rurve piteing wnich now | SUZANNE DISPLAYS oot o campetscwitn the wime vins | IN NEW YORK MEET who is now known as “Andy.” ¢ hes | and is returning home by the north- 18, Teeh High School: 23, Devitt Prep: Tt is" probable that the curve ball| yjos base ball / |of Baltimore tonmight on the latter's the University of California eleven,|crn route. arlotte Hall, was pitched, or, to be more accurate.| When he announced that he could i s B ¥ 2 v it was 8§ drives: Max Rosenberg, Glenn Wol- | which has comb through fve seasons L . ot 3 Emerson; 5, Devitt Prep at Devitt. was thrown before it was dfi\-ovrn‘d Bandle’ the eurte and begdn do-tell DLD TENNIS sK'LL atenholodY ATSWork. Howird .Camp: | undefeates RITISH PROS TRIMMED R by Cummings. @.eft-hand hrowers | others how he did it a great contro- bell and Joe Toomey. with George| Georgetown University track a -—— | curve the ball naturally. Some right- | yorsy vi % ol o Jeors: . e . Toa York Californin has established an im- B 3 | MURCHISON DELAYS TRIP & versy arose as to whether there was Friend and Happy Burtner substi-|fleld athletes will invade New Yor! ! hand throwers do so. any curve ball. College professors and tutes: Tuesday night to compete in the Fin mense oot bail record. having scored | BY HUNTER AND SMITH; SO HE MAY-RACE SCHOLZ |, Gimmings, in the course of his base | {eachers of natural physies insisted| CANNES. France. January 3.—Su-1''s Teturn match of five games wil|nish-American Athletic Club games ( The Golden Bears have been. flod| 'HOLLYWOOD;" Calit., January 3~ isbe “”;“;-l ascertal ;‘Edf at when he | pgt the curve was a hoax and.4m-|zanne Lenglen appeared on the local pe rolled on the King Pin No. 1|Dbe run in Madison Square Garden, Six several times.. Stanford obtained a| Willie 1. Hunfer, former British ama- | NEW YORK; January 2 — %Loren [ held a ball a certain way and gave|possible. Personal _demonstration |teninis courls yesterday with her old |drives of this city next Saturday|Or Seven wearers of the Blue and .20 deadlock this sseason by | teur golf champion, and MacDonald|>urchison of Newark, N. J, and it B;e"?‘" N‘]‘S'{!‘“‘-flxe its course | Analiy proved that the college men (doubles partner, Elizabeth Ryan. and|night, total pins to count. Gray are due to show their wares o o e S ali amin open chamaton | Charlie Paddock of 'Les Angeles,|in the channel of its progress toward | were wrong and, of course, in these |demonstrated, according to observers, B The Hilltoppers will have no one in e e nten ot tha Bame. | Uni- | 1923, yesterday defeated Abe Mitchell | Calif., American sprinters who were | the batter. He continued to work upon | days the boys who are at high scheol that she has recovered her former ;o lthe race featuring the great Finn o o BT tnnd | had reorme e Brition Brofes. | scheduled to begin a world tour Jan- | this discovery until he was able 0| curve the ball as thelr big- brothers |speed and stzzling service. | | BUTLER FIVE REPEATS, |V#ave Nurmi but their mediey relas tia ‘analslon: in 1eRs | stonals, who are on an exhibition tour, | U8Fy. 14 have delayed the start of produce the curve at will, and then|go in the games for grown men, The Lenglen-Ryan combination | - %7 »=5"% 2 four that did so well last Winter will A le g | Y St 20 exhibition tour. | (105 eXpeditfon until the middle of | control it, which was the most im- | 0 LR SEOCR H0 BN P | walked away with two matches, de-| KANSAS CITY. Mo. Januar —|be in action. George Kinally is to Woaniy Otfirien, St.=Panl Mght- o e e SL IO s portant fact of all. His first curve was | Spalding pitched the ball, not throw- | feating Miss L. Hall and Mrs. Went- | The final game of last year National [ run the furlong i the medlcs, Paul waight. who meets Jack Bernstein of [ goq s . e Murchison’s decision to postpone the | the old roundhouse curve now known | I8 1t and of Bis type was the €768 | worth Smith. 6—0, 6—2, and Mrs. Hill- | A. A, U." championship busketball | Herlihy the quarter. George Marsters New York in Madison Square Garden | *"% * beginning of the trip, it is sald, is|as the outcurve. O A e A e Seiha|yard and Mile. St. Omer Roy, 6—0,|tournament was re-cnacted here last fhe half and Wiliie Sullivan ihe mile Friday night, will train during the R ARSI based on his desire to meet Jackson| There is mno incurve. There never|Mho made the cucve possible 's ihe|g_o. night when the Butler College quint| Jimmy Burgess and Vernon Ascher coming three days with Mike Me.| CLEVELAND, January 3.—The|V. Schols, the only American to win|has been and there have been not|tnet Gf CURVE BICENE VAT | Today Suzanne and Miss Ryan arei of Indianapolis defeated the Kansas|are slaied to step along in a special Tigus, lght-heavyweight champlon. | Princeton University polo team was|a first place in the 1924 Olympic|to excee alx men who actually have s A to take on.the Misses French and|City Athletic Club team, 29 to 28. 300-meter event. Emerson Norton 4t the latters camp in Summit, N. J. | defeated, 23 to 7%, by the Troop A [sprinting cvents, on the indoor bgards | been able to make the ball hoolk for - x Bennett, the latter & 16-year-old| The local team at the half led|of Olympic fame may represent Tigue faces Mickey Welker, wel-| Jues, Cleveland, last night. during the January meetings. ,r a so-called incurye. It takes (he groat- | (Next—Charles Radbougpe). pheénomenon. by a score of 21 to 16. Georgetown in the high jump.

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