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48 r— — . ——— arry Doyle Star Swatsman in National League--Yale Postpones Selection of Captain--Rocco-Waltz Ready for Coming Bout--Bowling Schedules for This Week W WILSEE | Spears of Dartmouth Said " PORT repERAL A C.50UTS | ARVARD HAD BEST SHOULD BE HUMMERS | MANY CHANGES'! o Be Best Guard of Year N LIGHT s DAY OF SEASON Hartford Fans Pick Waltz to Beat Rocco—Local Sporting Men Favor tatian 1n coming sou. | Crimson Form Surprised All Fol- . y Gj‘d}?f/dndpjw With both boys trained to the ) of Captain Postponed minute, ana’avaiting e wouna ot | [0WrS-Shevlin Deserves Praise e timekeeper's bell that will start | il - | After Holiday Recess Thanksgiving on the Off-Trail. smothered elevens supposed to befirst | them off on their twelve round mill, | 1 : ' e 8 5 class machines on Wednesday evening at the Lyceum | New York, Nov. 22—To rate the |Hlaven, Nov. 22.—What is N i Herc's another one on—yes, another nes. A i ) nne = = b, here to forecast a sweeping Thanksgiving, i ;};E"“i‘:’( M‘,’“"‘“} qeis ""l" gos “.“\‘1(‘7 | football teams at the cnd of the sea- i 7 S ol S , t 0 give he boxing loving publie | ju athietios at Yalo, especial- : : For ShosoRot e luckyRenotenito e Overplayed. ChaWoTH tharaia= Ok ica RitatiTinG [leon NI ey ® t‘:;ultwm ',::e fatlire Ot,th" & : 4 So let\ :5 get maudlin, as vagabonds Baseball has been overplayed. | ever taken place in this city The ' onerous task, will be a fearful puzzle, ot CZ;"{“M;: ‘:‘et Ifia:za"i' 4 T o et Overplayed by 87 per cent. So the | Hartford fans are evidencing consid- | hut Harvard can be rated above Yale 0 sele @ 3 4 3 e i p g 2 v g : : | \ Who are long on self-pity and hitting | Flan now under consideration to | ¥aPle interest in the coming fra¥, | yipout any convincing arguments after the game, as has been | A € g self-pity tion e e G e Ry it om for years. Before the | 2 4 . ne o;th“ ?1”1'. ) | Prune away all early exhibition games | nag ever attended e CaniBitisrtn TiEis i:"aslh“nm;.-ux:iced that inYalu! ) i A r‘;“;’m:mfl‘“s that are all | 5pnq start the regular season fresh | city is expected to attend the fr i the logic of that arrangement. Om y the electior. of a ale : : 5 3 ERsEer | S this year would not be madk . Fergotten, long-vanished, or dusty | sounds entirely too good and logical h‘/\a‘llzlduc to his long residence In | mature deliberation it seems only fair ter the Thanksgiving recess. | ; : oy with Time. to be true. | the Capitol City, is the favorite With | (;, place the Cambridge men above explained that it seemed ad- | < s : For too long a time baseball man- | the Hartford f: but right here In |, . ;¢ New Haven this vear to postpone this . ; Old dreams from the years that are | derins have been almost sure to do | this city there are hundreds of fol- . king at it until. after the excitemenrt | - 3 now dim, undated the wrong thing at the wrong time jn | 10Wers of the little Italian battler who On the whole and looking 4 to the game had subsided - Of home—and a mother—and some | the wrong way. They have erred as differ with them in regard to the out- | from every angle it appears that Har- men had had a chance to : : : one who waited badly as a lot of their ball clubs brreq | COme of the battle. Waltz's rise in | yard was the better team on Saturday ous thought to the proposi- g 4 o greet our return from the laurel- | 1ast season, which isn't far away from | the boxing game has been meteoric, here are a good many grad- \ i gown track, the limit. But if they put this move | he having faced the best boys in | st b s el e A 53 5 : ivy 1 < o : Yor o M ord for the seaso! E g y e are ho have felt for some time : , Dut who waited in vain, for we lost | through to give the game a breathing | Massachusetts, New York and Con- | ord for wise selections of captains | ’ e 4 ¥ the way back, spell they will be entitled at last to | necticut, and but once in his career | convinced after sieeping on it would ted to Yale’s disadvantage m: e £ sphe i S Or, enmeshed in the Game with the | # large number of rousing cheers. has he suffered a reverse, going doWn | have won even had she not “got the t and that the new plan | : : # hands dealt by Fate, to defeat to Young Brindisi of New | preaks.” We don’t know what be tried this year to obviate 3 3 e The clock struck again—and we found Haven by the K. O. route. ~He has, | {ing the breaks” is or consists of, possible. 2 . S it too late. SATURDAY'S FOOTBALL RESULTS, | however, returned the beating to his | jarvard got them al other reasons have been | & e , . Trinity 9, Wesleyan 0. Elm City rival by the game method. | Through such fluky happenings as B8 for fite bhanee or custom, 5 < # Weive Rtorg ottoniios thinxe ROt hthe Harverd 41, Yaie 0. Rocco’s ability is well known to local | guperiority in pretty much very de- the Harvard-Yale game the | S g gray years behind us, Dartmouth 0. Syracuse 0. fans. Pitted against a number of | partment and position Harvard e matter of a new captain ¢ = GeU oL e And prod at the soul as Thanksgiving Army 17, Springfield Y. M. C. A. 7. | hard obponents he has as a rule been | won; and but for the whims of for- ly is discussed among the < Day nears Ursinus 10, Navy 7. & winner Rocco’s knowledge of | tune in Harvard's favor such as the there seemed to be no logi- And faces remembered drift back Fordham 14, Carlisle 10. the game is one factor that may have | refusal of Mahan to run backward hdidate for the place, for through the years, Columbia 19, N. Y. U. 16. :‘v:ll“’;‘”";“?:‘ bearing lm l:"- “""”“K:ulmn nearing Yale's goal, the luck men who repre: s Where home—aw, f it—w r's v 5 , he being possessed of better ring | ¢ King in not vanishing into thin turamy Onoppepresented the | Hanover, Mass, Nov. 22.—With the | football, but on the football fleld he fa | YV "°C2, ROy foreet mwho FRieem O SEINS S, gencralship than the Hartford He- | fir when scooting toward Yale's sonlu Sheldon, Way, | football season of 1915 about over, the | the liveliest ‘fat boy’ you ever saw,” ‘ oot ri N B 3 i 0. brew. Waltz is the possessor of @ |and the rabbit’s foot which attended Wilson will b:h_‘o\;vthitt:, nd | gridiron_experts are now reviewing |said the expert. “In the Harvard hat right has a tramp pulling that | Georgetown 61, South Carolina 0. and the tavolLS 2 ° b , o hard wallop, but there are many who | Harte when the ball did net bound up o b Pty . S | LD TRt G ) SRR Cel ety | e TG ) sl TN ek | e s }\;::»(:1121)1:12;\:1:'\':aez:‘mxosmxi\v Hamp- | 2re doubtful that he will be able to | B NI stinradiand cholaihim aves no veteran of the team | (o7 SESCHOTS AT EEEI AU SAT (o2l e mfi'rythir:fie]t(i:g | Thanksgiving—well, even a hapless | shire 0. ’ land it on his shifty opponent. | when he was gathering a fumble for o e omtion Srorior Il L OnaR A DB R S e S e e e et tailender Wash, & Jeff. 59, Bethany 0. The preliminaries are of the A No. | 4 touchdown—but for these fortuitous | men who were on the 1914 | o fol 5 TR TOROn Tt out | A5Sr o ware o more than 180. If ho | Should have at least something of | Buffalo 7, Rochester 3. 1 order and Matchmaker Walsh has | twists, Harvard might mnot have against Harvard only tWo | gpearg of Dartmouth. The selection | turned a hair or panted for a breath | thanks he can render, Johns-Hopkins 20, St. John's 6. medeiiuaneelen TN [Dneiot) acCrat IR Bt as Harvard did score ilson and White, were lined | jioylq be unanimous. He is the | after all his activity I could not ob- |And though off the trail that we once | Swarthmore 7, Haverford 2. the best shows ever held in this cily- | forty-one points and Yale none, there nst Harvard Saturday. And | 2'0licot man in his position this year, | serve it from the stand. Moreover, hoped to know, Miiiasentalosl Wisonmats) It is rumored that “Terry” McGov- | ig no way out of it but to rank Har- hite piayed his old Dosition. | Tn his street clothes he may pass for | he impressed you that he was having | We might have been under it—six | Tilinois 10, Chicago 0. ern, the former featherweight cham- | vard ahead. i gham Favored by Many. | a ‘fat boy,’ as they call the type in |a good time all the afternoon.” feet of so; Carnegie 30, Western Reserve 6. plonmillibs StESAtniEdEmanE Harvard Not Above Cornell, e has been some talk of Bob | — So htere md}heerlliht where the phan- izensselaerIs.d‘Worc;star Poly 0. rnge That decisive victory over Yale, m as the logical candidate for oIgc sSpeLse) urdue 7, Indiana 0. ———— oV c t Harvard above s e I] YLE LEAI]E five points. The figures are .320 and | Here's looking—and thanks—that it| Ohio State 34, Northwestern 0. ; STILL AT IT. :"',:‘:y:p‘",’r T ety i thinli 1o e Bnd Van N Ao 315. wasn't all worse. Nebraska 52, Towa 7. ATthaugh e et Sy L Cornell- d too. x‘:st:,?:\?d A An unusual feature of the average | —_— Denver 7, Colorado 0. think that a photo of the Meriden ‘};mfrj”'\i L':Tn"h" 18/401 8 1 CorRets departure from Yale tradition | is the small number of men in the No Chance? Oregon 9, Oregon Aggies 0. high team will adorn a' page of the | Harvard e / Bingham, for example, when | [) {.300 class. There are only five in | It is at least restful to know,< | California 81, Nevada 6. next football guide.—Meriden Record. B been eligible to play only a | ! that select circle, and they are Doyle, | comments a contemp., ‘“that no! Susquehanna Dickinson 10. Why not send it to some magazine (Continued on Ninth Page.) O leusllliTTiore 13 ha! desided | | Luderus, Griffith, Hinchman and Dau- | chance for an upset is due Thanks- for its comedy ent, however, in favor of hi bert. ed Merkle comes next. He | giving Day, when Cornell meets Penn. | S ) lon, as he has shown consmn«-} == batted .299, and another who was |Yale may beat Princeton, but Penn. executive ability. He was| 4 ] S q | Just nosed out and who is up there | beating Cornell is another matter.” Irly a star prep school player at | Glall[S eGOHd Bflsemafl POflfldb close is Davis Robertson, the speedy | Very likely. Yes,,exactly thirteen \ New York outfielder. He hit .298. years ago Cornell, with a great team, | Pl“ a“d Attams 320 Ave It appears from the figures that hit- | came to Franklin Field to meet one B0 The Yais Sraduates foel | - b ting languished or that pitching was | of Penn’s poorest line-ups. There was By s e G as | unusually effective. The base run- |no chance for a Penn. Victory. At the ic history and that Yale will 1 ning was pretty poor so far as indi- | end of the first half the score stood to do something and de it| New York, Nov. 22— Sometimes the | viduals are concerned. Carey of the | 11 to 0 in Cornell’s favor. Penn. had iy if she hopes to maintain her | last are first. A case in point ' is | Pirates the leading larceny expert on been utterly outclassed. But the final B tootball erafore the | L, s : : | the paths, stole only thirty-six bases. | score was Penn, 12; Cornell, 11. You Intment of a Ya,;l(;h C:,fm-,on t;‘;s Larry Doyle. —Larry's team, the |, ~orqinals were first in team bat- | can't always tell. RN Gt o ting, the Giants third and the Brook- | Penn hasn't nearly as good a nd it is believed that this weight | 1eagnue pemnant hunt in 1915, but lyns fourth chanceptolupsataorneligasvalogliad raduate sentiment has been | Larry finished first in the official bat- | Gavvy Cravath, the Philadelphia |to hook Princeton. For Cornell has knt to bear through the new Yale | ting of that major baseball organi- | slugger, made the most runs, 89, and |canned the old order of cracking tic committee or other channeis | . e el he oo B T o fruns o S Most \tri= | BEainstiBenn, Swhilef Erinceton hasnie reuade the members of the team | 2™ SR Y9~ | ples were made by Tommy Long of | Vet learned to disperse her fluttering e time and thought to the mar- | ler; the National League secretar¥, the Cardinals, 25. Most doubles were ! SPells against Yale. nstead of acting on the spur | prove this and clear up a question made by Larry Doyle, 40. Groh, and e fo moment and under more or | regarding which there was much live- Griffith of the Reds each played In “Into the Night"— exciting circumstance: | = % 160 games, the pennant allotment of “Into the night,” wro 5 - [§¥61a ‘o feeling also that the [ )Y Interest since the pennant season ;4 ;ng e This is the gr;test‘ ley, “pass one and all,"t;'eh:rM?::n ; . ended. The popular second base- pumber ever participated in by a Na- | @rops back with Brickley and Hard- (Continued on Ninth Page.) man of the Giants beat Luderus by ' tional ‘League Play wick, With Coy and Thorps and the 5 other great ones who suddenly go—_ e = s flopped from a column on the first rage to one or two passing lines a i vear, generally labelled “among the {old stars present.” Grea i iy o pan o | - “YWhen Good Fellows Get Together” ydy feels impelled to that being brought to bear to controvert in addition in having the better ree- staring him in the re is no * doubt that a large Giants, finished last in the National ;dnnht«edl,v, but no longer a king. The ! sceptre was lifted fi his hand wh : 2 icl e e e ] You will find fresh-rolled cigarettes of deliciously mellow “Bull” ¥ B e 5 . H a1 e R Y upon the Novemper winds Mr. Hon- | 8l Dyyham in evidence at banquets, club smokers and other social I with the snow. Gods a1d half-gods 1 i i an s IVI" : D a0 aaow Oons nd dheltits fathermgs of men of wea]th, prominence and expenencec‘:] tastes. .Y A one‘and all*—even though one be a n the fragrant smoke of this mild, delightful tobacco formality gives Ned Mahan. . . . R way to congenial good-fellowship. If you would be fashionable, But it 15 Just as well, since one ana | | expert in the company of connoisseurs, you “roll your own”—and the Free and the Home of the Brave.” Every man and boy will want to appear at his Good Clothes is at the service of the man who his share of this. 3 GEN U I N E the opening, rather than waste his best on this J oyous Feast Day and our Home of a cove dashes through air to Fame In addition to which, too often in as those they roll for themselves with this ... . Suits $10, $12, $15. Overcoats $10, $12, $15 and tfumble wipe out every inch that all must pass into the night, to take a The Annual Feast Day so universally observed in i Football vs. Life. ([ ” T St | Football and life are a good bit every Americ an home is closc at hand, |t R e e - | | If there is any nation on the face of the earth gemes is to rise again after you've b v i that should fcel thankfu] for peace and plenty, it cen thromnisad kecoionibucs inEitne ;| energy hammering away at a solid n cove dashes through alr to Fame | R fragrance comparable to the wonderful, unique, mellow-sweet flavor Our Handsome Suits and our Elegant Overcoats 1 i fights hi . gD . Al jibotts pastimeshs contonder Achis i golden-brown, bright Virginia-North Carolina papers” with cachSesack cou e and skill had put away. 3 9 . $18.00. coures Rt Roll a “Bull” Durham cigarette today— small section of halo with him to B your tobacco is “Bull” Durham. Mo o wall of trouble. ¢ hidden under the mass with his| @ of “Bull” Durham —no other cigarettes so fresh, tasty and satisfying would be a credit to the wardrobe of any man. way doggedly across the fleld to the George Brooke could turn out a | g iou will experience a distinctive form of to- light the way. And Mahan will take is these Unitgd States of America—The “Land of And in both the wise bloke takes SUIL further, in both games many To millions of experienced smokers there is no other tobacco cares for the best of Outfitting! face in the mire. goal’s shadow, only to have one lone tobacco. | winning eleven at Swarthmore with 500 students to pick from, but he acco enjoyment. New Yurk 10 $l 2 I 5 | Coulan’t at Penn. with 4,000 to draw - ipon. There are frequently inside o ‘cr:;?mons‘ which the outside public An Ilustrated Booklet, show- doesn’t know about, at large univer- : « | 3 Citizs|tnati malialas coach! turnihanas ng C"”"C‘}t way to “Roll Your ; ¥ BN am B U | springs in his sleep. Ask Frank Own” Cigarettes, and a pack- /@ 7nd< | 3 | Hinkey. BT age of cigarette papers, will both be mailed, free, (f Smokiri BETTER CLOTHES ,‘ to any address in U. S. on request. Address “Bull” When Syracuse University meets the | Oregon Aggies, then, if ever, should Durham, Durham, N. C. 357 Main St., New Britain J§ ve et o pretty coir wast-west ac- | 8§ THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY | cision. Both have shown that as football teams go they are not very TP for behind, for both have smeared and