Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
1 + NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916. Red Sox _;Jpe to Clinch Title Today--Rain Puts a Halt on Robins-Phillies Serfes--f)’errnie Wefers to Compete at Berlin Meet--Faulkes Takes Awful Beating from Champ McAuliffe--Other Sports OTBALL SEASON | Hornsby, Great Find of *16 [BUTTHOMIREWINS | e CPOR'T OTORCYCLE RACES HERE 1N EARNEST Seasom, Cost St. Lowis Sso0, | NEEUEDBYREDSDY — &=@) T JGGHT | A FAR FEATURE 8 Colleges Face Worihy Tryouts Now Valued at ' “Babe” Ruth Applies White Wash . NG e | Star Riders From Various Parts This Alternoon Brush to Yanks o of Country at Danbury Fair At thze Season’s End. You're two down and you need it TR i game drifts by on its sluggish | It is something else again E 5 | Boston, Sopt: 30—The " Red way; HAMOTTY, The motorcycle races at the Dan- ith practically every college 4 1 : | ; - - The pomp is gone and the dope is = Fair will be run he after; IRt antey o compitit S 7 : won another game from the Yankees | 1 < I OTo. e SECREE - s L e . 1 ; 2 The . 2 aying that | Of opening day onday, October 2 Bon the football season will get | : 4 K 5 - e | here yesterday, and expect to clinch | gy '2amthon et athareld savine yihat : G L it 8§ sl FonY a span or two unite you ‘“can’t keep a good man dowr The races will be under the manage- r(f\lgl(ll:\]\[ ‘(-i"n‘, T,:(hH f?» St ot games will finish it absolutely for dream; PDERRT already in include practically every k- x{-,_l(f,f‘:p, it fll el : é .c i i 3 Boston. The player files through the out- 1 record breaker in the United States, B Pl ] b Babe Ruth, the Red Sox's burly bound gate— | AL | and when a dozen of these men meet B il e it e : ; ) left hander, not only wrecked the |The Season ends—but the Records Say at the Danbury Fair Monday there is B - ira started the ’(,.mi" S g L ! e Yankees, but also shut them out with wait. . i WA e neie St Bolotev e REL ol <rith itio : ; . i many | five hits, winning by the score of 3| Will Prob hly Win Ch pion- racing ever witnessed in New England* Bt Smeck vl a poon T,x‘mz'l':)"_: : ; : | st to 0. Joe Gedeon made three of the | The game drifts by in the narrow 1 roha 1 AMmpion: e e i el L ! . Bates should prove $ : i mag e o | Davison riders cleaned up, defeating Basier picking than its rival for hits jolted out of Ruth and Magee zot ife 3 , St - 1 “ ; 3 ifas i i i | the Indian team in nearly every race. IR e B h. o Wi vhow By the mama ot Lite sh]ps in MR]OI‘ Leagues jidues At d | e | S e L = Gotham crew went hitless. The score: | Only a breath or two and then e tlarley Daylion < ) ! : Sk 2 : r. h. e, | 1ts “dust to dust” in the league again; — tend to repeat the performance this i = [ | | | fPhe last previous game batween the fodia ] 3 | The helghts we saw in the early prime | Chicago, Se o : | vear is evident, as they will send on e oty Onose was Dlayedfin oston 03000000*—3 9 1| Are hidden now by the hills of time; Chicago, Sept. 30.—It looks as | three of the fastest men that ever 8, when the Worcester er “‘en- ks s i : e = i i 2 a “hase Tris S or rode otor s, a ’ . rien the Worcester team “en- Batterios_Shawkey and Walters; | & shadow falls on the game we play | (0UEh Hal Chase and Tris Speaker | rode motorcycles, Ray \\Iem\ar.“”(‘as R v]w.",f Cnjonatn \»m‘:m“ Roiins e Where the dreams of youth are an | Would carry off big league batting | Milwaukee, Wi ~‘"‘l‘"j‘“ Pl dule. - That you : agc away; champlonships this year. With the | G121 up kid” of Toledo, Ohlo, -an wrath over the defeat by Dart- | _ : Sl s s : James Pilazzo, of Bfidgeport, cham- B o Sn o . : ¢ Tigers Beat Browns. The worker leaves with the wraiths | season to end next week, Chase is four | pion of Connecticut E scoro 1 | . R i Vb St. Louis Sept. 30.—Detroit bunched Tt “; “;““’"’ 1 et points ahead of his nearest competi- That Oscar Hedstrum, manager of hits off Weilman in the fourth and | ¢ Season ends—but the Records tor, now Lou McCarty of New York, | the Indian racing team does not in- cighth innings yesterday and beat St. | : in the National, and Speaker is a g00d | tend to let the Milwaukee firm repeat Louis in a fast game, 4 to 1. The i thirty points ahead of Cobb in the | {his year with their Harley-Davisons locals outhit Detroit, but except in Downstairs and Up. American. | is evident, as the ‘“whole bunch” of L btnl a the eighth could not get hits when | SR e Chase has been playing a great game | rndjan racers will be on hand, as fol- e | they meant runs, and in almost every | - B0 O U0 SR T rough tory( 1!1_(\1\;1.\;\. Ix(w\'m(Ifi“yr!:l"‘""l‘ here | jows: “Shorty” Matthews, of Chica- st of condition. The it man e 1 pmibaos e T s Mo e St R SN EE Sttt i ko 8 RavCroyiston, totRnd REAEy LS e 4 ¢ _ : g : In the cighth inning singles by |l "0 " St cher s :r:-‘}“ “‘l"v;'»\fl;h‘: .ff‘{’“, he 'hnf llwml | “Teddy” carroll, of Springfield, Mass. table for foothall work and : . : : - g Hehem el i, vl BELCEl Bl et o R e e e ) s e et e 'ilf'fi Sl G Gl e S S ilindl e Lok Wellman, with ' & painifies iy byl o8 0 (0000 s T B0 R0 R (edeie Becond oRly ho TSl of iNtaeh, of Epringbela, SR Qe nunmnenionithoion 2ot slano s list included Tesreau, Perritt and | Brooklyn, who is credited with 259. | Brown, of Trenton,.N. J.; Frank Ad- i Rumler, hitting for Miller, gave St. = ! | | Benton, ~with Schupp occasionally | Chase has stolen twenty bases. | dock, of Philadelphia, Pa., and W. H. sghnuts that Princeton will never ¥ | | s not likely to ap- i ¢ | half that scare. | h0ws pretty well who's | Louis its only run. Detroit got two | tossed in . Nationalis Bs xS g e ooy AnD o o b o BT B e LS e e e ey o e i i T T || el B Rl R . probism R D and e o the) Yy ed e Tn | R as i imudableflistfandias) posw SECTRUED Harvard’s—it lles at the L : | the eighth Young and Spencer singled, | g o €00 (0 0o 0B (O TS rd rgm)h s e Bl iostibletnero e SLODE/ PO, o e st nenan il . i a2 . { but Miller let Spencer's hit get past | oo Ololns L 0 b ack, Chicago, is ahead in sac- | that even this large number may be Within a couple of weeks e ; : kim, Young scori il | breaking stretch lasting for a month, | rifice hits with 36; Williams, Chicago, | aqdeq to 1 McLean, one of the best in the | i é " il QN’\’:'M S ',{‘f““" they are all unbeatable. The same |in home runs with 12; Burns, New | A1 the machines will be the latest will be in condition, but just now | s | Wollman's wild piten The eaec © | men are there with the same arms.|York, in runs scored with 99, and | «gour.valve” special racing model -1 hos to depend on Sinclair and | | s aep sty etiie 5“’"'1' The same men that couldn’t last five | Brooklyn in team hitting with .261. | 2114 as the track will be specially pre- ltrobe, two hig but inexperienced | : 000200020 ‘[- S‘ Cn' innings are now lasting five week Leading batters: pared for the event Manager Kellogk lows, Parisette, who on the | | Toal W J | And yet there are those who look to Chase, Cincinnati, .344; McCarthy. | predicts that all half-mile track mo- B norder with the Twenty-third | e e d’*; 7 1lihe consistency of the Grandolddope. | Brooklyn-New York, .3 Wheat. | toreyele records will be broken. These { atteries—Mitchell and Spencer; e Brooklyn, .320; Daubert, Brooklyn. | yien are capable of doing a mile on iment, and Hasley, who reported 4 Pk T 3 E A ] Weilman, Hamilton and Hartley. i i 3 e, may, help Rush in his search for | : Sept. 30.—Roger Horns- |not hit a lick. Every one said that tley The 1912 Hero. .320; Hm:hm]un,» Pm«’h’ur:h,h .‘m, | close to one minute, :\nld all of (h(‘l b St. Louis, .309; Robertson. | chines entered are able to go eighty ried tackle to start with McLean. |y, the brilliant young third baseman Connery had made a mistake in buy- | Another problem which is vexing |of the St. Louis Nationals, is the ing him. | fsh is presented at quarterback. | greatest find of the 1916 scason. Ac. During the winter of 1915-16 | ————————— Some one has referred to Joe Wood | Hornsby, : , and Christy Mathewson as the 1912 | New York, .303; Stock, Philadelphia, | mijes an hour on the straightaway FAUIKES BADLY EEATEN | world scries heroes. Not precisely. | -293: Long, St. Lou 292; Zimmer- | Of course this list is of professionals [day Eddy will very likely start, with | cording to St. Louis baseball experts Ifornsby slept twelve hours a day and | (i & |The 1912 world series hero beyond |man, Chicago-New York, .292 { and does not include the dozen or =0 hes and Haas second and third fhe is the best third sacker in the | fed himself like a milk fed chicken ST any debate was Buck Herzog. He not Cobb will retain the American | amateurs who will compete in their ces respectively. Ames probably | National league. In addition he is|on sweet milk. He changed his style | Park City Champion Hits Colored Op- | only batted .400 or more, but he |league base stealing championship | ciasses. ows more football than any other one of the heaviest batters in the | of hitting from a crouch and a choked P y | saved the Giants day after day by his | even though ho loses the batting title, Motorcycle races are the most in on the squad. He is naturally | parent baseball organization. Horns- | bat to a perfectly upright stand and | PORent With Fverything Except |spectacular fielding. | for his record is now 65 thefts,, far | thrilling of all contests of skill and adept, anl his father, the famed |hy had his first season in a league |a full sfving with a long bat. When | Water Bucket—Buddy N. . But for Herzog the Glants would |ahead of anybody else's though Way | gpeed, and faster and more daring ake Ames, has drilled a lot of |in 5, when he played short for |he appeared to join the Cardinals in & cket—DBuddy Never in It. | pve peen beaten 4 to 1 in that series. | behind his 96 for the season of 1915. | men never met in competition than 3 into the voungster. | Denison in the Western association. | March at San Antonio he weighed 170 | New Haven, Sept. 30.—Young Me- | AS it was they carried the engage- | Fiddie Collins has tied Weaver for the | wij be seen at the Danbury Fair is a fine general and |He made a good impression on Bob | pounds, thirty pounds heavier than | Auliffe, of Bdes ot oAty ¢ |ment to eight games. Herzo’s work in lead in sacrifice hits at 41; Jackson | pext Monday afternoon. > . but he is no driver. i Connery, scout for the Cardinals, and | he had been in the previous fall. o =l SsSboR cleary _Out- | that historic quarrel was on a par'|is ahead in total bases with 283; Pipp | The program is as follows: 8 Has the “Pep.” was bought by the St. Loul He started whaling the ball in prac- | PoInted Buddy Faulkes, the Water- | with the play of Duffy Lewis last |1eads in home runs with 11; Cobb in | pirst event: five mile professional early in the spring for his first | tice. Hec kepton whaling it in regular | PUry colored featherweight, in the |fall. = Tims scored with |8 and Dstrolt in | 90-56 ou. in. class. Fisek peiee. Y18 ltady, on the other hand, is full of 1 5 . S o : $ league season for delivery in league games. He is hitting well | feature bout of 15 rounds staged Cluboa it Wit g2 TS | second, $10; third, $5. and keeps the team on the jump ¢ m and keeps the team on Jumr Leading batters Second event; Five mile amatevr, 5 N As rener: be i ar | fall. over .300 and has a number of lon, ir | the time. As general be is far . g l-under the direction of the Na a alkar Glove 292: O i St stodi Bl o Ames There's the| When Hornsby showed up in St. | hits to his credit. He hits all pitch- 1= Mailonol Herzog and 1916. Speaker, Cleveland, .392; Cobb, De- | 30.50 cu. in. class Tn;pr todk v $10; second, $5. Four en- The use of Ames will be |Louis in September a year ago he |ers, including the 'sreat Alexander. cscontial when Eddie | l00ked anything but promising. He Hornsby cost St. Louis $500. An | HcAuliffe earned honors in every |day is the most valuable infielder in mot in the ame, for Ames | Was thin as a rail, weak looking, had | expert valued him at $10,000 recent- | round with the exception of the fifth | baseball, barring no other candidate. used | & bad position at the bat, acted like |ly. e lays his improvement to | when his colored rival made a short He is of greater team value than ¥ an amateur in the field and could jmuch sleep and milk diet. rally and carried the fight to the | Eddie Collins or George Sisler, the | 270 25 "5 : - Bridgeporter. two American league stars; for Her- | NeW York, .296. Fourth event: Twenty-five mile pro- At the ends Rush will start Highley 2 | 20.E i lass 1 Marion Wilson, 1 or 'k Only th N 7 s zog’s help to the Giants is beyond _— fessional, 30-50 cu. in. class. A Marion Wilson, brother of Aleck, nly the remarkable gameness of I Y S aaeono third, t vear, captain of Yale, and Tom, Faulkes enabled him to go the en- |all expression. | pr 2 ¢ years ago a lineman at Old Nassau " tire route. 1In the second round the | He has shown his ability to play WEFERS SENDS ENTRY Iourth 430 ay Athletic club at the Arena last night. | hich reminds us that Herzog to- | {r0it, .362; Jackson, Chicago, .340; | mirgt prize Strunk, Philadelphia, .315; E. Collins, | trjes to fill Chicago, .307; Gardner, Boston, .306; | yjrd event: Ten mile, 30-50 cu. i . : Veach, Detroit, .300; Felsch Chicago, jass. First prize, $20; second, second punter. Haas may be Sisler, St. Louis, .297; Bauman i 3 the backfield when not at quarter. 2 g * | third, $10; fourth, § ona moneys. First prize, $15; second, $10; third, $5 to Perform a2t Berlin, Oct. 7—Plant Sixth event: Five mile, ffjr side camrs with passengers. First prize, $12.50; to Enter Distance Runs. second, :50; third, $5. McAuliffe shot a volley of rights and | short. And he has shown more ex- T to riders not finishing in first or sec- ngmen. Princeton has in recent lefts to Faulkes body that sent the |tended hustling qualities than any |Son of Former King of Cinder Path | latter down for a referee's count of | ball plaver we ever saw on the field. d now assistant coach. Rahill and I crowd was taken by surprise when | wonderful ball at second, third and Fitinfevent;fHive milh ADNECASNON B e e oci aseba ews in a utshe ars been known_for developing rious sets of first class ends. three. Faulkes, in apparent distress, " The guards will be well taken care ATTIONAL LEAGUE. MEETOA <t rose to his feet and was greeted by | Sir: Speaking of books that golfers by Captain Hogs and Nourse, with | £ % AJE“‘:\N LEAGUE, otherRETade Lot M B ote | lsnould r:flad, what about the follow- byan and Ruth as substitutes. | T e IAEN s g the round closed, Faulkes had made |ing for diamond stars to peruse in The hearts of the committee in fyan is a broth of a boy, as strong | Yesterday's Results. 1f‘“f’d“-“ esnltsy connections with the canvass eight [leisure moments? eharse ofl thol coming athletic meat = ‘a bull and as big as you want them, All games postponed, rain, Boston 3, New York 0. times. McAuliffe, in his over-anxiety “The Way Home”—Any busher. ATE! ) e gots his football sense and aggr | Detroit 4, St. Louis 1. to land a knockout, rushed Taulkes “Their Yesterday’s”—Cubs and reness from his father, who cap- Other games postponed, rain, to the ropes and deliberately threw |Athletics letic association were gladdened last Barry for Manager. ined the Tiger eleven nearly a gen- anding of the Clubs. e Standi his somewhat lighter opponent to "'Il‘he( St:r Ro\'er\—Josh Devore evening on the receipt of a letter Boston, Sept :xo—“wnpnl I sald x = Sta o e Clubs. “Las 1 cans’—Frank recently tha s was v last v ation ago. E : T anding of the Clubs. the floor. } 0 the Tohicans”—Frank | . poinie S, AT, fe Gl 1| recently that this was my last year Driggs is alone at fullback, with a | grookiyn . 58 . The poor showing of Faulkes was | Schulte. % % v : v | in haseball,”” declared Manager Car- ssible alternate in Mike Charles, an- | philadeclphia .. Boston L. 3 5 |a big surprise. Only once or twice “The Miracle Man”—Jawn McGraw. | famous speed king of years ago, Who | yjgan of the Red Sox yesterday, “I her Brooklyn man who is just now | Bogfon ....... Chicago -... : during the bout did he display that “The Gray Dawn’—The Athletics. | will appear at the games at Berlin | meant it. I am through. I would : iat “The Pit"—The Cincireds. Fair grounds on October 7. Wefers | not have stuck it out this year had of the St. Joseph’s Young Men’s Ath- | Carrigan Says This Season is His Last st p scolasti difficulties, For the|New york .... . 54| Detrolt Mt uis 3 5 | old-time form that has made alves Rush has a fine set of plavers. | pitspurgn i New York . 2 E 3 |a terror in the featherweight division. SWERNCE 2 will participate in all of the dash |it not been for my promise to Jge jlly Moore and Brown will have first | chjeago . ..... : St. Louis ... i 511 ; fast on his feet, Faulkes last . e events, and his presence will no doubt ! Lannin to take charge of his club I, with Georgi, Mathiasen, Freck, a | gt Touis .. S Cleveland ... iy night displayed a brand of slow-foot- Next Week's Finish. create much interest. It was through | another year Jre kicker from the 1915 freshies, | oy ojnnat i Washington 5 cdness which is seldom seen by a |In the turmoil which follows next | the hardest of endeavors that the Carrigan is quitting because the Irdi Dave Tibbott as alternates. Tib- Philadelphia 5 boxer of his weight. His punches also | week, winding up the National league | Youthful flier who bids fair to emu- | management of a pennant contender ott, who kicked many a field goal —_— *“” llacked steam while he had no for- | season, Brooklyn faces four encoun- |l2 his noted parent on the cinder |is a ha ain on a man, and he ason, is on the injured list and midable defense to cope with Mec- |ters with McGraw's murdering Giants | Path was secured. Wefers is at | does not have to engage in any such L2y get into the North Carolina game Today’s Games. Today’s Games. Auliffe’s stinging rights to the. body. | while the Phillles have six games left | Present a student at Fordham and | nerve racking pursuit. He is worth ext Saturday. Philadelphia at Brooklyn (2). Washington at Philadelphia All through the bout the fans mar- | with the Boston Braves. has been displaying wonderful form | §75,000, while his wife is said to bs situation at Yale, Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (2). Chicago at Gleveland (2). velled at his fonderful stamina, es-| A wind-up of this tempestuous sort | during the past summer. 1In a re-|worth as much more. i S B aniie =\ fhear alose ||| BoatonWat Newl Yol (2): Detroit at St. Louls, Iy after that stormy session in |is a filting climax for one of the |Cent race he hit the string at 10| The Red Sox leader is a manager B . St. Louis at Chicago. New York at Boston. > second round. Faulkes complained |great seasons of bascball. Both lead- | seconds flat, winning hands down. |who has not reccived proper credit. atehing. He playeq for two ’car]s a sprained ankle which proved a |ing contenders are forced to finsh | _Assurance of the appearance of the | In fact, his work has been ridiculed % ”"’f S”{mfl LL'“;“:'J:;:;,;:,% thr{Eiz - great handicap. against the toughest competition they | Holy Cross track team which in- | and belittled, when the truth of it ls ny ootba shorte &3 3 i MecAuliffe, 5 5 iti - By 5 3 i . | cludes Andrew C. Kelly who electri- at he must be numbered among the cason he could rip through the var-|n,s a bad foot and may not play. NICKALLS BACK AT YALE. was m:\‘llfvz & (‘»125s?t\,.ilfof,f3'.';::.‘"5;3: ;:umm;::‘ <‘w‘xh.€;ig tc::: ‘ififfi’ififlq’%r‘iffl. fied the followers of the cinder path :,‘!‘\1 managers the game has kno¥n. ity almost any time, but scholastic| Rex Hutchinson, who was counted = out. At infighting the Bridgeporter |of the closing game 3 i sport early in the spring, and who | He has built up team work, instilled brouble kept him on the scrubs, upon to be Harry's costar, is moving | Returns From England and Orders | ywag far superior while he always had i 7 has been meeting with phenominal | his players with the necessary game- Gidmegie Tech under the coaching| oo slowly to take advantage of the Crew Practice Begun. the better of the argument when | We knew the price of lumber had | Success has also heen received. In | ness and maintained harmony ¢ Walter Steffen, one time ChicaZo | poles opened by the linémen. Thus| o o = =0 | Faulkes saw fit to swap punches. Me- | gone up, but it never occurred to | the recent senior championships held | Picking a successor to Carrigan will come up fast in the last two | sf3r Hutchinson has been a sad di New Haven, Sept. 30.—Guy Nick-| ), jiffe had several good opportuni- |us that it had advanced $2 an inch. | at ®ewark, N. J., Kelly finished third | soon be one of the winter sports of cor: d will have a heavy team at!|,ppointment. alls, coach of the Yale crew, returned | fjo5 to put Faulkes away but when | Tt remained for that stirling or ster. |in what was considered the greatest | the Boston baseball writers. Already Kew Haven today. It is said to be| Harvard has made several changes | yesterday from England, where he |{he crucial second came, he got over- | ling economist, Colonel Ebbets, to |8alaxy of sprint kings ever entered |it is said that Pat Donovan, winner dept in the usc of the forward pass. | from the lineup that faced Colby, | has been spending the summer In em- | anxious and excited, many of his | discover the sharp upward turn 4t 1005 ards Akl =vent e B0 i slated ad Jones may start a pony back field, | Caner has been given a tackle and |ployment in a munitions plant. He |swings going wildly. ; Although nothing definite has been | for the joh. If not, it may go to omposed of Smith at _quarter, | gorween has been demoted to a sub- |and Captain Cord Meyer have or- From the second round until the Cheer for the Nav learned from Ray Morse of the Sa- | Heinie Wagner or Jack Barry. acques at fullback and Waite and | jtute position in the back fleld, with dered out the Yale crew candidates | cleventh McAuliffe piled up many| We understand that in Vidal, of |lem-Crescent club, the committees en- | o i e 5 i B oc tuc halyck Hitchcock first choice. The squad has | next Monday for the fall coaching. 1 points on his opponent. In the elev- | Dakota, the army eleven has a foot- | tertain hopes that the dusky flier will WANTS GAME TOMORROW fombination, m“y'*"‘ € : heard a terrific lot of talk in the last A race with Columbia has been | enth McAuliffe dropped Faulkes to | ball star even better than Elmer |acquiese to the invitation to partici- | Manager Moses Levin of the Silver & the past week. week and should show better team re- | discussed, but not definitely arranged. ! the mat with a hard right to the | Oliphant. * | pate in the coming meet. With thret | City A. C. football team would Tike RN o Gates appear to ave | gulis. Aside from the fall regatta no plans | stomach, followed by a right to the It this is true the Navy should |Such stars as Wefers, Kelly and |{o arrange a game with any local he call at the ends. with Captain| pennsylvania is likely to catch a|have been laid for any other race.|jaw. Faulkes lost no time and sprang | adopt Germany's system and discover | Morse entered in the sprints, the | eleven averaging 130-135 pounds for Jlack and either Durfee or Zenner at| artar in West Virginia, which has kA - o his feet at the count of two. De- | some Kiel Canal along the Atlantic |crowd should be treated to the great- | tomorrow afternoon in Meriden. Man- he guards and Sheldon and Baldridge | poen working since August 1. The EE i e | spite the fact that Faulkes took con- | Coast before complete demolition ar- | est exhibition of speed ever displayed | ager Levin will pay for the telegram t the tackles nd Callahan | goutherners have one of the greates MISS SEARS WINS AT NET. iderable punishment in this round, | rives. |in this state. | sent arranging the game and can be | backs in the country in the personf ;| Boston, Sept. 30.—Miss relyn | he stuck it out. His phenomenal re- | Any football team that has an Oli- | Another star of fame who has sent | located at 5 1-2 Crown street, Meri- Rogers. Last year Penn had all kinds | Sears of Boston, former national | cuperative powers held him in good | phant and a better man than OIli- | his entry in, is J. W. Plant of Long | den. E of trouble winning by 7 to 0. | women’s champion, yesterday defeat- | stead until the end. | phant teamed together should be |Island, recognized as the distance | —— - Charley Brickl Boston college | ed Misg Alice Cunningham of this| Faulkes was a badly beaten boy. | forced to play with four men, the | King, who has been ‘cleaning up” ANOTHER BATTING STAR. team may give Dartmouth a hard | city round of the annual | His left eve was closed early in the | other two being a center, rush and | right and left during the past s n Augusta, Ga., Sept. 30.—Another ame. At New Brunswick Rutgers | women’s is tournament on was discovered ¥ fight, while he submitted to great|ga quarterback, in order to maintain | Plant will be seen in the even of | future batting star will open against Villanova. Ford- | the courts of the od *Cricket | ; bo scen at center. Harry LeGore | | punishment on the body. An old cut | fair competition. a mile and further, and with such |here yesterday. Announcement wag bam will start its ason against | club. The scores were iss | over McAuliffe’s right eve was opened DS formidable opponents as Sandy Evans | made that a n was born last nj Lafayette at Faston—a game that |Sears will meet Miss Molla Bjurstedt, | early in the fight. Bevond this, You Said Tt and Jenkins of the Salem-Crescent | to Mr. and Mrs. Tyrus Raymond CoBbS A MIZD. PLEYASANT 3¢ CIGAB promises the hardest battle of the !last year's winner, in the challenge | Faulkes did no great damage to the | The three-foot putt looks simple, club, a pretty race should be the out- | The leading exponent of America’s | v match tomorrow. . | Bridgeporter. An ecasy job, but when come. baseball now has two boys and a girl.