Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1016 Penn and Pitt Furnish Surprises on Gridiron--Meredith Again Bows to Swedish Runner--flzeldon of Yale Out for Season With Rheumatism--City Bowling League Has Close Race for Leadership Honors PENN SHOWS SKILL IN GRIDIRON TEST Folwell’s Good Coaching in Evi- dence-Yale and Princeton Stmngfi The football and Pittsburgh on saturday, when both elevens better against their opponents than even their most ardent admirers ex- pected. Penn outweighed by many pounds, showed flashes of real foot- ball and disposed ot Penn state in impressive st The coaching Bob F self evident with backfield, especiaily Berry displayed prom skill and Penn's improvement over shown this Ason. Folwell has Promised to accomplish much with the material he has at Franklin Field this season and he bids fair to carry out his promise. Berry's work was the best individ- ual exhibition that has been seen ir Philadelphia in a long time. He gcored a touchdown and kicked two field, goa Berry cleverly caus forward pass and made a spectacul forty-yard run for his touchdown. The game was hard and rough and was an excellent tryout for Penn, for Penn State was an opponent all keyed up to win. It is quite evident that the Pennsylvania eleven is going to be better than any one imagined. The Quaker line charged in a man- ner which offset the farmers' attack and the burly mountaineers were skillfully handled by their lighter o ponents. This game, like the Pitts- burgh-Syracuse game, showed that beef on a football eleven is not essen- tial any more, Warne: Pittsburgh sprung the big surprise of the day when Glenn Warner's schooled team gave the gigantic Syra- cuse eleven a beating which fairly car- ried them off their feet. The Syra- cuse line, which averages more than 200 pounds from tackle to tackle, was piled up in its own way by the lighter Pittsburgh forwards. Cap- tain Peck of Pittsburgh at center; although much lighter than the He:- culean youngsters against him, played havoc with the lumbersome center men for whom Coach Bill Hollenback predicted so much, Warner, a past master at offense play has drilled his -backfield in a carefully organized tem of inter- ference. He used the same system jon line plays that Harvard has used 50 successful Three men team inzo the opposing forwards. The first two open up the way and the third man comes through with the ball. The backs of Pitt charged with such fury that the big Syracuse players were bowled over time and again. Pitts- burgh followed the ball all the time and had a far better repertoire of plays than Hollenback’s charges. The Pittsburghers had good reason to en- tertain high ambitions this season, for the team looks like the best that h ever represented Pitt. It is signifi- cant that this is the first year that Pittsburgh has rigidly observed the eligibility rules which have been rec- ognized in other colleges for several years. In past seasons Pittsburgh's accomplishments on the gridiron were overlooked by many experts on ac- count of their lax eligibility code, but this season’s eleven is said to measura up to the recognized standards. The defense of Pitt was a big surprise, as this feature of the game has usuall beedd Warner’s only weak point. The defénse on Saturday was a decided | improvement over the weak opposi- tion shown against the Navy a week earlier. The tackling and blocking were hard and effective. Yale Looms Up Strong. stock of received a the Quakers. The Fullback Howard sing offensive was a great ything it has Pupils Spring Surprise. s Pennsylvania | big boost aid | of | olwell is beginning to make it- | FOOTBALL 4 3, Trinity 0. an 14, N. Y. Harvard 47, Mass, Princeton 33, Lafayette 0. Navy 12, West Virginia Pennsylvania 15, Penn State Pittsburgh 30, Syracuse 0. Cornell 19, Bucknell 0. Bates 6, Maine 0. CGeorgetown 10, Dartmouth 0. Colby 14, Bowdoin 7. Brown 20. Williams 0 | gie Allegheny 0. ordham 47 Susquehanna 0. Columbia 0. 27. Western Re- serve Dickinson 3, Ursinus 0. ‘Washirgton and Jefferson 12, Westminster 0. Ohio State Swarthmore Marshall 0. Rochester Gettysburg kins 0. Stevens 6, Worcester Tech Colgate 33, Rhode Island Michigan 9, Michigan A. C. Northwestern 10, Chicago Towa 24, Purdue 6. Minnesota 81, So. Dakota Lebanon Valley 3. Lehigh Gallaudet 43, Washington St. Lawrence 12, Hobart Muhlenburg 43, Albright Kentucky 0, Sewanee 0. Springfield 20, Amherst 0. Yale Freshmen 28, Exeter 7. New Hampshire 14, Norwich 14, Buffalo 2. 2 Johns-Hop- Vermont 21, Conn. A. C. 10. Rensselaer 7, Hamilton 6. Vanderbilt 85, Mississippi 0. Georgia 13, Virginia 7. —e day, but the opposition was too weak to take advantage of it. There is a tendency toward long passes from either the quarterback or the center in the present system of play, and this fact has made fumbling a more com- 5 t season Quarter- back Watson of the Harvard eleven relied mostly on short passes and with his backs bunched closely, there was little fumbling of any consequence, On the other hand, the champion Cornell team of last season relied mostly on long passes directly from the center while Captain Barrett, al- though in the quarterback’s position, was virtually an extra halfback. The Cornellians, however, were carefully drilled in handling long passes, which proves that an eleven can be taught to bring fumbling down to a min- imum. If anything, the Princeton team is further along in development than Yale. This is painly Princeton’s op- portune year. Coach Rush has a team of seasoned veterans, and if ho doesn’t land them on top this year, it will be two or three years before he can develop a bunch of players who will have the experience of the present troupe of Tigers. Princeton right now is made up just about ns they will be for their important contest. The final choice will no doubt be: Highly and Wilson, ends; McLean and Lathrobe, tackles; Nourse and Hogg, guard: Gennert, center; Fddy, quarterbac Brown and Moore, or Eberstadt, halfbacks, and Dave Driggs, fullback. Seasoned Men at Princeton. The majority of these plavers have | [ had two or three scasons of gridiron | experience at Princeten, and most of ! them will graduate next June. Rush has reason for confidence in his eleven, for in experience alone they have the edge on Yale and Harvard. Prince- ton’s defensive game seems to be just | about where it.should be at this stage [ cf the season, and the thing which the corches will aim for more than any- hhmw else from now on will be a more | aggressiveattack. Yale has shown | much aseressiveness in offensive play for so early in the season, while most | of the Tigers' attention has been paid | to defensive play. Although Harvard ran up a big count of 47 to 0 on the Massachu- The Yale organization shapes up at the present time just about as it will | for the big games against Princeton and Harvard—Gates and Commer- ford, endsi Taft and Baldriage, tackl lack and Galt, guards; Smith or CallaMan, center; T, ~mmx quarterback; Bingham and Legore halfbacks; Jacques, fullback. Indi- vidually this is a formidable team. They are all proficient in the elements with the coaching smoothness of execution and fecting of scoring play reason to believe that powerful contender for iron honors The Lafayette eleven proved much er than Princeton substitutes on day. In spite of flagrant errors and handling the bail Princeton found victory easy. With the changes in the system of attack under the new rules, especially in the general of the forward pass, ac- handling of the ball has be- of the most important teach the football player. very game of any conse- 1is season, there has been ¢ u fum} While coach- es seem able to install all other knowl- cdge of the game into their pupils it Is a difficult task to develop backs and ends to handle the ball cleanly. Princeton fumbled badly on Satur- a per- s, there is every Yale will be a Castern gr us € ome th In almost auence tr one Astr T SMOKE OXMOOR A MILD, PLEASANT 5c CIGAR which aims at | setts Aggies, the game put up by the Crimson against fairly weak opponents showed that the development of the | Harvard eleven is slower than in | | former years. Harvard’s defense had | no trouble in holding back the Bay | State farmers, but in offensive tactics the Crimson relied <ol v on the in- | dividual efforts of Eddie Case: Casey bids fair to become a star of the Mahan type before the season is over. He has a world of speed, and did some running In a broken field on | Saturday that was unusually spectacu- lar. ey uses the straight arm just | as effectively as the old-time stars ta | bowl over opponents. Horween at fullback also did much fine individual work, but there is still lacking in Har- | vard’s play that unity and team work | which have made Crimson teams of | the past so effectfy | That Harvard is far behind both | Yale and Princeton is shown by the | fact that the eventual make-up of the eleven is still undecided, and as Haughton anly joined the coaching squad recently, he seems to be still | in the dark about the final choice of | candidates for more than one position. Murray’s quarterback play Saturday | was encouraging, and the Crimson has {no need to worry about this position, { with two good men like Murray and Robinson. With the Cornell game but a week away, Harvard is in a very chaotic condition, and if the Cornell team is as far developed as It was last season, the Crimsan has a trouble- some afternoon ahead at the Stadium on Saturday, Setback for Green Team, The Dartmouth players got a rude | shock when they were downed by Georgetown. The Hanoverians' big carly season scores were the result op playing very weak teams rather than - | | | wings, | Trinity. [course, one of Cavanaugh's best ground gainers, Duhamel, was out of the game until the third period, but almost every feature of Dartmouth’'s play was disappointing. Fumbling was very costly. Theilscher, usually an accurate man at handling the ball, 1 fumbled disastrously when he had carried the pigskin to the goal line and a touchdown was within his grasp. It wasn’t until the third periad of play on Saturday that the Cornell at- tack organized compactly enough to { drive back the stubborn Bucknell eleven. The Ithacans went up against | a stiffer proposition than they figured on. The end play of the Cornell Ryerson and Zander, was on encouraging feature of Cornell's play, as was the great kicking of Shriver- ick, who promises to be a worthy suc- cessor of Charley Barrett at quarter. Cornell showed no new features of at- tack, as the new plays in which the team has been rehearsed are being saved for Harvard on Saturday. The Navy got a good try-out against the stiff opposition of West Virginia, | and gave the followers of the Middies reason to believe that this year’s eleven is a big improvement over last year’'s team. The Army ran wild against the weak opposition put up by | SUNDAY FOOTBALL RESULTS. Tigers Defeat Union A. C. Eleven De- cisively at Traut’s Park—Will Play at Same Gridiron Every Sunday- The Union A. C. football eleven of Naugatuck went down to a 20 to 0 defeat administered by the Tigers A. C. of this city yesterday afternoon at Traus park, before a good sized crowd. The boys from the Rubber‘ Town put up a stubborn resistance | but the fierce onslaughts of the home team on the line, caused the visitors to crumple up and three touchdowns | were the results. Captain Wright, Grabeck, Fresen and Schroedel were | the individual stars for the winners. The Tigers plan to play at home every | Sunday, giving the local followers of | { football the best that can be secured for entertainments. Those who acquainted with the efforts of the management to have teams that are of equal ability of the locals, feel con- fident that the coming attractions will he pleasing to tho! who attend. While nothing definite has been ar- | vanged &s to the opponent for next | Sunday, .it is possible that the All- Southington eleven, one of the crack teams of the state will be the attrac- tion. The Tigers have been greatly strengthened since last season with @ the acquisition of a number of play- ers from the Pawnees and other ; teams, and are now ready to make a strong bid for the state championship honors. With the ball on the one-yard line, 1ime was called in the Annex-All- Scuthington eame yesterday in the iatter town thereby keeping the score down to 12 to 6 with the locals on the lond end. The dashing work of Beyer was responsible for the vic- tory of the home boys. The Empires defeated the South Iinds yesterday afternoon, score 12 to o are | | | | | | SHELDON IS THROUGH Veteran Left Tackle Deveiops Rheu- matism at Tobyhanna Camp and Eli Eleven Loses Valuable Player. New Haven, Act. 23.—VYale yester- day lost a valuable veteran football player, when the illness of Chub Shel- don, left tackle, who went to the col- lege infirmary three days ago, was diagnosed as inflammatory tism. While a member of the Yale irtillery battalion in Camp at Toby- hanna, Penn., during the summer, ex- posure is believed to have caused his illne He prepared for Yale at An- dover and was the chief competitor. of Cupid Black for the Yale tincy last winter. His home Joplin, Mo. Sheldon will not leave the infirmary ior several weeks, and has probably played his last game of football. Charlie Taft, son of the ex-president, wcceeds to the position at Jeff ackle. Yale today began its weeks prepar- ation for the Washington and Jeffer- scn game with four plavers in the hospital. They are Captain Black, left guard; John Callahan, center; Traver Swmith, quarterback, and Chub Shel- don, right guard. Smith will probably resume scrim- maging Tuesday and will again run ibe eleven this week. Callahan and RBlack still have lame ankles, and neither is likely to begin playing till late in the week. Although Yale was defeated v by the Washington and Jefferson tcam last season, the EIli coaches do not xpect another humiliation this year. en should Yale be compelled to present a team which contains two or three substitutes, it is felt that, with the Yale first string backfield, Legore, Bingham, Smith and Jacques, again in prime working order, Yale should be able to outscore the Penn- sylvanians. cap- is in ATHLETICS BUY CABLE. Toledo, 0., Oct. 23.—Harold Cable, Toledo infielder, has been sold to the Philadelphia Amerlican eccording to a telegram received by Cable here Saturday. The purchase price was mnot stated. Cable played second base for Newark in the Inter- national league last season under an optional agreement. At the close ot ihe season he was recalled by the New league club, | strength on Dartmouth’s part. of York Americans. | zation | Live Oaks | Aarpoons rheuma- | * RACES TIGHTEN IN BOWLING LEAGUES Gity League Teams Are Closely Bunched for Positions Consistent work on the lanes, main- tained for the Live Oaks the leader- i ship in the City Bowling league, the boys cleaning up the scheduled games during the past week in decisive fashion. The fight for second place between the Annex and the Tigers is attracting attention, the teams being tied with 12 victories and 6 defeats each. The Rangers and the South Ends are also in a tie for next rosition, with the Wanderers and Har- roons trailing and the Pastimes being hopelessly out of the running. Rogers continues to lead the procession for individual honors with an average of } 102 with his assistant Bill Brennecke in the runner-up position with 101. Eddie Anderson and Johnny Wright are tied for third position with an average of 100. Sixteen other mem- bers of the league are within a few points of the century figure in aver- age the lowest of the collection being rated at 95. Brennecke with 135 leads in high single score, C. Larson with 346 tops the total string mark. The Wanderers although not setting | the league on fire by their winning habit, have set up some figures that are keeping the other teams on the jump to beat them, with 541 for high single team score and a high total of 1523. The tool room trio of the Skinner Chuck company holds the first place henors in that circuit, with seven vie- tories and two defeats. This aggre- has also garnered the high total and high single score honors to date, and Kahms a member of the | team is in possession aof the individual honors for the same. The standings, averages schedule for the coming week are as follows City League anding. Ja B .666 .666 500 500 444 .333 il Ave, 481 South Rangers Wanderers 467 456 480 462 Pastimes 441 High Single—Brennecke, 135. High Three-string—C. Larson, 346. High Team Score—Wanderers, 541. High Team Total—Wanderers, 1523. High Average Men. Rogers Brennecke E. Anderson J. Wright C. Larson Lantone Thompson Richter Jurgen Foote Screen Barnest Hoffman Huck T. Wri Robertson Bertini Cage Young & W, Wright' 102 101 100 100 99 99 99 98 98 98 97 97 97 TLeague Standing. L. P.C. Awe, F i .666 .333 .333 kinner Chuck W Tool Room Office . Drill Room 4 6 Shipping Room 6 . ’! o B Single—Kahms, 121. Three String—Kahms, 304, Team Single—Tool room, 314. Team Total—Tool room, 839. High Average Men. Kahms Thoernton Trevithan Helander Bowers Hultgren North McGrath Bloom ) Hartman Wilcox Gustafson Burr Root High High High High 94 92 89 88 88 87 87 87 86 85 85 85 84 79 Schedule for Week. Monday—New Britain Machine league; Royals of Hartford vs. Tigers. Tuesday—City league; league. Wednesday league; M. rarty. Thursday—City league. Friday—RedMen’s league; Skinner Chuck league; Paper Goods league. GAME CANCELLED. Owing to the death of Marshall F. Davis, sub-master at the High school, the football game witlt Enfield High school in Thompsonville Saturday af- ternoon was cancelled. The locals wore at the Hartford depot when they received word of the death of Mr. Davis. They ac once. — Berlin Construction Baraca league; SR FOR THREE. Oct. 23.—George MecQuillan and veteran pitchers of the Philadelphia National baseball club, will be released next season, accord- ing to a statement of Manager Pat Moran Saturday. They will be re- placed by younger players. TINSHOW Philadelphia, Chalmers, George Chief Bender, and | 484 | 474 | Paper Goods | mixed | decided to return home | b i Do We Say Something? Arabella, sweetheart mine, Though the fashion has decreed it That you go out, rain or shine, Where the stocky halfbacks speed it; I had rather—though you rap My fond love as sere and yellow That you gaze upon the scrap Posing with another fellow. Thou who see-est not the dash Back of perfect interferenc Hearest not the vocal crash From a thousand wild adherents; | Vieweth not the leap of end | Tn a tackle full of fire, | Only that some female friend Wears a dress that you admire, Look—a run—the goal line nearing! Yippy—yippy—=goa it, Bo— Dost thou leap up wildly cheering, Or enthusiasm show Nix—thou sittest still, complacent, 'While the thousands throw a fit, Peering in the still adjacent | Where some dressy females sit. Arabella, sweetheart mine, | Though I know you’re bent on going Whether it be rain or shine Tn a gown you're bent on showing, T had rather though you rap, | My deep love as sere and vellow, §~.‘ha1 vou lamped the festive scrap | Bothering another fellow. Casey, of Harvard, came from the same town that sent Mahan to fame. The native Sons of California have nothing on the Native Sons of Massa- chusetts.- Na one,” writes a Massachusetts fan, “has placed full credit for the Red Sox pennant and world series | triumph where it belongs. Bill Car- | rlgan was mainly responsible for the team’s fine showing, and Bill Car- rigan is the man entitled to most of the credit. He iIs one of the great { managers of the game, but his full worth will not be appreciated until | some one else tries to take his place next year.” | Carrigan has a world serles record of .800. He has led his club to vic- tory in eight out of ten post season charges. And no major league man- ager ever led a ball club with any better judgment. ‘Western Football, Western football bumped into a jolt at the start, when Illinols fell before Colgate, and Michigan will need a fine team to overcome the deflcit. For the Wolverines face two of the best elevens in the land when they meet Syracuse and Cornell, where unless Col F. H. Yost has high grade ma- terial he will make little headway. For no ordinary machine is going to make much headway against either. ORT LIGHT Grantland Rice The People. You would serve the people, You who would right their wrongs; Lifting their heavy burdens, Cutting their binding thongs: ‘Who look to thelr faith—their favor— To their aid as a helping power— May the God of the Dreamer pity When you come to the waking hour. Give them your dreams—your labor— | Serve them across the years; Nights, that are stark with sorrow— Dawns, that are dim with tears; Guard them and guide them ever, And then when the tale is sped, T.00k not to their anthems af welcome But walt for their curse instead. | | | | | | “Do_you think this season,” F. J. R. “that the Harvard of species will be deadlier than Yale?” asks | the | the | i Before we get that far along we come to this—Will the Cornell of the species be deadlier than the Harvards? | “that | “Suppose,” queries Sideliner, Cornell beats Harvard, Michigan and Penn. And then suppose that Prince- | ton beats Yale and Harvard ;\nfl‘ Dartmouth? Who wiil be champion —Cornell or Princeton?” Supposipg that all these varied ’\ndi manifold supposings work out, the | situation would have all the elements of a draw, don’t you think? Jackson’s Tough Break. About five vears ago the Brooklyn club came within a short grab of bagging Joe Jackson. What a difference to that athlete | a regime in the National league would | kave made! For six years now Jackson has been finishing second and third in the bat. r, with averages ranging be- 0 and .408. His average for the six about .370. Yet with never led the league, With this same average tossed into National league ranks Jackson would have been twenty laps beyond all; competition—hailed as one of the great stars of the game. \ vears is Maxims of the 19th Hole, My son, tell no man thy score nor the shart putts thou missed around the course; vea, talk of his game rather than thine own, And shortly thy fame will over- shadow that of Evans or Travers or Ouimet. Those who care to can josh Prooklyn club all they desire. they can’t take away that worth of the loser’s end. the But $2,700 DING, DINGS FOR SISLER. Detroit, Mich., Oct. 23.—George Sjsler, star first baseman of the St. Louis American league baseball club, -vas married here Saturday to Miss Kathleen Holznagle. Mr. and Mrs. Sisler will live in St. Louls. Sisler d Miss Holznagle, who is the daugh- ter of a wealthy Detroit business man, were students at the University of Michigan, where their romance began. | CARPET BOWLS RESULT. Pheonix Temple of Honor defeated the Sons of St. George at Carpet TBowls at Sees hall on Saturday even- ing by the sccre of 56 to 25. Rink 117, skip, Woods, St. George, 6; Rink, 2, skip, Symnds, Temple of Honor, 27, kip, Coleman, St. George, 6; Ring 3, ip, Heisler, Temple of Honor 12, skip, Swift, St. George, 14. A Tract for the Autumn. “Who's who in America” gives Her- bert Welsh’s age as sixty-five. age is not, however, great enough to prevent a man from taking a long walk, as Mr. Welsh may have re- flected in pondering the perform- | ances of Edward Payson Weston. One day last June Herbert Welsh set out from his house in Chestnut Hill, near Philadelphia, to walk to his summer | cottage on the shores of Lake Sun- | apee, N. H., where John Hay once spent happy seasons. Mr. Welsh's walk about five hundred miles. He | crossed the Delaware at New Hope, and the Hudson at Newburgh, and the | Connecticut at Springfield; his journey took him through Worcester and Bos- ton and Lowell and Nashua. Mr. Welsh has been well known for a good many years as an advocate of justice for the American Indian; as a student of history and politics; as a worker for better clvic government. No sense of self-importance kept him, however, in the course of his long | | walk, from talking on many matters with many men; he was impressed, he tells us, with the strength of Presi- dent Wilson with the farmers of the states he traversed. This s not the | essential lesson of his trip, however; it seems to us that the energy of the | walker is rather more to the polint. Mr. Welsh comments upon the “phy- sical health and mental calm” in- duced by his long promenade. These are two great boons—and they ars within the reach of practically any- body who has two sound legs, This | | 1, skip, Middlemas Temple of Honor, | CHALMERS LEAGUE LEADER. According to figures compiled by the secretary of the Hardware City league, James Chalmers of the Paw- rees was the Tris Sptaker of the lcague, with a batting average of 500, TABERSKI HOLDS TITLE. New York, Oct. 23.—Frank Taber- ski of Schenectady, N. Y., successfully defended his pocket billiards title here, Saturday night, defeating Ralph Greenleaf of Monmouth, Ill, by a total score of 450 to 407. STACKPOLE-MOORE- TRYON C0. t., 115 Asylum At Trumbull HARTFORD. Quality Corner. THE HOME OF HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES | for | were | the all this he has | ond. YANKEE ATHLETES IN NEAR CLEAN-UP Scandinavians Win But One Event at Christiania 93 Christiania, et The Oct via Londonm, American track and feld team met with complete sucqass at the meeting with thletes here Saturday, the the which Scandinavian the visitors, first time on tour, win ning every event in There turnout they com- peted. was great by no means a’ to initial see the Americans on their this city, but that was lement weather. and gloomy, the freezing, and the t so that really first c impossible. Under these appearance in largely due to the The day was @ark te: erature below frozen hard, s performances discouraging circum- stances the small band of Americang made a fine showing. Joe Loomis of Chicago was not suited by the dis- tance of the sprint, which was at 200 meters, so he confined his attgn- tion to the high jump. In this event he turned the tables on Kullerstrand, Swede, who defeated him on the opening day at Stockholm. By clear- ing six feet on the frosty ground, the iicight at which he was beaten a week g0, Loomis carried off the prize irom Kullerstrand, while Murray, the versatile Californian, was third. Andy Ward of Chicago justified~his clubmates in sending him over as an independent member of the team by winning the 200-meter race, in which ihe Americans swept the prize list mpson of the University of Missour} was second and Fred Murray third. Ted Meredith won his second first prize of the tour by taking the 400- meter event. He also won at th distance in Stockholm, and its ev ient that in his present form he is better suited by the shorter race than by the 800 mete: In relay racing the American sprinters have proved superior to the Scandinavian com- | binations, and again today they romped away with the relay race at «00 meters. The summari 200-Meter Run, (218 yardsy, 26 inches.)—Won by Andy Ward, Chi- cago; Bob Simpson, University of Missouri, cond; Fred Murray, Cal- ifornia, third. Time, 9:22. High Jump—Won Chicago, with 182 feet;) Kullerstrand, with 178 centimeters; *vith 168 centimeters. 400-Meter Run, (437 yards inches.)—Won by Ted Meredith, Ifhil- adelphia. Time, 50 1-10. 400-Meter Relay.—Won by can team. by Joe Loomis, centimeters, (6 weden, second, Murray, third, Ameri- Ted Loses Again. Christiania, Oct. via London.— In the games held here Sunday the American athletic team nearly as successful as in yesterday’s conm- tests. The 800-meters was the only cvent not won by an American, Ted Meredith again being forced into second place by J. Bolin, the Swedish champion. Meredith made a better race than on the last occasion that he met Bolin at this distance, finishs ing only a yard behind the winner Joe Loomis won the 100-meter dash, but Andy Ward, the other Chi- c2go sprinter had to be content with third place. Kustod of Norway fol- towing I.oomis to the tape. Simp- son and Murray finished first and sec- ond in the hurdle race at 110 meters, and the American team again cap- tured the relay race. : The summaries: 100-Meter ~ Dash.—Won Loom: America; Rustod, ccond; Andy Ward, America, 1ime, 0:10 8-10. 800-Meter Run—Won by J. Bolin, Sweden; Ted Mecredith, America, seesl cnd. Time, 1:56 5-10. 110-Meter Migh Hurdles—Won by 3ob Simpson, America; Fred MuaTay) America, second. Time, 0:14 9-104 400-Meters Relay—Won by Amd can team, Loomis, Ward, Simpst and Murray. Scandinavian team seg PRINTING in Many Different Langunges, BY SKILLED UN1ON MEN Moderate Prices. LINOTYPE COMPOSITION. Officc Hours: § a. m. 0 6:13 o = Mondays and Wednesdays to 8 p. m- Tel Mgr's Res. 179-5. Foreman 339.1 ASTERN PRINTING CO. 63 CHU!{"" STREET, 22, was third. Over 25c Store BEST WORK AT MODERATE PRICES QmMoe Open from 8 A. M. to 8 P, Mu Sundays by Appointment. F. E. MONKS, D. 2. S, Georgiana Monlis, D. D.“8.