Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MISERABLE SHOWING OF “FOR SCENE OF BIG BATTLE IN THE BOWL ON SATURDAY — BALL PLAYERS WANT REPRESENTAT. = HENSINGTON BOYS SHING INTO ACTION Four Teams of A, P. G. Lane Men Start Season at Casino PLAYERS FORMING NEW ASSOCIATION Plan I to Get a Representative on | the Advisory Board New York major leagus organizing an association demands to the club call a strike next spring were met not taken Gotham ma;y Wre None denie movement about a year unde Raymond J. Cannor eago and Milwaukes professed ignorance present extent membership There Cannon’s work Oscar “Happy™ the Chicago * Oct, 12 haseball Liepor play to pr and they owners to unless are seriously hy ates ed By Cannon the existenee of a way which has been under the direction o | A lawyé of Chi-| | but alli of them cf the movement's its has been little about AS the SEGEny attor and ey for others of ck who were barred forever from organized hase ball following the 1919 world scandal, Cannon is well known to the magnates. From time to time news- papers have published stories detail- ing the movements From what can carned pears that the movement is the dissatisfact of players with the manner in which Commis- sioner K. M. Landis has handled affairs. It is d that the aims of the new association representation on the cil, elimination of the in contracts, the a board of arbitration ers' grievances Include Roush Case. Specific cases upon which this dis- satisfaction is supposed to be hased are said to include those of Eddie| Roush, the Cincinnati star who held out for a time for a salary of $18,- 000; Babe Ruth and Bob Meusel of the Yankees, and Bill Piercy of the Boston Red Sox, who were suspended for barnstorming after the world series last year. The players series be it ap- d on some advisory coun- ten-day clause establishing of to hear play- and identified with the movement also are said to nurse a belief that some ball players, who have incurred the displeasure of their empleyers, have been shunted out of the big leagues through secret agree- ments among the owners, each of whom is alleged to have agreed not to claim the ousted man under the waiver rule. Will Bar “Black Sox.” The players, it is also reported, sensing that Attorney Cannon's con- | seem to have NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12 BIG CROWD TO SEE YALE-IOWA GAME ord Attendance For Farly In Ihe season Contest, Is Looked Por at Rowl on Saturday. Oet, 12 Associat New Haven ) The foothall question at 4 Pross) Yale today is “Can Howard Jones heat ol coach of the [an strategy in In beef and the Towa coach Jones, head ven, in foothall the on Saturday?" brawn the Hawkeye lads the jump on the Bulldog sectiona! tussle promises or less on brains and Iie birgest carly peason record in the Dowl is ex the battie of the elevens brothers, The rother feature has in the impend- nis brother Yale Jow tt this inter generalship, crowd on peeted o see oached hy hrother against wdded to the mors the Jo interest ing fray mes was star quarterback at ale in 1905, 1906 and 1907, while at the same time Howard was a substi- tute end, competing for his place tgainst Torm Shevlin one of the great flank players of all times. The Jones irothers hoth graduated from the Sheffield Seientific school of Yale in| 1908 v | Howard university ‘urned Michigan and Jones coached at Syracuse in the fall of 180§, and an eleven that defeated held Princeton te a tie. ut tions in athletics at resulting from the defeat of and Gold in three kames played this season ha such ogainst the te take form in a short fts way before the 1 an early meetine, has represented school, but perhaps onc of the heav iest that any secondary school in the state, present coach has made a failure withstand even moderate attack, those who object point out. of an easy win, expressed deep re conditions as they found fact themselves ' OUTLOOK IS DISCOURAGING FOR FOOTBALL AT NEW BRITAIN H. S. {Alumni and the Public May Make a Formal Protest That Something Be Done to Assist Eleven in Getting Out of the Rut—Poor Coaching Blamed For Conditions. The storm of protest against condi- the High nchoo! the Red the four s risen to form protegt em s lkel time and find school committar out of a height that coaching With one of the heaviest teams (hat not only the local for the | miserable can has graced the gridiron in producing a line that Alamni Surprised Members of the Alumni team, one the chree that walked away with ret at them, in expressed disgusted. | of as the players thoroughly some He hecame with Ted Co. le coach in 1909, and | as captain, Harvard was heaten § to and Princeton went | down 17 to 0. Yale and Harvard played scoreless ties the next two years and then began the era of Crim- suprem in which Yale was beaten by ¥ vard in four successive seasons. [OWA THE FAVORITE | Loss of Yale Stars Through [njul'iPS; Lessens Chances of Bulldog For a Victory Over the Hawkeyes. New Haven, Oct. 12,—The Iowa here Saturday because of the number‘ of Yale players who are out of the game with injuries. O'Hearn and Becket quarterbacks: Jordan and Bench, halfbacks; Blair, end, and .'»fi'-‘ ler, tackle, are not expected to he in Saturday's game. Neidlinger, a half- back, is booked to start the game at quarterback. IKelley is availahle for a substitute. For the backfield Yale has Mallory, Wight, Knapp, Haas, Warner, Scott and Knowles. Plenty of other players are available to fill all gaps but many of them are un- certain quantities, L 1OWA ELEVER OFF Hawkeyes Enronte lor Bowl to ciated Press) have corp, the market value of choice hogs team is looked upon as the favorite{and the usual ta'k about | 1ean crops,—ail because cons, | Towa football eleven, 1921 champtons of the western conference, their way to New Haven to play Yale | in biggest game of Iowa's history. which are these: famous mentor FOR NEW HAVEN Battle Yale on Saturday Towa City, la., Oct. 12.—(Hy Asso- ~-Farmers of Towa tod forgotten ahout the .price of yumper or of their of | members of the University are on the Yale Bowl Saturday, in the Big for a score of reasons, among The rival teams coached by broth- , Howard Jones and brother Tad, of the Yale eleven; that all Jowa has a sneaking notion that the Black and Gold eleven may conquer Yale and most important of | with practically no knowledge of the | game and 1922, / Alumni who have been wont to at ‘end the games are dwindling in num. ers because of the pooer exhibition of tootball that the present team dis- l G st 'he sad part of the whole matter, [le ind the part that causes the alumni to rise up in indignation is the fact that defeat after defeat is being taken a8 a reflection upon the hoys, who are said to be doing their level best, but in nl game, and seemingly, no way of ob- taining knowiedge that is necessary if they are to win, Advice Frowned On A number of High school stars of other days, realizing the deplorable conditions have come to Walnut Hill park or 8t. Mary's fleld to assist in the coaching of the team, but they have been turned away with ofie exception, it is reported. In the days when N. B, H. §. cham- pionships were taken as the rule, the team was coached by men who don- ned the uniform each day and were in the line with the players instruct- ing them in the proper way to play their positions; how to dump the op posing player with minimum amount of injury; how to carry the ball, ‘o run a broken fleld, and the other fun- damentals of the pigskin pastime. Players on the present squad vouch the fact that (oach George Cassidy has neglected to instruct the lads in these necessary departments of the they depend on brute strength or good luck to win games— and in these days of properly coached High school teams, they are out of luck. Without desiring to sound a dis- couraging note, it is practically hope- less for the locals to attempt to hand | cut a defeat to such teams as Kent, when they clash Saturday afternoon. Painful To Think Of The defeat of New Britain by Meri- den. a thing practically unheard of in the annals of intercity football, is the straw that broke the camel's back. The officials of the school are under- stood to have been approached but with very unsatisfactory results. Foot- ball, one of the things that New Britainites could point to with a sense of just pride in the days gone by, is M b i [oX J. Seo J. E. D. J. J. Ca four teams, Tonight the Traut & on tomorrow night the Lancaster .. Mattson .... Neurath ..... Hultquist ...... Tréhy s Horn Young .. W. Fagan . Peterson Penny .. Goodison Thompsen ... Dummy ..... The bowling league, consisting of at the American Paper oods company at Kensington, got arted last night at the Casino alleys. Hine company ague will occupy Mac's strips, and IPafnir Bear- g company league, and the Spanish War Veterans will hold forth, The results of games rolled last ght at the Casino and Rogers Rec- reation alleys are as follows: PAPER GOODS LEAGUE. AM. Drinking Cups. 88 90 98 02 86 108 88 ki 93 92 03— 84— 88— Pl— 79— 435—1347 oore McMurray Malarney 274 282 256 Connell 264 453 459 Cigar Bags. .. 88 85 o i} 77 97 97 82 90 85— 79— 71— 104— 268 242 265 2176 Emerson 261 432—1302 Book Covers, 100 90 81 86 5 4 80 3 68 61 256 253 223 T8— 94— 87— 84— T4— 417—1261 nthardt . 89 78 441 403 Film Pockets. Emerson .. 90 86 O'Brien . 7 86 76 84 73 81 Johnson McMurray . 89— 265 74— 237 90— 250 86— 236 85— 262 Fitzgerald 424—1250 UNIVERSAL CLUB Pocket Knives 90 90 71 79 101 78 88 114 R0 429 441 Coffce Mills 101 96 261 288 256 81— 88— 88— 97— 299 81— 240 424 1294 26T mpbell $4— today one thing that alumni are more anxioys to avoid any other subject. In discussion thar 86— $1— 84— 259 264 243 93 93 Brennan Fusari . Wilcox ... GRIMES’ HOME RUN DEFEATS WHITE SOX — First Baseman of C Cirenit Clout With Two Men on Bases in Eighth Inning. Chicago, Oct. 12.—The Chicago Na- tionals defeated their American league rivals, 8 to 5 yesterday in the third game to decide the city championship. The serics now stands two games to one in favor of the Nationals. Ernie Osborne, who pitched the Cubs to the first victory came back yesterday, with plenty of rest, owing to the four days postponements and the open date last Friday, and tri- umphed over “Red" Faber, star of the White Sox pitching staff, who won the opening game, Faber was no match for the Cubs vesterday and they lambasted his of- ferings hard in two innings for five runs. Ted Blankenship came to the rescue, but before he had settied down Grimes uncorked a home run drive into t right fleld bleachers in the ve hases and broke the tie which the Sox had worked up to in the sixth. Score: CUBS, ibs Poles Out a > >l cnnonsnws? Statz, Hollocher, ss, . Terry, 2b. . Grimes, 1h, Barber, rf, Millér, 1f, Krug, 3b, O'Farrell, Osborne, of. P 1 B e I enernannaT Slorovwunws? 3 37 WHITE SOX. a = © | oo s v cocwounmuLn] Hooper, rf. fohnson, ss. “ollins, Sheely, 1b. Mostil, ef. . F i". . Mulligan, 3h, Schalk, c. Faber, p. *Strunik ’ Blankenship, lhcvanwarenc lmoconoommun 2l commooooana? 9 27 300 020 300—8 White q 201 002 000—5 Duns, Stat , Terry 2, Grim Darber, Hooper 2, Colline, Mulligan, Scha evrors, Hollocher, O'Farrell, Osborne, Mul- ligan; two base hits, Miller, Collins, Sheely; home runs, Hooper, Grimes; stolen basges, Terry, Hooper, Johnson, Sheely; sacrifices, Mostil, Terry; double play, Barber to Grimes; left on base, Natiennl 4, Americans |12i base on balls, off Osborne 8, off Faber 1; struck out, by Faber 4, by Oshorne 5 Blankenship 2; hits, off Faber § in 6 innings, off Blankenship 4 in 3; loging pitchér, T. Blankenship; umpires, Hart at plate, Nallin at firet base; Quigley at sec- ond base, Dineen at third; time, 2:16. MISS GOLLETT LOSES Woman's Golf Champion Cubs . by National Goes Down Before Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, in 19-Hole Match. inning with two mates on the HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM IS ATTRIBUTED TO LACK OF PROPER COACHING —IOWA FOCTBALL TEAM LEAVE IVE ON ADVISORY BOARD — LEAGUE OPENS HUGINS RETAINED AS YANKS' HAMAGER Ruppert and Huston Decide to Hire Him for Another Season New York, Oct, 12.—DMiller Hug- gins, manager of the New York Yan- kees, American league baséball cham- plons, his been re-engaged to pilot the club in 1923, The decision, a for- mal statement gaid, was reached at a meeting yesterday afternoon of Jacob Ruppert and T. L. Huston, owners of the Yankees. To Curb Rumors Although the club's statement did not go into detail, Mr. Ruppert as- serted that the action was taken to curb rumors that Huggins was to be ousted as leader of the American league champions and also in recogni- tion of his achievement in winning two consecutive pennants. “Inasmuch as Huggins has won pennants in 1921 and 1922, the only ones ever captured by the American league club here, he certainly was de- serving of being retained,” Mr, Rup- pert declared. Furthermore, the club desired to put at rest rumors that Huggins was to be deposed and that tother radical changes were to be made.” Reports that the Yankees were to he reorganizéd have been especially persistent since the decisive defeat of the team in the world series at the hands of the Giants who also turned them back in the championship clash a year ago. But the action of the Yankee owners is at rest. Among cthers were stories that either Eddie €ollins, star second baseman of the Chicago White Sox or Bill Carrigan, former manager of the Boston Red Sox, was to take the club's helm next season, Chance Also Mentioned The name of Frank L. Chance, peerless leader” of the Chicago club a decade ago, who was able to land no hetter than seventh place in 1913 and sixth in 1914, when he managed the Yankees, also has been mentioned in gossip of possible changes. Huggins, who has not been in the best of health for some time, will go to Atlantic City for a few days and then return to his home in Cincin- natl, where he will undergo a minor operation. Terms of the contract tendered | Huggins were not revealed, but it was understood that the re-engagement is for a year's period only ~ BOUTS AT POLO GROUND Curtin and Martin in Star Mill This Given material that was not as at- tractive as the players placed in Cas- all is the conviction that “lowa fights" Yale's new coaching system will be no matter how tough the opposition, under scrutiny in this game and al- 96— néction with the “Black Sox'" has re- 3 20 Heleomb’ . Newton, Mass., Oct. 12.—Miss Glen- Afternoon. sulted in the report that his main effort is to have the barred players returned to the fold, are insisting that the constitution of the association provided that the former White Sox players remain forever outside of the barrier. According to those in position to know, the groundwork of the asso- ciation was laid in the National league ready the followers of the fortunes of Yale on the gridiron have begun to watch it to see if it points towards de- velgpment of an eleven which will not only be able to defeat Harvard next month but to produce what has so long been missing from those games, a Yale touchdown. Rain this weck has interfered with | letter men last year, shown offe Captain Locke is at fullback all have been developed, eran guard New Men In Lineup Although Jones lost seven his team has sive strength this season. his old niche at In place of Aubrey Deévine American quarterback, two men Minick, a vet- who assumed Devine's Coach sidy's hands and with darker pros- pects, Dave Dunn, three turned out a team that was second to none in the state. Dave Dunn is a graduate of the local High school and | a man with the interests of the school | and foothall at heart. He went into the job of coaching the squad with the proper spirit, secured and held the re- speet of the plavers and turned out a Pe Lynch Hall ... Hubbard Dummy . 429 1335 243 222 259 299 228 90— T1— 81— 100— 78— 95 75 418 nniman 423 1264 na Cellett of Providence, national woman golf champion, was defeated on the Brae Burn course yesterday by Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, a former champion, in a 19-hole match in the second round of play for the Women's Golf Association champion- ship of Boston. Miss Collett lost chiefly begause of weak putting, her drives being strong. New York, Oct. ish Johnny Curtin of Jersey City and Terry Mar- tin of Providence, bantamweights, are scheduled to box ten rounds today in the main bout of the opening pugil- istic show at the Polo Grounds. In two other ten round contests, Frankie Jerome will box Danny Lée and Joe Tiplitz will oppose Andy Thomas. 12i==. the practice of the Yale squads. S | Flectric Range Harrison 81 Logan Hamlin Wilcox Mattison Kkicking role, and Parkin, who takes care of the generalship and the dis- patching end of passes at quarterback. “Duke’” Slater, the giant negro, who last season was accustomed to take out one side of the opponents line when gains were needed, has been replaced at tackle by Engledinger, a West Point man, two years ago. Eng- iedinger and his running mate Thomp- son, one of last year's veterans, scale at 200 pounds, After Jones Arrived For years, Jowa was one of the minor teams in the western confer- ence, a second division team that was considered as no more than a good| trial horse for the major western| elevens. Then came Howard Jones His advent marked a new period in Ipwa's athletics. But two years of bhitter disappoint- ments followed while Iowa watched | two championships fade by the barest in|of margins. One year amopponent's kick drove the championship and gained such headway that it was| discussed by the magnates at their last joint meeting in Chicago this summer, The clubs of the older league are said to be fairly well organized! and players of more than half of the American clubs are claimed to have been enrolled. “I pever knew of a more inaus- picious time to start a ballplayers' union,” President John A. Hevdler of | the National league said to The As- sociated Press. ‘‘Salaries are higher now than ever before and playing conditions are better. The club own-| ers have met virtually all the players’| requests. Ifor an assortment of text hooks. “If a player has a he| “proc. E. Allen, faculty representa- can take it to Commissioner Landis,}tivo grmed with sheaf of test ques- one of the fairest men in the world.: e g nnjieqd Tantity . SATABEEL. No, I don't think the plavers should | ynounced that two hours would be | be represented on the advisory coun-|gevoted to study each day diring the cll. The advisory council is virtually|\irginia Poly.-Tech. institute—Har- | Landis alone. His is the last word, | arq offencive though President Johnson and myself| The Center players will arrive are members. The talk about rail-| Richmond, Va., Friday morning and | place Soadine s olayer is slily,” [following the clash with the Poly-|uway just as it was settling at Town Question Never Dis ussed. Tech. team Saturday, will entrain|City: the second year a surprise on- Mr. Heydler declared that informa-|Sunday morning for Mansfield, Mass. |side kick ruined the Hawkeyes' dreams tion about the organization never has| The squad will work out at Mansfield | in the last moment of the deciding | been brought before him officially and| P ) Thursday, when it | game | from Mor that all he knows concerning it is|will go to Cambridge | Last senson, Towa began preparing for what he has read in the papers. The bt club owners have never discussed thev DOUGLAS IN JAIL \r,nk of her foothall glory, the game | | with Yale. This year the Hawkeyes | ehorn of their four great stars, still matter with him, he said. “I don't think the organization willl P pitct ¢ 6 . | have their slogan “Towa fights." | Former Pitcher of Giants,W ho Was SHpe ) hurt the game’ he added. “The previous one didn’t and I don't see Banished By Commissioner Landis. | Iowa's championship cleven of a | year ago. made that slogan famous in how this one will."” Vice-President Huston and Busi- ness Manager Barrow of the New| Arrested As Alleged Wife Beater. |the mid-west. With the same fighting York American league club pleaded ‘splr)' Towa promises to give Yale the geneéral ignorance concerning the pro- of the year when the teams posed association. square off on the bottom of the Yale “It makes no difference me Bowl Saturday afternoon. whether the players organize or not,” Coach Jones promised his famous Col. Huston said. "I don’t know hrother everything in the way of the whether any of our players beleng western open game that the west has or net and I'm not worried.” [to ofter. Hie attack probabiy will con- Barrow said it was his understand- | st almost entirely of shifts and ing that the” movement was largely ‘]ms!\"s. nlnh(;‘uzh :- will have ll‘am:'m“ to the National league and oy - Gordon Locke, 18 great plunging ::“:::dclub in particular, which ho'nn&‘:g;‘f;‘_;“l“)f:l‘" Lh“ ’:']”‘vf“ ~‘”: tullback at hand any time he clects deciined to name. He said it was| ca8R8 TS S GYES afl‘:";fd» to try the mettie of the Bulldog line. | @iscussed at the Chicago meeting, butl) ) I0eTS WIOTEL MEy 88 Sav/ing he Bad |Jones himself a former Yale star end would not repeat what was said there. (| (" 1 T e " |and later coach there, will be well hildren. The domestic disturb-|enyipned to counter the Yale offen- ance Mrs. Douglas was declared to (g | have stated, was the climax to a seér- ies of outbreaks. Douglas with his family here recently from Florida, | was sald to have completed the |son with a semi-pro team. On Miss Collett’'s drive for the nine- teenth hole her ball struck a rock in the brook and took a bad bound ahead. Se required three,more shots to get down hile Mra. Hurd, playing par golf, made the hole in three. Her drive for the 200-yard seventeenth hole fell within six feet of the cup. &he made the cighteenth in fou®, one 264 | under the women's par. 4 2341 Mrs, L. Q. White of Brockton de- 231 feated Miss Frances Stebbins of Brae 255 | Burn, 3 and 2; Miss Elizabeth Gordon 285 of Providence, defeated Miss E.| | O'Gorman of Providence, 5 and 4, and | Miss Margaret Curtis of Essex, de- feated Mrs, D. M. Belcher of Win- chester, 5 and championship team Coaching does not appear as one of the several po:i '~ns for which Mr. v draws s2'* ‘a5 at present, but > has assumed ‘ith the permission of the school committee the task of handling the team. He is, however, physical cuiture teacher for the school system. Many Want Dudack If any of the Alumni who in the past few weeks have freely expressed their disapproval of present conditions had their say, Billy Dudack, who is turning out championship teams in the west and acting as physical di- rector, or some other athlete of prom- inence with the interests of the N. B. H. 8. at heart, would be asked to come here and lift the squad out of its present position. And it would have the hearty ap- | proval of the boys. ! (Continued on Following Page). TEAM STARTS EAST “Praying Colonels” of Center College, 240 271 235 261 282 In Papua, the unmarried woman lives in a gree high above the other natives, in a shaky little hut made from bamboo. Un’ted Barber . Shop .. 3101% WASHINGTON PLACE 4 Chairs, no waiting, first class barbers, all having over 20 years' ex- perience. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 5 84 82 415 Flatware Left Danville, Ky., This Morning to 125 1288 Meet Virginians and Harvard. 87 e Bl 1— 86— 84— 424 |Hartney Dupins Gulbberg Crowley . Howe Danville, Ky, Oct. 12.—When the 26 “praying colonels” of Center col- lege packed their war hags prior to their departure this morning on the | eastern invasion they crowded foot- ball togs over a hit and #ade room 1277 80— 231 252 252 234, grievance i |{Cooper [ Willlams Crowley . Hulten The eyes of sndiis and slugs are perched right on the erds of their feelers so that they can leok in | every direction without moving. e e e e e e e e e e e o e s et .88 e e, . e e e Wonder What Columbus Thought When He Went West. BRIGGS IF | FALL DoOwN | HAVEN'T MADE A ON THE JOB WHAT OF | GooD DISCCVERY FOR IT-- We'LL ALL BE YEAFS - M JUST PEAD 430 YEARS ACHING To DISCOVER FROM NOW, SOME THING NEW ISABELLE 1S A GooD SCouT To Fix ME UR LIKE THIS-- SHE'S A GAME KID I'LL TELL THE EASTERN HEMI- WELL THEY SAY 1M A SUCKER To Do THIS BUT I'M GOING TO MAKE GooD -- TS FOR THE WIFE AND KIDDIES | from the beginning of the Birmingham, Ala, Oct. 12.—"Shuf. | flin” Phil Douglas, erstwhile star | | pitcher for the New York Glants who | was banished recently from organ- ized baseball by Commissioner Landis, was placed in the city jail yesterday | on charges of disorderly conduct pre- | ferred by his wife, who called officers to their home, and they said, declar- |ed Douglas had beaten he to NEXT DAY) HELLO - THERE'S LAND AT LAST - I'M GLAD \VE DISCOVERED SQME THING \'T DoesSNn T Look SO MUCH ., fiflléfz‘ | NOoTICE SOME OF THE| SOME OCEAN' We'Ve BOYS ARE INCLINED BEEN ON THE GO SINCE To BE A BT SORE -+ | AUGUST 3RD AND HERE THEY WANT To Go ‘TS ocToR=R ELEVEN- BACK JUST BECAUSE HOPE | SEE Some = WE'RE OUT OF SIGHT O0F LAND| THinG BY TOMORRKROW I'LL BET OLD HENRY THE SEVENTH WILL BE SORE |F | COME BACK WITH INDIA UNDER MY ELT -~ THE BIG STIFF! BOUT IS CANCELLED. New York, Oct. 12.—The proposed boxing match for the American fly- weight title between Pancho Villa, the champion, and Frankie Mason of Fort Wayne, Ind:, former champion, has been ordered canceled by Chair- \man William Muldoon of the state| “athletic commission. The action faken by Commissioner Muldoon be- se he did not regard Mason as a ble opponent for Villa, believing the latter would outelass him, md that, for the protection of the poxing public and the good of the , it was better to call the bout Word to that effect’ was con- d to Frank Flourney, matchmak- for Madison Square Garden and Jatter saild last night that no oth- nent for Villa had been pick- nd thit the champlon would ibably not appear at ali at the n on the night of Oct 20 as inally schéduled. Another bout, decided upon later, will be fea- Capt. Locke a Star Towa's offensive is a mixture of the old and new In football. Captain | Locke is used as the pivot for Coach | line smashing tactics while his| 1 t arrived \| where he Y sea- | 4 Jones cooper » passing WALTER WHALEN MARRIED. Philadelphia, Oct. 12.—Walter Lee Whalen of Boston, nationally famous athlete and a broad jumper, was mar- ried yesterday to Miss I“rances Mon Reilly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Thomas F. Reilly J. Alfred Reilly, a former member of the Harvard football team, acted as best man. ing zame v will be chiefly in evidence | ¥z2le as Coach Jones has developed a | system of shifts that he thinks wi!l be | effective. i against ENTHUSIASM AT DARTMOUTH Mass., Oct. 12—Word | was received at Harvard last night that 1,900 of the 2,200 students at Dartmouth college have sent theff in- tentions to attend the foothall game here between the two colleges two weeks from Saturday. President Hop- kins will Be among this delegation. The Dartmouth students are now rais- | ing money 1o bring along a lot of oid college standbys, including favorite janitors and other college attendants. Cambridge, YALE HIRES SHELL BUILDER 8eattle, Wash,, Oct. 12.—Yale uni- versity, which took <4 Leader, crew coach from the University of Wash- ington, also has obtained Dick Pocock who has built shells used hy the local institution for séveral years. Pocock has left the jobh of foreman in an air- plane factory here to receive $4,000 a year,