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[ B B B A INDUSTRIAL CIRCUIT FURNISHES CORBIN AND LANDERS WIN IN DUSTY LEAGUE GAMES Former Trounces Stanley Works 22 and 19, While Latter Rule Shoppers by 31-21 Count Defcats minus So- ted a new Pe at cen- ward and Schade iinute after g letier broke a shot from eide ave his team a double through with but Jack gave tage. After y Works, ong shot and was pushed . E the foul- ing column when he jahbed Jasper from the rear and he got ons of his fwo free tries and Hallin, after being jounced by LaHar ,also made good on one. The Corbin team was now playing very loosely, the ball, throw! it wildly. The Stanley Works got the ball in mid-court and a series of passes gave it to Schade who flipped it to Kallgren who, instead of shoot- tossed 1t to the waiting Schroe- der and t tered for t them an han a fouled P team the one point tims out by the Bchade dropped in a aer when 1 hade got int crimm their Neren ing goals for en K long one making ghooting. vsual lo. g 1 when Schu mads free he then | and shooting | e [sideline play G00D OFFENSEIS “IIFIGILT ThSK 'Famons Coach Discusses Basket- | hall Problems BY COACH L. T. TURNER (Southern California) The subject of sistent of 1 greater problems for the couches players sketball today than e problem of defense. The five-man defense in some form r can be made the most diM- cult of any defense to penetrate, It | I8 being almost universally adopted. On the offensive problem, however, | coaches stand divided. Some adheye entirely to th § pass game, some to the short pass game, others to systematic believe, sents con- a combination of both styles of play, | and lastly a trust-to-luck system, in | which group there is a vast majority. | Al have been successfully used E some fairly consistently. Per. | haps the physical make-up and skill | of the players determine this issue, L however, favor the combination of the-long pass and the short pass Briefly stated, my reasons | for favoring this style of game are: | 1. One long pass parallel to the | center of the floor takes the ball out of the opponent's shooting zene | It the out-of-bounds play is not looked upon as a resting perlod the pass can be made to beat the | forming of the opponent's defense, | 3. The short pass offense, which requires great drive and endurance | shouid start from the center of th floor. If the opponents have failed to form their defense the work of | advancing the ball is less strenuous because a defense hehind a driving | offense is not effective unless illegal guarding is permitted by offic | 4 Aim to drive the short pass loftense down the center of the floor. |This permits n to cut in advance |of man in possession of hall from {both sides of the court. It elimin- {ates belng forced out of bounds on and also prevents |shooting from corner of court | 5. In the short pass game a p ler should move toward and in ad- of man passing to him at ball should be pas: ou are standing flat- man passing the ball should cut in back of the man re- ceiving the pass. The shorter the he safar the pass, ths less > of interruption, worst enemy Never whist favor o The feature Lastly, deter- which a 1he proper timing 1 are to possible moment. Re r action follow receive t "o | Constant drill on floor formations lis necessary t is place and du OSBORNE T0 COMPETE il < took the 1ead when |O1¥Mpic Champlon High Jumper To tight five their flooy curac minute: e a tally in one and wwas made, then Ho when Olson p Jasper shot scrimm made 1t.17-16. Ho on a asper. his team to other den 4 nd later and | Take Part In Gomes In pass to York On February 7. New York, 14, — Harold M cham- add- ed one to his tear | ar- | Appearing in San Antonio | 1. o son !l not en |ter a competition for a year ago ! ate and nation He also - new to I of hig defeated e 25 Belmont Yearlings '-"@ Purchased by Widener Jan Hollecher’s Health Will Determine His Future ortstop v m not T Cubs im READ THE HERALD ULASSIFIED | ADS FOR YOUR WANTS will | e NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 195, GOOD GAMES — NEB CINP HAS BEEN LONG ON THE J0B Starfed Picking All-American Teams in 1899 (By BGilly Evans) Tmitation is the sincerest form of flattery ich being tha case, Walter Camp should take much pride in his All. Al ca football team. Years ago Camp conceived the fdea of picking g team that would |be made up of the outstanding play- ers in the football world. It took conslderable nerve to tackle so big a job, although when |Cagap originated the idea, the class of colleglate football was largely confined to a few select schools. Pack in 1899 Collier's Weekly first gave nation-wide publicity to C selectlons. The feature has by a national institution | To football fans and players the | Camp team is the last word in f{oot- | ball. ‘ | The idea that Walter Camp origi- nated has become a pet hebby of cvery sports editor, Al grid ex- perts close the season by picking an All-America. As yet ne one hag ‘d).«:m ered two teams exactly alike.” | e | | When Camp first picked his all-| star team, Yale, Harvard, Penn and | | Princeton were supreme in football. | At the close of the season he had only to consider the lineup of these | four teams to pick his All-America With an improved standard of| LEave it o the ladies fair to fn- |football In other sections, the task troduce the latest innovations. Here | more difficult. we have Miss Kay Clark of New |later became much |York city playing a round of golf KAY CLARK, CADD | Today with the open game it is any- thing but an enviable job. SKA CAPTAIN DRO Are Led by Mifchell ‘The Shipping Room &till enjoys a slight lead In the Stanley Works Weekly Bowling league, but the Face tory outfit is not so far behind but what they are dafigerous conténders. The rest of the league is tralling far bebind. Mitchell, Wlicox and Senk, in the order named, are individual leaders and a complete review of the league and the work of its members follows: o2 eh Shipping . 13 Factory . . 14 Outlaws . . 24 New Office ..., . 27 Non-Producers .. 26 014 Office ... & 95 Btee) ..., . . 27 | Foremen eniiaes18 T | High single etring, Gace Bigh three string, Wilcox, 3 | single game, Steel, 553. High | game, Factory, 1517, | Individual Aserag Mitchell «vvy000e Wilcox Senk Sinto ... Gacek Molynetx Politis Duplin Swanson McConn H. Bertinf . L. Truslow . Shroeder Y FRANCIS RE New York, where there is always plenty of enow for ski-golf. Despite the rather awkward stance | H. Johnson . made necessary because of the use | Kinshall {of skis, some surprisingly low scores | Luebeck have been made. The caddy, Fran- | Zapatka cis Regan, s also similarly equipped ' F. Anderson . and follows Miss Clark with ease. ,Hoftman 5 at Toland Springs, Me., on her skis. | Last season was a_succession or |3t Loland Springs, Me. on her sk upsets in football. ~Few teams ran |, tfi¢ (47 s gone ofer big at Fo |true to form. Each weck saw some (/204 Springs, Me., i el comparatively unknown college knock off one of the leaders, | e picking his All-America has he de- | Viated so widely from his original course as in the season just closed. i | Instead of Yale, Harvard and | Princeton playvers hogging the team, [not & eingle member of the so-called | ig Three is placed on the first | 1 1 e s Corbin and Farnir Teams Both ’ The fact that eleven diffarent col- | i C | s are represented on Camp's first | Cflplflre Onmts m has made it popular geo- aphically. Practicall tion of the country has consideration, g company girls' bowling team #ook two from North | & Judd at the Y. M. C. A. last night, the Al |and at the same fime Russell & E T in's girls dropped two games to the . Corbin outfit put in tel with a 98 and A. &ince the publication o America for 1924 Mr. Camp bern the target for many a sports editor. That he realifes 1§ diffi- | jculty he {s up against is'apparent ! ening paragraph of his recent lssue of C Here it is ¢ All-America team of h scores were by M Koleaki story in a 1 Fafnirs 98 d conserving the ener 3 ieon and supplementing t 5 by a team by the inferjec- [Hon of fresh men at psychological | Fr moments, has g on expanding | 4 Olkoa til thera is a game playeq | M. Dunné | Without a great number of substity- | M. Murpl tiens | H: McCue | “The old days when it was hoast- | ed a team of eleven men, a dozen. played through all th games of the seasen have dis o peared iioloski . The 0 Possibiy| ‘Totale P. & F. Corbin play of drmands ater range of ability in all the t stafement explaits w pick an All-Ameérica away with it, |18 80 ¢ team today n xas, Jen, 14.—Bat- | < matched to fight| 7 local negro, here will net be permitted to n San Antonio, District At- M. Chambers announced | Chambers bases his 4 of m rged agajnst d off TENNIS GLUB BLECTS Fred Steinman is Chosen President | of Local Court-Playing Organiza- | THORMAHLLN « Jan. 14.—The Al agiue club manage- ced jast night the trade .efty) Thormahlen ast night follows: Preside preeiden among those prese ) and a report of the pr will be made next Tuesi other meeting will t 1 The officials promised a v season of intereet way of t Why Does the Barber Strop His Razor? for the m Games in the Ranger c! ague at the Casino alle otre Dame ar ing two from Harvar 1a of the Dartmout single for the night his last string. He was tie Because he knows the value of a keen edge. He would never use a razor without stropping it. Valet AutoStrop Razor strops its own blades. Valet 3\ | ORCHESTRAS NOT 10O | PLAY IN PRELIMINARY John L. Sulivan, leade Rexmere orchestra, thinks he has a grievance and he blames Sammy Gross, leader of the Mel- ody Men orchestra The two orchestras were booked for a iminary game at the ar- Saturday night but, ac- to. John L., wily of the a battle of to a bat- tie of brawn e mu and Jc y plqued , 'since Walter Eckersall to direct the FOOTBALL EXPERTS ARE W Jonie GENERALLY AGREEING .W. Johnson Emmons Think That Camp's All-American Choice T. Jones Ely Is Good One. Rawlings Keogh Wilson Cochrane Merwin . Klambt . Pattison Gavitt Budnic b |Majority of Coaches New York, Jan, 14, — Football |ceaches are pretty well agreed that Walter Camp' 1924 Ali-American, as published in Colller's Weekly, ts one of the greatest teams of all The line is outstanding, with such & srilliant performers as Horrell of | SPurvey (cGintey of Pemnesiegnin, Woir o | IRHY Efim_q‘m” FIVE SECTIONAL GAMES Nebraska and other stars of like West Pointers Complete Program for calibre. In the backfield there is the phe- {nomenal Grange, and with Stuhl- |dreher, perhaps the greatest quarter eam, it would be har dto beat. SHIPPING ROOM INEBRASKA' NEW |SPORTS CONTESTS. TOPS LEAGUERS| " CAPTAIN DUSTED) ARE MORE LIWTED Stanley . Workers Individually Bloodgood Dropped a5 Frats(Not So Many Internitional. Gave Him His Election Captain of the University of braska's 1025 football team for just three woeks is the unique disting- tion held by Albert Bloodgood. Whyn Bloodgood, a second-string player, was sslected captaln fn pref- erenceé to a number of star regulars who were eligible, much gossip on the campus resulted, An investigation was made by the WEIR, ABOVE; BLOODGOOD, T. | - athletic board of Nebraska unjver- |sity and it developed fraternity poli- | tice was back of Bloodgood's Fclc-:-i | in April. | in Walker cup play. | pro PPED WHEN IT IS FOUND HE DID NOT EARN HIS | ELECTION—OSBORN TO COMPETE IN WILCO GAMES NEXT MONTH —SID TERRIS WINS HIS FIGHT BY SUPERIOR ABILITY — BRIEFS | G This Your — By The Assoclated. Press, New York, Jan. 14.—~The interna. tlonal angle to sports competition, which gained record-breaking pro- portions fn 1924, will ‘be less #harp- ly defined this year, Interesting international compe- tition 18 promised in such branches as boxing, golf, billiards, rowing, swimming, track and tennis, but the new year will be witifout any eus- tained program of world competi- tion as witnessed in the Paris Olym- ples and also lacking in such out- standing events at the Walker cup golf contest and the international polo cup series, two other features of 1924, The Unlted States Golf dasociation has. decided not to send a team abroad to meet Great Britain again In defense of the Walker cup before 1926, while it will be at least three years, or 1927, before America again risks her rights to the historic polo trophy. The stmulus of the Olympics, how- ever, to track and fleld athletics al- ready is apparent in the spectacular advent of Paavo Nurmi, the phan- tom Finn, who has demonstrated his ability here to race rivals into sub- Jection with the eame. record-break- ing ease that characterized his start- ling performances at Paris six months ago. Nurmi's {nvasion has caused an unprecedented boom in indoor track sport, with additional international interest promised by the addition of Italian, British and Canadian stars to the invading fleld. Harold Abra- hams and Eric Liddell, two of Great Britain's Olympic heroes, hnve heen invited to take part in the Pennayl- vania relay carnival at Philadelphia America's defense of the Davis cup will be the outstanding event In de- fense, with the prospect that this country’s forces, bolstered by the jm- provement of Vincent Richards, wiil clinch their right to hold the trophy for the &ixth year in succession, 1t hasmo* been seriously ménaced since Tilden and Johnston brought it hack from-Australia in 1020, Golf also will not be without its m(N‘}w'ionnl twist, despite a Japse Walter Hagen 8 to lead a band of American asionals in quast of fihe British open title he has won twice in the t three years, Most of the professional ‘crowns of the ring appear eafs for the United Sfates, but titleholders stilf have a X tion. Bloodgood had more “frat” broth. ers on the squad than any of the | other players, incidentally his fra- | {ternity swapped votes to put over the South American menace in'ths pres- | ence of Luis Firpo and Quintia Ro- mero among the heavyweights and Lusi Vicentini in the lightwelght cir- cle lonly one Notra Dame man was plac- 83 | “Even Coachs Rockne, whose No- Next Season by Signing tre Dame team convincingly demon- strated its right to be called the col- champions, commends MMr. |Camp’s eleven, despite the fact that | lage Weast S Point, SN Y- Army's 1925 football schedule nine games, including a record of fiv completed yesteeday by the eigning —~ of Davis and Elkins college, of El-| e kins, W. B EEADED) Point November 7, the last bantam. | date avallable, | ht champion, was suspended ur Four mid-western, February 1 by the Naw York state athletic commission vesterday for engaging In an “unsatisfactory match with Augie Plsano, Brooklyn bantamweight, at the Ridgewood C. in Brooklyn, January 6. isano was also set down for a sim- sriod but he was permitted to n engagement at Yon ‘hursday night for previously contracted. of | list ed on each of the three Iected. teams se- BOTH ARE New York, Jan. 14 —Eddis (Can- 1) Martin, world's tollowing list, in addition to fi annual Navy battle. The schedule is as follow: October 3, 10, Knox college, of Iilinois; 17,| Notre Dame, at New York; 24, §t.| Louis university; 31, Yale, at New | Haven November 7, Davis and Elkina; 14, Columbia, at New York;/ 21, Ursinus; 25, Navy, at New York. | Davis Elkins, | good, lelection. For votes favoring Blood- they in turn agreed to vote |for other fraternity athletes in Jan. 14.— sports other than football. As a resuit of the investigation, Bloodgood was forced to resign and elected to succeed himself Peeved at the action of the ath- Va, for a game at West lctic board, Bloodgood has announc- | 5 L open |ed that he intends to turn profes- |Hoppe's world's sional. The New York Americans one gouthern have been after him for two years'DY reports.from Paris and thre eastern rivals arc on the|and he intends to report to them Contl, sensational young French cue this spring, Bloodgood is a star second base- man and last season was one of the Conference. FABER PRAISES COLLINS Pitcher Red Faber rays that under Eddie Collins the White Sox will show itself to be at least 20 ball games befter than last season. | Amateur boxing will have an in- |ternational tinge with the prospec- ‘n\rr invasion soon of a crack British team, inetuding Olympic champlons, !for a tournament with American talent in Boston. There also s a inter-sectional contests, was| Ed Weir, All-American tackle, was PTospect of North and. South Ameri |can amateur fistic stars engaging i a series of tests, The foreign . threat to Wi balkline billtard crown, has been eliminated partially that Roger » Would not compete in the in. |ternational tourney at Chicago be- ginning February 23. France, how* University of Detroit; {lcading hitters of the Missouri Val- |ever, likely will be represented Ly gome other strong contender, whil. other foreign talent is expected 1 take part. Keen international competition ir promised with the invasion of Arm (Continued on Following Page.) Second Honeyrhoons ( How ABoUT ARBUND THE GOLF GOT To HAVE T MDRROW COURSE WITH ME [ | MY HAIR TecDAY ? J TenDED To ! 7 — WANT To WALK 1{ | CAN'T ¥ ) ) 'Ll QWEAR IF You HAVEN'T PUT IN ALL YouRr| TIME SINCE COMING HE R FUSSING WITH YoUR HAIR) il e lallod, WHEN MARR HUNG | DON'T HNowW |F I'LL BE ALL THROUGH OR WE WERE FIRST 1ep YouR HAIR DowN To YouR NE® CAPS AND ‘You Kspcu‘l’ LESS TIME oN \T THAN You Do NQwW AND You SAID 'TwoulD SAVE A LOT OF TIME IF You COULD HAVE T BOBBED paAT WA [WELL '~ How | ABOLT THE NEXT DAY- SN BRIGGS e < JOHN = | CAN'T MAKE ANY ENGAGEMENTS “I'VE GOoT Tp HAVE A WAVE AND MY { “MAR AU DonE 0yER e ( - \ Y a d