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s ~ & . Home T SRR, o o - “Face Damuorous Points of B i S Todiy"No One of the Big Colleges' Cortain of VALE ATHLETIC AseN For_Bay LeGors and Othors frém xm«mm-m% out the Bapvarses Rhicke Sseccietion tor s from y competition in athletics. After a survey of the_ sit-, B T s e Evening Post =y Thus a silly and ill-advised restric- tion upon university baseball players takes toll of a group of promising. itk propecis. of & plessant’ polourn th prospects a 80! In an attractive resort as guests of one of the wealthy cottagers, saw no reason why they should not spend the summer in the manner outlined. As a result, they are cut down in the middle of their athlétic career. Had they gone to the resort to play ball in the capacity of waiters, with thei: | hands held open behind them for tips. they would not then have been tech- nical professionals they would have been unspotted%amateurs, and would ! now be eligible to represent Yale. What poppycock! There are a hun- dred ways of evading It,.and it is con- | stantly being evaded In a hundred ways; its chief use is in teaching boyr | {oving femarkable Theavy squad when he moved from contains ,much Cutlile "y Plesterali and ' ne ‘hay levens of the g ér the out- o ot beatten NS A the most of his opportunity. His 3 ta chargse have run up 134 polnts aguinat o ‘estminster, Navy and, the Carlisle Dy, Not ome ot the a““‘? en - Captain Mahan and]|Indians in the three games to date by Barrett, two of the leading wWse of a clever combinatiom of old ot 'ggmt. and rew football offensive methods, ‘Tigers Have Well Balanced Team. PennsylvVania will have to be ever on the alert inst this attack and de- “The battle between. Dartmouth-and | velop a m.::e powerful scoring game ‘Pfinceton ‘a year ago was thrillmg | than she has shown up to this time, ind there is everyrreason to expect|to hold the Pittsburgh eleven in check. 7 another great struggle when the teams{ Followsr of the United States % ::_z tomorrow. - The Tigers' mnm: Aufi.my teams will follow with un- : ; Georgetown, -Rutgers, Syracu t the outcome t 4 Z lnrgo Eatherings, of Sridiron entMStt| sd Latayette stainp the Nessm eloven | Army-Georgeionn. bame. . for. thres AN INSURANCE POLICY fin’_c‘,m‘u ‘game ‘at Cam » /f#s-0ne of the best of the year. Prince-|wees ago Georgetown defeated the in ti® event offire 4s o’ mighty 80od | Princeton- Dartmouth. battle at bei “has a well balanced team, Strong | Navy by a 9 to 0 score. Aside from the Dird to have-on hand, and worth two | ¢on: “Pittsburgn cona |08, DOth offense and- defense,'several|ioss to the Princeton match the in e bush “of thinking about It, 82| test at Philadelphia; the Georgetown- '5‘“""‘“‘ .stars and excellent plan | Washington collegians have played % gam | of, campaign. hereas “Wfl -!a(a‘?%u. ity you | ATEY Eame 8t View Doint nd e £ Dl msesure 2ot Darimouti's S i Drie, ob Che Wit e o i el % . PRSEE O | fon and Jefurgperoat ey A SUNREES Son ot v et aDiIiY: o R adiaiste the, esmern apened. St - ISAAC §. JONES Cornell Mosts Harvard for 1ith Time. Ao, Groen San,,be Eatliered from (heexpected to be as hard pressed as the * - e Hanover ven Insurance and Real Estate:Agent Cornell goes to Harvard for “the'| 0"y 00, 70 St l‘\:“" s fu‘:fl Army, for the Middies have been ’ eleventh game -between . the. two uni- - o rounding into form repidly of late and Richards Hlilding, 91 Main Street | & ities sinca 1890, when the series{SCPr® than arvard ‘wis able to TUn|shonld present a formidable front in = was interrupted and the Ithaca team | P 282inst the same combination. The | today's game. has an excellent chance to break the{yine, 1= heaty and fast the backfield | ™ bil®o0 n, Football Arena. long string of defeats that has been oo Lol Glenn just crossed the mi enter the of ultimate victory. = ton, Yale, Cornell, 1 Penn- sylvania and the Army are ail upon to meét O] ients giving them - bat usual practice :standard. The result of skillful combining u-l brewing of —Malt, made from nature’s best barley; —Hops, with the pungency and flavor found only in —Watet, crystal clear, drawn from bed rock. Even our careful brewing methods could not pro- duce Na_rraguwett quality without the use of these ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW e 7 ndgh has drilled the team in a num-| The.day will also be notable for the |the arts of tergiversation and deceit superior ingredients. EDWIN: W. - HIGGINS |1 Porton omce A e e Sest | ber of special plays by which the New | return of Columbla University to tho |It is high time that our universit: B & A3 e oS Dell ele‘?m 5 fl;‘e- of L;g best in -the | ampshire players-hope to score. The | foothall arena after a ten year ban on | athletic authorities began to stud Attorney-at-Law bem bl B T Babne ‘question of victory ‘appears to depend | the game .at the logal institution. Co- |their summer baseball rules with some Corner Main, and=@hetucket:Strects | weight, ‘strength. speed and. sufifiept{ iPon defensive ability rather than at- | lumbla, which opens its 1915 schedule|of the manliness and courage and tack, since the offensive of the elevens is about on a par. Yale's Chances Are Good. Washington: and Jefferson defeated Yale a year ago, 13 to 7, and returns to New Haven hoping to'duplicate the feat, but the chances appear to be against - a second victory. Yale is stronger than in 1914, while Washing ton and Jefferson lost ‘several of her best players by graduation.last spring and has not shown the power and drive that made the team so formid- able last season. Neither eleven has met a mutual opponent and score comparisons through the use of third teams give little basis for comparison in' this respect. with a contest against St. Lawrence Universify, played its last previous game at the end of the 1305 season. In this struggle, Pennsylvania Qefeat- ed ‘the Morningside eleven by a score of 23 to 0. Before the beginning of the nmext gridiron campaign President Nicholas Murray Butler ordered foot- ball stricken from the list of Co- lumbia_intercollegiate sports and it was not until the present vear that the game was permitted, in Testricted form, at the New York university. The principal games to be played in the east today together with the results where the same institutions met last year are as follows: Cornell at Harvard Did not meet veteran matter to steady the combinia- tion -in_the face.of the hardest oppo-. sition that Harvard can offer. . While the offensive of Cor-, nell has been -satisfactorily ‘demon- strated in the games to date, the de- fensive ability of the Red and. White against a powerful attack is still an unknown quantity. In facing the Crimson, the Ithaca eleven is going. dgainst ‘a combination stronger than| any heretofore. met.~ The' outcome is' problematical, with® the chances: for victory and defeat about even. - Har-' vard’s team has rounded into_form very slowly this séason and is not in the same-class as the championship cleven .of 1914 at this time: The general spirit of the five Yale player« who offended in ignorance, and when enlightened brought word of thei- guilt (sic) to the proper authorities | And why were they ignorant? If the Yale authorities were as deeply con- cerned in the dissemination of the va- rious phases and shadings of the sum- mer ball rules as they are in uphold- ing them, it is quite likely the present situation would not ha been brought about. That the players were ig- norant may not be questioned: for certainly their attitude in the matter warrants no other conclusion. J. P. Sinnott of the New York Eve- ning Malil says: In the history of amateur athletics AMOS A. BROWNING, Attorney-at-Law, 3 Richard’s Bldg. “*Phone 700" Brown & Perkins, Mivmeys-at-law Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Shetucket St. Entrance* stairway fhear to Thames National’ Bank. Telephone 38-3. FOR HOME USE and at Hotels, Restaurants and Cafes. WHIFE S0 XAND' YANKS. . « AFTER HOME RUN BAKER. e ) X Comiskey 1l BREWED AND DOTTLED BY THE NARRAGANSETT Starts on_ Campaign for Stars at Any Price ' e in this country there has never been ¥ Haughton coaching system, is, Now-| While Yale appears to have the eas- | Darthmounth at Princeton -...12 to §|In this country there has never been BREWING CO. Charles A. Comiskey, owner of the Wash. & Jefferson at Yale ....13 to 7 |costs Yale university the athletic ser- Cni White Sox, may have been Georscsown at Army . Did notmeet| Vices of Harry LeGore, Arthur M. thwalted in his ambition to purchase filburn, William Easton, Epencer A. umpelly and Robert G. Rhett, Jr. All five_are debarred from participation in Yale athletics through the techni- cal. violation of a summer baseball rule they knew nothing of and which hey ceased to violate the moment they were informed of its existence. It is necessary to quote only onc sentence Virgiana P. I at avy ..Did not meet i Syracuse at Brown .... Did not meet : Wesleyan at Amherst ........0 to 1§ ! Carlisle at Bucknell ....Did not meet Colgate at Renssalaer....Did not meet Albright at Lafayette 6 to 42 W. Virgma Wesleyan State Verment a an erican league' pennant ‘in’ 1315, but does not intend to curtail his ex- travagances in the least on that ac- count. § “I‘hear the ‘Old~Roman has only started on his campaign for star ma- terial at''any price” sald Frank J. Navin, president of the Detroit Amer- PROVIDENCE R.L GAINS IN WAR ISSUES coNTmli_E. not meet o criticism for its weakness. It would | by opponents or fallure to to ex defensive mdiagx:.clu). during the recent|There Were Some Irregular Improve Training School HLG SesS :’rpn;‘uxly,\:"smler:\‘z::v‘lnu::nm‘:xg:;g ;nt:e s torxm;al of gmhm‘h?uldpunl) rrzed heights is apt to abou the n:fi.a st 5 = Steve SURBEEGY | y R C s : efensive work to bring this depart- | demoraliz ; & ses, ACCOTe “Comiskey s determined to tang 3. Anin Y Qoethie sted s ah i e orse Parmy Day irensurer.” ° | men of the piay into ocend Witk the || Taida mititade; for vitter Frank |65 N elesian o Franklin Baker n- B e S 4 g Rl g Sk seems only fair. however, to the|offense, and It is probable that the | Hinkey's attitude, cn tootbajl | He was the second Gopher captail ued thé‘diecutivé‘cf the Detrpit ‘Tig- | New York, Oct’ 22.—Further sena. |Devey & R @ .. bia . Did not meet |Plavers for the assoctation to publicly | eleven ‘will be severely handicapped in|coaching policy at New Haven arbears |in recent history o be barred froks ers. “I understand he is ready to|lional gains on war | Dsu " Secprt 5 3 jexpress the regret that because of |its firet couple of games because of its | to haye been misunderstc lay on the eéve an inde- issues, together with some - irregular: Hobart at Hamiiton ... ..3 to 14 (XD 3 ) & | 2 pi offer Connie Mpck as much for the flssues, oy b e o b M er at Latieh 0 to 27|carelessness of its officer and com- |inability to cope with reasonably pow- | one-time great en ! pendent e sustained third base home run king as he paid |improvements in railways were tne % 7| mittee these men have inadvertently | ertul attack {of head coach a year a: < In_ 1911 Chaxles Somers for Joe Jackson. Con- | chief features of today's active mar- B 3 viglated the rule mentioned. For the rest of this year, at least, |that a great reorsanization was ncces Ear Madison, nie Mack could have had that price ten-! - muge":;; Talr m‘;/ : 4% NO PEACE MOTIVES “Through the carelessness of its of- | it is probable that Metcalf will put his | sary and with the full approval of E was deciarcd ine to piay for Baker a _#honth ‘before the end of b° ’"" in) £ 1,070,000 h wa ux IN FED'S EYES. |ficers and committee these men have | varsity eleven against two or three; Taibott, then captain, discoura hirawn from the line- the season just closed. ; e d e o or i | —_— Inadvertently”—do you get that?|,utside elevens each week for practice |return of zraduates for the purpose of laint of the University of “Mack not anxious ‘to_dispose | tradsacted in.that period. <P o 3 T Through the carelessness of the ath- | games to build up his defense. direct coaching on the field, bel of the recalcitrant player. He felt ‘T‘* usual "“fgb;‘ra‘;f‘;;‘;w m!] 3 Gilmore Says His League Has Made |letic body that now debars them from |" The team that Metealf wiil put on|and rightly it seems, that ex _— A e B Lo | e s hoao™s No Move to Meet Organized Ball. |competition five of the greatest ath-{the field Saturday will average close | rare instances more harm than | LAST GAME OF SEASON smoolifisle i paill for.a man: who|adding-e mere fraction™to its Teceatf, ews u_ oo letes in the university violated, inad-|to 178 pounds through the line, while | resulted from @ piaver beinz to | - : had £6 fulfll ‘the obligations of 4 Ym‘“’” {'15 Tater . & -7 Guasheim Ex Organized baseball politics and not | Vertently, a rule to abolish thé taint |the backs will average abqut 165! thinz ome day arother thi | Putnam: an r to Play Today— an d e T L T e el e SR WA 2 D I prospects of peace has brought un- | Of professionalism. And are ineligible [pounds. Captain Simonds, Littaver,|next, dependent ge ext | Chal May Pitoh Americafi feagtre; a¥ a whole, and Ban | ~Other mew, 1o Sminsaed}iiveisiien. . founded FAports of . the . ederal |by the erring committee. Jiller and Mansbach _comprige tha | pet iheories or hobbies of certaln in- | halmers May Piteh. Johnson in particular; - opposed the Geplta) BLoton ';od-in 375, ' United |league’s “immediate ambitions before| Amateurism in this country is and’|backneld, and among them they com- | dividuals. AE g " T O g L fonhen gy | O e v |8 the fans, according to a statement |bas been for vears more or less of & |bine the essentials requisite for a back-| In order to estabiish this poiley ¥ D :L-fil::cgg:tnme S_‘\:b Soemoin 8o Stodebaker & 15195, WSOt eriand recently by James A. Gilmare. The 10:0 ‘Rulk"!! like this make it a farce | feld of the highest class. As with the ras necessary fo §0 to some extremes L Webater foc this anteruttll e L . president of the independent cir indeed. however, their weakness is on the |and a number of old plavers felt af- | v st b ‘] understand that because of ‘the|3 1-2 to 265 1-2, ell Motors 3. 193% | declared that no move sl other- | None of these Yale men played ball d“',',,m,_ fronted because not calied upon to| jon. Cassent has secured many & fallure of -hisi present. star. collection, | 1-4 to 70 and Central Leather 2 to 59 % | wise had been made by the Federal|for mon None of them need to.| ( a yer, the ends, arc | lend the kind of help they considered ; Stars for this game and in his list afe Comiskey is more than ever bent up- |1-8. = Baldwin Locomofive was__the % |league or its authorized representa- | Harry LeGore, at least, can get a Mg | fast pair. and in addition o his|most important. Iinkey was derer | included Mclnnis, Barry, Dell, Loveatts on ww ies ‘of Baker, and | most. impressive festurs’ of the attef | Lickszym i tives along peace lines. lcaguc salary any time he wants £0 | otner qualifications Calder is an dept |mined to confine the actual coachirg | Burns, Potter. Fallon, Carrelly § that he .will-oatbidrany rival in cash e o ay B U e ulley “The Federal league club owners|turn professional. The Quoque Field |at receiving the forward pass. Helley |to members of the re fr, and | Wi N for °on for. the good: of | 1-4, ‘Within .a_fraction 6f its record. {ijgen & stvers who went ,to Philadelphia and Pos- |club merely plays ball for the amuse- | ang Wilbur, the tackles are basketball | it turned out to be a | delphia Nationals s the that shows -his -cus- | The rise in this stock gave' turrency | Lo Wisies _...00- ton,” ~explained Mr. Gilmore, “were|ment of the residents of that section|players. The center trio does not seem | anticipated in reconcil = < u‘:mhn it he should de- | to fresh rumors of m;nd‘l!lflalffln- Mackay Cos . not chasing any officials of orgzanized of Long Island. Its players are never | ¢, measure up to the rest of the line.|ditions with the new Penn State Students’ Plan Shattered: clde nyireleasing. the home run |solidation embracing that ' company | Mii™ cos pr baseball” We wanted to see the |paid. For years varsity men from all{ Byllwinkel's absence has resuited in|Still wa the adv | - State College, Pa.. Oct. 22.—Plans of sl > hGhicago -5 - quite strong [with the newly organized Midvale | Mim ols games, and being broad enough to|the colleges have played around |Brown's getting the position at-center, | criticism of those Yale m Pennsylvania State Colleze students to Snoughy e the icluty stands o make a | Steel Company, and the Colérado Fuel | Max ot o7 . - recognize the fact that the national |Quoque during the summer months. |witl " Denaldson and Cleveland, the | football, but he wanted trevel as “livestock™ to the big foot- Lo Aea e | and Grsa i NoriThrOTes (ESHertlan Faee- o sioe o sport may be legally plaved by cther| The Yale Athletic association is | uoras are only fair. |ana not theirs, and con: ball games to be played by the Biue © s to play in the Am- | The two last named were very active | Meyic pec . than Federal league teams we twere |making itself ridiculous. If LeGore. | Goumbie will make Saturday the |friction grew up. and White away from home bave been - a8 nhext sopecn and not in|and strons, While Midvale approxim- | Coper o there as fans to see the games. Milburn, Pumpelly, Rhett an1 Easton | sccasion for a celebration. It is ten — hattered by the Interstates Commerce ¥ Souia, where s needed most | ated its recent high price on the curb.E, St P & 5 “The object of raising the peace cry [are debarred f-om further intergoueai- { yets 0 OF & PSP UOR o ov & on Solon Declared a “Pro.” Commissfon, it was learned today. It B Weui be wigy ‘Zx"&?&.“.’:’.fi’éfl%’fi: po‘fnmeeitm;v:g:uiti:fl :fla;o:‘fls.:,av; Mt Pacine and picturing the Federals as groggy e compatition it -vill be “he o8t | Morningside Heights, and the alumnl | inneapolis, Minn, Oct was ruled that despite the willingness ~ = 5 3 ontans Power at this time is apparent. Many play- | Unjust crime ever committed in the | Ly el for the game, will be | Soron T a8 O f the lents to travel in special ::lfl:::ozni‘;'ua:csz:l‘lork. e, [ et nts ARTNQe B0 = aiin |0 BBIN ers who were in organized baseball { name of maudlin amateurisy on hand 3,000 atrong. Mimat Petball uievess cars bedded down with straw it was delphia, and tHe whols: leigug, o ithin hale & Dokt creaiacaayis High | 50 SRk S 5 this season have not signed for 1316.| The Providence Journal prints the b iaa v held Sulity of professiona % | iliegal for ads to transport hu- E 3 3 5 earn- One of the most ridiculous of the | fuliowing: FOOTBALL GAMES TODAY. ot 3 b take Part =~/ man beings under the special classifi- st QEeuliar combination of siroum. |ings for the third quarter of the year, many untrue stories recently put ipto| The barring of five erack athletes| Ancehems o Bochestcr at Meadelll. Pa e The | cation of “livestock." e efiaices the Yalue of Baker | to be issued next Tuesday, tange from circulation is that in which the Fed- |from teams by the Yale athie..~ au-| Amhest n Weseran st Amberst Maw. e e i e O e plases |~ The students hoped to ses the Hls e ot t‘htt clty | $40,000,000 to $45,000,000. Conspicuous eral league is charged with seckinx |thorities as o punishment for violating | Bethery ve Frankiin af Retheny. West Viniala | SUCHEC a8RIDS BiM was that he played me rext week at Cambridge at lolized more (han elsewhere | among the railways were Canadian an agreement with organized baseball | the law relating to playing summer | Rrows v frmcae af Prodencr = Havre, iontann, tes 5 about $7 for the railroad fare e asn Be juns he contrib- | Pacific, Norfolk and Western, Read-|X regarding a salary limit for players. |baseball, calls attention again to the Tx. “Oberiin’ at Clevelznd. r The eligibliity committee - includes he journey in Pullmans - 5 amainet oo “Gienampion |ins and Lehigh Valley, St Paul, New | e & W -Because the Federal leaguc has|fact that mo matter how earnestly the | Cathoiic University wo Viia Nora st Wastiogon. | TBC SUEWILY computios inciudes them $35 N hunat ihe. ot e g | York Central, Erle and New Haven. |G AR made astonishing headway it is’ not |exponents of simon pure athletics la- D, C = =~ = L L bim was unanimous. =As Solon sign- ‘Wweakn ankees lies in | At their best gains in this _group | Pacac ail . throwing away any of its legitimate [bor to rid baseball from the taints T Hamils o ras a m. ‘s in O g the lack of proper hitting. strength.|ranged f: to “th: ints, but | Pac Ta & Tel ; Colgate vs. Ren. P. L at Hamilton. ed an afdavit that he was an ama-| There's a girl in Omaha who doesn’t b N T ged from ofe to ‘three ‘points, but|Fic Ta & weapons out of respect to any O. B.|of professionalism, it's practically im- | Diesimon rs Jabsicn, Yol st Cartisle Sour 1t swes Sh that’ expuieon from | thiuk Alexamier can pitch st RN S ety thn o e SBowen realiaing reduced these advances iater. | Ebamvnis magnates who have been hit. What- | possibleto to achieve the desired re-| Drake vs Simpsn st Des Molnes, . ~ P i 3 m nd for man Car, oW €l (o low Wk e ! ever available players the club own- sults. Fordham ve. Haly Cross at New Yot the university might be asked. Solon |bet on the Phii s and had to roll & pea- one of the most: inactive stocks.of its Gee v Unl Virginia Athens 5 ¥ it groum e it the block with a toothpicl Geciate’ they Redlioats AoIe i s g P ers decide at the annual meeting cf| Yale and Harvard in particular are| Semis v Usiwny of s e e L e e thing withfn’ réason for Frank 'Bik:’r gl:‘i:.d came lnf (;w{% d‘ennngs P::&Lh e ‘E,he Federal league to be needed will |sticklers for keeping their athletes in Hobart st Clten, bebl ¥ - rance of ta, -2 CeS | prcsed St. | Cai | be sought without regard to expense. |the straight and narrow path of pure Comell am 5 Gt 5 [ ::&ig?le.-lyu::l;.“l:dmb;od-:‘!yfledw*&g were somewhat mixed at the close | puimin Good ball players who are in a posi- |athletics. but the announcement that| Ires Sste v Usiwmiiy o Ml | EDNA PORTER IN “EVERYWOMAN ” DAVIS THEATER, THURS., OCT.38 terms of contract he ask ‘pron | itk a steady undertone. . eichtiver . tion to accept the best offers for their | the former has been forced to declare | “Ti, yqusne e Washingion at Baltimore. ot Y e i sked ‘“from Th(e ‘knowiqx;aloczl“r‘l:one{ aovmem NPE Sveny services will be better paid than ever Lnoliglhh- n\'p'me;nbem of the 1914 Kewpon s “Aatiocn ¥ Gombiter, points to a heavy cash gain toMOITOW, | Beae. .. next season or it will be their own |baseball team for fracturing the much ayetio ve_ Albright st Easton Yantene 'rank Baker come to the|the result, primarily, of recent gold | & i & S fault. discussed and much abused law shows | Lchgh v Mubiobers st Sowth Bethichem. have ot trouble. placing Mim T b | ccessions” from abroad,via Hallfax. | Bunely .- . “Players who were bluffed into sign- |how gigantic is the task. Ohlo iwes v Ohlo University st Wesersilie Proper apheremthict ns, M Jn (8| Forelgn exchange denoted. little |3 %, Kres . ing with O. B. last fall /by the same| It has been pointed out several times | Princetcn v Darimouth at Princeton sei, present guardian of the near cor. | ChanEe from recent weakness. R methods which ~their emloyers are|in these columns that the system in| Dniwrity ¢ Pemesivanis st Fhisdeipiia. ner, lachn’ oathoter of ‘thve abiiity, | [ONdS Were strong. with less breadth |8t Louls S W' now trying to make effective can|vogue at Brown is the only proper| Srithmors w. ¥ and M. 5 S Fritz, In tdct. frst made mis “piy:|to the selling. Total sales, par value [t lous 8 W i measure this latest ‘political move|one. The authorities on the hill grap- on "vv. Stevens Tech.. st Schnectady. league _ reputation _ in_ the outfiela, | 2E5TeFated $4.97¢000. . - Sheas Shetica = along its proper dimensions. Tre pled with the simon pure Droblem | Usiied Staes Miliary Academy v Georsetows wheréfile speed and firié arm came i | ;-r;’flefl esza!:s ‘b?]nds gained 1-4 to|souh Pacine . minor league club owners who swal- |many vears before arriving at a hanpy | st Wes Pount -2 per cent. on call, : s Neral Academy v Virginis P. L. T he Dest ohIre) o P R Socar lowed -a dose of the peace medicine |Solution. Now they allow the students | Uilied States Xaral A oy ps Soun . Baivey last fall just prior to their annual|to play summer baseball to their | * Chimiiy of Ak v Westers Resrve o [ A ;,‘ie,de,,;y STOCKS, Cand 3 pe meu‘ling and bravely stuck ‘o the old | heart's content, the o‘nly provision :e- Akrn. ) Ol o i Stand 3, pf guard as a result 4. of v |ing that they play with no cl that - o e This afternoon lon'. the 'Academy |Alasks Gad A ... e, o e e‘ robably. do not now |ing that they play no_clubs o Ticols vs Northwestern at Urbe. campus Coaeh Overbagh will stack up his M. I~ A" pigekin chasers against Allls: Chalmers crts that the Federal Allis-Chalmers pt operate under the banner of organized léague club owners are tugging at the bas ball or with a team in the Fed- We Are Rxmmné Ship- Ansconda Con COTTON. closed barely 12.43; 'Janvery 1258 May 12.92; July 12.85. Spot_quiet Merch middling 12.45. New York, Oct. 22.—Cotton _futures steady. December 12.78; Whales, their challenge having been ble header fashion in an attempt to arouse interest. “The success of Western teams in the Federal league in gaining public favor be accounted for by the fact that winning ball of major leagus quality was played at pric The same ~ combination will win thy not touched a pigskin in three years. Although the scrimmages have not been as frequent as Metcalf would have Ifked them, he was willing to everything to getting .the squad.on a firm foundation, and it is probable that most of the real constructive work will be done following the opening disqualifica- of Maine v, Bates v » Am. Ag. Chem. . coattails of any of the powers in or- |eral league. of Michigan' v Jichigan Assles . s\fio Bf—\r:{llg'eslflree"::aut.l:d ztgle:g club, am A chom' ot ganized baseball and begging for mer-| Brown does not force her stadents of Mismewta w. State University of iyl b - il .m"'.m.y o et Biear ot cy. Every club owner In the major [to resort to subterfuge in order to|yowa ai Muscssts £ e, RER " TRORstle o Con ... o B h Peoes leagues Of orsanized baseball knuws|Win a place on teams athletes repre- ity o Wew Virgisis vi. Washington 204 g B 2 a Am Car & Firy Cnlon” Pacttic - erently. senting the hill teams have nothirg to | Lee st o forword Qiscfi'é’hie“(fcé’ifi%"’t g o ot - “In the closing weeks of the sea- |be ashamed of when they take the | VUrigw we Tempe wt CUERC . . Lo e o L b frowe. | Conom 0% - o son it was made plain to fans of Chi- |fleld. The college world knows where | b s =ik g i e "800d- on | 4L uide & Leather . Cr & A R | cago, St. Louis and Pittsbus they stand and they rub elbows in| WrMame w. Trinity st Williamstows. mussing such passes. A e o Losther ot e the Federal league it better eiuipped | intercollegiate batties with many play- | W=rwowrs s Wooser st Sorngheld . T e me I fnot ST with snappy, aggressive young players |ers who were with them on teams or | ¢ T Wishinston = > $an Doy o4 B of major league calibre than ecither of [ played against them during the sum- i Sioe T Ry its older rivals. Despite the organiz- | mer season. The Choice Am. Tocomo pt " 1 Alehol .0 ed efforts to offset the attractiveness ——— i 5 |4 s o S e & B o jthe Whales as drawing cards in|COLUMBIA OPENS FOOTBALL LEGORE'S ABSENCE DOES ober Brew . Am. Bee S pr A e 1 cago by ing the best players o | M;rflv 5. Swa of 77l from ze.nl.t.' in cities where there was SEASON SATURDAY. NOT SPELL DISASTER Am. Sug Mef. Diah Copper - no “opposition _and "Be Fi of o || im sor pe e o G Coen Chicago, the Whales eventuaity worr | Team Developing Steady Under Coach | His Place Can Be Filled, Just a * A e Totaceo - and now hold first place in Chicaro Metcalf's Directions. Bickley's Was Last Year on Crim- N | i e R fandom as well as in the Federal son Team. 3 Am. Woolen of Vulesn Det bt league race. In behalf of Manager Joe | Columbia gets its first football test o woslen, ofls L1111 % s | waeh v T Tinker the Federal league claims the |this week, when it opens. the season on| Harry Le Gore was a distinct asset 3 Am. Wit P ot % | Wabasb: pt B wi World’s baseball championship for the | Saturday with a game with St. Law: | Wost. arstand rerce university. So far the develop- | o with four other Yale athietes for Amels Beal West: Un Tel lgnored by pennant * winners in the|ment of the team has been steady, If | 4 Violation of one of the rules against D AR Tt B & i other major leagues slow, because Nelson Metcalf, the head | gummer baseball does not of necessity Wit Gana’ ™ “In St Louis, whise two teams in|coach. afd his assistants were deter- | sl disnster or doom the eleven to : organized baseball sstaged a serie | mined to ground the eleven thoroughly | Jefeat at the hands of Princeton or MONEY. advertised as for the city champion- |In fundamentals. This was made the | Harvard. His place can be filled, just ship, a majority of the fans register- | more necessary for the reason that not | sy Chariey Brickley's place was filled “:.7&‘5 Yx;"“}': 0‘;;-'21’«;?}‘:““ ety |od their disgust with such unsports- (& man on the vareity squad that re-[on that wonderful Harvard team of ST last loan 5 closing ma"F °j°|manifke tactics by staying away from | ported last month had played football | o year ago. it g + | the games, which were put up in dou- | In two years, and many of them had | ie Gore was a brilliant offensive a strong punter and = o fans of New York.' Plans for stands | Therefore judgment of the eleven important in the Yale machine. ments.Regularly, Without 4 P ——— seating 55,000 persons are now being |on its showing against St. Lawrence GOt along without Brickley AVH G SR O WREAT Open. High few. Closs Worked on by architects here. and 1| will probably have to be revised nmmvvmufl"“flh 105 0% 103 hope to be able to give out all detalls [on, when Metcalf gets things wi Gore was a or more valuable 105 1emi ek |regaring the New York Federals | smoothly. than ‘wonderful ick- p ststadlum within a few weeks. There| It has been apparent that although There is plenty of and s - st s will be ten cent bleachers, yuarter|the eleven is equipped with a fair of- of time before the two all-im- 0 5% . 59y E7ats in covered pavilions and granid-{ fensive,which is varied snough to bring to_fashion a backfleld » Stand sests for half & dollar. into wse the forward pass in its simpler. v um Sometimes 1 39 3 £ i only club owners- organized | phases and the ‘assortment - lack ‘some WR % . W% fiom-mlhwhhu,o:?-nm»w-.m -uho—g star whose close guarding