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S ThHe OMmu S - stock of second hand balls, so as to have | 1 WHERE DO COLF BALLS (07|5= v S oo e <o’ e ™ | WITH THE COLLECE ATBLETES [ One of these men whe has bees in the | EMBER B P8 second hand goif ball business for & sumber | S— . v {Lost, Strayed, but Chiefly Stolem is |of years. may be seen any Friday in the [Doings in the Field of Sport in East » “. Answer. | Wall sireet district wi his assistant. each .“ W* < |earrying two big grips leaded with what | might be takem for securities. . He se —_ i STEALING {about & thousand balls a week during (ie | FRESHMES CADDIES WITH BT o e wate e 1o s oy cny | WORKING OF BULE | (s vemon, and Michigan woulda's be sur- | ‘would never suspect of putting down a prised if he made it presty hard for Pete Crooks that Work im Palrs | .04 hand ball. These are men who do| AFmy and Navy Pemeers Need Not |Liwie of Harvard to relain his tite s in on the Pablic Links—Remaking | not play in tournaments, but who follow Leave Imtercolleginte League tercollegiate ehampion. To back up Herner | Sccomd-Hand Omes—Fro- 1: for exercige. and the siight difference in Unless They Wamt To— there is Denbrook, the foot b‘m piayer, fessional Deslers. the condition of & ball, %o that the paint pem i ioms-funragriing who has been improving right along in o0 it is new, i not of 5o much mament o | weights. He i likely to turn out a for-| them. s the difference in price between midable bammen, thrower, the Wolverines 8 and §8 & dozen for the same ball | The intercollegiate femcers have s meet. | think. There are geves men in the University ot | ™ Michigan who have the varsity letter k'r' ‘m«r track sthietic performances. & strong ‘Wmuvnnummwuunl |team. Joe Hormer, the welght man, i | his letter in the intercollegiate games last | spring and he bas been working hard with | the shot and the discuss this suiums. He is Jdoked on as specially likely to do things ‘DAY Bem | i ] $25 Suits, Now For $17 $ 30 Suits, qu Ij"pr $2_0 e do not advertise to sell at one- | Young ROLESE of the personality or | qualifications of the mew premient of the National league, his election is an 0 omen, for it came sbout through a combination of personal | #pite and political chicanery. It represents | NEW YORK. Dec. 18—The conusdrem half price and then fail to do so— we couldn’t do that and stay in Reductions of $7 and $10 On All Suits 1ons business. The reductions we quote are just what you get. We come out about even on the deal—the profit goes to you, but we must reduce stock. Eaeh suit is cleverly designed and per- feetly fitted. The same high grade, honest workmanship will be given, which our reputation de- cession 0 unserud men and | used to be, Where do all the pins #0 07| There are some plarers who repaint their |ing in New York mext month, at whieh it | Michigan's Track Men. It presages therefore. @ future Now it i What becomes of the galf balis” | guy goif balls, 80 &= 10 keep them fresh | may be determined whether or ot the| The track veterans are Craig, May, West, if Dot something worse, for the | As several millions of golf balls are manu- | jooking, but such balls have very poor | Army or Navy Vencers will remain in the | Tower, Bohnsack and Leger. Cralg is the o teague, that s already in & precarious |factured every Year and A% 30 ene 5060 &37 | playing qualities when they get Ohe eoat | college Jsague. It was reported same time | man who gave Poster of Harvarnd such a state when it comes to integrity. Tt might of last year's balls in this year's holes|of paint on the top of amother. ago that the Army and Navy men hed de- [run in the Mo-yard final at Cambridge bave been that Herdier was not the man | they Must go somewhere. “Aded to withdraw from the league and to | He alee s & good low hurdler, and it de- Best qualified for the presidency, but| A few years ago manufacturers used to boid dual mests separately hersafier. Ac- | Pends eatirely upon which event he chooses whether be was or not was a matter that | buy up second hand balls of thetr mlGolf Honors [cording to Jaceb C. Fisher of Pensayl |ie stick io Bow grest his prominence in the recelved positively. no consieration in the | make, remould them, puiiing them on the vania. secretary.treasurer of the Intercol- | next intercoliegiate meet will be A grea | eontest finally ended In his overthrow. | market again as “remade balis™ They A D d d legiate association. this is not ekactly so “mny folks think he will be the sprinter What defeated him was that certain mag- |Bad & standard price for baiis regardiess re ivide | “The Navy men. he saye, asked fhe West | Of the year if he devotes his time to the nates found themselves unable to dictate | of condition, so that Do mafter how badly Fomtors §5 S Ghe Suline NS0’ Sl & | GUA him. When & man refuses io ¥ield 4 |cut up & ball might be, it was wordh 8o Among Many‘,‘,., Teet with the midshipmen instead of | Last season he was taking eare of four | principle he believes to be right and is|much o the manufasturer Who wamied to | he intercollegiate competition. The Army | €vents in the meets he entered previous to forced out of his position, 1 i time to |make it over. | —_— athletic councll decidled that B @8 m.:..‘mu;mum et & aysiem -rn:»-‘\ live that something is wrong With the| The idea then was that the interior of | want to have the soldisrs withdraw from |18 fine for building dp endurance, bu e that be. Ang Yot Where i 50 ovi-| the balls Wes 06 ool a6 over and that | A8 "A Season Advanced New Ap- ecollege champlonship. Affairs are now | Which does not tend to make & man cham- Gence that Hevdler was not eminently it was oniy the cutside of gutta wr;ni plicants Took the Lead in [in that state, and unless ihe matter = 1:‘;"“: ::) ;:: ;::w“*l:;r:fil'm-mh ™ mpetant and efficient. T. J. Lynch, the | covering that wis injured by use. - inning. brought up at the league meeting the two | %7 o « s .:.-Vm.n may fill the office ably. But | perience demonstrated ihat this was a| wi P government schools wil! rematn in m.‘n- and he will be Craig’s teammate again mands. after all. what sssurances has Lyneh that | mistake and that the life and resiliency of Toege. He is perhaps better at the furiomg thad at the end of the first year he wen't o | & ball is destroyed by continual hard hit- | NEW YORK Dec 18—The end of another | 1t is reperted by Mr Fisher that staying | At the shorter dash, so that the partner- | the way Hevdler went? If this Murphy- | uag. eompetitive golf season finds Do one Per- |in the league rests with the two schodls | *BiP should be effective. Brush-Ebbetts gang is to rule—as it has| Thers is an enormous amount of meney | %0n enjoying a momopoly of honors. Bar . reled In this case—it may as well be UD- | spent on Foif balls, and yet their Mfe is | In the summer George Sargent sprang Serstood mow that mo man will be long In | very short. The standard price is 80 cents, | Sensation by winning the president’s chalr who Soes not take his | although some makes cost 75 cents. There | championship titie but since them th orders from “Ae mang.” The ome consols- |used 1o be §i baia, but thers was hot| Brton has been compeiled to acknowleds: tion left for the Heydler faction is that the . | v conspirators wers Dot stromg emough 1o | they are Do longer on the markel When Gardner, the Y pole vadlter, who wen schieve 8 full vietors: they had to secept|a | through a ciassy fieid at Wheaton and wo a compromise. This may offer some sub- this Schieve the natiomal open | enough to them to justify the price saud | freguent defeat Tfien there was Robert th did lttle to pre- | tial hope for the future and it may |nine holes and oue In the meantime. is there anvthing off (hat Messrs. Murphy. Brush snd Eb- betts would lke? 1t; new sppears .that Jack Holland of Widhita has got the Pueblo franchise for transference fo St Joseph Holland has been distinetly successful in minor league ball st Wichita: he is a hard worker, tevel headed and shrewd. He knows the game and can hanfle men and do his share men are piaying wi pare one for the surprise. In fact. to make use of the phrase, was a “field cholce™ in the poo! when the maich play began. It was the same in the principal com- petition hereabout. Waliter J. Travis began auspiciously by winning chief cups at At- lantle City and Garden City, and a little Iater the Metropolitan champlonship over | the Apawamis Maks Sinde then, however. | the Garden City veteran has been brushed | astde right and left Practically the only goifer wearing a double crown is Alec the Intercollegiaste Fencers association s willing that they should stay in This view is contrary ported as the sentiment of the colleges making up the association. Some persons e . t n of competing year after year against the fencers of the government institutions, be- | their college work and are therefore much more oroficient than tice fencing in their own time. army and navy men learned the art as & matter of & profession and mot Sport. This view has had rather cireulation. and several vears ago it reported that several of the collemes posed withdrawing from the league, o what hes been re- | have sald that they 4id not like the idea | cause these men have fencing &s part of | the men from the ordinary institutions, who learn and prac- In other worfls, the idea was that the more wide was pur- teav- with the people. Such elements ought to work for success in St Josesh as any- where else, and it is certainly to be hoped | Smith, the Wykagy! professional, who wo! the eastern title at Scaredale and supple- ing in it those members who were willing to compete against the army and the navy, thus forming two distinet organizations. It was sald at that time that pledges had n Leger is the man who scored third place in the 'imtercoliegiate quarter mile last 4 Paimer, who ran first and second. Both {he and Gamble cen travel the distance close to fifty seconds. and that is & per- formagee that is likely to do something quartet of freshmen quarter milers of last seasen is te be let loose on the intercol- legiate meet this Ume going W the Tace, with all the point win- Ders of last year back to face Black, Saw- yer, McKinney and Granger, who all can oo fast | Sonsack and Saxton wil | the middie distances this year. They were with the cross-country team this fall pre- paring for the spring trainiug and are Teporied as moving well now. The dis- tatce men, Tower, May and West, who !ul scored in the intercollegiate meet, will be joined by Hassvan, a fast freshman of |last year, and ihese four probably wil take care of | spring. He was preity weil up to Blumer | mext Tme, even though the Prineetoniun | { | : Dresher€Tailor fl — B Tt Tameain It ought to be niece |~ ———— Stars and Stripes mented this by gaining the Metropolitan “epen” over his home green. Smith proved somewhat of a disappointment in the ) tional “opem,” and he also falled to gather in much of the Californis goid during the Portola sertes of tournaments. | Then there wes Willie Anderson, the | four-times Natioral title holder, who after barely getting into the money at Engle- wood returned to St. Louls for a few weeks {and then went to Skokie and won the ‘We-m open with the phenemenal score of 3 for seventy-two holes, Anderson’s record mow embraces four Western tities, o say nothing of several Southern. It has been sald that the east is sadly kocking in promising young material and while this is true to & certain extent the @efect would Dot have been nearly. so apparent had that great amateur, Jerome D. Travers, been abie to do himself Jus- tice. The champion of 1907 and last year §ot & poor start on the other side in the spring. and since returning to these shores his induigence in the game has been of A desultory mature Anyhow, at no time Guring the past season has he shdwn his tiue form, consequently his name Mils to Some of those National league magnates &ppear as a tournament winner, making the haye queer n ns of ethies, anyway. {first time in five years that this ‘has At least two of them, it seems. went Into | him it will not be there when the plaver |psppened. the contest for the election of a league | himself comes over the ridge Most of | Eesides Gardner amateurs that stand preaident with Lut one object before them—{ these ball thefves work In pairs. One{cicee to the top are Charles Evans, Jr the getiing of desirable plavers for their | picking up the ball that is driven over | the westarn champion: Albert Seckel, the teame. The side that offered them the |the hill and throwing it to his confaderats intercollegiate title holder, and H. Chandier srautest inducements in this line got their {in the weeds. Upon being challenged the Egan There are many who believe that yotes. Preeminent justics! Could anything {boy who is loafing around where the ball (bad Egan not been taken Il he would bé Tairer or of seunder philosophy? What |went over immediately replies “Search }r.an beaten Gardener in the decisive match mafter the relative merits of the candi- | me” a process which is, of course, not|of the last National tournament. However. make vp the reiay team for the Peun | gemes in April, at which Michigan wuli| struggle to regain the laurels torn from | them the iast year by Pennsyivacia in the four mile race. Craig, Leger, Keck and| Gamble will make up the one mile reiay | team for Philadeiphia very likely. Onve lof the distance candidates is Andy Mo- statements and the league remained the | Laughlin, a grandson of Dr. Angeil, tae | same as it Always had been. The idea |emeritus president of the university, | that some persons had was that it wi In the pole vault Michigan &t length | be cowardiy to leave the leagus, and in|BAs & man Who amounis o someihing that way tacitly 1o edmit the Teat is Freeney, the former interschol quitting was that the army w-onu.-nonm;m«ulm; fencers were 100 good. As & mat! Grove High school of something around | year in and year out the government twelve fest. Freeney vauited eleven feet | dents bave been leaders in the six inches indoors last year when he was he greatest satisfaction of the a freshman He has been playing foot bal. this autumn in the backfield of the Michigan team and so will have to rest up & while before he begins competion in another sport It looks lke a good spot for Freeney, because the most powerful opponent be will have is Frank Neison, the Yale captain. With beth men i top form it will be an even thing. These two should be betier than the others who are vaulting. Michigan will have an indoor meet With the harder. If we stay in and improve, as :;:::um“ gy ‘;b: ':;uw:l:m we will have to do to make & showing |go g0 o jo0 b, Wolv againet them, eventually we will raise the |10 #1708 22 98 B8 BB The WONITES standard very high in the league and some time we may be able to best the govers- ment students consistently. “What difference does it make if they are taught to feuce as part of their school that Holland, If he ultimately plants his team in the old Missouri city, will meet A beer just suited to quaff at home —a night-cap for the sociable evening —a refreshing draught for the late supper—a delightful glass to sip under the evening lamp. Stars and Stripes is a foaming, sparkling beverage for the keen palate—for the connoisseur. Have a case deliversd fo your home. Willow Springs Brewing Co. Been given by several of the delegntes to | A convention still 10 be held that when the | in Stames (15) ven with each twé osen cases of largs reties 5 61°9% the city for.. in_Stamps (30) fren with each two cases of large Bottles, de- s livered in the dity for. 2'25 fallure some years ago and long period of infetivity —since ought to determine the fans for success. Taking the team away | froin Puebio cas be regarfied as of doubt- | make & ful wisdom only in ome aspect—will Den- wer turn out crowds emough to compensate for only one Colorado ity in the league? It depends somewhat on what Wichita @oes. Without Wichita at the Colorado threshold it woull be extremely dublous d 55[! 8 R H PEbEEE couid not be made to pay for the long western jump. Wichita, with Isbell at the helm, ought to enjoy a spurt of interest and zate receints mext semson. Had Joe Cantillon got hold of the Pueblo team and planted it In St Joe it might not have been a bad thing.for the league. For he is | eertalaly a besa pal' man. | nary educational institutions is teams have been good enough to be ond place Whatever the reasons for the soldiers and the sallors have been best of the lot right along. A man who is connected with the Col- 13 Office 118 Sounth i4: Bt Phome Doug. 1908 Er LONG GREEN IS SWEET NUSIC| That Boy Will Be Home At Christmas in a day or two. Why not have him here and have him measured for his 1910 college attire, during this PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE when he can get $30.00 Suitings and Overcoatings FIR $S20! Young men of his class desire garments of class—and he will tell you himself that there’s but ome tailoring establishment in Omaha that turns out garments with the true "collegiate atmosphere”—and THAT establishment is this one. MaCarthy-Wilson 304-306 South 16th St. that must de accepted for the promise of tefnporary reward. If this is base ball polities. the sconer base ball politics be Teformed the better for base bail 1, as mow seems certain, Chicago hae (8t the balls one by ome. sccured control of Philadeiphia in the Na- | Such of the stolen end tional league, which means syndieate base DAl it may be taken as the beginming o'l'*’""”’“! are 1m’nwnn wet the end of one of two Institutions—the Na- | offered for sale on the » WL Shon tional league &8 mow organized, or base |Price demanded being snywhere from 15| MULDOON PICKS MR. JOHNSON ball a5 & clean sport. Dne thing i certain—| (o 3 cents Almost every goifer who ndleste buse.ball and clean base ball| marks bis balls hes had the experience of 1uot exist together; they cannot be made | buying back his own property or eise © co-ordinate. It might be going too far | finding some other piayer using it. NEW YORK, Dec. M—Although rather this tme to dd that clean base ball! The balls which cannot be sold to plavers |ooriy 1o begin talking about the resuit of a5d Murphy camnot live together, but it on the }inks are easity disposed of to Wmen | ine fight that is scheduled to take place certainly is true that clean base ball would | who make s business of going round eol- on the Fourth of July between Jeffries be A whole lot safer if Murphy were out | lecting them from the boys who pick them land Johnson. the subject crops up in ©f the game. up. Some of these men make a reguiar|pugilistic circles every hour or so. “Bill round of the private clubs every week, Just think how happy and secure in his | usually after Sundays and holidavs when position President Heydler might nnllhr play has been heavy. They are very been all slong had he seen his way clear | good judges of the condition that balls are to make that decision in favor of Chicago | in, but will not pay more than §or 10 cents that day. On the other hand, think what | for them. A ball would have to be almost | Iie has fitted many & good man In his base ball will gain in the end whether |new for them to pay more. {8y tor the ring and bad muen to do wis Heyd@ler were deposed or mot. by having | The usual test is to squeeze the ball "'l‘”' last bare knuckle fight between Sulll #.man who s strong enough to ignore the | tween the thumb and forefinger of the|VaD and Kilrain at Richburg, Miss. nearly Mutphy threat and not make his decisions | left hand, using the right hand for ada:. |DiDeleen years ago. This was the last bare OR the merfts of the case. Base ball has | tional pressure. This i to discrover cracks | XPuckie fight, London prise ring rules, tn survived some awful flis and it will out- |and also to test the resiiency left after |iHis country. e Mgy lthe ball has been niayed with for any| IP Peakiag of Jeffries and Johnson, Mul- i R oty o A :;non:uu shighity In favor o€ Joknaon, 2ot Sand’ bile M2 always test them for s e would not like to see Jeffries win, e By vonsq R o when he expresses himself neither lm""n" ks oot up with ton | 764 Dor coler enters the argumeni—it is a3 & member of the oy, & question of man and man physique sold for oid rubber, and they are | L " N S0 ST, e AE »d W phocacr, e mst abil- 04 Wand Jres. oo Bat wprth Oxtng w0 for the seccnd hand|iy. e flx:.qw:ln to 3eftries is the Prize Pight Expert Thinks Jeff Can- net Come Back. Any Suit or Overcoat At just about this time your mind, no doubt, is unsettied as to what to get for Christmas. Our $80 to $85 Sults, for only— $20 would make a most sensible pres- } ent, not omly for Christmas, but for & long time to come. Herzog Tailoring Co., 219 N. 16th Street, — i Hoekey FPlayers Get Ten Dollars = Minute for Game. | NEW YORK. Dec. 18—The professional in every sport, whether it be base hall | hockey or what not, is always listening for | the same sound and he can deteet it far off. | collegiste Amaieur Athletic Association of |Je has trained his ears to catch the firsi| America meet will see a vastly improved |#ousd of the crumpling of the long green showing by Michigan in the contest for |To the persen who is content to gase on m.i the tam cbampionship. surface of things only and does mot care e < el to deive of the inner workings it undoubt- | work? By sticking to it we will attain ledly appears that base bali—the great na- 3:.' What matter the moral prineiple | only useless, but foolish. |Esan 1= the same great player. goester. | their beights, 1 am sure Then it will be | FIRSI-CLASS JOCKEYS SCARCE :i;ny pastime—is the most resumerative #ake? What matter of the atiack on| There are others who will pick Up & |in fact than during his reign as National| time to object to thelr remaining in, after S— {form of athietic competition. But this i the present administration is based on [new ball and put down an inferfor ball champion in 194 and 1806 we have beaten them for a number of |PToblem Next Wear Will Be to Get | py true | Slyister ambition and spite and projected | in its place, and the pleyer will not motice| The visit of Miss Dorothy Campbell | years I think though, that st this time | Good Omes. Thews 16 amather Dronsh of athisties by wmacrupulous men? All these comsider- | it untll he goes o tee up st the next hole | woman champion of Great Britain, re-|any objection to them om the part of the| NEW YORK, Dec. 15.—Jockeys for racing | Whieh is just beginning to elaim its own. alions must be lightly brushed aside for (Them again there are caddies who will sulted in the championship om this side | oiners in the league comes in bad part. | Wil be & question of imporiance next sea- |In the United States, that pays even greater take the new balls out of the players being won for the first time by & forelgn | It has been suggested that the inter-|Sof. &s it was last, there being but very |SUmS for its exports than does base ball bag. Women are almost invariably the |player. Had the North Berwick lassle 1ot | oiegiate winners should havs a Qual meet |few Wwho can be termed amywhers near | The season of hockey in the Dominion is| victime of this triek. When balls are|made the trip the title would have changed | uyy the winners of the army-navy bouts, |first class Unless the winter institutions |Of necessity mot nearly so long as that of taken from & man's bag they are re- hands anyway, as Miss Kate Harley. last|py; | fail to see how that would lmararo“—lln out some pew material there will be a |base bell but while it lasts the men de- placed with old balls, so |year's winner, falled to display her old- |, ey If the college teams are to meet |Scarcity of good riders. mand and get Amounts of mintage that| pinches the bag to wee i Ume form. Miss B. Adams Qid execeed-|iny orhers in bouts at all, there is every| Al present thers are about four worthy |Sound more like legendary dreams than| rgly well to win the eastern and thel, ..o why they should meet them in the |of mention, Powers. Butwell, Dugan and |truthful statements. | | Massachusetts tities. When it comes 10l,iercollegiate fencing maiches or ot at |AFchibaid. Comsidering that at least tweive| Ten doltars per minute for ome hockey | team matches it 1 worth mentioning thal|y) | gon't know if the mavy men wili|fist class riders are needed fn the esst to |Player would if one did not know the in- | the Metropolitan distriet forces wom the | .. 15 the idea of Lrying 10 persuade the | D-6ke good and consistent racing, the mum- |¥de, have to pe swallowed with more than | Griscom cup among the women and the | ,rmy men to quit s, but If they do, I shal |ber 1 too lmited. {one pineh of salt. But thie iso't the mere Leslie cup among the men. be sorry 1o see them go, because I thipk | There are about three others whe can he Profuction of someone’s fertile brain. A the quality of femeing In the intercollegiate |CAlled Accepiable. Burns, Musgrave and Siance in the qunals of the sport across the {league will suffer f these teams drop cut |Kederis, ibe lsiter being the winter fing !ine stamps it as suthentic and so down | {of 1~ e fay, and it may be be will tarn out .Ah‘eln:‘: ‘:1:::::5‘ u::u::-.n w c:ml':‘-:: et |fust class ey aft is winters ex- &Il ¢ -sirung iness over ” eves s, Mgty per.ence. B’:}:n: uu:o :\en :;—: |Jeff and Johnson are making such & fuss Graduate Manager Lape of Dartmouth|yiicie are very siim. is mot the result of eme big jump, but has jexpresses the opinion that the establish-| yrogoris is & rider who has elevaied him- |found its stepping stopes in other sports. | {ment of the freshman rule at Hanover bas | or from the coa! mines (o the seddle. He| Art Ross. who piaved with the Cobait | {been @ good thing as fer as (he effect on | y.y discovered &t Seattie last summer. team against Halleybury in a Hoekey game {foot ball is concerned. He says he resards | wyue racing was in progress he applied |last winter was paid $80 for the comiest. ::::m:u:m?.: ne treshmen from VAFSitY |gor o posigen'in a stable and was 5o guick | which lasted sixiy minutes, two haives of | knows t 29 |10 learn that he scom became prominent |ihirty minutes sach. Thie would make nis papulbangaricy ool o floma il L g lew to bemefiting #5." day, 0 it is claimed by these who ase) Furibermore. all the other members of | says Mr. Lane, “the past season shows Us | capable of Sudgire. {the two teams rereived big money for |that more freshmen than ever before re-| Aronibaid, who has been riding for three |playing in that game. The contest was| ceived the benefits of two months of Vig-|or four years, is at Juares, but was the |s'aged in Cobalt, the heart of the silver | jorous exercise, discipline and cOMching oD star rifer ai Oskiand before leaving for |mining district. and those miners are will- | the athletic field, distinctly & PIeasing re- | Mexico. He has ridden for the lasi two|ing to make a big layout in order to get | jouit of the working of the rule. AS 0 the |gcasons at Los Angeies and is & capable two good teams together, and then they scholarship, the records of the dean's office | jockey. He Is In about he same ciass as |wiger heavily om the outcome of the {will tell whether the men on the freshman Butwell and hardly as good as Dugan and match |#quad have fared bétter this year than the | Powers. He is not as tricky as Dugan, | Thousands of doilars change hands on ihe | treshmen who were last year members of riding fair and square races without resort- | results of ome of those games. gince it is {the varsity squad. {ing to artifices of the trade. He will be |one of the few big amusements which the | | “Without knowing the facts, T will wager | quite an scquisition to the renks im (he mimers have to divert their minds from | {that the few freshmen who might have |east next season If & coDirpct can be pro- |€oDSLEDt SAPPIng of the one from the earth |been prominent members of the varsity |cured on his services. | The average salary paid the professional Dave Herzog, Mgr. {squad this year if the freshman rule had I Musgrave i & middie class rider, but he |hockey player in the Dominion for sbout ! Hotel Loyal Bidg. ot been in force are in higher scholarship | will po doubt do Guty on the Canadiap cir-|nine weeks' piay is probabiy SL0M, but | standing than they would have been under |cuit, as be is engaged by Mr. Seagram, |there are several luminaries sl puck chas has & thing or two on the National electing its president for five least the president of the Western is up %0 as not to show i unless they are ueesed hard The chief fault with most fact that be has been out of training for & number of years, and, a¥ he puts I, “An |athiete cannot absent himself from the {ring for so long a period and then come | the |rule if the assumption is correet strain of the past varsity seasom, also, who rarely races in Ne |& distinet gain from the adoption of the | Saratoga meeting begins. York untd the It may be that ing who are compensated for their services in much larger checks. Some draw ‘as high {Pain and King will develop some ability |as $L000 for the season “From ihe standpolnt of the team of the | during deir experience ai Jacksomville. It is generaily conceded that the aver- or territorial orgamzation, and all indivi- dual glubs be relegathd to the list of the Rer- i s non-voting allied members, except such it undoubtedly could|Both are Nghtweights and & winter will (age babe ball piayer recelves s stipeod of | ) by oy are charter members. These are | mber he oo Golf club, Wheaton, IIL; "ln-kllll_iL,‘luvo made valuable use of several “m—.mmm 1lboul .00 & season for nearly | the Chicago ed an indolent life | bers of the freshmen team. The team of | Consideripg that there will be much bet- | months’ daily work, and when all this tme | Brooklt ‘(. 4 S . Bad & hewlthful a(-| next season on the other hand sbould beve- |ter horse Tacing around the local tracks (is taken into consideration it will be found | L 0P TN DO CUB. B Andrewts Goit | fit from the fact that the mew candidates next seasom, the jockey questions is & mo- |that the selaries paid hoekey players touch | © o SR FAEDeeatt b o W “lihoush thers is Hitie| will be trained atiletes. From the stand- |mentuous one, aa the fleids will be larger, & higher mark than those given the ball|. 5, o g :,A’;’“.,,':N..f:'."'f:fi‘ ages me3, | point 0f the coleges with whom we are and bad riders on £ood horses frequently | tossers. meeting by a vote of at least two-thirds of all the voles cast, proved ten days’ no- aad. | competing athletically, the result of the (upset ail form and destroy the chances of | — been 15 | adoption of the rule bas undoubtedly been|tleir mounts |GOLFERS PREPARE FAR AHEAD |, . .."\ccn given all secociate and ai- » — u Al L he PO year 2 LT led mesabers, stating the proposed revis- {mext year, more attention will be paid o Champlonship Events. s sy it It i urged that when the United States | the bome indusry by the mere infivenial| NEW YORK, Dec. 38 —Robert C. Watson. | Goir assoctation was formed, in 184, golf was practically unknown, end at that time 2nd for nearly ten years subsequently the national body, had 5o alternative but to Gepend on the more pretentious clubs for support as well as government Four years ago, however, when Rapsom . Thomas became ent, the game hdd grown to sueh an extent that he unof- " | fictally advocated that all clubs except | ehartered members be relegaied to alded | muanbe robidp. Also that all sectional, territorial and | composite organizations shouid be subeti- |tuted and become She backbone of the United States Golf association. It is sald that Mr. Thomas. supported by amendment to the constl- | My W. Fellowes Morgan, Sias H. Strawn of Chicago, Alex Britton of Washington, D. €. and Samuel Y. Heobner of Phila- overnment of | delphia, are the moving spirits i favor the sectional] of the change. of the other president. Fred Clacke baving signed a two- comtract with Piisburg. &t for Hans to come across as per usual #a¢ al rest all this speculation about years pennant. Your wise old Pa is loading wp on 8004 hardwood timber new while the fo-on the ground. That oid man i same wood chopper. Prestdent O'N Year's LF] 1 siy Egke il Win g H ; ing of the national body will be held here | on January #1 Applications so far for the various chasm- L1L HH] i 3 i §s ! it . i £ ' g ! I i : ! ] i Egr. i} Ei L 4 | : iy El B EEi e £ b H T . igt i ‘I i kg~ {4 g | # il i i ¥ fi ke z%!é *3 %Eg ) i i ig: Ept | §