The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 27, 1923, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MONDAY, AU 5 3 PAGE 13 ¢ Onside Kick Eliminated From 1923 Football Code :: reat never-failing harbinger of the football season, been pruned down by the rules committee, but now changed ‘ ale guccesded in an on-side it, but Te F bit b nd fell N Rule VV, section 2 ting to a kick-off crossing Spaulding’s foorball guide, has app i, It comes it fire make tt chback the goal line and then going out of bounds, the usual, but, as always, is full of interesting : © spect or of the kicker’s We ‘ ut this play bef My . ney pop wep A bi Pept dlc eihyod ar | Mt information, including resume of last year s Welsh, her coact 4 Varnell was al body he st F t about, but ichdowt t been incorporated; subject, of legiate play in the differen or nplete intercollegiate schedules for this yea , . ‘ n and behind the ln nage has aches, officials and players is aloes? as fol anier K} pbhryee 4 Ase: Be ag 5 : amplified in pybooty fale, - - of the name rule, re But what makes the gu es in t 5 irpowe of this change deciding between @ 8 bate are some of the r rule ex P n't » has been very hard to plained in the guid lo wh started Immediately after the shift Rule IV, section 1, @ parag " ae t In rule 2 1 2, the place from which the pen- the stands was vide hback and nmittee last wir own Une rimm elven t his own side and then kicks it beyond the t. mage may not himself touch the ball, nor may other player of his side touch the ball, until it tou an opponent, The kicker himself, or any other player who was behind him when the ball was kieked, may however, recover a kicked ball which has not crossed the line of scrimmage.” for purpos only one of outstand pportance has be v ® penalty against ¢ ty ix inflicted spot of the down, while roughing lays the start of a game. The wording of wectior a forward passer inflicts the penalty from the spot of 4 been altered to make it « t after « the foul, and clipping gives the privilege to the offended This abolishes t i » Always a mystery to spectators and not 1 uently puszting to the of ficlals, who, unless warr orehand that the play ' catch, made at the expiration o fod the kic nide of electing whether the penalty Il be measured ay be tried—and somethin en then in the light y, wa e 1 c lowed and also the € ‘ from the spot of the down or the foul. This latter ng shift of backfield men to get “on-side” before the Washington Btate play nshingt te w a touchdown. that ntil the bal e ! ‘ ree ange is important s kicked—are lable to mins the eligible men fornia winning b T t ka dashed acros " nd alse " ‘or-polnt ts all t There are a few other changes, but those are the ones om time to time the scope of the on-side kick has nd of that game might bh 1 for t L, an an alt ; si nade ju ire¢ of most importance Lee ae AA AAA RADA AARP ARAL mannan PARRA LAALALA AL AAA ARAN AAA a Strand Smashes Homer Toledo Kick Would Stop Fir ‘Napoleanic Leadership of McGraw Record and Jake Wins ate ) 4 Peer Carries Giants to Baseball Power BY HENRY L. FARRELL EW YORK, Aug —After the genius of leadership he has shown in the last three be true, even if it sounds a little unfair to his boys, to say that an win a pennant with any kind of a good ball club. vii w York Giants of 1922 were, in comparison to the other clubs in the National BY LEO H, LASSEN bof : : z , a fine ball club, but it is almost certain that they would not have won the pen- WO outstanding features were the big noises in the| (Gan he bring him down? Key, i , nant behind any manager other than McGraw. 5 t Lake series in the Utah cheese box last) ‘rnat would seem to be the . No other manager, with such a dilapidated pitching staff, could have urged the Gi- standing question of the coming} ants to the heights which they attained in the critical parts of the 1923 pennant race, Outside of the pitching department, which some tacticians consider the most import- out enough home runs during the week to break the cre If Dempeey atill packs the pt oy ) ant, the Giants have a great; —-———— >, - penta league record, set at 38 by Bunny Brief in 1916. Strand | that tala Willard low at ‘T« ‘ : > team. McGraw has said he now has 34 to his credit. the present fight is @ travesty a 5 5 figures it to be the smarest Gets Ball Club Next, and of more importance to Seattle fans, was the} The wnskilled * ¥ * f | sci Lake Slugger Now Has 34 Home Rune ve Hu{HAS DEMPSEY LOST WONDERFUL K. 0. PUNCH? Credit; Jacobs Adds Two Victories in Salt Lake ak BOB DORM AN 4 an ? se Series Wi a Lake, N, Y. Aug. 27 “4 John Me Dempsey ut Firp » ribbon , e New match between the world's champion First and foremost was the fact that Paul Strand pounded |r rere ne ican rival previous encounter fact that Elmer Jacobs, the Seattle ace and the league's to be wide leading pitcher, won two games for himself and ran his|nand might as well be tied behind string of victories up to 19} won a doubleheader from Sacramon for the season against only six defeats. With several weeks to go, Strand should hit several more homers and Jacobs should win quite a few ball games yet. Both of them are leading their fields by a wide mar- gin. attle making the long from Salt Lake to Seat tle, it's doubtful if the seri with Sacramento will open here until have the edge on the play with the Indians, as on five out of seven in the fornia capital after they had iit their first two * The Seattle outfit is always hard beat at home and with the club hitting and getting good pitching, they may gain some ground at the expense of the visitors. Seattle is a cinch to run into ome good hurling, and the battery men will be facing the best base running club in the league. RTLAND held second piace by « hair for a single day when they {to on Saturday, a fraction of a point being in their favor. And then they were tumbled back into third place Sunday wh they lost both ends of a doubleheader to the Solons. When Portland was in secc place for that day it was the first time since 14 that a Rose City Coast league p was that high in race this late in the seas As they have several w home and as they est club in th thelr home field, chance of | ng second place. nd about all ‘that Jimmy Middle for taking a sec ein the mor you're passing around praise don't overlook . the veteran righthander of the Sacramento outfit | Prough has been pitcht straight seasons in thin comp and |he’s Just effective today as ever, He jhas a world of # and a great ile full of pitch Nothing ever worries Prough. | That's why he's a bear in the inches. He tends to his knitting and manages to get by with a lot leas fret and worry than most of your good pitchers him for all the use to which he put it, and whose knockou joealed in his mig graphed plainly to an would be a sorry mark against the “Tiger of the But if the famed Dempsey punch has lost a Firpo bas a | chan uid seem to that some ening fr Dempsey fis Jack hit Tom with everything bi the w bucket. Without taking challenger |bons touch tt It Is true that Gibbons, at the end of the fight was hanging on; that another round wou ave probably ne down f final count | But for 15 rounds had taken all |that Dempsey had to give. And he still was on his feet David and Goliath. Pancho Villa, flyweight champion, ever handled. J. Roberts of Tampa, Fla. jand the best ball club he has On His Birthday Giants in In butiding up what no ¢ urn out to be at least pennant winner, McG to find everything but ers, and since the New b has more money to spe seems but fate that has reduced the team to such poverty in pitchin From the results of the 1921 23 nt races, it might at a great team can win w pitchers, but the res 1 only b tion, McGraw the figures st by no other manager AKING an outside chance that the Giants might be beaten in the resent chase for the National league | pennant, it is not out of order to look to the future and see McGraw |leading another race to the pennant au If the Giants had some young pitchers of promise for the next sea might not be too h dous to gueee that New York will eague na row. C league clubs promise to be much stronger next season, it would be logical to figure that a team good ch to win this year ought to bé Koo ugh next year Anta are not youths, but in way they’are a young ball club aamuch as McGraw has two, or not was presented with the Tampa franchise by his father on his 26th birthday. Tampa is in a Clase C league. JACK SAYS — HE WOULD BOX WILLS A ba DEMPSEY, writing to a Precarious Situation | Pat Moran’s Fighting Reds Are Back in Na- tional Race | IN y YORK, Aug. 27.—With a slim lead and a slumping team, friend in De says: “No|the New York Giants are in a pre- natter what you hear, or what they | carious condition. say, I am ready to. meet Harry lis three weeks after the Firpo Just Jet some responsible pro- moter make an offer and Kearns will sign articles as soon as he can get his fountain pen out of his pocket.” FOOTABALL STAR DISLIKES RULE College football star, is low and vo- |elferous tn his objection to the 1923} | football rule amendment making the | Jonside kick legal. McMillan ts taking the summer coaches’ course at Notre Dame under Coach Knute Rockne. ATLANTA CLUB Pat Morans fighting Reds, out of the race just a week or so ago, are back in again as strong as ever. The Cincinnati club has not yet broken a winning streak that jhas run to eight straight games jand it is just 2% games back of | the league leaders. With a great trip thru the East, in which they won 10 out of 15 games, the Pirates are one game | back of the Reds and 4% games be- |hind the Giants. “Bo” MoeMillan, the great Centre} Both the Pirates and the Reds are playing better baseball than the Giants, and {t is a credit to the sreat team of John McGraw that the world’s champions have been able to retain the lead with all their bad baseball. Only the stoutest of fighting hearts has enabled the Giants to |remain in front. Their defeat of the Cubs yesterday is typical of the BUILDS HOME | tart tnat is keeping them mov- ing. The Glants went into the lead in the last half of the ninth, need- ing three runs to win and Vie Aldridge was going like a million. Jimmy O'Connell hit a homer. € slipping veterans, d to n he has several ball players in| A $600,000 clubhouse ts to be con gue structed by the Atlanta Athletic Heinie Groh {s about thru, but|¢lub, The club ts sald to promote + d iets wh the ne comes for h to be|the biggest at c pris | The answer would seem to be that| Even a ot fe e Should t 5 the tate’ whien | he time comes for him to be|the biggest athletic enterprises in 2 : soma Father Time” {s beg to get in| 1 nd n 11 | oh sbable, Dempsey will be Gaut, Memphis, defender of the title, | Mra. Melvin Je Olympia; Mrs. S./ nis work on Dempsey, that the ter rn land on as ta | : son slapped one at Bamey Fri- teeing off in the qualifying round/L. Reinhardt, Dallas, Texas; Miss) tie punch that marked him as one et agai’ a re his speed and| “Md Use Fred Maguire at second, = h flat \« | WOMEN’S WESTERN LINKS fatn"n tic” ‘| prin a White’ Sulphur Springs, N,V preparatory a Ofdbons is no super-man Jack tle mia wit 5 Mir the trounds, |" mn geil tournament start-| clude: 5 30, Aug. ‘The women's) bracket of 32 lowest scores, tod ed@ at Exmoor today with Mrs. David Mra. Fred C. Letts, Jr., Ontw ated on the bench, McGraw can | Georgia. x t lack. |shift Frank Frisch over to third base | BRUTE There were ee ee training for the Firpo fight for sev The West has gone “crazy” over horseshoes, Even staid officials of state get a real kick out of tossing ’em, Here’a Charles C. Moore, Idaho's farmer governor, practicing for a tournament to be held at Nampa, Ida., September 18 and 19, to decide the championship of the Gem State and Ore- Two hundred women from every|Louise Duene Kalamasoo,| and if that ia the case many critica believe that third base | | America’s oldes ’ vay. qualify. Players who seemed as-|City, and Miss Madge Mi a star at the fast corner. Maguire erica’s oldest golf club will|the ball: away. McGraw sentisg | a major le hitte: ‘et nd, if h TEX RICKARD Ss * M l mob mse inter yet and, if he) course was opened in 1898. New York still has faith in the | wim Mee ire contrast the Pirates and the Reds “ ; é At NEW YORK, . 3t=N - | be ; AN FRANCISCO, Aug. 27— gars Tex Rickard: “If anybody BY TOM OLSEN | QARaToGA Ne ee hug: Sa (tHicago, Aug. 27—Invasion of|and the spark-plug of the Giants’ de. K, Aug. Negotia. killed off. It is just as likely nw one The Bta e at ack Dempzse ana to knock off his Aetna in| vill b y by 5 Sets Ot fie taeed hare LOmOETOW;| bat Uhak whe he Maye tnto the cing |¢;.0m0 12 The Star mille marathon | Jack Dems t Co ee eee ae eck aa |bo replaced, McGraw has, in Travis | POUt Will be renewed today by Tex|Yanks are just moving along, win | Lake Neptune club's water meet at Deena ee ett magne etre otactine | Bancroft ts tone too strong: phys:| Sty Sooording to: plang: there is little to worry them. ; ia | ‘, ie ; The carnival closes September 3. | wants to use some of Tex's money.|gaturday afternoon. Torney made| In front of n crowd of 3,000 spec The junior and senior track and|Jackson stepped in and did every auspices of San Francisco Bay! running around fighting the Homer | with George Godfr nd Jack] Illinois Athletic club will be held] George Kelly has many years class. He complained that his mt Fiint Hammer, national champton|thing should happen to him, Me sented had a fine chance to whip Dempsey, |tepented her triumph by finishing | °! Rather than take a chance of|Chicago several days, taking regular |4tural position despite the unfavorable weather,| a3 16 minutes, 44 seconds. t h | ‘coming water stars, Kenneth Cur-|4,y" reat and doctor up the cold. | The Boston A. A. squad, made up| “Ns have been acting in recent years, STARTS SCHOOL |for boys under 18 and finishing #e-| sparring partners at the Dempney |for Chicago today Bill Cunningham ts available tor day at the University of Callfornia.| 4 TLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 27.|Crystal club girl swimmer, had| heavyweights to get in the way of |New York Athletic club, Is expected | oy oe raion league club, |fielder of the club, oung player brows and keep her game in trip for! yy to have the right kind of a fight| Henry, who was in charge of the |tury course in 9.9 Saturday r of the club, is a young player BRONCO TITLE| LOCAL EAGLES may need replacement, as he has LOSES RACE | soutn American's staff. }to compete in all fairneas to the | Tegland, Salt Creek, Wyo, won the| The Senttlo Eagles defeated the| The pitching, however, will be the sprint swimming title from Helen| Who has examined both Dempsey|who had won a 50-yard senior | Yakima Canutt won the steer wrest-|that decided the Eagles’ state base-| 1s buying up every good, young pitch Hoth clubs played good ball thru. Eberie swam the distance in 293-6,| leas subject to the effects of hard|o¢ the meet was to bring togethar|and Bonnie McCarrool won the wom ated phi hetib ay cen {the giant leader he ought to find a | previous chance to show All other | cause his effor so far ve been title | Jevents, except the race in question|a so-yard senior ove os Di ‘ t jand the one for boys under the ue? wo ed ing ote Lag ig Seattle team with three doubles,| JOHNSON AND | jiamond Dus #ame conditions, were Class By or) eA, Winder third. Thine 26 %-6.| While Hickey, J, Cotter and Pies |STACY SHOWN CHICAGO) Ang. 27-—George| half of the ninth, Jack Bontley hit alto compete In thow. Rediand third. Time—-s8 eryone had a chance. That's what |othy Di third, Titmee40 4-6 claims the Mexican heavyweight Brooklyn ingrensed ite losing N what we hope we accomplished. No Hall third. No time taken, | next Sunday and Monday playfield Sunday afternoon, Mal on; an Stenmoe 18 the fastest swimmer in SAM AGNEW Wally Bohang threw the ball away in necond, No timo taken. ‘Cookies, Jon for three di A tint eon art first Sheedy, Fi 1 Del D suspension for three days and fining pe é Diving for boys—Kugene Corum first; AUTO OWNERS Sheedy, Fox and Del Due of $25 of Sam Agnew, Seal catcher, Joe Harris singled in the seventh The list of results follows: William Borrown second; John ‘Tando| lend Badearty Tw red the Ouks, He will be backstopping O-yard ¢ tor gitls under 16 (wood third, Time—1:10 GUARANTERD Work ‘0 hundred baseball outfits have in W 7 rege tiga . | niga y berg. He ran it out at his best, with Mrs. Eleanor E. Harwood, of | Virginia Pep, St. Louis; Mra. Louis! c¢ tho outstanding figures of rin re Der 8 k gtecn Firpo will be ap ie h ‘ts a fine second baseman OLDEST CLUB | altho it looked like a cinch out, and Olympia field Fordyce, You! wn, Ohio; Miss! history is going. him t t t sy mark for the clever boxing of |{"4 ® srea around player, But} TO CELEBRATE |" moving, so fast that he part of the West will attempt to| Mich.; Miss Myriam Burn: a re ooeate Pacha - is his posit and that he would be went to third when Friberg thi ipa. |cel@brate ita 25th birthday in No-|Jack Bentley as a pinch hitter and 2 ia nea icc ecient oa k D I t l haa all the makings of a second “Ed-| vember. The club is at St. An-|he knocked a homer, winning thé — Green La é€ empsey 18 A etes dle Collins” at gecond base, He isn't drews, N.Y, where a six-hole game. YACHTS IN ah dooan’t learn, the Giant's batting or was openediin) A808, | Annoyed by| Arriving |i seme Ser) CONARD AND [that oe oe ai IS TALKING | ig S H Cold for Meet Soe Gore il meet in elght games, and one | AVE BANCROFT, the smartest WHITE NEXT?!” J IN SOUTH THRU BONNET 81g OUCCeSS eavy Cola) OF WE COU Drentaty tx te cuioe wagee of the contenders Is very Ukeby to Y 37, re i tions for a Benny Leonard-Charley | to be the Reds as the Pirates. More than 80 yachts of various thinks Firpo is not a great] pack TORNEY, who placed Bothered with avy: wold Chicago by contenders for na-|fense, may not have more than an-|.i for & Belin J TORNEY, no plac 80 Joth A " a 4 r i” ghtweight championshi In the American lea; t classification will engage in a| fighter I am prepared io make a tional A. A. U. honors in track and| other good year, but when he has to oA rain g si pebpiggeti } im last week, won the beach to | | Rickard. The match will be staged |ning and losing. With all, tho, the second day of the first annual/ with Dempsey ho will be very close |ieact wim, a feature of the Green | While mont of those arriving were| Jackson, a youngster who is about) .t'tng Polo grounds late in Septem: pis Er great big teed “Gel Pacific Coast championship yacht-|to an even money shot.” vegas : ts eral days this week and he may not/ unattached “dark horses,’ the big|Teady for stardom right now is Pt ing regatta and aquatic carnival.| That's a gow! bet for whoever) ° 4 > te " eat sume work until rads | — — |the West Green Lake bathing beach | resum 2 ir long trips, planning to reach| cally, and when he was forced out hich tlt Be e ae | Thicago not later than Wednesday,|of his position this season by illness, the water 2 rae oo Dempsey will probably be a 2 to 1)+n distance, which is estimated atliators, including ma Cole ty | eee tot mar A eRe eay made @ regular summer event from|shot—maybe 10 to 4 three-fifths of a mile, in 13 minutes e now on, {s being held under the| a nth ago, before Firpo got tol oan a b if : Pe ; | women, Dempsey worked yesterday |ficid events under supervision of the|thing that was asked of him Yachting clubs. Practically every|gmithx and the Joe Downeys, thera|, Biancho Stenmoe, the winner of | 7) UNS tty Ot |nhureday and Friday and Monday,|*hend of him at first base, but if any club on the Pacific coast is repre-| were many persona who thought he| The Star mile marathon for women, h coe ee int the cola (in the Javelin throw, member of the|Graw can bring Jimmy O'Connell in The fete opened yesterday with! But now it’s hard to find one in| first in the women’s beach to beach | i an, Olympic, San Francisco, has been in| fom the outfield and play him at his a canvag parade along the marina,|ien who thinks he will. |swim, She mado tho distance in| i ‘3 = 2 | throwing himself clear off, Dempsey | Workouts on Btagg fleld, where the) Casey Stengel Is liable to be thru which continued to hold today. F . P AFTER The meet brought out several| Tre vsne, "in wanted to take moverai| kamen will be played. After this season, but the way veter HELEN WILLS IR O |rler of Mt, Baker, showed plenty |" Jack McAuliffe, Farmer Lodge and|for the most part of New England| Casey is likely to be around for sey. SPEEDINESS _ | citss ia winning’ tno so.yard dash | jac Renault are expected to join his| college and university atars, starts <A! mate years y outfield jobs that have to be 2KELEY de. olen ond in the beach to beach swin , and when the champlon| Loren Murchison, crack sprinter, |®"¥ outfield 4 benicetey, ave atten! OR CHAMP] i.n, tet teteh smi |hmy cay ant hen the carpion| Loran Murchison, cack. eprint 4 ang ett Wills, tennis queen, matriculates to: Altho Agnes Speidel, crack | resumes work he will have plenty of | e to be holding a regular job on any > it (i planned oO eo & ‘a da | snc by Wednesday morning. She has two immediate ambitions, | Advised by competent judges| Planned to enter the 60-yard dash | hig punches, | ) Pen ¥ i. i yee y : ven.{. Pep Young, the brilliant right knock her studies for a rank of high-|that their man needs to be spesded| for sirls, she was barred by Dad’ ee | Murchison stepped over the cen | and he should be good for five years Suzanne Lenglen, world champion. for Jack Dempsey, Luis Firpo’s han. | meet | TEGLAND WINS | at least. In left field, Irish Mousel = diers were making efforts today to| In explaining his reason for bar-| WwW |secure him fast Mehtweights arf|ring Miss Speldel, Henry says | slipped a lot and {s haying trouble AINWRIGHT welterweights as additions to the) “Agnes Speldel was not permitted| NEW YORK, Aug. Howard | CAPTURE TITLE | win his legs. CHICAGO, Aug. 27—Gertrude| Dr. John Rellly, medical examiner | other entrants, who had been as-|broricho riding champlonship at {6 Renton Englos in a great battle at|big worry for McGraw again, as it Eberle, New York, took the 60-yard| of the New York boxing commission, | sured that no swimmer, boy or girl, | rodeo, which closed here yesterday.| Renton Su . 5 to % In a gamo|has been for three.years. ‘The club Wainwright, New York, in an A.|4nd Firpo, said that tho latter has) event, would be permitted to com-| ling championship; Richard Merch+/ai championship. ling prospect in sight, and if the law A. U. mest here Sunday, Miss|% better heart than Dempsey and 14! eto againat them. Tho sole object|ant won the roping championship Jot averages ever starts working for ¢ out. The Seattle team finally got to| © “ h Sybil Bauer, Chicago, successfully | punching |boya and girls who had had no|an's broncho riding title |\Sim Highton, former W. 8. C. hurler, |COUPIe of good ones before long, be defended her 10-yard back stroke| |for tree runs in the fifth Inning. | i itie« Tom Sullivan led in hitting for the| a | novice events and entrants in the] fo-yard dash for boys under 14—-EAwin| ance also starred at tho plate 10 ove: © not allowed |Dumar firnt; 7. Strena second; Charle GODFREY SIGN | ‘fitise ara pinch niter in tne tant| first two ovente were not allowed|Dumar firm: 7, strana seconds Ovaries)" YC Se NINE BEATEN h Ko-yard dash for girls under 1¢—Nelll*l tho eighth, when the winners put| ‘The Three Brothers Dye work ‘ 4 homer with one on and gave the Ginnte iverd evel co and ev. N tacond; Dor | O ners’ Dye works Godfrey, one of Dempaey’s sparring ee ee ee over the Cubs very event wan a race and ev.) atiiward first; Norma Hall second; Dor-/iwe counters across that decided the|ball club took a thrilling 10-nning partners, and Clem John#on, who , nal wed side attoke for girle—Dorothy |contest. Seattle will play a two-gamo| game from the Stacy Shown tossers we started out to do, and that's ; : M % Ms ! first; Evelyin. Brisbane second; | series with the Wenatchee Kaglea|by a 7 to 6 score on Walla Walla title, will meet here tomorrow] to nine stealgnt when i. wall away with @ §-2 victory. clo " ade that elthe Jlanche night Jaim is made that either Blan sisae eo Wave cidaiin I'he aeons R, HH. &,|lory’s great fielding and Fox's ro f Cralge 4; Don-| goattie 15 ' |ilef pitching featured for the win- the dity or that she can awim faster tia Benttle Bagles ...+.... 6 18 | he ninth and let in the run that enabled 9 ald Ib 1 7 Ary P ¢ s. Bracken and O'Connor starr D p\" Tnalabe to eat the Yanks, 4 to 4, than Agnes Spoeldel. She simply| 60 © for xirla under 12—|Renton Hagles . Arm | 9 ner Bracken and O'Connor starred SUSPEN E irban ocker held the Athletics to} Immediately after the moet, prizes |" vornoime alving for. girle—Ruth Agee 1" BAN FRANCISCO, Avg. 27—Pros-|tnras little hits, and the Browns won| wore presented to the awimmers by | first; Miene Milward second; Blanche HESS BES ety ; and drove in the run that gave the f0-yard dash for poys under 18—Kon-| third |] Can Saye 815.00 to $50.00 on for carrying on a debate with Um-| jtea sox a S-4 victory over the White uPaLans ASSL Lah Je ateatitn: Bone: eaoh-to-banc m for boye—Jack | ‘ SAT ie | ed Box a vietory over the Wh urrier firet; Joo Newaum aecond;| Heach-to-beach mwim for b Re-Ground Cylinders q ne ya re : gon. Governor Pierce of the Beaver State has bi in- amull in the #eabAngel flutte Homers by Cobb and Heliman helped |aianche Atenmoe first; Neva Brownfield to-bench awim for girls—Blanohe EA t 0453 been Imported to the state of Yuca: ited to taste Gouaeoh: ArAGr Rah h een We again 9 Beal Ang utter ta mamers, by Cobb and. Halt Hae a 4 fests Neve Brawntis pipenatia tins fe Sie tants st- tan, ‘The villagers are keen about L ernor Moore, Rah, rah, rah, for the won the 50-yard dash." Kath » Lynch firat; Dorothy Davis! Pleasance and Evans; Highton and | fr tho losers, The score: ident McCarthy has announced the| their sixth atraight, 4 to 1. TOGA mad Aves dante: Stacy Shown pite Ward in Saturday's game with) Sox, on ‘Thompson th Time—48 4-6, | Torney first; Kenneth Currier second) Wednesday, ninge. (Open to girls who had not won| Nellie Milward third, Time—16 44, the game, “gus!”

Other pages from this issue: