The evening world. Newspaper, November 30, 1912, Page 7

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iRMY AND NAVY TEAMS CLASH BY ROBERT EDGREN. “Xi-American” football team of 1912.” In the first place, although it is customary to call the picked men of the great Eastern colleges the “All-Americans,” {t is obvi- | ously impossible to pick a real All-American team. Admitting that the Bastern college teams outclass those that play to ‘westward of the Atlantio coast, it is still e fact that the Western teams now and then develop phenomena! players who would be the star men of the year if they were connected with Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth, Yale or any of the great Hastern colleges. These star men, however, are scattered throughout the country. They never go through the test that is given every player on a big Atlantic coast team. It is impossible to tell what they would do if opposed by the Bighly trained and well coached Fasterners. A player might be a vaarvel in Denver and simply a good man at New Haven. Of cour: there's no doubt that an Eckersall would be an Eckersall anywhere, and @ Wolf Ransome or @ Chester Murphy would make good at Yale as well aa on the Pacific coast. Prom the jeading Fastern institutions @f football and learning it is ensy to Plek a team this’ year that wgid be supreme on any gridiron. Tho team I have selected would make a powerful combination in the game as it will be played next season—the open, kick¢ng, forward passing game. It te thoroughly up to date. ‘WHERE SMALLER COLLEGE STARS SHONE. Te would be possible to take either @e or Princeton's backefield in- and the selection would not be far G@erdéner, Harvard's quarter, fis team with remarkably good| Go 414 8. Baker of Princeton, whose individual play was perhaps perlor to Gardner's. Hobe Baker wa: one of the great halves of the season, and so was Waller. Hardwick was hard to beat as a ground gainer. De Witt of Princeton played throughout the season In splendid style, Wendell was a ground &ainer, although shadowed to some ex- tent by the great Brickley. In the quarterback position, however, some of the smaller colleges outshone their larger rivals, Bacon of Wesleyan I regard os the best quartsr of the year. With & small student body of @ couple 4 other ways, he managed to drive Wes- leyan’s football warriors through to Meenan Is Columbia’s Brickley: At the Game of Basketball —— to put nis ability to work, Tho first half ended with @ score of 20—8. In J , the second Poly started off with a rush, and Benson Play Great but they missed several good chances for field goals, and then dropped back Game in Defeating Brook- | again. Maine ‘and Segall did eome very f floor work The line-up was as follows: lyn Polytechnic Five. Brooke Poly. ust, Mame Im the initial game of the basketball © season Columbia defeated the Brooklyn they were no mate five, and they did not seem able to rm faa ll ne of | amir Wi ssid Yale. {within striking distance of thelr own! S \qgoal. Columbia showed heraelf :ar{ T. L ak \ahead in point of development st ihis| om Lyn ure age than mie was at this time tast ar, and judging from appearances last ht the fifth successive champtonship 1o Be Re-Elected 1d be brought ome to Morningside. feenun started the scoring, breaking} Thomas J. Tynch te prac caging the ball |Sured of re-election an Pre: This 10 pound | Nat League when cally aa- lent of the nates h ynal a yn under the bay we head snowed remarkable speed. Me| meet in this city the week after next fcored four Meld Koals, three of them | Before the Fogel trial it looked like a e direct result of his fast work in| sure thing he would be thrown out of bringing the ball down the field, and his/ office, but he s0 gamely stood his soment did not have a look in, compelled the disbar: son @ld some fine work In the sh trom organtzed baseball of the talkative line.’ Ite cage’ four field goals and h elphia baseball man that the from the foul line was excellent, t got anything left to do but} mg elaven ou! of fifteen chanves| cont him tn off, After winning The only weak spot on the Colum. | sich {mportant fight 1 oitld o he at centre. | hora; ot ehody In sition put up & very | Charl he Dodgers yy and not until the| secretly R, W , Veoder, the Louisvill 1 , captain of Princeton. was placed against | good authority that he has given vp the Dim wax the Columbia plyot heard from. |idea of presenting bis uame at the © {2 @ place for Coach Marry Wisber ‘yom, reenact mae At n “1B Square Garden on Dec. 9 wenty | ne Ze THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, HIS ALL-AMERICAN ELEVEN OF 1912 WOULD BE SUPREME ON ANY GRIDIRON |) With the Country’s Greatest Punter and Drop-Kicker and Players Who Were Strongest in Their Positions, This Season’s All-Star Team Would Be Invincible. maay victories. ® dashing runner and fine drop kicker and punter. Bacon during the seven of the sixteen touchdowns made by Wesleyan. & eeventy-yard ing @ punt in scored all of 1890, DE WITT AS OF The fullback earned by De Ie @ great lin he was De Witt used Grove the ball twieting spiral Many will thi entitled tion hi Wendell w during thi against Trinity's 0. field goal in the game against Yale, making the first Wesleyan score since first clams punter. overworked and stale, he recovered in time to give Yale a taste of his quality. Yale, kicked high to this position. Wendell ts captain of the team that won the championship. But this selec- to do only with Nndlvidual play, out of the game often jason, and never really of hundred or so from which to get|struck the atride he carried through material for a team, handicapped in| the season of 1911. Brickley couldn't be seperated from one of the balfback positions with @ A He te a great general, —"" Player. Bomelisler Storer Pennock Ketcham Shenk Englehorn Felton Bacon Brickley Thorpe De Witt Yale Yale blast of dynamite. this year. His dropkicking of goals is equalled only by his ability in running | with the ball. He 1s two great players in one. It would be worth Harvard's while to have him on the team if he kicking; if he couldn't kick the ball over an ant hill he'd hold his position through his ground gaining ability. Brickley ts an fron man. He never loses speed or atrength or nerve, even when the whole opposing team is bent on nailing him down in every play. THORPE PUSHES BAKER OUT OF LIMELIGHT. It {s unfortunate for Hobe Baker of Princeton that Jim Thorpe, the Carlisle season, weored One of these was on run made after catch- the Trinity game He the 14 points rolled up Bacon kicked a AGAINST WENDELL HARVARD. Position has been well Witt of Princeton, who played all through the season. De Witt ie bucker as well as & In the Harvard game but While Flynn of against the wind, intelligence and always low and hard, with « 1 that carried it wei against the wind and diagonally across the field and made it hard to handle. ink Wendell of Harvard Of cour: Indian player, is @ halfback. But for Thorpe, Baker would “shine next to Brickley, He 1s an accurate field goal kicker himself, and no man that ever Played football wes ever surer in catching and trickier in running back punte. Baker was the only man of the ason who could pick Felton’s twists out of the sky without dropping the ball. But in spite of all this Jim Thorpe! must be the other half. Thorpe is the most wonderful athlete in the world. Brickley 1s @ good jumper, but Thorpe 1s @ marvellous all around man. And through the past season he has man- aged to concentrate ail of his energy on football. Ho has been the back- bone of the Indian team. In one game he licked six field goals, His kicking is equal to Brickley's, and as @ runner with the ball he ts certainly every whit as good. In saying that Brickley is the greatest star of the college gridiron 1 don't to place him above Thorpe. @s an educational in- stitution, rr rnet exactly in the college class. FELTON BEST PUNTER OF THE SEASON. Now for the line. Jirat there Is Bomeisler, last year's All-American end. Bomeisier has been unfortuna| this year, having lost many chance to play through injuries to ehoulder and ki But he played half the game against Princeton, During that half a game he was everywhere, fastost of i rider of Polytechnic Institute on the home court Dy a score of 37—16, Although P aastee 1h the made the game occasionally tnieresting, with some clever blocking and pai nk fn 1285... | ceamed up wi for the Colum: rion,” Untveralty” ol “Petianiraniae eres jot Jersey Cl testant In seve! Walthour sen’ ement Boi blond-hnired team | year wonde race, ago. four day has never The foo | shaft 5s SPORTS Walthour Sends in His Entry for Six-Day Bike Race and Will Be Teamed With Cameron. rider wered 1,42 miles 1 on the mileage pric Mn ‘coiahing Mase’ “iG soe OBBY WALTHOUR, the famous and popular long-' stance bicycle Atlanta, Ga, wil be @ six-day race in Madison He will be th George M,. Cameron who has been @ con- ‘al of these long grind in his entry to the man- and as Cam- a partner bien, The litt rode the first thirte:n | in vat a partne: ite| the rix days ant! of ck two years as partner, d up to-day for the race. They are John Bedell of Lynbrook, 1. 1, and Worthingion Mit ten of Davenport, Ia., and Grassy Ryaa, yt Newark, and Lioya Thomas, of Cal:- 1¢ for the high school chai 4, Fork Leimean | Manu ylayed ODDS AND ENDS, NEWSY PARAGRAPHS AND ALL boy OF GOSSIP action, has worked wondens with, she team, a elinirets sre now amore. on over ff they wil win out, Harvard deteaiod Yale b7 6% to 4% te te on | cual team mau on. whieh wan plavet ven “Bare, Arps maw gave the ey? ‘of both rr tk eroolla fate, tonrha Peneron attic tng the ‘gheeatuve victory eco eerie of annual "eum a hara-Ville Nove 1 font id wil end th aston 4 Son tig ty tet en seven Broux ‘The Villa Nova squad bad» Jong sot Th tam won, i Twanians have a @ fiat set of plunging halfbacks constantly to old-time football throughout ‘the eeason, —— | which closed on Nov. 7 and, other than sen fegming, he Rrorgect reenm ofl the Juarez Handicap, are yet to be run, sit doar tant . sera will DIKE out more quantity And: Guallt Chifago. Is, tym sald tne. st j|than has ever bean reen here, and it Js Wainednune, tirtoeathe oneal hot stretching a point to eay that it ts |tletd meet ot the conference It'w ll be held under doubtful 1f ever @ winter tacetrack tim fio aldplets of the Univenity of Chia oo dite y gin.ilar array of entries In such ovents Gengeraiey mad wit ha held fh = 01th ‘he cross-country run we: Shia Bate Universtine but the date will sos ‘be eunounced until Tater,” see collegiate basket afiite for the oh were aapiatded nd by th | yer Havers wh ‘fy tet the Naaket by | fehind were the pointe cn which the disvuaalon Bloged revent ~, one #0 tild 0 owen. Morgin fats” as treamarers As Morgan hae aetyent Io Goll in “one capacity oF cther for the ta unig atone. time 0 Golt Amoctation. ne b congequanciy Perey. at ‘bowivcied ‘ior Viewarer” v0 Me couldn't run a yard, simply for his! NEWS: OF ALL BRANCHES THE SEASON’S GRIDIRON STARS 1912's All-American Eleven College, Harvard Harvard Pripeeton Dartmouth Harvard Wealeyan Ho ts by far the!ends, sure and sudden in tackling greatest star of the college gridiron | always at | Baker’ the game against | fough| third hard down kick And when one’ insta! or that Eni | prevei ~a | ‘Thur: over ine with a have eld | turnsti beat teruainment . olf, which won the Latonia C His injured shoulder was incased in @ finally reeled to the sidelines it was ais covered that he had been playing with @ broken arm as well. #0 good that he entirely outshone all of the other ends. was always danger that Brickley might of kicking Felton kicks with his “silces”* twirling motion that causes it through the air end first with a slight spiral motion. ke a snake, STORER SCORE AGAINST YALE WAS HER DESTRUCTION. the season as consistently as any: other member of the splendid Harvard axgre- gation. Some glory should be given to the man who crossed Yale's goal line for Harvard for the frat time in eleven years! fumbied Storer shot out of the bunch ike an arrow, “| Gossip | Sport From the Mexico JUAREZ, Mexico, Nov. 9.—AN doubt emarding the ultimate success of the v NOVEMBER By, Tera,’ OF SP ORT ELE OE F. Position. Right End Right Tackle Right Guard Centre Left Guard Left Tackle Left End Quarterback Right Halfback Left Halfback Fullback Une. war the team. jo line, right spot. He was Hobo emesis while he lasted. in| Die Flynn, the ¥ Harvard Bometsler |¢ver Flynn tried t where within met with @ cri tened him on th gain of an inc! it Mke a hero through the fir and nearly all of the last period. leather harness, but when he His work was in thelr own ground, where there| ing backs. tne Yale gam down to the Yi when Harvard had the bail. of Felton's peculiar knack Harvard had that ball often ould have had it. left foot. He it a awift to KO beci eo the other side the ba! wiving Tt tsa kick that te hard | Dearcat, to Judge, as both Princeton and Yale | Goubl ae | to players learned, And when tt drops into| {,ethenthal was en hands it is twisting and writhing In the Yale game Yale's the Tiger cent: “Bluey.” And fi serves place ag an All-Amert-| games he outcli on the atrength of that play! tres so f though he played all through) 0 a remarkably fast he held a roving Storer did that. When Wheeler his own ends. If thin Mt! could His quick thinking and nt action gave mim the advant. others who might rolling ball. lehorn of Dartmouth i» the “other have touches form another Give it m battle on He was satride 7 mom famor of pga ater route, that da tn 208, Border Line, nt meeting hero was dseipate sday when it was recorded tha 8,000 people passed through th This was far and away th showing ever e wal Tegan at Go!) tA mumber ¢ Itizons of J ° re Stovall wi Un NeXt season terms with Pr sie pled @ half. dusen Bresos ning the races iu the stand but It wasn't with for him Stoval eatel he can do he did las muc Mawthore ra ee ee ‘Gasket. Lsuemis and *We “ar. Dy ue Bio and Woe famous cider ta Pina oa something with tt. whether Louls mage ng him leader, but the 1s confident the team in charge from the outs BOMEISLER RE. tackle. He te @ stx-footer, weighs 20 pounds stripped, yet is very frat. Nelther Harvard nor Princeton could @ain through his side of the line. His own team used him as a battering ram through every «ame. Glass at tearing holes in the opposing Hig wonderful by Dartmouth, Englehorn being elected captain of next year’s team. was one of the few great tackles of If he played beside Shenk, my eelection for left guard, hie weight and strength would ald in making that side of the All-American line an im- penetrable wali. His range of play was remarkable, He often got down the id on punts, roving from alde line to work HOW 8HENK AND PENNOCK EARNED THEIR PLACES, Shenk was one of the mont aggressive men on the aggressive Tiger eleven. It was he who took all the fight out of fullback. t through any- of Shenk he was ing attack that flat ground without thi Although only 175 pounds, Shenk punched holes in the Yale line whenever he pleased, often outplaying his own ends in get- ting down the field on punts. Pennock of Harvard outplayed every Man opposed to him q@uring the season, ont line, He all Yal the Juarez Starts Winter Racing With Reco Record Entry for te Stakes fos, hs ny Graveliing “ibe dent un, the the Idea simply club hat if He wae an Ea Ketcham big_man, performing the ordinary duties of a centre he plays all over the field, as if commission, breaks through continually and down the fleld under punts, outplaying ark cht } was re- weighing When-|* He wag behind Storer when the latter recovered the fatal fumble ta | and he followed @torer | they team. ot arm the has a slight advantage over outplayed ea Besides gota ‘bunch of football etary trained and coached together for a week it would be tmpossib! to leven strong enough to eridiroa, Sop rt nay 3 te ihe: diatence STOVALL TO MANAGE BROWNS NEXT SEASON. ! the Browns just come Med: tried hard to ex-Car- dinal manager, to sign with his team, of mak- to h aeagon When he had to bring tt out of chaos a the result of Bobby Wallace's futile efforts to do He} Felton of Harvard, my selection for left end, ts of a different ty Ho ta 487 pounds, and all bone & first class all around end, although helped. Not @ flashy not Bomeisler’s equal in some ways. | player, ad @ quiet knack of being Ke! But as a punter he ts in a class by|in the right place at the right time and himself. He ts the greatest punter of|doing things when ho got there. When the year. Felton was as brilliant in| Harvard needed a gain badiy: it was every gamo as Brickley. His punting | Usually Pennock who was called upon kept Harvard's opponents worrying} to open up a hole for Harvard’s plung- . Great a backs caught and held juat three of Rogag Felton’s punts. The others either| 2! jam 19 greater, it [bounded out of the catcher’s hands or| /#n't 4 Point of ability. In agmressive- dropped through them to the ground nes, speed and headwork there is Iit- It was one of those punts that twlated | Me to choose between them. away from Wheeler's grasp and was|. Ketcham takes the position merely snapped up by Storer, who ran for a| Docause he is a bigker and rangte: pakke rey man, By length of leg and reach of; other | ed the opposing cen. that not one of them can| hin wupertority. in| | when the pews was flashed from the coast that he had Jost to Willte Ritchie on @ double foul, In all the history of the ring no champion wae so unpopuler as Wel- fast. He ts a type that belongs in the background of sport rather than before the epotlignt, only showed @ woful lack of tactical abil barred by the decent rules of the ring, on him twice, Ritohie alipped tt over on nothing in a ring but a champion called in the East w: Well, while I would like to see that one—a clean knockout for Ritohie—the way, te satisfactory tm that tt pute the fellow om the shelf. ‘Mo honest club manager should ever T WOULD HAVE BEEN more Ifke & square deal if the managers of the Leach Cross-Battling Nelson bout Thankagiving rnoon allowed th Dane to carry his crutches into the fi The #0 called contest was atrociously one aided am? withal pathetic. Nelson's long gray whiskers continually tangied ‘his feet, and the wheeses of the years sourhed’ sadly and raucously from hie throat as he tottered through the mo- tions that were incidental to his plan of atti ck and defense. Cross whanxed him, nmed him, banged him and walloped ‘him all around the ring in almost round. He hooked the aged with victous lefts and rights to the butt of each and uppercut him eo often that Bat's head kept wabbling back and forth for all the world like one of thowe folemn donkeys you see in candy stores around Xmas time. Crosa landed on the Dane's Jaws and the tip of his chin more than seventeen thousand alx hun- dred and twenty-seven times—as I counted—and he never dropped him once. Put lo and behold ye the archaio Dane, although affected by spissitude, would let the dentist biff, be t away with both mitts untt) worn, ited, disguated | can 4 chagrined he sone jase up, when ddeniy Bat would send tn a right ewing on Cross’s slats that would make him back away with alacrity. Never did I nee such a look of anger and mortifi- cation on the pulohritudinous mug of Teachte ae it wore when Bat cackied « feeble speech of thanks to the audience er staying up the ten rounds pre- a Vhed by Inw, and never was a more generous cheer given to @ defeated box fighter. SSEMBLYMAN AT. @MITH, the wit of the Lesistature, wae strolling along Park Row smiling grimly when he bumped into Yours Truly, “Whither bound?” quoth I, “I want to take in that Akter-mantae investigation that te trying to get some- thing on the cops,” said Al, “Say, it formers to date are a bunch of Jatibinis get ‘em out of hock. It looks to me as late and 1s being worked in the present case is to put all the police the convicts and crooks whe are What?" And Al blew efong on bis biithesome route. of all the Nassau County com- + oe rept whisker of Hen Coffin. tragedy in it for which The KETCHAM WAS A REAL 6EN- Frater ‘World pleads guilty to its un- SATION. Ketoham of Yale, centre, was one ef the sensations of the football year—a Last year there was some Ketcham or entitled to recognition merican Yale-Princeton game you herewith a pho- tograph of Hen Coffin of Vigilant and Ladder Company of Great Neck St. tion, This {8 y 1 how ne looked but two short weeks ago, But when your artist, Mr. Long, !ltustrated an article which told of Hen Coffin's Paul Revere-Iike dash across Great WURRA WURRA: Will you please give me « description of what constitutes a gentleman? 1 seo you hand out hatfuls of common sense every Saturday, and I'é like to get a sensible (dea of what your opt uplift, For the tan’ sakes, man, don't the But come to think of it I suppose one dard for the natives to describe one. The beat rescription of a @entle: Philovophio old friend Tom Dufty of Thone-le-Gee when I was a barefooted gossoon running down hares on the sloping sides of Croagh Patrick, Tom wae a Great genius, poor man, and tt Is too bad intirely that he went to his untimely doom in the thraich'rous wathers of thi made out of turf, But in hia days he useful information. This is what he sal 4 GEBNTLEMAN—A man that's clean inside and out; who neither looks Bp to the rich sor dowm to the poor; who cam lose without squealing and ‘Who can win without bragging; who fe considerate of women, children and 014 people; who te too brave to lie, too generous to cheat, and who takes his ahare of the world and lets other people have theirs, And d@'yo know, Mr. Flatbush, that sive you, rest. But really tt applies to all Mayo DPAR WURRA WURRA: Get out your harp and minstrel for the @lory which has come to Gus Klots of No, 14 Meserole street, Green- point. He won the pole and reel offered by Adam Btahle of Can: for the first codfish of the season brought In to Stank pier on @ fishing boat, It welwhed elx pounds, the cod did, It takes @ Dutchman to win @ pirize with @ baby fish that ought to have been clinging to its mother's flipper instead of roaming after kidnapping Mr. Klota’s bait, Those Canarsie fishermen have no #hame. Incidentally that pole and reel have been hanging up in Stahle's place awaiting the appearance of @ cod for @ month, None came until Klots ehowed up with his Incubator baby cod, But I had heard lots of fs! men boast that they had caught lots of cod, Were these fellows just hare L. D, You can't put me in badly with the Mr. L. D. I wouldn't say 8, but most every fisn> sa nut. Ashermen, LOUIS STOLZENHOPFER ~ Omara McKayham wasn't Irish, Me came 3 the mearing. His trans ae Vitegerald, was trom my place tt v haven't time to look up the population kK. KELLY, Paterson, N x cities, Isn't there an almanac ore schovlhouse in Paterson? ALL-AMERICAN is not usually found im a game boxer. And so it wee not muet He managed to “run out” every time he was mat: husky, classy chap tn he division. When he did box some & cold and clammy affair, HERE'S A Waftl, IN THE hearts muters, for, alas, no more ‘shall ze with rapturous delight on the I'm wondering 1f Tom Duffy had me in — well, I'll let you guess the VEN PICKED i ched meal lity put resorted to everrthing that ‘Knockout’ Brown almost put the him, but the reverential experts it @ fluke, And Ritchie's reception HI reverse of Thankegiving Dey Fesult, thoush. accomplished in matoh up @ foul bezen. i i I didn't want to go to see the of Bat as a pot bol for Cross, but ike that Tew ie personification of the gamest fighter r ever witnessed. I can under stand better than ever before how, in prime, he waa able to “take more” begorra, he can take it now, had Croer worried and tired at the He had Cross ail but out im the round. HEN, TOO, IF I HADN'T there 1°4 have missed a brilliant gem from Announcer Joe Hum- phreys, the shiny pated Apollo, who has only one tooth but carries two gold toothpicks. Joe was mellifiuously an- nouncing « series of coming bouts, Net had dragged. weertly along. Diugged away. “Next Monday ev in Yonkers"— “Where's that?’ asked @ fresh ehep fn the balcony. ‘It's a foreign port.” snapped “but I'N give you a letter to the Amert- can Consul there.” That was @ crool blow et Joe. But if there ts a Consul up {t must be Jack Skelly, a scout, one of the famous “Thre: ing Jacks," meaning John L. ik McAuliffe and Jack gave the sporting world sueh treat in New Orleans twenty Jack's latchstring hangs out bloods who go his way, amd there's nothing better on sale nie maa with the white apron “shes ou! ? its F by? t shine plece of bunk. ‘The star pers who would swear to anything that would if the policy that has become popular of testifying againet them police Neck Hills to lead the fire fight- ere over the divide, he fell far short of thie luxury, He made @ Joke of those whiskers, Mr. Coffin wee bashed and grieved. He cut them off, They were the growth of years, Hen had gone about his work of sign painting all over the county, with those whiskers inapir- ing him with as high ideals as ever moved a Bernard Shaw or a George ot that B. McAneny. But becaus Vbelous — sketoh World, they ha forever! Those Place can never sift the winds woftly and with such plaintive mel- ody as those which are gone, Why, oh, why, aid you let Mr. Long do it? W. VAN N. P. §.-Hen had to go all the way te Long Ialand City to get them cut. No Nasaau County barber would lend his shears, his razore or his lather cup to such sacrileg ae inion i# on thig matter, Yours for the MILPON C. BUXTON, No. 48 Walminster road, Flatbush, Fiatbushers know what {s a gentleman? rarely goes out in that direction, ee it's man I have seen was written by my 1 } @ Lakes o° Coolfin in a boat that he hed contributed much to the world’s store of. 4 on the subject of which you writer for: better than that description can I ARK TO A TALE OF WOE that Must find a pesponsive echo tn every flat dwellers heart: WURRA WURRA: T eo that there ts a lot of fuss and sympathy for the man who re- to pay the rent because his ‘ae not furnished with heat, iat do you think of this: In our flat the paper ts coming off the walle, the lavatory 1s constantly flooded and the sash ropes are in the window casements. ¥ nights we must fo to bed ‘with an umbrella to keep the rain off, ‘The Tenement House Inspec: tors have given the landlord six months to clean his tank on the roof and six months to clean out his hot water boiler, We never get enougl: Th water or heat dumbwaiter runs only to the third floor, We live on the fourth, We pay #6 a ‘3 your verdict? NATHANIEL FREYER, that landlord before Goff, Na- THE MIDWAY SOCIAL CLUB will sive @ benefit in Turn Hall, Lexington avenue and Eighty-fifth street, next Friday night in ald of Charley Pronger. This ts an event which fs held annually | since Chat¥@ became totally blind and was deprived of the opportynity. of earning a livelihood. All the sports im Yorkville~and ‘!t t# bursting full. of.’ ‘em—should be on the job to give Ol, Pal Charley a bit of easy change... a etme tte /

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