The evening world. Newspaper, November 17, 1913, Page 10

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A, A. U. PRESIDIUNCY “Pe, , ATHLETICS PROFITABLE FAVOR NEW RULE WHO'S CALLING? + + ( Copyright, 193, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), wer, Sar BELIEVED. ——> Yale ‘Developing Plays i i Get, (TSA HERE THAT WEY AXEL, (66T A TOA.AU, SHOWN BY TREASURERS REPORT Kirby Wanis Rules Covering Events Where Amateur Competes With “Pro,” annual me tle was held at the Waid Union of the Untted States 1B of the Amateur | PELKY WAS GONNA FIGHT TCAD HA PRIVATE GYM “TO PROVE HE COULD LICK, HIM = THAT'S Scat (DEA i ‘MISTO GUMBO, Aus JES AWAIT «) GHEAT SCHEME. “To PROVE) Stat You CaM Liem od GuNBoaT SMITH! ‘ont rat) e : 4 HE CAN Luck You ~ So '™ GONNA HAVE YOU FIGHT Hitt IN PRIVATE. “to SHOW HIM HE CAN'T, see? MISTER TAM) \ ; Mahan, Brickley and Hardwick Are the Men Most Feared by the Coaches at New Haven— Prac. :¢ Resumed To-Day. (Spectal to The Evening World.) NEW NAV Conn,, Nov. 11.—Yale | To Stop Harvard’s Trio Of Plunging Halfbacks who would start the game there Satur- day between him and Brann, Carter played so well that he will unquestion- ably start against Harvara and may play through. If his work Is remask- able he will get many votes for cap . tain. With Pumpelly eliminated be cause of his many injuries, the tainey should lie between Knowles, the halfback, and Carter, the end, waless the team violuces the tradition and elects a Junior captain. There has not been a junior since Frank Hinkey'’s time. Corey came nearest to it, recelv- | ing many votes for captain of the team ’ ifieetshedltalds FO Yo To LEGGO */ OFTER | LEGCO Barted to-day gettin ie ad backfield, | wuleh font to Harvard in the fall of for ele A, © 3 . stop the wonderfu a 2 | 1908. Yale Displayed Unexpected fe n election of officers James ¥. 7 SWING IN ; THIS SWING YouLt which the Yale coaches and players 94 TOO MUCH HOLDING ANO OFF ‘ ailivan, Secretary-Treaaurer, rend hie da = mit {a the most wonderful fleld that has SIDE PLAY. ; Strength A t Tigers and ) IN Some. OTHER fine I} gainst Tigers J annual report. ‘The secretary's ntates MA VICINITY (f “ BE ‘4 { | oppored Yale in many years. | 1. | But the captaincy is not roreving . There is no questio . one Yale. The campus the Ment hie tha 7” tetlos en any one at Yale. e campi Elis Have Good Chance to id I that amateur athiet a — VICINITY ¢ * |The coaches and players realize that) caiad are telling of the wonderful work this country continued in a thriving 4 nena the team which smothered “Hobey" | of Wilson and Gurnsey and the others: Beat Harvard. condition At the end of the union * caker will have much harder work In| the way the team came bach after GO fincal year there were total dues of ‘i 3 stopping Mahan, Brickley and Hard-/ defeat by Colgate; the fact that ther # registrations wanes wik but one Yale fumble and eee dy Ceprraht. 1019. bs Tye Pree Punishing Co | HONS amounting to $i grand ‘There will be a peculiar pleasure to cate Peete ae apes Me oe (The New York World) j total reaching &, ptal re= the Yale team in stopping Mahan 1€) vit try among other things to elimi- ] HE Y Princeton gaine last B@t+ | celpts for the year amounted to $741.90 his is accomplished, for there 18 ®/ nate the tendency to off aide play end Urday changed all prospect® f0F| and the dishursements ) leaving: ere that Mahan planned for| holding, which cost Yale go many pen- story | i” an easy Harvard victory OV¢T| w Kain of $3,161.06. many years to come to Yale, but was] alties Saturday. They realize that Yaie Fale, Tt te evident now that Yale will stavus Town Kirby, president of the finally prevailed upon to go to Harvard, needs every inch of ground that can be @re Harvard a hard feht with at least! union, in hin widrow valled for renee A Yale coach to-day recalled the case | Miined at Cambridae | atnet the ‘attens @ poesibiity of winning able and uniform rules to govern all of Jim McCormick, the great Prince.) [iitir °f Fan Fale showed unsuspected strength iM} competitions in track and fleld, a close fhe Princeton game. Princeton's line, Wh had outplayed the Harvard line Understanding with the various play- Kround association rules to cover meete, aptain and an Jim McCormick ton fullback, who was all-American player. Only a light signal drill for the var- ity fs planned for this afternoon, out i to tome to Yale, but finally! to-morrow there will be a scrimmage in @ Week before, was unable to do MUCH] iy Which an at e Who was an ama-; Pent te Princeton and in his four) Which the Harvard formation will ve egainet Yale, In fact Y Je and Prince- tea with one who | ; * am which | thoroughly tried out so far as the Yak years never played on a team fem were #0 evenly matched In this esmional, having ! : fi being the} coaches can explain them, though the Gepa: b could gal his competit for mone het » Yale, his final year bd Yale coaches realize that Harvard haa tment that neither could gain Bese s oney or the heartbreaking game where Coy starred! 4 good many plays that they are keep- @Feund except throven punting and Mr. Kirby also urged in hin address and beat Princeton in the second half} ing quiet and waiting for the game at Me reeseaal end: run, Princeton's] oh cher that tne Amateur Union to 10 after Princeton had scored two| the stadium next week. . sth was shown in the fourth QUAF- | sould te ti ne to recognize nue touchdowns early in the gam Incidentally Harvard has not beat Gar when Baker nad tac! oJ Ainsworth | Ximerican “Federation oe ALL THE YALE PLAYERS IN | YT in the stadium since the stadium @@ the Tiger five :rd line, after the} Sports, and that the Amateur Athlete Vole halfback had cis: the remt of Be defense and headed down along the eBelines, With only five yards to @ the Yale men buried themneiver tri antly into Princeton's line, intend- te push straight over for a touch- ‘xt Union should seek to establiah asm ny national bodtes as possible to contro! one or more branches of sport Mr. Kirby further said that of all amateur sports boxing during the your had been the moat popular, | SCRIMMAGE TO-MORROW. ‘The work to-day will be Nght. The was built. This has been a year of shattering of football tradition, but Yale, which is the home of traditions, Players spent yesterday at Jennings !farm in Fairtteld and because of the | rain remained indoors the greater part |of the day, All of the players came will try to maintain this one at Sol- die Field. £ Qo | through the game tn fatrly good shape. C. A. Ebbets Jr. Gown. But three times Princeton's de- B SY YES, YEAH = THIS Slight wrenches will keep Pendleton Genee was a8 solid un a rock, absolute-| ayy wine iba UP in BosTON TonicHT — 1S THE HoserraL - and Carter from doing their best. in For Head of ty impenetrable. It was then that Yai w ynaford, 1 hot Detrott F “ am | the scrimmage to-morrow and may feted a hort forward pass, which was! : “HAM VS THe GoonER, & ep them out of the signal drill to- but not after to-morrow, Carter's playing at end was a source [of great satisfaction to the Yale play= ers, for there was some question as to |New Highlander Sure WHOS CALLING 2 ray elected captain of the Uni- versity of Michigan football eleven for 1914, Raysford has been playing lett end thie fall, Jeff Smith Wins Battle @ufled, and lomt her : the winning points. Yin showed superiority in covet ince to score | ki ai Newark Club The annual meeting of the etockhold- ers of the Newark Club, champions of the International League, wil! be held in Newark to-day and a lively session is sure to result, George L. Solomen, BH me Ky ing punts. Time and again four or five Yale men were waiting te leap upon the Tiger back as the ball G@ropped into his hands. They ed Indian Football Players 4 a8 a rule, before he could gi . ; 7 ’ esident of the club, is seel re- Paget “ng tee't| In Paris From Bernard, Ave Drilled to Fill Any | He'll Be One of Regulars i222 tutece 03 5 J game"vas aver ote ont enon —— [seeeamreaes of Mate, Ye, Oe teal] Position on the Eleven| pedi [ear ae, Scones, Gary sere 8s] ‘aovets tn, estes to We. poole American Middleweight Starts | iliwause, on Thanksgiving Day after- @etting away with the dail after makin; oon, LEN WARN ‘ @eatch. Law played a great game. His team famou: assist him in presenting the demands BR, the athletic coach who made the Carlisle football 48 long as Mr. Herrmann insists on attributes the success of the redskins to early outdoor Edward and Stephen MoKeever, whe Holden, an Outfielder From the G with Ebbets own the majority of the jhaving them that way, Punting was, steady” all through, {0 England to Meet Best in Eddie: Mecosrvi Bay. Bienen and life and the fact that every man at the Indian training school is South, Determined to Crash| ,,. — seen te club ere tm tense ot Newt MMUSE eras each fron. tains lounge: Baylor, the AieeHoan Montiel davaloned top all’ keodagl work While the Carlisle Indians were play-|!ng*young Ebbets selected as the club's Johnny Bull’s Country—Dailey, the “White Hope” Crusher. 84 loas of blood. A kick on the head @t the very beginning of the game| epened a big Kash that bled freely in : @ite of tape and bandages. ‘The playing of Wilson, Yale's big Quarterback, will give Harvard some! [Who are signed up for tights in Aus- | tralia, sail to-day from San Franc tes, | “At Carlisle,” says Warner, “they have only about 250 boys over seven- teen years old to choose the team from. Compare that with the big student ‘sat Dartmouth, Cornell, Harvard, Northwestern, Princeton, University of Kansas, University of Michigan, University of Pennsylvania and Yale. This speaks something for the preponderance of athletic ability in the Indian.” ing at the Polo Grounds Saturday there were many spectators who gave ex- ession to how sadly they missed Jim Thorpe. At that very moment Jim was in the middle of a row out on the coast. It was his two-bagger and consequent President. He has another vote in his favor from Henry Medicus, also of the Brooklyn club. Another important mat- ter to be settled at the meeting is the location of the training ground for the His Way Into Popularity in McUoorty is to engage in three battles, for which he Ix Kuaranteed $5,000, while New York. Bronson and Saylor will fight five con- tests each for the same amount. By John Pollock. run that caused the Sox team to jump|team next spring, as Harry Smith trouble. Wilson handied punts in splen- | 1 . Smith, the California hea Warner always puts all the available material on the field when practice By Bozeman Bulger. on Umpire Klem and threaten dire | w, (i! SMITH the American middle y tf i ante to train in Savannah, Ga, G4 fashion, being off like a rocket ever: ; : ommy Murphy. the local ix begins and the men are taught all the fundamentals. He plays no favorites nee things when the teams got on the boat, ps f ¥ weight, now in Paris, won a bat- OK | N case there is any doubt in th®} so fay on the trip th, eens ‘ time the ball dropped into hia hands. J tie on Saturday might, receiving | WewNt, and their manager, Jim. Bu Every man must go through the mill, and before he s finally selected for mind of the fang concerning the !nas hit close to .am, - "™® P80 EQY HUNTERS GATHER Usually he whirled out of the grip of fhe decision over Bernard, the French ae {i nh Francisco 01 a place on the team he is played in practically every position, That, eays Highlander outfield for next season pans Walting tackler and got away for ten, miadioweight, In a twenty-round boat thd OF Arthur Pelktron New Yeuug || Warner, 18 why tho Indians are so successful. The men can be changed | ye might be a good idea for the boys| Larry Motcan isn town again and FOR BIG OPENING HUNT, / Was Drought which was fought at Luna Park. Smith | afternoon, while Murphy will take on|{ @found to play in any position, Guyon and Calao, the stars of the back- | to lock over the following letter. The} says he will make New York his home owed remarkable received a guarantee of $2,000 for his Willie Ritchie, the lightwetght cham-|] fleld in the game against Dartmouth, played as tackles last year, | epistie comes direct from Outflelder| until the time for starting to Marlin] LAGRANGE, Ky., Nov, 11.—Wex > ould seoet in getting around or! ong gmith left Parls for Engiand,| pion, on Dec. 10. Smith fights. son W. P. Holden, who lives in Birming-|next spring. Larry has invented a kind | hunters from all over the United States throu, e ends. 4 Lani 1 in Boston to-night and Eddie 3 where he is signed up to meet some hotles | an | game that can be played in the parlor on @ board, and says that he 1s going to make some money out of it. {nam, Ala, Yale was much more aggressive than) and Canada took part in the opening im any of her recent games, The rough- Hagan at the Atlantic Garaen A. C, hunt of the Nationg! Association here Mi it Liver m Nov, good middleweight ai ool 01 marenal te Al bs Dear Sir; I have noticed some of the Local Rinks Too Small Sepa the papers nd sewer he L to-day, The all age stake, with forty He says he will keep in good conditi . indulged in >; — oe , rym: an pil seal sno ee 7 Dailey, the Cleveland heavy-| With the hope of signing up Packey MigiAsedt | Rasilcn, aad once LeRAGE Tn SRERYN| ihe. Rugaat EON Rca ute she dri into Hi a hi Lier to have , develo ee Y-! MaFarland for a ten-round hout with ers, Last fall you sald something about /nasium, and hopes to have the jump on|!"s August Belmont and a party trem ree ante Mecvard: 18 Just the weight, seems 10, Mave ,Gaveioned 8) emi rition in Milwaunes on cae fame way, from the start, all Harvard- | knockout Yale dope may be upset. At any rate, if Harvard wins it is not likely to be! the rest of the boys when reporting for punch, for he! put another spring work, “white hope” to sleep in a battle at the ‘ort Pitt A.C. of Pittsburg on Satur- ‘ew York were among those who par- ticipated in the hunt to-day. SPORT BRIEFS. Frank Mulkern, the that city, has wired M feht promoter of Warland an offer | my playing in which you suggested that oc ey d CAMS |r fans could put it in their hats for reference. Now, whoever desires to | For 7-Men of ® Kuarantes of $00 for his end Sndividual brilliancy, It is also con- hat: t don't care | Ia Oe score. es CUNO Re wae Pred smee4 | Mutkern figures that a bout between i HL. fended.that the crowding has led to the | how Featy aitven Che cannes trade to Dalley’® punches was Fred MeKay,| Mulkern sees, ne clben inci | 70ugh “chopping game ani a | the giant heavyweight of Canada, Mo-| these crack fighters will attract clo Majority of the Clubs in A. ping id that three I am going to be a regular and our 20,000, ee (manager need not worry about me and my part of the field, which is centre. oe on the forward line will eliminate! nis, Those who have been talking againat 1 of the N. Y¥. A. C, to become! in the fourth round that referee Frank fewing mentor at Yale she will have) Klaus stopped the bout. Are in Favor of Dropping the I’ Yale persuades rowing coach Gian-! Kay was in such a helpless condition rt Tom McCarey of Los Angeles, Cal., telegraphed Danny Morgs rot) From Lineup, {he @evaiture from old conditions have| They say I cannot run bases, 1 stole ’ ome of the most efficent coaches in the 4 2 E Jack Britton, to stage over le sald tha’ with the exception of ayine| something like fifty last season and H | also captured the point trophy in Clase Gountry. Giannini was a frat clans oars: | Je#4, and Badle McMahon wil reopen a twenty-round bout meen Hritton prcteeetenal Canadian teams feven-man| will get away with about that many New York University Eleven whilo in the ancond set W. 1 Beate : b the Olymple A. Co 0 - | and Hud Anderson, th fornia Light- a n 0- . Also T will drive in some pret i i was the winner, aH, eee. vente center, OF champlonehiPimwy ten-round bouts will be etaged. In| ond nu Anderson, the Gailfornia Ii ‘ minion, and New York oan ill afford to |Next Season Also T will drive Hasn’t Scored in a Single) 9% the winner. with W. HH, Loftua the Setting rene aa, Mat ae 8 Mhot | the frat Willle Schafer will tackle Dat-| Morgan wired bark) that If Mecarse| Indications point to @ big change in try to improve @ thoroughly Canadian |"Un® by hitting over 700, ne ORD i Se thine ey, Putting champion an! «i! around ath- ry Ry: main go of *, 2] the hockey situation of New York this t. 1 Now that’s my idea of @ ball player i ting Larry x NRO} would put the show back to Dec, 2)/ the hockey sport. It is also asserted by those op- tl it unoea ce: jame Is Season, Rain kept most of the mem! lete. His crews have won more national | “One Round Hogan ‘allfornia will) he would gladly accept tt, and would year, With Us season's skating a Week | posed to any change that three men on| Who has the right notion, more o! bers of rewing championships, during the Past} ewap punches with Frankie Hass of few years, than those of any ottier coach | Yorkville, who has been fighting In good » im America, Besides this, whch is of | form recently also let Hritton fleht the winner of tne | old, the followers of the sport are /eon- Cross-Rivers battle, centrating every effort on the executive ther than (he playing end of the game, the Walkers’ Club of America indoors yesterday. Six took a twenty-mile New York University will begin its last| Wl to Bergen Point, N. J., covering @ forward line will find the task too severe a trial in thirty-minute halves, especially In view of the fact that but Frank Chance’s former club had pos- esed that kind of a spirit there would not have been so many shifts toward | the distance from Edg N advantage in college sport no leas than] ee ine AA Phil Cross, who has been under the| Unless all sixne mixcarry, the five] little practice ix allowed the teams tolthe latter part of the season, Incident-| week of practice to-day after one of the| four hore and Ottase ike Pu Jo fa club sport, Mr. Giannini is a thorough | (i'd Willams of Baltimore, who « Wa} doctor's care for two weeks, 9 well | no. toame entered in the Face for the} condition themselves for hard hookey.| au, this letter tipped me off to the fact| most disastrous seasons In. the history! The clothes of the walkers were teo gentleman and sportsman, Yale would | OM his twenty round ge ete | again and Will don the gloves to-| x uateur Hockey League title will boast| As againat this argument the supporters the first time that Holden comes | o¢ football at University Heights. The| heavy after the morning downfall » Yale Campi, the champion hantamweight of | morrow night at the Atlantic Garden|? AW against the regular seven | of six-men teams maintain that the one | f° te ier eee bhi! thin] a8 & reault 5 ane have to go far to find another man as | aifornia, at the Pacific A. C. of Ver- A. C., where he will meet. Frankie | % als ms 1 ae aw Necessary improvement in local hockey | from the old home town, Oughtn't) Violet team has not scored a point this | Pastenney, Rosa a home aoed. - |mon, Cal., on Dec. 18, was matched to- | Madden, the rugged Howery lahtweight, | ft’ vecutive Committee of the Amas| ie cleanliness if the public ie i> be in-| that to be worth a boost? year and with the final game against tivo Sunday hike ot ie aS of the —_— duy to meet Kid Mahoney, the crack} in a ten-round battle teur Hockey League has been told to| terested, j eae her | the Navy Saturday the students do not association, “Those ‘who’ teres Ge ACK JOHNSON js very angry with a = thresh out the matter of the expediency | When it comes toe vote on the prop. | At inst literature has lost another/ osi4c+ their eleven to break into the|yesterdege haute were Jim Hocking, the Federation of French Boxing ea Wee ! Pane ee ———"" of dropping the rover from tne local pete is hi , Reneative Committee it} star, and just hed Hie ne whep We) scoring cl: | pacemaker; G. C. Trefry, G. C. ‘Trane " Nockey teams, thus making six-men |1s asser at at least three and pos-|needed him, Author McGraw has com. | *"¢ i. his best with the |4r, Frank Heath, CB’ Stora Clubs. He has told the French peo-| WINNERS AT NORFOLK. |JOHNNY COULON ASSURES Heer ig rutbe sibly four of the five clubs will vote in| pied with the request of Garry IHerr-| ones Ean ban dene His Hane mr aBe | Say cree B Nicholen gum Ble exactly what he thinks of It. Since | -———— FRIENDS HE’S ALL RIGHT, | 1 is Kuown that the majority of clubs| favor of trying the change, ‘The Cres-|Prcmn and will write no more for the |! Nein Vary bone and Na uan mn the federation has declared Johnson's | ysnwr HACK Two-year-olds; aelline IGHT, e favor the propusition, The| cent Athletic Club, Irish-American Ach. ‘ ‘ | this has not been very good ne i meatal FIRST RACE-T ear-olds; in the leas! Ath rs, We might have done without rf en trying for positions om the “vacated” by his refusal to defend St . wams, following the general |letic Club and Hockey Club are known | P&Per® . also | handicapped by having some | conimbia varelon title y ” aif furionge Hilly Stud hool n ibutions tn th 1 ty basketball teas five and a ha ony +HICAGO. + aa * jockey teams, have al-|to favor the Innovation some of Mac's contributions In the sum- vest players ineligible at various f im will against challengers, Johnson says he'll jue ciieeten and 1 to CHIC AGC 17. — Friends of | trend of local hockey ‘0 favor tion, and it is mad latian terme pen eo. p have their first tryout to-morrow, Gee organize @ ‘free, open to ull champs si Johnny Colon, the batitamweight | realy letermined to try the slx-man|thought that the Wanderers will als |mer, but a ¥ r from the season. It ts the first tlme!iumbia's frat kame is with Mew: Wone } @hip tournament” himself, in sp: ee 0 Lee DATO SED of hockey, “and it Is believed | be found with the affirmative voters, |casionally would be well worth while.|'/"\ie memory of recent Kraduates that | tiueeate strat Dec, 5, and it is probetbe eae : In spite to WY ohamplon, who feared that he had met that the Executive Committee of the} Only the St. Nicks are known to oppose| MeGraw's decision to give up author- New York University has gone this far|that a plete substitute lineup will the federation. " with harm during the recent storm on] a, HH. T. will follow sult. It is argued | the tdea, and the reason for this is that ship was because they asked him to season without making @ point. be sent into this game. It About the time Jack begins playing | Tur i Latkes, were reassured to- | by the supporters of the alx-men rule! they have so much material it is hard {ou gi mot try to force him. He would | i! ® S88" pas Fisher's plan to pay all of hig ave pins with the French law some.) Plt f . he local rink i# too smail for seven|to find room for all of thelr stars on a |” eferred to have kept +. | ton to members of | Hi Nd * Mt day when a letter was re stating | that th PM The ohare ee tenets teem ee. nA] nave preferred Pt out of it) Alexander “berg, the European wrest- of last year ing will drop on him. it would haniy a a team, that port his | « in Bainst this is the| iene the late Worll’s series, but when 1 make als American debut to-]/%@ and entirely new’ material G0 ebnson's plans to find himaeit J that he would remain hunting in th jon has deteriorated Into “shinny” | fact that the other clubs havo found it | {Urine e nak the Christhaa holidas ported to this country. incident ; Canadian wilds ther month id that cleaner and faster sport will] extremely hard to get an eventy matt | Ban Johnson made his threat of forcing | ight at the Atantic Garden A 0. His rans of last year's tear, iecuer QeMS particularly anxious to see’? a mate scab Vices ac, he prediced by dropping the rover, It]anced team of seven men in. past sea-|the player-writers to stop, the Glants' | yponent be 1 ank Krause, Abs: | Jaques, Benson and Lee, mit wee y . BERN Te ee ta Gal Tele kee | cok ant O8 Bs Prieta iw claimed that with four men on the/sons because new blood has not come|manaxer had to show hin that hel unnounces that he will take on ans |oatues, put In the scrimmage agaiese petern, , ave 4 » | i A te ak Shite NORFOLK ENTRIES. forward line there 18 too much crowd-| into the sport with the hoped tor couldn't get away with it, Asa matter} qianteer that ars directly after he| the new me a wen Caler ieevel Gove, Colrwere Bicii | --— ing and too little chance to display | alacrity, of fact McGraw Was one of the frst tolanishos with Krause. He clatms that -_—_—> i paced Uitte It nid J MS. Barr also RKOLK, Va. Nov. 12.—The James 2G de ee = say that players should not write up the| jc will be his pian everywhere hy ° ks WPRRSENTATIVES of Sum Lang Iecciveer ial Pl croweae osu avatar core c | | eee n= hig games in which they were partioly / S008 America, #0 that none inay | Chip Beaten : ford and Joe Jeanetts have signed ‘Tiiiitiy glx | OREN . sj D We ke f Re ° pants. y he ts looking for easy game, Other R 5 wo. ub t ni —— say he ts Fi y Kame, Othe : articles for a twenty-round pout f rlones ov). 8 | Lae’ ieiementGeadne, tar Eco Four ays a eek O acing ‘The latter part of the junket to the|sood vouts will precede the Aberg- Third Time b Lig Doe. # in Paris. This will Rie a aeaee te 4. alls, 107; Bulblog Monte ° soast has been profitable for the White | Krause affair. yy teed as a world's « natip, dust 2 ngame) 2M and out | jug Plesk, MW Pl ad fe Ne t E t! oat nd the Giants, and It begine to — ig War Bam and Joe uid havea me $1 MN 14g 8 2.28 | MICO, RAPE tree anned for Next Year in East :"s"*:: mil Geamay eal Yate | eary one hunired ember of the Leo Houck mopoly on title claiming is a purzle [1 ae He Ace. ladhi: Shove re net 4 5 couver $#,00) to the good, In San Fran- ntclair Golf Club attended the annua! | me gure thing that either could waa ¢ Me Maine Shoive and Anwar ian, aan a] The Lagobey naa carey Clie nee | AAA foe nest roms, One oF the Burges |oiyoo they’ are sald to hove drawn $5.00 ARETE Of the organization last night jn wf hy Carl Morrie any ment, aise ra vai jorking hard | . euse Will be worth two dai ” ’ : P, PHILADELPHIA ‘ iy! wemen Cinbost Smith Carl Morris and FOU ICTH RACH-dinmpton Handicap: | PBIAR IA. tna clean basis. With that end in view |8,000—m value equal to any of the vert | People 1 on tho clubhouse, C.F. Droste, Proaident| |PHIUADELPHIA, Nov, 17, — tay By, eee Willard, not to mention Polky and iit axes oie mile art w sixteenth = [ing ix! furlongs —*Pont portamen of highest standing are Im-|ent-day turf claasice auch as the Brook.| gust before the Giants and White of the club, acted ax toastmaster, and| Houck, the clever Lancaster © fw others. , Wi (Nathan), 9 to 4, 1 tod and out, Hew, Wt; dun te, 0k, Dr o ions and mares to improve! lyn, Metropolitan and Subs, | ae vancouver, Germany 8c | speeches were made by Congressman + Scored his third victory eg 5 , u rting stall roan Handi-| reach Van p G Chi Now C; Af J wappoee that shou'd Sam or Joe win first: Rolling Stone, w (Nicklaus), 9 tolerl, Mab Arran, 107; Pee breed not only for the turf but for] caps. eee McGraw and Callahan will shake|», W. Townsend and I. Kent, both eorge Chip, the Now Castle (Pa) tea, her Would Immediate!) draw a “color 1. 8 ty 1 and # toe sec Northerner, | Veweley e " ane ermount service of the United Btat Plans are now ‘being considered for at piah dice to see Which #iall have the! members of the clud. Those who had | Wh? recently knocked out Frank Klews Mag" againct Misto Johnson, bP fear Ke 4 and out, | tot ‘" ‘Tiers Gili Wate aha [tee Te vment. ‘The donations of thor- [least four days a werk of racing on ing CN Ne’ of throwing Bill” Kiem. tra {won prizes In the various season com. |! bout that went the six-round lMmét — a F also ran. 15, “Carton Gh To wie] GON MN lions and hurees to Uncle | cal courses next year, The Stewards, Umpire, overboard. According to sche,t tition were presented with their /t the National A.C, Saturda: 4 ae ——> - WAlglon, 8; Devic See aaee yattona of the turt have ale |fealise that with that number of dave | die arcuraw has a runsin with him one | Bet Ny before @ big crowd of tuna who yetleg SQPRARTMOUTH was in hard luck eel peeia 14: Quartermaster, WH: Cherubee Move, 107, | Sasn BY WANTON OTe iia apparent /th® tracks will be able to attract horses Git! and iays off the next so as to give awards ree oe themselves hoarse for Leo to Gaturday, being overwhelmed by ne Fenty “4 Vertiabire, It ready had Kood results epresent: {70M all parts of the country and hold Callahan a chance, Jack Sheridan, the| F. W. Dyer, who in the course of the Chip out, knoe SP Mhsiele, Betore thet game Dan. bi ih elaine tng eat | PLDT AACR thre year olde snd oi sellin the quality of the chargers 1 vn the (them here. This year racing was held other ump, #0 far has escaped, afternoon defeated W. R. Hotchkin by) Om At Peuarivanlaaie was in a pusition to make a few middle | ing: one mile oud seventy yanis—*Mimesia, 10, ing the Government 5 only three days a we This was not brosgpy 5 up and ¢ to play for the Van Vieck- 2 an tried hang pasts if Harvard b Yale ang W2sht championship of the world, was | Laubrook, 100. 1 af Richmond, 100; | Have jumping contests at the Horse Show. — |worth while to owners of big strings, | Now that everything {6 getting quiet,’ pratt Cup, was presented with the tro-|t? connect with his famous “ha: the intercollegiate football cham. prevering. gd 4 sine to Paris, | Crest, Ohi Serrieames,. 108; Bosek Head, 108. ry ais ai ” of racing to be Seid And as a result many of the notable looks like a good time to start those phy. W. EB. Marcus jr. was also the| Ut Houck, boxing in clever orm, » nad le Oo accept + wy , air in h ¢ it wouldn't look well for horses were shipped to Canada, where any he 8 ing; one mile und seventy yarde—*lad of Lang.|at the they were able to race seven days be- dan, 08; Ceerard, 104; Hen Prior, 108; *Ovtlant, immediately following the meeting at q show the Wide scope of the! fore they were asked to move to 08; Kaydervseros, 106; Meee bet, 208. fem Saretoga. 3 ty the’ nee ve spether ie Bil nd al 5 ah hd SPA ye n offer of fight promoters there who ically arranged for a bout between Oy 4 c9bre.0¢ Mts, himself and Georges Carpentier, ands going again, doesn't the | evades the eaten Nayere } eens ‘says he will have sev.|Feciplent of the prise offered in the come | ta" pe, the ati ote whe the @ral_new ones scheduled by the time Detition for the greatestt number of which (he Nationa) Commission goto ready to “ringers” during the Marcus edly,

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