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> Edprer2 COLUMN Football Now a Game Which Develops a Student’s Mental as Well as Physical Ability. Cwort lom York rvaloa Word). HE “Haughton system” started a new idea in some of tho big colleges. all team candidates. The players will etudy rules, plays, strategy and other things connected with the game. They ‘Will be coached with the use of dia- grams and will tak» examinations at regular Intervals through the football geason. More attention will be paid to signals than to “trig” or calculus, ‘This is the Intest scientific develop- ment of the game. Those: 4» have been opposing foot- ball as a game tending to develop the physical side of the players at the expense of their mentality can learn something by attending the football course and tryine to memorize forty or fifty sets of signals and figure the forty-seven possible variations of each play. Football wi! not be as popular with the fron foundry type of player as it was in the go0d olf days, when the cry of the football player was, “An eye for an eye and a tooth for @ tooth!” IKE GIBBONS Is a foxy young man. Mike Is sadly in need Of advertising, for outside of ‘that ‘ear St. Paul hie reputation has fallen off until his name ts seldom mentioned in polite fistic society. Mike's engagements with Packey Mc- Farland and Kid Lewis cost him myuch popularity in the Kast. Now Mike has con. out with a statement t .t be has signed for a match with Jack Dillon at 161 pounds. This would 2 -turally seem to leave it up to Dillon to sign or crawfish. Dillon says that he will make 163 Pounds for Mike, but no less. Dillon Goesn't claim that he is a middle- weight now. His best fighting weight te about 165 ..unce and at that he is thin enough. If ho trained down too fe for Gibbons he might be in the @ame shape Gibbons found himself whea he was fool'sh enough to train himeelf to a cinder for Packoy, Gibbons 1s naturally a light middie- Weight, and he can make 154 pounds and be at his best, His weight is about the same as that of Tommy Ryan when the Syracuse boy was middiey sight champion and one of the best that ever held the title, Ryan fought much heavier men, with success, hown much anxiety to follow Ryan's ex- a bis letter heads an- “welterweight and Mike isn't a weiter, and hasn't been for many years. At 154 pounds Gibbons could hardly afford to give a fighter like Jack Dil- Jon ten pounds advantage in weight, INNY LEONARD surprised the sporting world last night when he stopped Ever Hammer in twelve rounds, This Ever Hammer has been regarded as the best West- ern candidate for championship hon- ors. He gave Dundee a rough ten- round fight a while ago. He has been called another Battling Nelson, and has shown almost as much rugged endurance 4s the Dane in some of his fights, Benny Leonard would do well to stay where he can have experience in long decision fights, If he repeats the Ever Hammer performance a few times Champion Welsh can hardly ignore his challenges without hy Ma surrendering an unde ACK BRITTON'S decisive victory J over Kid Lewis marks him as one of the best welterweight champions since the time of Joe Wal- cott, Britton his been fighting a long time, but he seems to hold his Lewis has ekill and fighting ability. KEEP your gears young and your car will never grow old. pixo N‘ GRAPHITE Automobile LUBRICANTS make cars cost leSs to run, reduce repairs, re- duce depreciation. Ash your dealer for the Dison Lubricating Chart has Regular courses in football will be taken by tHE ‘EVENING WORLD BEST SPORTING PA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1016. ; a) GE IN'NEW. YORK BIG COLLEGES THIS YEAR HAVE COURSES IN SCIENCE OF FOOTBALL Now sit Give me A SYNOPSIS OF THE ULULATED NUMERALSS. (1-27-44 = 5 /, ‘g ‘ YU, SYNERGISTIC METKOD oF PROGRESSION WDICATED BY “THe Fouling DeDUciBLS T+\3-UB- 7-U1+4g-5+@-B-1. ' ve “Wis SORT OF THING Wr. MANY A COULGO@ HERO Pounvay ‘ vas Rush Busy Developing Tigers’ Scoring Powers For Dartmouth Gam Princeton Coach Has Been Pursuing 1915 Policy of Strength- ening Defense First and Then Attending to Offense — Jack By William Abbott. HE Princeton eleven is now re- celving strenuous offensive drilling, From now until the Dartmouth battle next week Coach Rush and his assistants will devote their efforts mainly in developing the Tigers’ scoring powers.” Speedy Rush has been following his 1916 system, first strongthen tho defense and then develop the scoring attack, This coaching policy ex- plains wily the Tigers were only able to score three points against Tufts, fense at the expense of the offense, but things will now be different, It has practic: back, as the regular quarter, He plays = night he guve middleweight Gibbons such a hard ten-round battle at the Garden, Britton has the self-confidence of a real champion, Otherwise he surely wouldn't have risked his title in short twelve-round bout with a reft- eree’s decision of Kid Lewis's class, No one will ever catch Freddy Welsh doing any- thing like that. And Britton didn't even select his own private referee, AVE TIBBOTT of Princeton has been spending a lot of time daily practising the kicking of field gouls, He is a remarkably long kicker, and it wouldn't be surprising if ho’ became famous as Dea, Eckersall and Wrickley before the present season ends BRC HAUGHTON ts working ip hard with the Crimson football team aguin, He has signed a new contract calling for a salary of which must make k profs wriggle when nk about it they th I failure vived question will “Is education a probably be re- of the learned members of @larvard's faculty when they compare the usual classroom stipend with the emolument touchin’ on and appertainin’ to labor on the gridiron. —_ JOE WALCOTT TURNS UP AS SHIP'S COAL HEAVER. Joe Walcott, the original ¢ killer” of ring fighters and terror among White pugilists of all sizes and by welghts, Js in town after an absence of years, Joe is no longer @ fighter, but his brawny gorilla-tike arms, which earned him thousands in the Yold days” are sUll strong enough to make him a@ living. Walcott is now 4 ship stoker terday from ship on b He arrived here Australia on th Aros Ca r all the tt way decade prime, al I Lavigne had beaten him defeated "Joe" Choynakt 100, and soon afterward w down the gauntlet to pugiliats was in K He a4 in the heavyweight class. bight years later his star had fallen, His last recorded appearan the ring Was against “Jack” Robinson on Nov ve 5. Soon afterward he disap- Poared, and the current rumor among boxing “fans” was that ho had died, ny Walcott was Torn in the Burbadoes, British West Inilies, April 7, 1678, against a contender | ly been decided upon | Combination—Driggs, to have Jack Eddy, « former hait- | M | i been regarded as one of the best be welters in the world ever since the plunging. Mike | his wonderful Eddy, a Former Halfback, to Be Regular Quarterback. & more dashing game and gets more Lcd his men than young Ames and w! and Eddy was in for most of the Tuft: me, but was guilty of fumbling, ‘ault’ generally due to inexperience and anxiety to handle the ball too quickly, Exidy, once his fumbling is 3 should develop what Old Nas- ‘u has wanted for several years, & capable quarter, He is a natural football player, a quick starter and knows the game thoroughly, | Last season he was a substitute halfback. Coach Rush, eager to use Eddy'’s great speed, hit on the idea of trans- ferring him into a quarter, a position trouble, Wh undondtedly will be the Orange and Black's regular backfield Brown and oore——has finally been brought to- gether and daily rehearses the offen- sive formations, According to pres- ent arrangements, Alan Hrown, the huskieat member of the backfield, will used ohiefly for his hard line Driggs will speclaling, on punting and sharp thrusts through tackles, Billy Moore, who has been troubled with charleyhors: will do most of the ave Tibbott, is getting into the big games when the Tigers have the ball within gicking range of the enemy's goal. The Lafayette came this Saturday will go @ long ways to show just how uch improvement Speedy Rush has been able to accomrlish this week in perfecting @ scoring “punch.” The Army-Navy game was pur- posely scheduled to conflict with the Haryard-Yale battle on Nov, 25 to ease the great demand for tickets. Evidently the plan failed to work, be- cause officinis of the New York Base- ball Club, who are handling the tick- ots, announced to-day that applica- tions for seats had broken all records and that the club's allotment of tck- gta would be exhausted within a few jaya. Dr, Whalen, whose Tufts eleven de- feated Harvard but lost to Princeton, makes the surprising strtement that in his opinion the Crimson will have a more powerful combination than the Tigers, Benny Leonard Stops Hammer In 12th Round (Rpeelal to The Evening Wort.) KANSAS CITY, Mo, Oct, 19.— Ever Hammer, the Chicago “blond tiger,” met his match here last night in Benny Leonard, New York light- wolght, who got the decision in the twelfth round of a scheduled fifteen- round go, Leonard gained a knock- out, although Hammer was on bis feet at the finish, Hammer came up for the twelfth kroggy from a flerce pounding in the eleventh. In less than a minute of fighting Leonard swung a right to Hammer's head and the Chicagoan went to the mat. He was up at the count of three, but Howard Curr, Hammer's manager, already had climbed to the ringside and asked Referee Ed Sinith to stop the fight, Smith raised Leonard's hand tn token of victory and the affair will go down 48 & knockout for the New Yorker, lead the Tigers against Harvard | Yale. 1T wu, wore |Capt. Huston’s Plan For the Wo by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) rld’s Series Looks Like Good One ———__ ++. Local Magnate Thinks Annual Melon Should Be Cut by Both Players and Owners on Bas and 20 to Losers, Which Ide is of 80 Per Cent. to Winners a Would Make Clubs Hustle All Year Round to Secure Successful Team. By Bozeman Bulger. 'N the mildst of all the suggestions and counter suggestions anent the finding of a new basis for the World's Series to make it more of a sporting proposition than a big melon cutting for players and owners, comes Capt, T. L, Huston with @ real one, If the idea the Captain suggests be put into effect baseball in all its branches will be up on its toes and hustling from New Year's Day unul the finish in the fall. His is a sport ing proposition for fair, the kind of a tonic baseball needs. “Why,” asked the Captain, as a group of old-timers discussed the change, “wouldn't it be @ good idea to divide the spoils on a basis of 80 per cent. to the winning players and 20 to the losers and then make the owners split it on the same basis?” Everybody caught it in a second. There would be little left as con- solation to the losing players and just as little to the losing owners, It would be a tooth and toen il fight such as the game has never seen, The effect? Well, listen: “T guess,” said the Captain, “that wouldn't have all the club owners ex- tending themselves to get together a corking team, eh? Their only hope would be to dig up the very best bali club in the country and they would leave no stone unturned, There would be mighty few demanding a player mit then, In just about two months every club in both leagues would Im- prove and the public would be given The team had been drilled on the de- (tat threatened to cause @ lot of the acrapplest baseball they ever saw, Owners would have to fight to win, |the same as the players.” Thero were other owners near and the Captain laughed heartily at the thought of how this would hit home. “{ don't know that such a thing would be possible,” he said, “because some clubs are better able financially to stand such a fight than others. But no more so than they are no “Anyway, as long as the Li tions are pouring in that might be| one for the boys to think over, It’ would certainly be great sport, and’ while I am not speaking for our club/ right now I believe it would be will-| ing to take a chance.” ‘This ts the first time that it has ever been suggested that the club owners take a chance on the result of the big games and it seems remark- able that no one thought of it be- fore. Heretofore the owners divided fifty-fifty while the players split! sixty-forty, the owners having little! concern as to the outcome except as) to prestige and baseball honors, H There appears to be no doubt of a radical change being made at the coming winter meeting and with all this early talk crystalizing the m nates will have a lot of material for consideration. It can be said on very good au- thority that the players will not be paid so much money in the future and it can also be said that there will be a sweeping reduction in prices to the public. It leaks out now that Ban John- son made vigorous objection in the meeting of the National Commission to the $5 seat proposition in Brook- lyn. He also opposed it in Boston, All along the American League President has been against charging as much as $5 for any seat at a World's Series ball game. You can bet it won't be done again, e ry Jim Buckley 1s on te warpath, The reason for Jim's 1 of the white heavyweights to meet his big colored fighter, Harry Wills. declared to-day that he is willing to let | Wills take on any two white men for ten rounds apiece in the same ring, He Wills stops both before the bell clangs at the end of the tenth session, ‘Augle Ratner, the Booox middleweiht who te now under the management of Jimmy Johnstoa, has been matched to mect Albert Hadoud, the French welterweight, at the Bmplre A. ©, on Oct, 26, Irish Jack Smith at the Manhattan 3, on Oct, 90 and Mike McTeague at the All three boute will be of ten rounds’ dural The Pioneer Sporting Club on West Morty. fourth Street has another tive card of bouts dat, Young Young Zulu Kid sails for England on Saturday to fight Jammy Wilde Nugent of Nutley, No J fat London on Dee, 10, As Tim Logan, the Muiladelphia hearywetght, asked for a few more days in which to get into condition for bis tenfound bate with Tul Breu. nan, the Chicago knockerut, the offjpiale ¢ tte Clermont A. C, of Brooklyn have postp bout ‘Monday wight until Tharsday evening, | Oct, 20, This will be Brennan's first bout In ger | o' eral wooks, neh, welterweight cham, Albert Badoud, the ¥ plon, and Johnny ‘Kid’ Alberta, the Elisabeth, N, J, Mahter, will tn the main bout of ten rounds at the boxing show of the Clermont ©, of Hrooklya to-night. The bowt should te a bummer, af toth men are game, rushing , Hany Maloney and Johnny Melaush ie bot ix rounda Lin, both of Brooklyn, will battle f for the reopening boxing ahow of An deta the Cream City A, C. of Milwaukee bate Deen Completed. ‘The show will be stgand on Oct, 24, a which Young Ahearn. tyne Iwaukee weight, will moet | } fighter, and Frank the | Brooklyn Highiwaight, will hook up with Matty McCue of Hacine, Wis, in ten-round boule Paul Blwar eight, and delphia will exchang wr fdx-round toute to le inv yempla ‘A. A. of Whilad day night John Kirk, massager of the New Polo A. A, of isting of three fours, one In tho alx morrow even! six and tw rounder Yo Joo Heol. Damn Fu, i Battling Miller, « lem, In the at 1 Harlem, has arranged a good cant for his club, star attraction Wille Andrews of Willie Astey at the Olympte A. ©, next Monday night, Several clubs have made flattering offers for & retum match with Brtle, but the lattar has turned down all of them, Young Ketchell ‘The National Tum Verein af Newark, N. J., will bold an amateur boxing toumament—pre- liminaries on Oct. 21 and finals Oct. 23, A who finish fimt and second in the ing clases: 115, 125, 195, 149 and 176. All reg: tatered amateurs of the metropolitan district are invited to compete, Entries will be received by L, J, Madden, Room 648, No, 120 Hroadi tty, Young Falton, the lightwetght, who mets Ad Wolgast at Kenosha, Wis. next month, bas been matched to box Shamus O'Brien in a twelve-round bout om Nov, 7 at Columbw, 0. Two ten-round events will mark the opening of the winter season of boxing at the Harlem Sport- ing Club to-morrow night, Every one imows {ghamus O'Brien, the Irah Youkers lightweigit, who will meet Maddie Doreay, the clever colored boxer, ia ove of the ten-round events, Johnny liastig, the Brooklyn lightweight, and Chick Bimior will appear in the other ten-round bout, Wiliie McDonald jdana to keep Irish Patay Cline so Iwiry that ‘he'll foree Champion Welsh |and Henny Leonard to tox him, © got him {signed up to tox at the Empire A. ©, tomoruw Au McDonald, "Patay Broder turdey uight and Mickey Donley at Allentown on Monday night, Then I've got him booked with Allie Nack at the Harem §, ©, t, 27, Johnny Nelson at Philadelphia Oct. 90 Joo Wellivg at the Manhattan 8, ©, Oot, Patsey is ansious to take Leonard or Wolaa x at any time, Collewe Point Football Team, Unusual interest {s centrod in this season's gridiron battles of the College Point Club's football team, which went inty action lust Sunday by trouncing the oleven of the Naval Militia of the First Baitalion of New Kochelle by a score of | 52 to 0 oThe College Voint team last year wor contest it played and folled ‘up. 280 points, holding. all ents score Coach Frank Be former star of Fordham, is confident. team will have ttle trouble this Sune day, when his squad clashes with. the Elins at Donelly’s Field, College Point Robideau Stops Jimmy Coffey, PROVIDENCE, It 1, Oct. Sam Robideau of Philadelphia stopped Jim Coffey of New York in the eleventh round of thelr. scheduled fit , d to the mat, but was instant, Again, the tenth, floored, the bell’ saviyg hin, eee Cabs to Train at Pasadena, CHICAGO, I, Oct, 19.—The Chicago National League Club has Mio Tern EXAAS « BRouocxT UP -To- DATE. Loorn Tal Mt AN @PLLD*, WHILE Tue GRADUATE A FuTrre COUece Decrees Wik HWE A NEW SIGNIFICANCE 27,244 POUNDS; hon WiLL Give fou A PIRST SECTION. AND A Dears: r He ANT aad? ‘Cornell Football Star Barred For Playing ‘‘Summer Baseball?’ ~~. Eckley, Strong End, and Two Members of Nine Victims of “Faculty Ruling Which Is Re- garded as Unreasonable. (Special to The Brening World.) ITHACA, Oct, 19.—Eckley, star end and shortstop of last year; Clary, this year’s baseball captain and catch- er, and Valentine, left fielder, are lost to Cornell athletics. The faculty found the trio guilty of. playing summer baseball, taking for granted a lot of things, which don't appear very serious after investigation, A ruling, generally regarded as un- reasonabje in itself, which applies to baseball alone and not to any other sport, whether the man has or has not Teceived any money, reads as fol- lows: Note-In applying rule 11-C to baseball, any person who plays under a name other than his own, or plays in a contest where an ad- missio® is charged, except as a member of @ school or college team, shall be conclusively pre- sumed to have violated this rule. Rule C, If he receives or has ever received ani nuneration or con- sideration of any sort for his ser- vices in any branch as performer, CHARLES L. TIFFANY WINS CHIEF GOLF PRIZE. ‘The usual turn-out, nearly a hun: Buckley | aod Jerome Hennessey will box in the semitinal, |dred strong, took possession of the Nassau and Piping Rock links yes- terday for the semi-annual handicap tournament of the University Club jours he will make @ big wager that! handsome gold watch will be given the boxe | Goi¢ association. Charles L. Tiffany, whose alma mater is Yale,ewith a gross score of 168 for the thirty-six holes, won chief prize of the meeting. Possibly the fact that Tiffany is a member of both Nassau and Piping Rock helped him yesterday, although it is said that familiarity with @ course does a@ golfer little good. HATCH LOST TEN POUNDS ON RECORD 95-MILE RUN. CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—A heaping dish of ice cream and some lemonade was all that Sidney Hatch of Chicago, a veteran Amateur marathon runner, wanted after he Anished his record ninety-Ave mile run from Milwaukee to Chicago yester- day. Then, after a brisk rubfown, he to bed for a tweaty-four hour Officials of the Amateur Athletic n declared that Hatch’s perforn probably was the most ramarkab) » He covered the distance: in 14 hours 50 minuves and 30 seconds, beating the former recora by four" hours and seven minutes, on went ENTRIES AT LATONIA. TRACK, LATONIA, Ky,, € he entries for to-morrow's ra follows i ore ‘Huth Weble Clark M109 Peather Yu HD RACE nd deus 1 10 BY < 102: Thur kner In)eON, i TOR. "Lucille WP. W her jobohen will mingle with George Underwood of |clded to establish its 1917 } a the ions = ing camp at Pasadena, Cal., ¥ ag HACE Salling. Uivwe year olde, ant - Weeghman announced here y. | i} y We, 107, Hooks Joo Ionch, tho woet side pantam, who made | Pampa, Fla., will be abandoned in favor| jit, joo: Rena 110, Housiue, 116; Waterproot, Jonnay Krtle step faster than at any time in lof the ‘Indianapolis Club of the Amer-| tig” bia career to get @ draw, is matched to meet jcan Association, Apprentice allowance, ‘Track muddy. » ! player,.coach, or otherwise, apart from such necessary expenses in exo@®s of ordinary expenses as are actually incurred by him aa a member of a coilegs team, or of @ permanent amateur org&niza- tion in connection with occasional amateur contests. To date the absence of Eckley from the football team has been keenly felt and will be during the rest of the sea- son in all probability, as the candi- dates fdr both ends are not up to the standard. The two — posi. tions left vacant by Shelton on gradu- ation and Eckley will be hard to fill, for thelr work featured in all the kames last year and played no little part in the bringing of the champion- ship to Ithaca, Eckley received no money for play- ing ball, but while working for a large concern took part in an annual game between two such concerns and mone was taken in at the gate, not for the services of the players, but for the outfits and petty expenses of either team. The faculty nevertheless insist on holding strictly to the ruling, and the prospect of another championship team at Ithaca is weakened quite a little Clary, star catcher and this yea: captain, together with Valentine, al other member of the bail team, also come under the same ruling and wilt be barred from future athletics. With ee such stars taken from wh are lett by graduation, I Sharpe will find it a hard job to bring together another winning ball team. ENTRIES AT LAUREL. (Spectal to The Evening Work!.) RACE TRACK, LAUREL, Md., Oct 19.—The entries for to-morrow's races are as followas FURST. RACE Tro-year-olde; maidens: fi ive aud W half furlongs, Dixie 11, (linp,), 115: Home Sweet Home (former Sagamore Mill), 116; Swoon my.) 11: Fire Ballot, 112; Limette, 112; None, 118: Latter, 118%, Tis Smart Mones: ’ joeal, 119; Rose Ping, 112; Affinity, 112; Bella 8., 112 SECOND RACE -Throe.year-olds le and lena: weling mu enty yards = Mair, 116." Celtabel, 108: Porin, 10%; Bat, 108: Agar ion Agnes, G: 119; Beat lo, 108) Functloinaire (Imp.), 108; "Senator 1h; *Afe, 100, THIRD RACE six fur Vom, 110; 8 Drices iis +h ‘Celt, 110! Wa te Barbary mags en 114; Mare Henry, 1M VIFTH RACK — Ad} ages: consolation handicap; one mile.—Rhyne Mailen, 117; Potroma (imy),) Hat Rock, 11%; Eagle, 110, Three-year-olde ancl nrwnrd ; nd a_wixteenth.-Minda, 110; If Coming, 108. Newop, 104 ‘*Secmet. 1 Infidel Bh, ae x 108} Hob elit: on ‘Gherron, 1 Mr Ma STOMACH TROUBLE Felt Wretched Until He Started To Take ‘Fruit-a-tives”’ 694 Champlain St., Montreal, “Forgtwo years, 1 was a miserable sufferer from Rheumatism and Stomach Trouble. 1 had frequent Dissy Spells and when I took food, felt wretched and sleepy. 1 suffered from Rheu- matism dreadfully, with pains in my back and joints, and my hands swollen. A friend advised “Fruit-a-tives” and from the outset, they did me good, After the first bor, I felt 1 was getting well and I can truthfully say that “Fruit-a-tives” is the only medicine that helped me. LOUIS LABRIE, 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, triai size, 25c. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg, N, Y.— Advt, MISERABLE FROM! { PUTTING 'EM OVER Don’t Want to Kill That Laid the Golden Egg. All They Want to Do Couple of Her Wings Off. Footba end men start acting like end men, ferey Haughton isveo the alma mater stuff that he has only room to accept $15,000 for coaching. Why doomn't University and send for Ui i of t! leap atu ta wre box To-n iyo A ovr Wis Vo hens Wena Ballplayers had better hold on, as the World Series is now going around ourve, With only four more coaches arriving to-day, it looks as if ¥ struagio along Percy Haughton may be the man e minu' World ain't so bad, We never have to wat a doubleheader, The Cincinnati ti ter each day. Looks as if buying the Robins wit run into extra in ordgt to forestall any charges of unfairness, Ce 4 his A & vealed euve Abolishing the World Series will rob granted eleven from Time chess field to his alma mater, Asking 4 foot Atlanta Football has been resumed at Car- Usle, they develop middle-aged teams, fortunately, to tossed two sixes and chess are about the only two games that you enn play and be ANSWERS TO QUEER! Weoz— starting in St. Guff—Can't tler too, mo matter how long or how to your dru cont box of Pyramid ry It will give quip relfef, and a singlg mailed free in plain wrapper if y! send us coupon beow, FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, Kind'y send me Pyramid PileTreatment, in plain Wrappers NAMO ceceeeercrsrereee Street . ight —Cler AKvort Hal CIRCULATION IN NEW ¥ Che World THANE Want Works a.l the to-day and prosp r. With ‘‘Bugs’’ Baer PLAYERS the Goose Is Shoot a team is bad when your hook full of Penney admit Ht jorge Ade ‘a ead conch? e's tackling dummy will have ithout one, hou he gots paid by the ut n two cricket teams playing im is looking bet- ings this winter, American eleven Im, Ne season started, ore t the » ican League of a lot ple ot tleonite ld top am for some into the philanthropist to glare by donating @ player If yo ie a student te ms bad as inquiring for the Sherman Hotel but It will be some years before one of thelr famous answer i many a man rooted for a natural and then dominoes nce at the name time many a bird amblee carrying a double his hat who never RABID RUDOLPH. ball season Looe cee fost be a citizen and a and tle Ti t toda: te q often curés A trial package a 640 Pyramid bide, shall, Mich. Free sample CITY WHEN. PRINTED IN PUBLISHE ERALO. TIM > iN seven-time World Order one