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a DILLON AND GIBBONS AT LAST MATCHED = FOOTBALL HEROES WHO WON i" @ proof of which is that there are ‘ ne coll Hor. with the coaches. But he showed #0 | who was acting captain, « ‘Akar eee brea fale By Bozeman Bulger. vy | Ore, ereME joverhiand pitchers than SORA Ra tH BOO are much ability right away that they Kiel er \ alee a lore Klin “7 3 aad, seal miles sor yaad NITE AONE SES INCE it has been shown conclu- any other kind @ over hander has Public wouldn't think football ac ~tistened to his theortes with a Mttle| Hye! to play ond. and At culls | pected to ‘bring’ cue aceeay Roe oe | sively that success in a World's | 2, Qtong! Advantage in that be is} was so brutal if they abolished ease terre a ar engerenaimnt ta eas aches ce ee | Bagy Games Scheduled sry ua ramet Mati ane fuel ee | Tawi Ways, up to that me, deemed tt the From that moment until the end of | Most of the fastest machines are A on the pitching, the old question has the same aa a golfer does with his revinaesto: heen Oh eRe east-iron duty of any football player t ray that white bandage was the|Chtered for ‘the motor classic, an fe Bi El do up a-ain ag to the al im- Wooden clu The overhander also! enlize that Harvard's greatest to fall on a fumbled football in-) ,; Pana iy my ff alo's wars tne ain wualne unio a4 or ig evens O- ay provements, if any, in that depart- bap eg Toye ee Ve bene ra) tol defense is right there at the ticket i H nd they followed. it. “Coy be jor the |mako his curve bal 1k straight! office. * - gtantly. went berserk! ‘There le bo tier merry. whirl ment of the game, downward--what we called — the eee y PASO! c Jose ee y 4 >p! 1 are! evie’ shoot" ¢! w used to pickin) ne pall every time,” 8 supre ports 8 yee 4 rf eat , " ¥ » last twenty-five — | dentally, the modern ball pli f jot of no-score p ; a lant pick up a rolling ordered the quarterback.” "™*” ®lin the fact that the American speed-| jn So-Called Minor Teams. Most of the interest in to-day's card | Stars for the las ving themn to|Knowa two bally—the fast hail and cee football Just as easily, and run with; Yale was on Princeton's twenty! W@¥ Championship contest will prob- e centres in the so-called minor elevens, | *!nce the old rule compelling then the cu y do not differentia ark Griffith will not make ft, Ho did it, in practice, aud some! yard line, sd ably be decided by the order in which In this division the Pittsburgh-Syra-| Pitch the ball instead of pave {t— detween the ball that cucves outward| any changes In his 1917 team, He 4% were enthustastic | In one crashing attack afte _| the Urivers finish, ‘The drivers whose " cuse ba » show that there have not been 80 | and th that breaks downward,| {« just going to warm over last ever the cap “and some of them othe* Coy plun Sa Minoan hie points entitie them to foremost con- By William Abbot. name tela pee sabe ey foat the] any radical changes in style as/ for the simple reason that the down. season's SOUD. w= = hook their heads and looked gloomy |fulling, In seven plunges he made a *ideration in this premier award of AI as tho big teams are con-| ,, implies. Syracuse and Pitts-| ee nas been perfection of these |#hoot is merely an extension of the and sald it wasn't done that way— touchdown for Yale. After the goal-| {6 Season are bending every effort cerned the games to-day should] CUPS aro two of the best scoring com- é ih outshoot, In other words, anything ANSWERS TO QUEERIES. Sr hadn't been in their timo—and Kick Yale beran plunging drei iie| to have their steel mounts In the best binations in the East. Both have) different sty! | that Is not a fast ball nowadays 1s a| k if Rub therefore. never could, would or field again as soon an she wot. the; Possible sha be merely full dress PENCGTORIS| Sowertul, wall coached tes ‘the |_ For instance, Radbourne, one of the | curve, spithall, of course, is dit= | Zepera Ws Wee chadaedt That'e ‘eet should be done that way ball. “Again it wam Coy every thmes|,, Resta no 3,200 points. Aitken | for tho big shows that commence next| Pane ot Nei concues Leums and the | sest pitch=- that ever lived, ¥ sald| ferent, ‘That calls for a separate alg- | (an versonal, Sam's first chance camin on Nov. | He was like a madman, a fury, There he ge ig 3 ay ey = kenbach week, Harvard, Cornell, Princeton, . grote = ry » be aal ryee? te have been an overhand pitcher, a! Ral. | i hen Princeton played Har-| way nothing that could ; d Any one of thee | West Point va generally favored to win by al ' 4 é 1 Sane Tak Biche Wha AMMAWINK| WANs Ho, tant Goo stand in his three leaders can win the gto,oo0| West Point and Annapolis all draw! small margin. ¥ 4) style that all managers insist upon to| PITCHERS NEED NERVE TO USE| Kazzap—You along in the usual way; buck along) crashed through it Itered i |sPeedway title by flashing home first |¢8y opponents, just tho kind of| ‘The Penn and Penn State game will! this day and one that youngsters try! , SLOW BALL NOWADAYS, =| at over a few chalkiines, loxo the ball,| The Princeton ‘stands rose and. sol: in the Harkness race. elevens that should give just suilictent| Probably develop Into a hard fought’ to develop. Nobody has improved | ein dtoeet Hyper re inte from @N | on the National Commission gather in @ punt and siart it nly pealed out the strains of “Old ms ste contest. There is keen rivalry upon his delivery, ne imobovediene in ae ne oie | are full dress suits in a lumber all over again, It was the first time! Nassau," but neither sentime ms tween thesa two elovens, especially “POH h i ’ any improvement in baseball at all, psellatedhs JOE Bet Harvard and Princeton bad played for college apirit nor bee? a, Nesey mid since last year, When the Stata eleven| The one and only real discovery 1n/ but a few of them ke Dasher Troy, @ = aeveral years, since a break occa-|rtand before Co's. savage. rusmen Walloped tite Quakers 13 to 3. Bob! pitching during this quarter of a cen- | }i¢ cree * te! York and Joe CROSS DEFEATS GATTLE; Bret nd vritiocianta teudenoy lo une] iia soctes enctaee, (eee ene sIwell took change of Penn this sea |tury was the spitball, It is entirely | H#OPRUNs say that the frequent uso | STOPS JARVIS EARI ecessarily muss up Harvard's petithe Tigers were hopelessly berton . . son and has worked considerable im. | al Ang! of the “slow ball” hax heen of advan. | CLINE Give Darvard had come down to| ‘Ted Coy wan ed tom Ay iM Mn yiipe |) Charley White, the crack Chicago ht of Woon I provement, though tha team hasn't) different to previously known methods | tage, The “floater” was seldom used rinceton expecting to have ¢ s|tered like a fighter who has. fowehe | Uehtwelxht, will be a busy fighter in t the Coliseum , Hash nything startling. The Red|of making @ ball swerve out of its//n the old days, and in that the] Marty Cross has again shown hin’ fun with the small-cotleg toa finivh, He was crying hye nt | the future, as his manager, Nate Lowts mie. HI. on Mand ;[ gait Huo, wore pretty deob in & foot-|qirect course 80 as to fool a batter, | Modern pitchers Nave shown Improves | gate to be the master of Harry nthe amusement was proccedir eally. In the dress ooms he didn't | Of Chicago, has already be d him for “Oh On edinatdlied (-' . 6 team under Folwell's |, H cally, 0 | ” | plond-hatred fighter of vw ‘es Cragg oe Wiswpoluts| Know. Bis’ own RiMthane ma iors three batten end aloe expacte te sige? capable’ direction is apt to go ahead|T8@ spitball, technically, 18 not @) In many ways the slow ball ts the lanky > SE ee aume matiie sca when Sam White suddenly took it into | hours before he entirely iiot yeni | hie de fee tant with ence eonaed To east side bantam. | Host any Ume, and possibly the State) curve. As most everybody knows, it/most effective of all In a pinch, It Chester, in a ten round barle o his head to become famous. Berserk madness it was--like th sd m Up a h Benny ry \ ty his manager, Hale | Players are in for @ surprise party. | is thrown by letting the flngertips slip, t#kes nerve to use tt and fear of it|men met a In the other sched of the anciont heroce of the Samieny| et measo Bauare Garden the lattor t Kid Mondo, the up-State bentam, tmouth regards its brush with he leather instead of gripping |P¢!DS hit out of the lot has kept sey. | lem last night in the oth i BAM BECAME FAMOUS IN i arrted him theaaey tit, S882%—! part of next month. The three BOUts |for ton rounda at the [loser city A, Cot | Georgetown only as a warming up for| from the leather instea STIPPINE | eral good pitchers from attempting tt, |uled ten-round bout Irish Patsy Cling ‘ ELEVEN SECONDS. ik BY Shk-pal Gaeee tse ‘pled | which White is already slated for wre |iochorter, N.Y, on Mouday evening, Nor, @,|'@ more serious business with|it. ‘The ball, without spinning at all, Among these is Marquard, If he had [stopped Jimmy Juryia tn one, resi A Harvard kick was blocked, The] Princeton's victorious, might. eaek| with Frankie De Saunders of Pitts |Predoan’ tas lad « sont gt and on a coum. |PFMCCtON next Week, but the South-| wabbles up to tho plate and then sud-| Not beon afraid to use his slow balla |yryite Git tattle, aa he did im. th hall rolied free of the rush lines when| Yale team couldn't dott Ml timah ton ple raunde at the fate se Wiene ho ought to make @ great fight with |CTHCrs are very aggressive this seA-| deniy drops to one side or the other, | f¢W years ago the Rube would have | ninth round of thelr first meeting a Sam White siipped through and]. i * ht: | Mew son and the Green Mountain lads may been one of the greatest pitchers In! the. Manhattan A. C. of Harlem. by Jumped at It lke young Mr. Scott ot|"AN INDIAN TRICK” HARVARD| 4: ©. of Pittsburgh on Monday night; see encounter tough opposition, Tho perfect style of pitebing, ac-|the world, But he would never have |fanded him. enough punishment .. Boston picking up a grounder, That CALLED THIS, Vrankie Batley of Toledo for ten rounds Ra, im Gibbons of St. Pal, hether of Mike Gib- The Princeton-Latayette game will | cording to managers, {8 the overhand, |the heart to take a chance. On the |atop several other men, wey pne8 enon Dice ne Gp. ® ere pas : ; At Toledo, O., four days later, and either |Pous, as foally tem miccesful in eeting on & | be watched only to ace how much of hut, @trangely enough, some of our|other hand Nap [Rucker reited on it found Cross battered Cattle from @ a tak Rate snsoved tha teath An entirely difforent stroke og| Johnny Nelson or Eddie McAndrews, (M2 Mike, who looks @ scoring punch “Speedy” Hush has pata A nana |etitely when his arm began to wane. | tile of the Tink to, tne oles from tho ground into the crook of his|fo0tAall genius was that of Charles! the Philadelphia fighters, for six rounds at Must clawed @ tout for injected into the Tigers during the | Sreatest atars have not heen overkant'|In the last game at Hrooklyn ho|Wyak on hist fibow without. slackening specd,| Pilon of Carlisle when the Indians, at the Olytapia A.A. of Philly ten daye (2%,0% Water Mouaghan, the Western fahter, | week, Old Nassau this season has a (Pitchers. A striking example ls Gro-lwtmuck out three of the six, Ros- r iC een seem Ie eTy and Me nat opens] wcored on Harvard Yn 190d. Ask any | at 8° OW pia A. A y Y® for ton rounds at Winnipeg, Can. on the nigdt} team unusual for its defensive | ver Cleveland Alaxaneer,, Ho 48 alton batters that faced him, and each LOCAL BOXERS / be MT las gare ICR old Harvard man about it and’ May | later. at Oot, Both Tom and Mike are waining| strength and kicking powers, The | exponent of the side arm delivery and|of them whitfed out on that tanta. | SEVEN 4 os Hh eo Psat describe it In other words, Harvard! Joe Mandot, the New Oricana lightweight, has |*? St: Paul. A offenso has been below the standard, |18 also the best pitcher in the country |iizing slow one. IN INTERESTING BOUT*( me tearing af was y hot over it at the thine, | petted trom the ring and will go into the real! Benny Leonard, whe knocked out Ever Ham. | The coaching efforts this week were | to-day Speed has bean and always will be eer / went through cienn and ran t EcRaiea ee Mr. Dillon Dwsiness at Now Orleana, —Mandot was |mer iu twelve rude at Kauss Oty on Weduen. | concentrated on the offensive, and the| Matty and ae eee Svapmana the main asset of a pitcher. With It 3 r t New Yor? . Ae » totich th e Carlisle stratexy rapeee . ts ataye ft hould show what|greatest exponents of the ov 4) he doesn't need y ssortment of| Seven representatives of New yards down the field to touch the hall] '), C4 Rhy ‘ 4 out by Pranklo Russell at New Orloans night, will arrive in town today frun Kan. | Lafayette affair a ee q n't need a great assortment of : Yo the grovind behind the goal posts. |anot ae ingig ne ott, ANd & Mttle | fabor Day, which catised him to quit the game, |aas City acwmupenied by hia beotler Chariey, | ia# Been accomplished in this direc- | delivery. he curves nor a spitball, He can even|amateur athletic clubs will meet knot of Ate pounce rye : ing ne arts ec BI \< rj u, C1 a a. Mt He hat already scored points. for| KR0t Hum wounced Upen tha. Jom hae been offered several matches ainos his | lly ditwrn, his maaege hha | HOGs eg tackles the Mesnachueette [ese Tee eaten tnonere Pana Np {aet along without w slow one ‘ike number of Pittsburgh amates ; Princeton by jamming one Harvard] Ay they ‘star aah he, Uofoat, but bo tured them all dowm, aaying he | handler and adviser | coeeane Gaeee that ob Md Bot cate | these the star wan Joo MoGinnity aber |Moxern inthe dnverelty tournamer manner over his own goal ine for a u y ack the VATA | way through for goo ably HOA arena ead . eB, eu at should not sel e q 0 Beast y ne hele hat clty unde fouchbacte ren eae (ae eae Soe LO ig cen Gea “Knoctoat” Brom, (iia matt nek, Ten PSM ously Worry the Crimson,” Harvard] WHEN SPITBALLG BREAKS! ENTRIES AT LAUREL, jrntcl wi r'tne wietabure Athiet But two weeks later W Bodh ADD TACKioe ald UlAd eee lane Nitledes ouktewsiees ~~ Brorn, | —_———~ BAS DORH ee rer Lescnile errr ane WERE BRAND NEW. _ — Awacciition to-night, The followin /# * o loved baseball a tested foot- par atten . ager i bey 4 hen DEOS Facey & ie SARI 0 The Event nrid,) Hy the pairs selecte rhe loved : fs hoe i foot~ I tion to F 1 er wix-round bout in Pitt | ENTRIES AT LATONIA. Head Coach Percy Haughton got back With the coming of the spitball an, We Bie . on a tw Uist of 10 irs selected in th sively rattler 7, ‘They fought each « slashing | the job and most of th od | other distinct schoo 8 estab) dy y ay aL, Md, Oct. | gitterent classe peeded n : swing! loons ie ig auana alts a fue labia aoe kat Ue eae | Oo tne JOP dried to the Rancee sue | the premier boing Jack Chesbro, who ntries ‘for Monday's races | TRRUROM, Balt a ¥ thing) parent acting as 2 of Moos A, C., where they fought | TONIA RACE TRACK, Ky,, Oct. |" Gornell will undoudtediy do constd- | still holda the record for the greatest | are as follows aL gisanee me Mae > ‘|for a runner with the ball before, remaiched them 2 The entries for Monday's races Are | erayie experimenting aginst Buck- | number of wins In one year, Chesbro Y MACK.<-Twn yearold mailone: welling W | | , n't any runner with the ball to! as follows ne Coach Sharpe intends to try out| Was the real pioneer of the spitball, A nel, hetones--onend Webber, 116 oe Wy DeRny ene 4 be fou und {It wasn't until Dillon, |. ‘Tet “Kid Lewis, the fast english welterweight, RST RAC twoyear-oklt: maiden| goyaral end men to fill the vacancy |and his wonderful success is probably i " ti it Laid 1Ya c through the Harvard it had [ett for st. Louis laat night, w tie will hook | sy Caron y.jeaused by the disquaiifiestion of|due to the fact that the pecullar i leadin oken to a swifte run that the with Young Denny, the Orleans | 2! | Rekley, the star end, who was found| break on the ball was then strange Horow " ¢ Crimson t lecided to censor hin | fisht @ twelve-rouud ie Cotiacam | 1it'| guilty of having played summer base- |and new. > PHOLE: |'s ess. ‘Then tt was te,|4 on next T ht, Lewia | Wut Dall, The Ithaca eleven is well tixea| Probably the best way to study t, Lea \ f cam | Ws aloo matched to fight Al Dot anton > with formidable line and backfield | these pitchers and observe the rela- ints HAMBERS : AYNAS [tnatess had 1 th Up tha) welorwcigit, for lem sounds at ‘Toledo, O,, on material, but the end problem 19] tive effectiveness of the differnt styles] tir, Ne Le-Harry Carlsom a 1 5 smbledic v th it in| vet y to cause SOMe Uncertainty of © arrange them in groups, 0 | in) Kg atts Dixon Park hard customer in Larrea mous. an a fumble], Ras Miele. Lae —— o., m's chances of beating Har- wn dis) okiyn. Inet night at th be Fue y . § H ‘ 1 Tommy Raion, the Drona fighter, and Frank i Har. eeercn BIDE ARM ta) oklyn, last nisi af $n Raacin the turk t n the ¥ FVArG| carbone, the stu alien mui x xt week, aR "i Bf five ba Comme: ‘arlson ree! bouncing over : t only thing that rave him |< arg ae wld | ocal gvidirona will bo - 5 GROUP, ben pounde’ allowance | award. aft rounds. Tn ¢h Mhrough ogain, and runs fy } him in bout of ten rounds at the box | yrs Demeus, 10 local « ree full of GROUT Al 1 third, however, Hansen staggered Cark Rana’ atoaned Atha uw On imp camel appear Ad 5 ot the Bava! io 11a action this afternoon, The recon- Mathewson, jexander, RACE, "wo year-o ree: ong | third, howey on ate fhto th 1 as befor rf had passed by, And Nolan pecently. fumed from a tap | ROUT WACK — Sharm Tandioap; eee | structed Columbia combination takes Rusio, Earl Moore, cam Tide tal mantel yun; Fa | ROR, WIth and jit « © well known | (Ren, Mo ttte to prevent A to tuenos Avtes and is in fine shape for th HLF irteapy ety! on the Union eleven, a game thi Johnson, Rucker, pe football fielt. ny : Harvard protested im jenny Valse, the former amateur cdainplon, will 10 should result profitably for the home Joss, Caldwel Ait ages Snr ; yely simple matter for Sun. Hel’ referee decided that tho | oot gemmy Dismond ie the other ten-tounds boys. Miner Brown. Rudolph. ib) Starving, Wr ev i | "i tively ple m ter (Saan i Tan ehAateR ae ithin the wulne ih 1 Ba 1 4 Kher len rounder, Advance money | ‘The strong Fordham team should SPITBALL UNDERHAND | ine, 120 Hack, tes 4 4 4 gout mad twis mill he rulos were changed the next winter atch) Brandt, the goad rooklmn bantamweight, ats, OOF, Aad Ona eR LaeR ED | a8 pleasant time with GROUP, iROUP, ievacth TT Pan Mas ards owe 4 " Ashe a Frankie Bi ft Jomey City Alen Cain, 104; irks, 10 ‘ le New York Univer “tlyardeed iy b) Lady. Barbe * see) ‘ down—or xty yarde t t |M’GRAW SAYS HEH « " | has a goc f out on Raymond, HOP, 110,” (0) BF, Curtian entry, (ch " Bam white heat ee aes aR SAYS AS Nov. ts AL Shubert for twenty, round at Ne erect ee | thin right side of the score with W Walsh, Mays. ir Te " a Yale, and ton w t Haven, Conn,, on Nov, 24, and Jobmny Ertle, the | five vand one-half fa leyan, een Chi —Three-year-olls and up: june -Collend ‘ fad Yate, and Princeton was f ‘| PATCHED UP EVERYTHING, St vial taucam, for ten rounds at the Clorimont Horny V0 irony 10; ‘halt ay vote-Vireinia Poly game,| _cndrix, oeriahi tN Rie ng tet dng alleader C J Rane Gam White 1 football | — A. ©, of Brooklyn the middie of next mouth feet Sha scheduled for to-day, was played| prom this It will be noticed that the | foleue imp). 108. td) Penmoue, 100.0 (0) 8 i a little more now. It certainly made Manager John J. M ‘The Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn has a} yeaterday. REPTaoOR Te) BN i¢ & Fane umderhand are in a very small mi- (MF naor, SPORTING, iy nan ” NM never be fe ci wh n Itimo: ood card of boute for ite regular w borin Howsnces jet wi age 1a 7 he | nority, So few « rr ave been suc- 4 : } Ba ac ae anne Wall Hayes: Be fore GRAIN: who Ie ih Beare: sre aa ile Pe the main eveut of ten, rounds Bye ete Mue team, without extending Itaelt, | ROrty; $0 few of thom have dort ae Stars of Boxing World il Teo COY'S RAGE SWEPT PRINCE: | “rnin. is F the ¢ gen Woning ot Colon, Si tate an BAGe "ET Most uni ety nb won 19 to 0. moro than three. Of these three only | get Ain daily 20. M0 at w. f ae by : ag Hiling Wis, at 135 pounds, Mike Dee inrrick, ‘112 ; . one remains--Mays of the Red Sox, Warn ‘ N TO DEFEAT. lyn in the last scries with the 4 Cusack of Brooklyn will clash Schiffer Shades O'Leary, apie is has nt tia vingerfle't 1 Night, it Te F was a neident inal of ix rounds ther bo BUFFALO, SecTake | Oe ana pase Bangor he as Teen Pe RACK ow Pesuk tutin it ‘ In Yale, back in 1907-8-9, there wa ' a Wie sen fal mh Tlake| very eifoctive, hut the players say this La tea saminy ‘Tian Nin footvail player of a differ een him and the New | wit aiso be contorted, “Poly Prep” Reads Mangal Mian, |S) . Palit over) tq duo to the fact that t are no | iis ad: Prone ; ' ae ek Coy. raember been patched up sAtIS | yohnny Kid" Lh sare iae Seepaty Poesia Pent eee ie tounds of tenivés Lothera in the league and there ta not Hien ate. 38 ye Cte We Busty of famoug football m | Hom of the| wo fought such @ « klyn won an easy victory over the |quilling last night at the Queensberry, CNOUBh opportunity to bat against that Hay of Light. 100, Stalwart He ‘ the prep rchools and ent 5 view of the ait=! Badoud, French « nual Training igh: hool eleven| Club. Schiffer Knocked O'Leury dowa) style of pitching to get familiar with ft. | ie r Ploneer Sporting Gaby w with a ready-made reputation. When uation ‘4. ©. op Tuureday night, was secured to-day te to-day, the final score being 27 to 0, ip the ninth, MoGinulty was @ terror with Bis ‘Apprentice allowance, Track heavy, Mike MagTesgue ve. B, 0, 5) LASTING FAWME IN A DAY a oe Sam White, a Baseball Star, Who Didn’t Like Gridiron Game, | Beat Harvard and Yale by Himself, and Coy Did for Eli What) an Entire Team Couldn't Accomplish—Dillon’s Touchdown for Carlisle Necessitated Change in Rules. ———————— oo Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). E' RY few years in footoall there flashes across the news the name of some player who shows a streak of original genius and becomes famous all over the country in @ single afternoon, One of the most Interesting In- stances of this sort was the caso of Sam White You remember that name, A plain, everyday sort of a name and a plain everyday eort of a fellow Sam, was a plain, everyday sort of a student, He was tall, lean and built on lines much favored amgng mountaineers and frontiersmen. In other words, he was the kind of a fellow who could walk fato Ryolite Nev, driving a pack mule and carrying a pick over bis shoulder anj attract no more than a@ mere passing glance from the inhabitants, Sam wasn't a John R. De Witt In stature. Any one would know at a giavce that DeWitt was made especially for the purposes of football. Look at DeWitt and you'd know in an fnstant that he must be either a Tiger fullback or a heavyweight champion of the ring. His huge shoulders, short, thick neck and swaying arms put the label on him at once, But Sam White was different He weighed about 185 pounds a al RE pwn too, _ his game was baseball He tlted Coy was a sophomore, nineteen take the slightest Interest in foot-| year 6 feet 1 inch tall and weigh- ball, He didn't ike St. ing over 190 pounds, yed in his In 1911 Princeton nee rome | frst Kame against Princeton. badly, Sam White was then a sentor| greater things the next year. Prince —in his Inst year in colle He Was persuaded to come out and try) (Ai to ae te all team because of his|©°: 8 given the ball repeated! alley Tayay a tee aa pvr and avery time he ripped through t paseball we rs for a gain, He scored two was over, and he hadn't any future |touchdowns, which with the goals baseball seasons to think about, sof ft ‘ gave Yale 12 to Princeton's 10 n bad scored 10 points in tho first alf to Yale's 0. In the second halt THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1916. BEST SPORTING PAGE | es Autos Being Tuned Up for Harkness Race y 5 4M won the game. didn’t matter much if he did get’a t : “football knee,” or some other im- But the next year was Coy's great year, He was playing d for Yale! pediment in his athletic ability. on Princeton's fleld. ‘The Ty AM WHITE GAVE THE COACHES |''" first: half, had smashed Yale down for & points and seemed supe-! rior to Yale at every point. | But in the second half Ted Coy, | A NEW THOUGHT. When Sam came out ho disagreed Tho hum and roar of racitg auto- mobiles hitting over the 100-mile-an- hour speed can be heard every after- noon now down at the Sheepshead Hay Motordrome, where nearly twenty p Speciais are tuning up for the Harkness trophy race next Satur- Copyright, 1916, ead ‘Teo Cor of Yae Beat PRINCETON BY The FuRY OF HIS INDIVIDUAL ATTACK Dillon and Gibbons Matched After several weeks of dickering, edused by the failure of the men to agree on tho weight question, Jack Dillon, the legitimate light heavy- weight champion, and Mike Gibbons, the sensational middleweight of St Paul, were matched to-day to meet in a ten-round no-decision bout at the big Auditorium in St. Paul on the night of Nov. 17, The men will battle at 163 pounds, weigh in at 3 P. M, on the day of the contest. Dillon ts to receive a guarantee of $7,500, g Sherman declared that Gibbons was to receive 35 per cent. of the gross receipts. To Box in St. Paul on Nov. 17 N NEW YOR WHITE, COY AND DILLON MADE FOOTBALL HISTORY by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) BIG ELEVENS HAVE EASY TIME TO-DAY DILLON” SCORED OW HARVARD WITHTHE BALL UNDER Hid JERSEY, Sam WHITE DIDN'T FAW. On THE Bac. Effectiveness of Pitching Matter of Method Rather Than Change in Styles History Shows Overhand Box- man Lasts Longest in Base- ball, Speed Being Still Twirl- ers Greatest Asset — Spitball Deceptive, but Its Users Soon Give Out. underhand ball, known to the players as “Old Sal.” In @ pinch it was deadly effective and kept Joe in the running a after his strength had begun to ebb, Very few managers will even cons sider an underhand pitcher when one is recommended by the scouts. They do not last long, and cannot possibly have that variety to their work needed for @ long campaign. Tho finished style is the overhand, PUTTING 'EM OVER’ With ‘‘Bugs’’ Baer RABID . RUDOLP Shvro— MENU of Snowballs May Bring Ray Caldwell Back to the Yanks This Winter. Winning the World's Series for the Red Sox was almost as easy as escaping from bing Sing. NY, (J e, Blackboard talks Te sure win ie Chatmpionaly Wf une ohale? \ nontty They say it takes two to make # aht. but only one to finish ty ‘ jurning the other cheek i: dope, but you don't ha windmill out of yours words may turn away wratl there is more diplomacy concealed i a good pair of hi pcan thee i RABID RUDOLPH. 9% Thinks took height at Yale this season, a team wearing t " will try not to id in aipbabetl-al order ny Can't why college football play: ers try so hard for a letter. We ha six we are afraid to open now. ‘Tibbott Isn't doing very well wit the forward pass, His inshoot fen working. FOOTBALL FACTS. Tt is not known just wh the first game of football was played as a lot of erlminal records were destroyed when the court house burned down In 1898, eee In 1911 Syracuse University team travelled about 22,654 miles) on the railroad and about five yards on the fi Wrestler claims another wrestler Injured his reputation, Didn't think an onton needed any help to make It smell ke an onton, cee Unless some of thelr stars flunk fn botany and crocheting It looks as ff Pittshurgh has a chance to cop the football honors, eee hietic committee alt as many let- The college doesn’t give out wrens yams Gene fF