The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1919, Page 18

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"Leonard Bets He Will Knock | | Out Welterweight Bartfield. — FBANY LEONARD, lghtweignt champion, is going to fight to- & night over in Jersey City at the | 4th Regiment Armory. We ased the » Word fight instead of box advisedly ~ -because Benny isn't going to hit, | stop and get away in his usual deft | manner, ‘Instead Benny is going into » the ring to uncork a knockout at the | eXpense of Soldier Bartfeld, the | Brooklyn welterweight. Of course it je understood that the rough and | sendy Bartfeld will have something _ to say in the matter before he is _ stretched on the canvas for the count, Dut Benny has his mind set on regis~ tering the K. O. Benny went over to Phfladelphia recently with the same idea. He met -Bartfield in a six-round bout, and bet his own money that he would put ‘the soldier to sleep. All of Benny's friends strung with him. Bartfield | not only stayed the limit but he was of fight at the end, has put in a lot of traf ‘ng for the bout, because he wants to back the money he lost tn Phila- ia. Bartfleld too is in shape. He kMows all about Leonard's ambitions, but he says he will be in there giving wood as takes when the final bell rings. Leonard-Bartfleld bout will be “The the feature of the evening, but there | are two other bouts on the pro- which should be highly inter- is, to say the least. On brings together Johnny ‘ oe and the other introduces . wyweights Dan O'Dowd and Al Roberts, The Dundee-Coogan bout produce the fireworks, Coogan @ good man has had little to mix with the eo-called stars ge hs hasn't been property mal e man, however, be is itelth, who for- Everything Eli Has Old Fighting Spirit and Is Not Alarmed Over Football Situation, Yet All the Members of Squad Ad- mit Gridiron -Situation Is Matte Be wil tour the county zo} Puzzling and Anything May fatgeer, rather than an England's} Happen in a Game Nowa- days. O'ROURKE 1s going to safl By Bozeman Bulger. from England to-morrow. He , ways there is no use staying HERE is no alarm in Yale over the football situation. re any longer, as Beckett won't take a chance with Fred Fulton. ‘There ts even leas concern on the surface than when Jack Cates 6 in his letter enclosed an with “Gordon Coghill the Aus nm , the Aus P. kindly took me into Reyes Vans & gan iS Ssenapcsieoren, Temcheon at tee people are never Bulldog team just before st went out a series | to bump into Brown. You remember old Jack and Phil, tal yas |on't you? They were on the same what did it matter? He had done | team with Tom Shevlin in those his- Y aes. for7, bd Chine was no| toric days of 1905 and ‘06 up at New ry ‘urther fame Cat ther the on's taouth.” Coghill Haven. Jack tes was the o | Wplucky fight, and that’s all there is © Bw it. He haa no chance of winning. Another person I saw just after th test was also discontented. “ "t think much of this fellow,” he the death of Yale's greatest of all ends, Jack has been helping coach the newcomers, Phil Smith, whose 250 pounds of football weight still cov- meaning Fulton, to w! That when T hed goer tretreei|era a lot of ground—sitting down— I would be ready then to tell | helps things along by furnishing the what torus about him. For | reminiscences for the new generation. have been eacion fiat the] pnit ent the squad away laughing nst Townley, Curran and Coghill Saturday and met them with even a ‘only @ camoufiage of the real fight- | Sroader smile on their return to the iq |S¥ He's worth a lot to those lads does not | When he pays them a visti, to be the least bit strained and| gq 02 7OU fave mot seen, 0, footed! real ability is in the mean while ‘some f “well, let mo tell you thing. being kept in wraps.’ Football's not the same any more Pi ‘There's Do Way to gauge a team now. ad ‘te Tanke sae ene fetter] With the change of rules there's no ; Beckett, the| basis of calculation. The teams are Bngilah champion heavyweight, |aleo all green and untried. There's uch of a fighter. Read on: deen no games since 1916, and a young fellow you don't figure on at all is likely to step out and break up any I aommation ie She, arse, areve simply called ‘prise | got to what we think are good Seren revere |men, teach them the recognized prin- Mr, Sugar, | ciples of football and let it go at that, from 4, got | Tt is idle to try and figure on what the other big teams have got. They don't know hemselves, What are known the second grade colleges are likely have better players than the big wads. A high school boy can work O'Rourke is making from London to England's merry Fred Fulton I believe Mberty in writing you, as I seek or am [ connected with jo enersy. Beckett's fight with Eddie McGoorty, Swoer but I wonder it the old t y understand | piece; but I wonder | old boy fighter and who|read in the London papers that Mac Joe's fight, | was locked up for being stewed just the biggest false| two nights before the fight? He . Past ex-|couldn't have been in the pink of t us that the so-|condition at that rate. Guess the England are huge | only pink part on him was his nose. hn ged to the United | Beckett is a nice boy to talk to and ‘and I believe Joe| poses for his photograph on the Lon- be about the biggest “April fool|don buses real sweetly, but, take it that John Bull ever threw a| from a friend, if Jack Dempsey ever Beckett punches -| turns down a fight with him he's @ strong face, . Bet your family jewels that fierce fighting | Jack knocks that bird cold inside of lot of taxi drivers | six rounds if they meet—end you can jual-|cash in before the fight. Like the Jimmy Wilde, Bastam, Bom: ‘ells anc the rost cf those 1 boi dasha ORR THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1919." WAS PRESEN pee LOVING CUP JUST BERRE THE BOUT= ar wit BG SUPERSTITIONS TONIGHT” Change With Yale Eleven Except the Liniment & forward pass on Yale, Princeton or Harvard as well as @ ‘ if tt ts not expected. The whole situa- tion is chaotic and it will take two or three years for us to find @ basis fo-) considering the strength of other teams. Of one thing you may be cer- tain, though. A Yale team always has te - bull spirit. It’s traditional. Now, every! appears to think that Harvard is stronger than Princeton. It may be, but nobody can tell, How) do they know?” ‘This, mind you, was all said before the games, How close Cates came to sizing up the eituation can best be shown by the surprising scores throughout the country—surprising to the public “Come on down in the sym, where the boys are dressin, Cates and Smith suggested. Dr. Sharpe, the coach, met us on the way. In the room twenty-five or thirty athletes were pulling on their togs, adjusting leather shin and shoulder pads. Others were having their scratched faces patched up to look fit, All looked expectant and eager—and shy. It_was exactly the same scene that football men have seen in that room for the past twenty years. Homehow, to end, playing opposite Sheviin, Since|” =] everyth' changed in football,” tes, “Everything but one—the smell. It's “That's right,” laughed Johnny the trainer, “I'm ust) ex- actly the same liniment, Jack, that I rubbed you with fifteen years ago.” “Yep, it's the same old smell,” observed Phil Smith. “You remem. ber the time when I broke tn here whistling about the smell and in- terrupted the coach who was making a serious speech?—Gee, what a baw!- ing out I got!” “How is the arm, Fido?’ Bates in- quired as Kempton, the new quarter- back, looked up from his shoe to join in the laugh. “It's all right, Can't lift it te my shoulder yet, But that won't stop me.” Tt @idn't either. ‘The crowd out there at the Bowl didn't know that Kempton, in his lar work, was favoring a shoulder recently re- covered from a break. Neither did they know that Capt. Callahan's face ts so badly skinned and otherwise upset that he hasn't been able to shave for a week. “Td come in and get @ bite with you,” Callahan had yelled to us as we sat at the training table, “if I didn't look like @ tramp.” But he was per- suaded to come anyway. He was now plastering hin if up for the fray, “We don’t know what Brown's go! Phil Smith remarked, “But these are pretty smart youngsters and I'm sure they'll get on before the day is over.” Dr. Sharpe took Kempton, the quarterback, over into a corner and while in a squatting position talked to him long and earnestly, Kempton, by virtue of his position, would have the running of the team—the calling of eignals—and, it being his first big game, had to be cautioned about sev- eral possibilities. As we watched the proceedings, Galt, the biggest man on the team, slipped on his blue Jersey and came over, His bulk in the semt-darkened room loomed up like the back of a taxicab, His face was 60 covered with scratches as to resemble war paint His catching grin distorted these ecratches into fantastic shapes. “I am off six pounds,” he proudly confided to Mr. Gates, and added, as everybody smiled, “but it never shows laces | Were amusing. Law never anywhere except on the scales,” There pare fully 190 sounss | f ge one I . player, e play ata on, wan vary erate that Oui aN i Copyright, 1919, by the Press Publi hin ¢ Co, (The New York Evening World.) "*seorry™, 4 fooeant "een FORMER HGe oF OUNDES: By Thornion Fisher AL ROBERTS Wie TRY TO SeRamBie = UP HR-OAN O'DOWD MR: TOAST MASTER AND GENTLEMEN- UNACCUSTOMED AS) IN THE PRELIMINARY HWHAT'S- HAISNAME” Witt FIGHT “HOW-DO-YOU™, PRONOUMCEST ~ YALE’S FOOTBALL SQUAD — THE Name, Nickname and CI P. B. Allen (Babe) 191 THE T. V. Dickens (Tom) 1920 S.... H. Kirkpatrick (Kirk) 1918 8 Munger (Ray) 1920 8. Walker (Leon) 1919 8 ¥ w. RB. LB. |. & Acosta (John) 1921 C. 1. C. Galt (Carter) 191 K. Hammill) (Ken) 1920. 208 610 Cincinnati, O, A. Hubbard (Al) 1920 S. G. M. Bidenburg (Snooks) 1920. J. Trippe (John) 1920 S........ P. M. Zenner (Phil) 1918 . Cc 23 a1 T. J. Callahan (Tim) 1919 W. J. Galvin (Bill) 1921,. H. Kempton (Fido) 1919 S.... C. La Roche (Chet) 1918 S J. B Neville (Chick) 1921...... THE M. AMrich (Mac) 1922 HB. HL Campbell (Pop) 1919 HB. P. H. Crane (Pau!) 1922 HB. J. EL French (Jack) 1921 HB.. R. Lay (Rob) 1920 S-HB....... Cc T. Murphy (Mike) 1919 8-HB D. Welles (Don) 1920 S-HB. J. Braden (Jim) 1918 FB. F, Webb (Freddie) 1921 8-FB. 22 2 21 BA 18 24 2 21 21 24 20 a 20 there,” Dr. Sharpe indicated by a nod, ‘is Braden, and he is a great pros- pect.” It was a question as to whether Braden would play, but it was finally decided to let him in, very much to the regret of Brown. By this time all kinds of old-timers were dropping in. There was Billy Lauder, the old baseball player, and also athletic instructor at Brown. Then they introduced me to a well known and prosperous lawyer of New Haven—a Mr. Lynch. “Well, I'll be darned!” came simul- taneously, Who do zou__suppose it was? Old Mike Lynch, who used to pitch go well for Pittsburgh, and finally wound up with the Giants. None other, And as a lawyer Mike is doing well. Not long ago he argued one of the biggest cases ever tried in the New Haven courts and won. But Mike was in a dilemma Saturday. He went to Brown, but lives in New Haven. His efforts at neutrality furnished him euch a problem as that. Soon after the arrival of Mike Esq. the little club house was in an uproar, In came young Hef- flefinger, a nephew of old “Pudge,” He is manager of the football team this year, but his enthusiasm ie not limited to that. He was heard a half) block away before he burst in the door, “Say!” he yelled, “Just got word that Yale has cleaned up in the cross~ country! Whole team came in ahead of Harvard!" &o, &c. “Yes, but we've got to win this football game!" some player yelled across the room. “Hurry it up! Hurry it up!" or- dered Johnny Mack. “You fellows have got just ten minutes mora This 1s no camp meeting. Come on! Come on!" There was a hurried pulling on of | shoes, adjusting of straps and the equad dashed out in a long stream toward the Bowl. The Brown playe who dressed in the same building were right behind them, Tt took the Yale youngsters a whole peculiar and half of the game to solve double-pass that Brown used, there wus no score, During the | termission, though, they conferre with the coaches, Beginning the sec ond half Kempton knew the secre ‘After that Brown never advanced an Yale won with comparative inch, ease, The one great thing exhibited by Yale was the physical condition of the players, The work of the coaches, aided by that star of trainers, Johnny Brown gradually weakened, but the Bulldog The ex- ceptionally hard work of the past sori Mack, had put them in shape. appeared to grow sironger, wi all 7 the scral Age Wot. 23 F. W. Graham (Freddie) - 2% 8. L. Reinhardt (Spider) 1920., 2 20 23 20 20 THE GUARDS. , 20 22 - 20 THE QUARTERBACKS. ENDS. | Het. Home, 184 6.10 Meriden, Conn. 187 6.00 Philadelphia. 178 5.11 Dallas, Tex. ACKLES. THIS 1S SO UNEXPECTED LaCrosse, Wis | Seattle, Wash. Waterbury, Conn. Minneapolis, 192 5.10 206 6.00 185 6.00 195 6.00 Jagkeonville, Fla. Honelulu. 175° 6.11, 226, 6.10 187 6.21 PUil; 195 5.11 Ni D. Segal. (Dang 19! 195 6.00 NewoYork City. 192 5.11 New York City. 212 611 A , Ohio. ENTRES. 206 6.11 Lawrence, Masa 180 5.09 Hartford, Conn. ——— and With Experience Gained Against Harvard the Prince- ton Team Feels Sure of Vic- tory. By William Abbott. What can the Tigers do to Yale? ‘The same confidence that Prince- ton’s team would come through in the Harvard game is already show- ing itwelf that the Bulldog will be collared in the Bowl Saturday. If anything the Orange and Black line- up for the Blue battle should stronger than the one that outplayed | Harvard. It is expected that “Stan” \ Keck, the giant 220-pound tackle 155 56.09%Malden, Masa, 163 5.09 Dorchester, Mass. 155 610 Omaha, Ne .CKFIELD, 160 6.10, 167 6.11 Fall River, Mass. Everett, Mass. 165 5.10 Montclair, N, Y. 172 6,00 New York City. 176 5.09%Kalamazoo, Mich. 168 5.10 Simsbury, Conn. 170 6.11 Hindsdale, Dl. 200 6.09 Washington, Pa, 189 6.00 Gates Mills, O. Joe Lynch's west side fans have char- tered a special train to take them to Philadelphia Wednesday night where their idol boxes Champion Pete Herman in @ six-round bout at the Olympla, as they feel confident he will topple over the title holder in the same fashion that he did that formidable fighting ma- chine, Kid Willlams, in the same arena two years ago. Judging by the manner in which Lynch is battering his spar- ring partners up in the gym, Herman will have to bring all his ringcraft into Play if he hopes to weather the six rounds Wednesday night take all, at 122 ringside, which claims he can do, I also manage who boxed Harry Greb, who outweig! teen pounds, two draws and he bas the clippings to prove it, Howard only weighs 150 pounds and ia willing to box Jack Britton or any boy in the welterweight class," As Augie Ratner has noti Rice of the Pine Tree A. C, that he will be unable to the Canadian fighter, at jatchmaker De George Chip of New Castle to will come together for twelve rounds, A double wind-up of ten rounds will be staged by the National Sporting Club of Detroit, Mich, tonight, In the chief event Champion Mike O'Dowd will take on Butch O'Hagan, the Alban; N, Y,, middleweight, while in the other contest Johnny Marray of Harlem will ewap punches with Mike Dundee of Rock Island, Ii, If the manager of Benny Valger is as anxious ‘as he wants people to think he is to have Benny Valger mect Jobnny Kilbane Jor the feather- weight title, here is his chance, Jimmy Dunn, manager of Kilbane, says that he will match Kil- bane to fight Valger, providing that Valgers manager will post, 9 ‘forfett of $1,000 as a guar. antes that Valger will do 122 pounds ring side, It’s @ cinch that Velger will not make that | for defeating Johnny Tillman of St, Detroit on Nov, 6, and on Nov, 7 he $1,360 for beating George Doig, the La "Balle welterweight, in a ten-round bout at La Salle, nm, Joe Benjamin, the lightweight champion of California, who has won every fight in the East, | will go against Johnny Drummie, the Jersey Oity Lighowoight. in the windup at the Olyamia A, A. of Philadeiyihia to-night, Benjamin should wie ae ho knows too much for Drummie, Frankie | Jerome meets ‘Tommy Cleury in the weni-tinal, armory in that city tonight, Pal Moore of Mfem- his meets Mike Ertle of St, Paul, Charley White weight, tackles Gergt, Jack Burke of New Or- Yeana, Pal Moore, the Memptis bantamweight, will not do much fighting in this country for the next six months, as be expects to engage in three fights over in England, Pal told Dan Morgan in Obt- cago om Saturday that he has called off bis fight with Pete Herman at New Orleans and will leave for England in December with Billy Haack, his now manager, Bam Langton’, the colored fighter of Boston, who is now under the management of Howard Carr of Chicago, now only weighs 194 pounds and ia in fine condition, Carr has matched Langford to meet Griff Jones, another colored fighter, for twenty rounds at New Orleans on next Friday might, ‘Eadie Fitmimmons, the promising local light- weight, and Cal Delaney of Cleveland hare been matched to met in a tensound bout et the Wolverine A, ©, of Detroit, Mich,, on Tues- day evouing, Nov, 18, If Fitzsimmons can beat Delaney be will get some big boute in the West, 4 Danny Morgan bas many offers for him if be wine over Delaney, Willie Spencer, th Billy Newman, manager of Iriwh Pateey Cline, the local fighter, has recetved the articles af agreament for the ten-round bout between Otine | and Ritehie Mitchell, the Milwaukee welterweight, | which is to be fought at the Wolverine A. Detroit, Mich,, on Nor, 19, Newman signed for Cline, the articles calling for the men to battle at 188 pounda, weigh in at 8 P, M. Cline receives $750, Bilent Martin, the deafinute middleweight, and Mike McTigue, also of this city, will not get the | chance again to box at the Syracuse A, ©, as they were both ordered out of the ring in the seventh round by Referee Jack Lewis in the star pout at that club last week for uot giving their beat efforts, ‘Al Lippe has arranged two more bouts for his pattlers, Frankie Brown, the former local featherweight, will take on Battling Reddy for | twelve rounds at Lynn, Mass, on Nov, 13, while Eddie Moy of Allentown, Pa,, will go against Charley Pitts, the Australian fighter, for twelve rounds at the saine club on the night of Nov, 20, Jim Davenport wri have Willie Kobler, country, under and 1 det him make ‘Champion Herman or Joe Lynch, title contender, england flyweight, has been signed for two battles by bis manager, Chubby Gilet, On Friday night Spencer tackles Sammy Nable at Long Branch, N, Nov, 21 he meets Boley Dyson in a bout at Marlboro, Mass, Joo Want. | the hard welterweight, clash with” in 9 tea-round 110 ringside for Tigers Confident of _ Collaring the Bulldog In Bowl | Saturday With Keck Back jn Lineup | "of, iniutad ankle provera game, will be ready for Yale. He is Nas- sau's best defensive forward and his great weight will do much to strengthen the beft side of the line, the same side that Eddie Casey slipped through unnoticed and caught a forward pass from Felton in the last two minut of play that tied the score, With Keck back in the line, and with the experience gained from the gruelling Crimson encounter, the ‘Tigers should be a formidable eleven for Yale to stop. Princeton's back- field, Strubing, Trimble, Garrity and Wittmer, played together for the first time last Saturday. It was also the first opportunity for “Shad” Davis to perform, but this fiery youth made good Coach Roper’s prediction that he is one of the best ends the Orange and Black has possessed in years. It was Davis's sensational catching of passes that paved the way for the ‘Tigers’ touchdown. After McGraw blocked a Harvard punt on her 15- yard line it was this same alert young man who pounced on the ball right in the midst of Crimson jerseys. When Harvard became desperate late in the game and charged down into Princeton territory, & new de- fensive star was brought out in Joe Scheerer, a long-legged halfback who can doot a ball at least half the length of the field. Twice Scheerer punted his side out of danger, the first time when he stood in back of his own goal line and booted away down to Harvard's 45-yard line, As a point maker Frank Murray was in- troduced as the Tigers’ field goal ace. He had one chance and made that one good with a goal 20 yards away. While Princeton exceeded hopes held by most Nassau rooters Yale is somewhat of a team. The Bulldog, after many years of victories firmly believes he has Princeton's number. Somehow Blue teams possess the ability to accomplish the unexpected when playing the Jersey men. Yale beat Brown Saturday 14 to 0, which was just double Harvard's count against Brown and one more point than Colgate scored against the Providence team. But the sis- nificant feature about Yale's showing was the way she pushed Brown around the field. Any team that can gain 360 yards by rushing as Yale did in the Brown contest packs a hefty kick. The New Haven backfield, Kempto' ‘ebb. Neville and ‘Jim Braden, varied style of attack that both Princeton and Harvard a busy afternoon. Both the Cadets and Middies re- celved setbacks. West Point's 12 to 9 defeat by Notre Dame was not en tirely a surprise. Back in 1918 the Westerners came to West Point and caught the future generals off guard by a complicated aerial attack. When the Cadets apparently had Saturday's game won Notre Dame cut loose with a bewildering assortment of passes and once again the: Army finished a victim ‘The Navy all year has been bellow- ing about its great team. But alone comes Georgetown and skins th Middies’ hopes for a record season by shooting over two fleld foals, meanwhile holding the Annapolis crew scoreless. The game was just another upset in a season remark- able for reversals. i Saas Brocco Cables His Entry. Maurice Brocco will be among those present in the line-up for the start of the six-day race at Madison Square Garden Nov, 30, the popular rider sign- ing a contract to ride at a meeting of the European stars In Paris yesterday, The cable announcing the signing of Brocco also stated that Oscar Egg, to terms pro- wae allowed to pick his own | passes, | Stop the Tiger aerial game was a gor- BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK ADIOS TO-NIGHT IN JERSEY CITY “SUBS” AGAINST Coaches Will Devote Next Two Weeks Preparing Reg- ulars for Yale Game. (Special to The CAMBKIL Harvard's regular te | get into action again until the game here with Y, two weeks Jaway. The who have been given a holiday to-day are un- der instructions to report to-morréw afternoon when the first steps will be taken to prepa y Saturday's game with Tufts 1 an hands + and the player rugged struce not to dres day Prening Wor! M about substit ve a holiday 4 who too! Pr un to-day, part im the with play for a litth nu these, however, | but the trio are for work bofore tI | Ralph Horween's bone stra covering Only 2 serious order, ull promised ready week is out injured collar- und in the barness urday and got out of place Doctor chols dressed the injured member after the game, but Horween, ter his arrival here, had it tended to again. The big full jback declares the injury is nothing serious, and says he will be back in uniform Thursday The younger Horween hurt his back ;Somewhat, and Jack Desmond, the | 200-pound tackle, was jarred up a bit, |but neither is seriously hurt. It 4s |@ great tribute to Trainer Donovan | that practically the entire squad will be ready for the Yale game unless one of the subs ¢ burt Saturday Donovan's value to Harvard has peen his ability to keep the squad from going stile, and in addition giving the coach a bunch of healthy regu- lars for the big games, esr Maybe when the team does report for ‘practice there will not be some rather strong language used about the weakness of the backfldd i: stopping the Princeton forward Stan Burnham's inability to me of rowful furprise to Conch Rob Fisher, especially as he did so well agal Springfield and in practice sinos that game. Humphrey was known to be a little weak defensively against the overhead delivery, and it was through hig territory that the Tiger touch- down was made. The rush line of Woods and Clark at guards, Sedgwick and Kane at tackles, and Desmond and Steele at ends is expected to stand as it is for the Yale game. Arnold Horween, who played a swell defensive game Saturday and brought Harvard some- what out of its slough of despond, will probably start at centre againgt the Blue, but Havemeyer and Phil- bin, the other contenders, are no through by any means. EVENING WORLD'S William Plant of the Morningsid> C., who recently : font en-mile championship fifteen-mile ‘polit : at f ime enberg of the b third, in winning another stablished two new Ameri- pie time fe the fifteen m. 1 a title Plant ¢ can records, miles was 2h th wrk by Im, 4 2 vecord, the three in progress at Doyle's billiard room, at Broadway and Forty-frst street. Her- bert MeKen second. ‘There are tered In the ev equally skilful close! Scudder 5 1 nt and, as all are about the nightly matehes are contested, evening Fay and J Cosgrove will cross et billiard tourna- $ ane is in the lead with George Burton second." The latter won fifty-point exhibition game Frank ‘Taberaki, the. champion, et Doyle's one evening last week. tball ngers the Metropoll- ries at Astoria by @ score the Qu tan Leagui of 4 goals Columbia rooters received their sur- prise of the season last Saturday when Stevens so easily trouneed the Blue and yhite eleven. 1 ‘oboken collegians were hardly d such a battle, e de was almost entir unexpected, lumbia came out of the game with a greatly swelled hospital list. Thornton suffered a sprained ankle fn the first few minutes. of ia ried off the field, Canapary pla: his bad shoulder and succeeded in thake Ing it far worse, but the greatest set- back of all came when tt was that Charlle Shaw had dislocated shoulder. PIMLICO SELECTIONS. First 2d, A an ¥ Race—Rubledium, Reber nzac nd Race—King’s Champion, Sister ie, Heayy, Weapon.” Third Race — Kwoneshee, Ro! Craig, Wilkinson entry. a ce—Penrose, Carman. Fifth Race—Jean Bullant, Ma a Tuckett, My r iia’ Sixth’ Race—Poacher, Cou Mine, Major Domo, sin Si Race—Joan of Are, Pale ) Henry Frantzen has a slight lead in| ush on tournament which ts ; and had to be car- 4 ‘ y TUFTS SATURDAY | f ¥

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