The evening world. Newspaper, September 27, 1921, Page 23

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+. +dent. “jeokiag gray and cold. » ~eterkn umpire alip through the door, etruck him that O'Higgins had since the beginning of the ‘the firm hand in a pinch, A ged ln Higgins, in his old derby hat and © f) _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1921. _ “ARE YOU The Story of an Ump By CHARLES envi iY Si tesdy tar doo fas, " CHAPTER Il. a (Coutimoed.) WH of teh new men was in- competent and trid to blurt his way through. He failed. a Another had not the requi- qe amount of firmness necessary to hendle eighteen bigh-string athletes. Ball players are like colts; they know ey ingtinct whether the driver knows ‘ets bysiness or not. The third man was only passable, and six teams were about incompetent umpiring, ‘m June, when the race was winegins up, Joe Kerrigan, a veteran service, went all to smash, ena interested parties had no trouble tm prgving that Joe's eyesight was very,.yery bed. Joe took his broken heart into the saloon business, and it geemed as if the very devil himself was after the big-league umpiring otaff.. Tt was at this time that Cornelius has corned the reputation of be Moudla-breasted gray travelling suit, gut in an appearance at the office of tthe President of the league. “Mf; Daly,” said O'Higgins, “T've ever asked any favors of you"—— “Go to it!” sald dhe young Presi- “What's on your mind “{ Want to ask you if you can let me take ten days off.” The President leaned back in his swivel chair and rvared until he was red if the face. Bolled down to a thick broth, the extract of his wall was to the effect that the league was tm the worst shape it had ever been trom the standpoint of cempeting umpiring, and that duty—d-u-t demAnded that Mr, O'Higgins should stay at his post. "t know that,” said O'Mgginal earnestly. “But this is important.” “Maybe this league isn't impor- tant!” interjected the President. Then he talked facts, and backed them up with figures. The race was Clove; O'Higgins, as the best umpire in the business—the salve passed without a nod—was soheduled to care for tthe important games. It was impossible to spare him, “But if you knew"—— “I know that Kerrigan is out,” smid the President. “I know that) Harding ain't worth his salt; I know thet (Panning hasn't made good! I know that all the towns in the] Leagte are howling: ‘Umpire! Um- pire!* Why, man, w® can't spare you! You've GOT to stick!” OHigcins did not press the point. |\ He aecepted the eituation, made no expiapation, and went away at last, As! President Paly watched his) seanon. O'Higgins had come towNew York! to officiate in the series between the] New York club and the Reds, both fighting for firat place. His as-| sistant would b* young Harding, a youngster from a Western league—| geod on balls and atrikes, but lacking| eal fepended upon the stries be- tween the two clubs, and Daly hoped} that Harding would be benefitted by his association with eo st*ady an umpire as OHiggins, The day efter the opening series, every morning paper in New York) called attention to th® fact that the bothe club might have won the game but for ome very rotten decisions by the veteran, O'Higgins. He bad al-| Jowed) three of the Reds to walk when {t eeemed that the New York pitcher had fanned them with bells across the corners of the plate. One writer contributed a long &F-| nounced to-day thet he would not for a fight between | nny Leonard and Satlor Friedman | tlole, pointing out that Joe Kerrigan had just been dropped because of the infirmities of age, and Joe, so the) writer stated, was a babe in arms) compared with O'Higgins, the Me-| thuselah of the staff. Others were inclined to believe that the old man had had an off day, but nome attempted to disguise the fact| that his umpiring had been very very bad. Business took Daly out of town the next day, but he read the accounts of | the game in the New York papers O'Higgins, working on the bases, had | made three decisions which the critics | agreed were the worst ever seen on the grounds, and the last’one had led to a rot. All the papers commented on | the fact that, though surrounded by angry ball plavera, some of whom had jaid hands upon him, O'Higgins had ordered nobody from the field. It was openly charged that O'Higgins was go- ing to pleces on a critical sertes. “O'Higgins Loses His Nerve!" sald the headlines. Daly fired a long telegram at his | secretary and finished his business as | soon as possibie, returning to New) York In time for the fourth game.) The baschal! population of New York | was in an uproar. O'Higgins, the re- Mable, the most prominent umpire tn | the league, had marred three gamos by execrable decistonn, and the Sew | Yorkers felt that but for his decisions | they might have won all three gamex, | tnatead of dropping two to ther rivals. “well,” said Daly to his secretary, how was it? Aa bad as thoy aay “Wore was the answer, “If I 4i4n't know O/Higgins for a sober man ! BEHIND 1 , 1910, by the Bell Syndicate), SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENT. He never fratemizes with the afer thirteen years of action the players can find no sign of his letting up, no | Beason, HE MASK ire Who Had a Heart E. VAN LOAN ing “hard-boiled. I'd say he'd beet drunk on’ the field You never saw such ball and strike de- cisions in your life; the teams are all up in the alz and he doosn't use any lets ‘em I think the old man's head is demanded authority whatever. rave, going, Pete.” fave you seen him “What does he say Just Daly “I've been at his hotel every day at * said the secretary, “but I haven't caught him, and when 1 saw night he Just climbed on a car and went downtown. They tell me at the hotel that he has been getting two and thrée telegrams least twice him after wouldn't the game last talk to me at all. He's in trouble of some sort.” if that old a day. “I wonder n going out to afternoon.” the The President was not in his box He had no wish to answer the thousand and one ot whom were firing them at him in the Was it true to take action on when time was gailed questions of the reporters, some columng of the papers. that he intended O'Higgins's evident collapse? Had he been fully informed of his Did; he not know that it was worse than work In the past three days? Kerrigan's? The President would see for himself before he made up his mind. The game began with Harding be- hind the bat and O'Higins on the base and llow walked to his They advised him to see an buy him aj yellow dog to lead him back and forth | from the ball park and they laid at two games and asked him what he was going to line. The bleach yelled ag the old fi place. oculist; rites hooted they offered to his feet the loss of the do about it. For three innings a made themselves, wide open as a barn trouble New York put two men on the bases with two down ste bet and McCue, the short- een first and second. ner on second had a speedier man on the path, It was plain that the decision would be a close one, for the second base- man had to travel some distance to reach the ball and nothing but a per- fect throw would beat McCue, (Read to-morrow’ ——_——<— TACK’S GOSSIP AND BOWLING NEWS ‘nele Joe” Thum has suc: matching Mort Lindsey of Stamford, one of the best known bowlers in the untry, and Gle Thursday night. Phe series call for the best five out of | nine games On Friday night “Uncle Joe" has matched Charley Trucks of York, who has the reputation of not | Keatley last | having lost a match game all season, to roll a ten game series, total bins to count. Ew Bowlers that won prizes In the White Elephant ‘nip will reoelve thelr individual bowling chamt ty-one evenly matebed this season. ‘Tar Jupiter Rowling Club of Yorkville have en: gaged Guartery for the 1921-1022 scagnn at Mave Aven and e will be held ‘her, Saturday migmt, for the year will be elected. re heen made for the ope the White Bleph Arrangement: of the Auk Rowling Lean Bowling Academs Monday ere fs one Of the oldest closed te tn the ctty. eatin Friedman Wi! Before Leonard. PHILADELPHIA, Sept, 27.—Diree: tor of Public Safety Cortelyou an: issue a permit READING rascal has) been speculating?” said the President. | game this child might have umpired the bases; the decisions ‘Then, in the fourth, came the rolied a slow, twisting grounder The runner on third dashed for the plate, the run- flashed toward third, It was up to McCue to beat the throw to first and New York could not have inal instalment.) eded in n Riddell, a well] known local bowler, to roll a series of | |ten pin games at the White Elephant | gingwald of Bowling Academy Tm Alley Owners’ Aswriation medalist in the qualifying round of the i heat "Monday 9 fore ‘Tee first eluty rot when officers ‘The Silk League Have to Box Mealey | Hallavill, Gimme and Musty Most Promising Trio of Steeplechasers. By Vincent Treanor. RAINER BILLY GARTH has the! T most promising Jot of so-called green jumpers seen in many @ On Tuesday last he sent Musty to the post for hin ‘debut . | through the field and the three-year- j | Old raced like a veteran at the game He was beaten only a head by Robert Oliver, which took Sweepment into camp at Saratoga yesterday. Garth saddied two more new jumpers. tn the J. 8, Cosden colors in Gimme} and Hallavill, t1 was their first ap-| pearance over the hedges and both performed ina most satisfactory man- ner, Hallavill won and Gimme ran third. It is said Musty is the most [Promising of the trio. Berrilldon, the sire of Hallavill, was a bold fencer himself on the other side of the Atlantic. Gimme did well Ull the last fence, when he blundered and all but fell. It looks as though there would be a nice lot of young horses to go on with in the jumping races next year. They are sorely needed, as our supply of cross-coun- try horses has dropped away badly this year. New blood must be had constantly in order to keep up the! interest. Jyntee does not race very often, but she wins a lot of her races in a way that marks her as a useful plater. She is reliable to a degrve, and, like most of the Fair Plays, is thoroughly at} home in any kind of a track. Her full| sister, Turnabout, was one of the cheapest mares sold last spring, yield- ing a generous return on the $1,100 she cost at Belmont Park. Evidently the war betweer John E. Madden and J. H. Kouster, which be- gan over the sire Friar Rock, is to be carried to the race track, as the| | former claimed Sympatica for $4,600 after the daughter of Friar Rook and Lady \Bedfotd had won the third ra ‘The suit in the case of Friar Rock is pending in the courts, and Ilke the Playfellow suit between Hildreth and) Johnson, will help to enliven the win-| ter and give turf followers something to talk about till spring rolls round | again. Since Dunboyne became a member | of the Hildreth household he has dis- | played the sort of speed that char- acterized his two-year-old form, and as long as he goes in the way he did in the Aryerne Handicap yesterday he {6 going to keep the best of the sprinters bu Dimmesdale showed | Terrace Wins in the FI in the Garden. Knockouts featured the preliminary rounds of the amateur boxing tour- nament at Madison Square Garden last night. Sid Terrace, a well put- together youngster, representing the | Rutgers gymnasium, stopped Leo Lynch, Norwich, Conn, tn 1 minute Jand 45 secon ‘The cast side boy | floored Lynch with, a right for @ count of four soon after the bell |rang, When Terrace floored Lynch “lfor the second time the referee | stopped the bout. One of the best bouts of the night «as that between Eddie Harvey of the Emanuel House of Brooklyn, and Frank ‘St. Bartholomew's Club t rounds the Judges failed to reach u decision and ordered another round. The boys fought furiously in | the extra session and when it was over Eddie Forbes, the referee, gave the ver= dict to Singwal . | After thre Philadelphia and Joe Falcaro of New Se of Newspaper Tourney. With a net medal score of 75-67. | W. N. Keatley of The World was the Cooper Cup golf tournament, held under the auspices of the New York News | paper Golf Club at Van Cortlandt Park yesterday Following were the b t scores turny | awards this cren! Elephant Bowling in: C. F. Laux, %0— 8; T. Le Can Academy, pas 91 49; F. FigNe n, $5—16. Wey 4 Greenwich Clube 69: R. F. Foster, 94—24—10; HL. Ser Deon anleced to mil the opening games ia 80—9—T1; D. Hall, 871578; A. e* atnerican Nettonal. Weim ihe"Wenite Roth, &8—13—73; end A. Willing, 92— Peotant ait an ara went tet teams in the tournament here next Week nor for any fight tr which Iinan planned to engage until he has fulfled his contract to neet Johnny Mealey at the Olympla A.A. on Oct. 1 The Director said that Friedman ts under a, bona fide contract with Her- man Taylor, matchmaker ‘of the Olympia, and this eannot be broken ‘ under a clause in the rules governing boxing in Philadelphi ee Sharkey and Nable Box a Draw. Jack Sharkey Sammy Nabio of the east side fough af 8 twelve-round draw at tho Rrosdway Exhibition Club last night, In the sami-final Mickey Nelaon won’ tha claton ¢ Young Schano in ten rounds, ee Jndwe Outpoints Murray. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 27.—In_ the| beat bout of the sight at the openin of the Olymple Club, Martin Judge, the crack local featherweight, by his supe. | rior boxing In the last two rounds out- pointed Tommy Murray, fads in a elx-round bout pS A Seeman Scores Easy Victory. At Paterson, last night, Sol Seeman, the unbeaten’ local fea*herwetght an former amateur champion, easly de. feated Tommy Bln of th elty twelve-round bout, Tt beut from start to finish another loca‘ Seems “Pht Bloom Scores Knockont, TRENTON, N. Sopt, 27.—Phi Rloom, the crack Brooklyn welterweight stopped Wally Hinckel in the fifth rou of a woheduled twelve-round bout here last night. f the west side and in a} Was Seeman’s t t THE GREAT BASEBALL SHORT ST Garth Is Well Supplied | With : New Ju hunters. authority who shrinking perso nomen "Kitty Ka KINGS PA are running afternoon | Bay iwe: one and yard wo half tide, and mping Horses It comes from an excellent mina noel — siccciamsitin thon —2 p HAGEN-GOLDSTEIN. With the Football Teoma AMERICANS WIN HAVE BEST BALL OF «vc THREE OUT OF FOUR INDIANA FOOTBALL TEAM eto find an end cutting in on hint who turns tot the other flunk for es 8 lot of speed in the early running, READY FOR HARVARD GAME, cape will be perplexed to find appar. but when Sande set Dunboyne down) die ine Hee eae ing aitingg him, | the race wag over, His lop ears xive BLOO: CRON i Hdreth has been arly every | Paabaine ahrbined Stin hoe music 1 Ha : MINGTON, Ind. Sept = play in practice, bat whether one or tae koplendid pods. ant’ Racie How | ‘he Indiana University football hoth of the brothers is very good the 16 use it in getting over the ground, ’ eleven, which will make its first, coach has not been able to decide tu | He Is a sister to Embroidery, the best | — vasion of the Kast when It plays Har- | 4ete | —_— stayer that Celt ever got, but he Nas] vard at Cambridge Oct. &, fi fige mR: never showed a liking fo: :|Wes a i Jins yt 4 t OME “Ti never showed a liking for anything Western Open Champion Wins aeroing ine most intensive training Us S. INFANTRY SCHOOL Mike McTigue Has No Trouble ator is only a relic of the big, fine i i ‘ofessional- ¢ve" seen on Jordan Fiek rep. + ati ator i only ia. folie of the bis, Bn¢) $175 in All itt Professional- Ov'r seen oh dows Vin prep: TO PLAY ATLANTIC FLEET.) Quitpointing Gus Platts at mont Fark spring meeting, Amajeur Fourball Match. Spurred on by the realization that) COLUMBUS, Ga., Sept. 27. —A little Dyckman Oval ‘The Frenoh horse Brumado ran in the Hoosier tear e has! r rmy. ball a fc the Ath ewce and did tot dinghase ne t er team now has Ite frat army-navy football game preliminary himself by any means, He Is a big, | In tte mateureprofessional fourbat chanc to oe a the Hoult of E the yl siits ay en vii Geet Beitan won ony enn Of ra id othered | matoh af ¢ Inwood Country Club yes- rt football, Coach wald Q.| Point anc nnapo: in New York at the turn out of the back stretch. |/terday, Walter Hagen, Western open Stiehin is bending sto the tusk of! Saturday, Nov. 26, has been arranged TO ee aa eral Somebody said that if first money | champion, and his partner, B, T. Gold- \ ; , We (eae ea American boxers at Dyckman Oval went to the biggest aggrevation in| rampion and his partner, B. 7. oy whipping iis gridmen into shape, and| between the teams of the United | ast night, he, rsee, ‘Beame des Wea ibs Nal weiey 6 ye Pate wot ohiy Won’ the mela itis a herculean task. Western Con- , States sera rey Sonal here and At-| Mike MgTiguo, the fighting Irishmas, ds, 4 eC er, i) ! ia ~ ‘erence le whic e e OONLC ntic eet fi Satur o 4, 1 uy Goody,” who formerly had charge | prize for the Rochester homebred, but fon ¢ “ a h prevent the couch ti puts turday, Now. 19, at rare, Gus Piatts, the English middie Bee ee eee ee ne eeeee aro captured for bin the $86 epecial (fom taking charwe of his team until | Now 1e Polo Grounds, Co- | weleht, quite a lacing tn the main hyland, the winner, ts good right now, |oward for the best individual score, hie S¢Pt. 16, deprived Stiehm of the op-|lumbia University Stadium and Eb-/ event, that went twelve rounds Gene and. barring nalahtiy’ ankles ts card roading TL, ‘That made $178 18 all, portunity of kiving his proteges any. | Nets Field are being considered for | Tunney, an A. 1 F. favorite, defeated fine looking bic Englishman. He and |, Sod put tp’ 818) thing tke the amo of practice | Re Kame arold Crossley, Another British aub- Bramads. ate both around 11 hands Sretasieul up #150 for the leading ‘Snaae is sacle aaah es “4 VY —_ Ject, In a bout* which was curtailed te high put Brumado is the heo vier | Professional, ‘ pert chine which NAVY REGULARS ON seven rounds, while Frankle Jerome, « horse. The latter at $8,100 was one| Tom Kerrigan of Siwanoy, paired can meet the Crimson on even terms. | protexe of Bill ; bargains of the Macomber ith RT. Navelle, and Laurence Ayton . Added to this handicap ta the fact | dhs Hid ly s.080n, won a decision eee ear « mber sale | ve Chicago paired with W. ¥. Ladd of that Stlehm’s elevens in years past THE INJURED LIST. over tpnnny Brown of England in ten i =e Rockaway Hunt, fled, tor second and have always been addicted to OW) rig Md, wept a rounds third places with bestball scores of 71, starts ANS ASe Md., Sept. 27 ‘The lone British victor was Sid Butter, Second and third moneys amounted £0 With the exception of four regular) number of the regmiark were kept out | a lightweight, Buller gained a Jodeer ABOUT FISH tourth prise, ~ players who graduated, Coach Stich |of football practice yesterday atter-|cectalon over ‘Tominy Goodwin, « west Pract all the thirty-two co ; ne for ev f No cadeimy by minor |etde lad e - ten ngtically, at the aus Ta the Geet position on hia team. Risley, tackle; | NOON at the Naval Acadeiny by minor [elde lad, In the opening bout of atx AND FISHERMEN round of the Professional Golfows’ As Mumby, guard; Pierce, cent and | injuries, The list of casualties, all with. Sen The Englishman could punch mornin: tried thelr luck in the ¢ Mathys, quarterback, will have thelr! minor hurts however, included Koeh- | Wt) both hands and in the secsad morn, tried thelr Tuck tn, the, curtatn shoes filled by men ‘who subst tuted |ier and Rawlings, backs; Titus and |feund he floored Goodwin for @ count with Dan Healy: of Montel Due, ide in many games last year and who are |‘ i 1 it uard. of nine, He also scored knockdowns in 5 ealy of Montclair, ‘ y es last year and who are| ‘Taylor, ends and’ Frawley, a | rm By H. Horn Bear Rov return. Jin Barnes, the national well fitted for carrying through a| gee Ma lthe third an@ fourth round y a. ° champion, was paired with M. Leonard gruelling schedule Riddy wes will 1th habeball pack (Holdi, line for W. ©. Simmon: of Pelham and they had a bestball of a eady for) he baseball park was almost crowded OE OT Witte | 23, the Cornishman going round in 74, take Riley's place at tackle, is a Mathewson Ganie, | when the first of the International bouts, alt ae He made the first nine holea in %, but husky lad from the mining istrict | “pe | which were held by the Academy A. C, een Oe AM Kot trapped at the 4th coming home, of Southern’ Indiana who gained his Harry F. Sinclair sent In hia check | ¥ th se ait} 340 site 9 there, He also shoved @ sec: experience in navy service slevens, [for $500 for a box at tho Mathewson | Was put on. McTigue got quite @ hand Manetn ab, See BAL tet ord Seere inareiaal septs ihe 16th gg Cox, another utlity lineman, ie fairly | testimonial game next Eriday, yester- from his countrymen when he stepped Friday, 30..0.. 618 062 648 the eeretitive record for Inwood. made experienced, heavy and aggressive |day morning. John A. Heydler, Preal-) lo the squared circle for his bout with soine time since by Tom McNamara. and looks fully capable of plugging |dent of the National League, also made) Platts. Michael was Inches taller than Capt. Harry Smith and Babe Wood | The Western on eapion iPPes Be $2 up the gap at guard & personal subscription of $280. his English rival, although a half pound got thirteen weakfish at Broad Chan-| took 6, after having @ short putt for a pera Arthur Deviin, manager of the “Old| lighter. The welghts were announced nel Sunday. They brought them in/3 and at the iéth, where he sliced hig 3 ‘Timers’ team, made up of players who /** Platts 159% pounds and McTigue an n y y cs ‘ond shot and landed his ball out of > c heabalnae paren: aver and weighed them before an admiring | boun Hagen’s partner was “right played with und ugainat “Matty,” an-| wen 159, ‘ aieee Ni ihe Libtah Dalevaa Bien| ther oR both Seauione iking Seat ON BOWDOIN ELEVEN. touncea this tino-up yesterday: Platts wan endowed with plenty of wu *| the 13th and 6 at the 1st! | ~- Plichers, Joe McGinnily, Amos Ruste, | Aggressiveness and carried the fight to SCR i them weighed over nine wie BRUNSWICK, Me. Sept. 27.—Op'| George Wiltse, George Hell, Catchers, | MeTigue from the start. The Irishman, Harry and Babe are not prouder ot| Tom Armour Misses Putt, ponents of the Howdoin College foot-|Roger Breanahan and Jack Warner. | however, dieplayed plenty of footwork. {their catch than Jn the finesse ¢hey| 1+ Tieg for Gold Medal hall team this fall probably will con- | Fitst base, Pred ney; second base, Mirna <cusedrenart: jue estate wot lshowed in getting away from the pler 5 Shite tat they are cpnoaet.h ie | Billy Gilbert; shortstop, Bill Dahien; 0 a @ face without giving up the majority of the) Thomas Armour, the Scottish golf- LO adehtihig ied by We | ied base, Arthur Devlin; left fleld, Joe | @n@ body that shook wp Platts. In the ta dh Acca er, and John N. Stearns Jr. of theling dousia, Howdoin hae twin | Kelley: centro fleld, Harry MeCorinick; |fOurth Found BMeTigue closed’ Platte ete BSS y - dob hal Jy e Aeld, * Se Stility |eve with a right hand swing, Prie a lub tled for the medal in the brothers, alike as two peas, playing |right feld, “Red” Jack Murray. Utility y Friend Casey reports also that a Ndaled oleate "he invitation “the opposing flanks of its eleven, |inflelder, Hans Lobert.. Utility out-| One round was almost the same es James Marsiers got five atriped bass/ qualifying round at the Invitation’ ohey are Charles Hildreth and Ho flelder, Joss Burkett , |the other. Platts dig the rushing and Sunday at Broad Channel. | Their size|tournament of the Naswp Country fiidreth of Gardiner, Me., and the All‘of theas men have replied to per-|forcing and MeTigue the hitting. Me- Was ot up to the usual Masters) Giyp yesterday, each returning ® total Jook so much alike that Coacn Fred [gonad lotters and will be on hand: The ie, however, waa not able to land specimen cima verey of 74. About a hundred contestants Ostergren has been unable so far to| Ml of aeats and boxes le now Koing on] decisive blow and Platts wae Aghting i i n ater ar ae nts officas and ht ‘ole | hard Ww! ne é The following communication has in| tok part, and although weather con- | tell them apart. An opposing runner | Grounds. The regular league game. of | waa Denier aneered co Bie it good news for the fal flounder | ditions were well-nigh perfect scores starting in! tho day will be with the Boston Braves, | waa announced, leaned to the high side. There were; four other golfers able to finish under | >» likes ‘ mall to hide hi under the cog. Stearns made his 74 in the early hours of the morning, and until fate) The RK, L, I.—Flounders very good. ‘Thurad in the afternoon, when Armour came | lishodn in ‘Stnithtowy |in, the Naesau golfer looked like a! De Luxe Grou chatue, and caught | Winner, Stearns sta ted out like good-sized flata and | Wildfire, making the first nine in 35, | qi three under par, but coming back he \ missed a number of putts and took | 89 for the inward half. Armour‘had a short putton 1 used sand worms vrins. ' fished about found that you want the: home | De plenty of bait on the hook. Take ie 1 to negotiate | and fill the hook and let the end oa few of the Inward holes, al- trail, and let the fish take a pugh the Koddess of chance smiled on mouthful before socking It to | hin at the twelfth, There he drove to eit aah them and you'll very seldom lose | 8, bunker, but made amends by holding | If t » weather keeps mild they | poth Armours and Btearns’s partners | will be here for some tm ald finish with The Beoteh= other evening I fished over jman played with | eae a Town Bea*h on 0 | now aent He eal “hI flood. tide, just’ hefore dark, tar {named went CG a ate tp ‘ A the fifth hole and came bac about an hour and got nine large | f/,the.fitth hale ana rittimer Barnes, | eels (1.26 aplece) and two tom | hed BR 75, and the President of cods, | the tropolitan Golf Association an- | We should be getting lota of | now 4 himmelt a being an clrply | ‘ “tommies" from now on. The beat | *atisfied with this figure, whic - :, ‘ qomenlea From inew obs THR beRe | ee kate OLONEL BRYAN his special order and taste flood tide or high water slack, A number of players who had been | | expected to finish in the 70'a proved —for the self-same $30? just beta da or rf © ‘dikappo ‘01 a“, W.! | - Auge Seeker rant attet 1s Westie Ae etn and pee ie rary A Royal Tailored-to- mings: GeitegTmeaseaeieis Gel ATE HR ecole eae Nesvau| made suit out in Ne- 6.3.7 sui ali Pirates’ Defen' | course, had trouble on the agrees. | b k h 5 d ler suit at $30 a PITTSRURGH, Bept Phiinaot- | Hie aasrcl hed an 87, | raska the other day ready-made at that price phin achieved jts first yictory In Pitts Players qualified in four sixtnens lik burgh this weason by taking yeaterday's | She, frat, and wecomd march Faungs —and bragged be- %¢m like an extravagance. game by a acore of 2 to 1 more than likely that tha deadlock | = No one ever accused M: _itabbell wae unctends, paaaing five | forthe vauaditying medal, ‘between cause it cost him only Pda i: Bin sie ta da togy tee Besar Wil be Ore $30! Bryan of being a debonair foe tne valioree rane ReaDeTuaCit | a atiel “AOmuue yee With venue ve dresser. Genius can't have ee eeaple sai iete. Mid CEA Ce een BENE, ane leak var Brooks We'll grant that $30 hing! Mr Rect Rit aecoaated fer ane hoeton, Var Besar Neary. var Hole & everything rate run. Taste is a matter of tobacco quality hesterfield | CIGARETTES of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended _ v: a land and Stearn B But Mr. Bryan might have delighted his world of friends’ if he had acquired the smartness, the perfect fit and tasteful style of a Royal SRwien| Tailored-to-Measure § ay 3! suit. Ge ig # Hie fecketbook ure Kd would certainly aeele have been de- Say lighted, too. IS cheap for a “ready- made.” They’re getting $50 to $75 for’em even yet! » But would Mr. Bryan still boast of his bar- gain—if he learned that he might have had his new suit made to Shy |! Banker’ Special \ = We state it as our honest belief ; Finert ¢ that the tobaccos used in Chester- s Pattems Aq ' j ! buses * t field are of finer quality (and Mh Suit or Overcoat’ it or Overcoat hence of better taste) than in any to your. order: <4 other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co, THE ROYAL TAILORS ; inall bi ,) CHICAGO. = NEW YORK aties® | Uptown: Sth Avenue and 42nd Street S.No NevVar' pula uteey cAt Our 5 * Theatre District: 202 West 49th Street “piArcung the, Comoee’ from Boogdnse, Columbus Circle: 1823 Broadway $2 Saemmsit New York Salesrooms Stores vy " the Old Gotham Bank 4 Union Square: 14th Street and University Place tcno Downtown: Park Row and Beekman Street §°,2772,0a=" Theatre and Circle stores open evenings until 9 P.M, Others Until 6 P.M. cor ORY CLASSIC? |

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