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————————— oe Ex a But He'll Never Get the Chance. Y TWO: Tendier Might, Beat Leonard BIG question among followers A Of pugilistic doings just now 4 is, “What would Benny Leon- ard do with Lou Tendler in a fifteen- | rotind bout to a docision® It has come into this office in yarions forms, | burgh Hockey Club team will play the | McGill Swimmers | Badly Beaten by Columbia Team | Columbia’e swimming team deci- | sively defeated the strong McGill ag- | gregation the Morningside pool [last night. Vour of the six ryt places went to the Blue and White, the other | two being won by Vernot of Olympic fame. Mabar of Columbia, who placed second in the Intercollegiate Plunge last season, proved ono of the | sensations, when he twice in suc |sion dove the entire length of the | pool, 75 feet. He completely out- | classed Carter, a teammate, who was second, Louis Balbach of Columbia, third place winner'in the springboard fancy | dive at the Olympics, easily won the dive, scoring 107 points to the 70 | gained by DeFronza, also of Colum- | | bia, Vernot, in winning the rd event, had a lead at the finish of over half the length of the pool. | A jarge crowd attended the con- | test, which was ‘he first’ of the year | for Columbia and the first time that McGill has appeared in this city. ———— “ Pittsburgh to y Can PITTSBURGH, Dec. 20.—Th = Pitts- oyer the phone, in letters and it has | Grandemere team of Montreal here next | beem put to us personally on the streets, . Many of those who sat around the ringside at Madison Square Garden jast Friday nigit and | saw Tendler hit Sailor Friedman from any old angle with hooks, up- ercuts and jabs so often that it would have taken u counting ma- chine to keep score, asked one an- ather the samo question, with no answers forthcoming but a doubtful . of the head. We confess to a ing of hesitation in saying what | we think about the matter. (Friedman against Tendler and! against tha tall Philadei- phian are different pictures entirely. good deal of the initiative he owed against Friedman. ‘The strategic Benny bobbing’ up and | wn on his nimblo feet, feinting, ing, in a relentless search of un opening tor his crashing right, would likely to inspire awe rather than in even Tendler, and the whole might be to spoil his entire lence and natural style. But— Ys it is on this but that Tendler’s a ces would hinge—if Lou re- Benny as just a two-handed two-legged lightweight and, ac- ingly, only human, the champion 1a have a real job on his hands ing Tendict into the discard. It ould certainly be an interesting oc- casion. :, | Tendler certainly looked a marvel action on Friday night. fot In a long time have we seen a r with 0 hands so equally good. A south- naturally, he makes as much use his right as he Goes his left, favor- An opponerit bas the o of ducking away from a right only to run into a left hook or of both. One of Tendler’s punches almost sure to hit some mark. He has no particular stance. He always moving menacingly before man-in shadowy, fashion. One| > sboond he is sideways with right hand | Bawing exasperatingiy for the hea the uext ‘he is switched completely apound with the left reaching out for % dig into body, and still again with | Hedy squared he dances in front of opponent with both ‘hands weaving @n opportunity to be shot into y opening presented. He {s never it of balance. One punch follows ther like rapid fire, each delivered | ith faultless aim. We can't imagine | defense that Tendler couldn't pene- | at some time or other in the} of a three-minute round. EFENSIVELY Tendler is not so impressive, possibly for the tle in the way of a blocking sys-| His continuous assault keep other fellow so busy defending | if that few chances are pre- ted to land anything deliberate on usually associated with men who at any calling. He is a gentle in in the ring as well as out of it.| Seldom stoops to unfair advan- and, as was very noticeable on Wriday night last, behaves like a good | in. Every time he floored man he retired to a corner-of ring and waited for the fallen to get solidly on his feet before wing the fight. UT good and all as Tendier may be and as worthy a foe as could » be picked for Champion Benny o the sight of them in the against each other. Billy Gib- who manages the affairs of | Beonard, has placed Tendler in the apme class with Tex Rickard. Billy that Tex will never make a| x out of Leonard's services nor wie Tendler, and that goes. oe is very vindictive, and he is ularly sore at Tendier and his | @anager. Benny and Lou were re- “qently matched to meet in a Philadel- iq ball park, but just before tho we of the battle Leonard hurt his nd in training and requested a post- ment, Leonard had a $5,000 for- <up for weight and appearanc: without further consideration, ” through his manager claimed forfeit, Gibson was wild. As he| under the same conditions he dn't have thought of collecting ler’s money. Tendler's manager, ith more of a desire evidently for an sy $5,000 than for a chance to win slightweight championship and its ws fortune, refused to give up Monday und Tuesday nights, it has been announced ‘by the local team mana ment. ‘This will be the second ser! of the season for Pittsburgh. Leonard, Tendler might lack | the West, after many interesting in- tersectional gamer, but the prestice of the once mighty Big Three was booted around with surprising teums. Yale, Harvard and Princeton has run | is plainly seen in Walter Camp's All- American selections published in the ourtent issue of Collier's. Eleven col- | nose the leges ure represented on this mythical | Washington and Jefferson is rated as | Ja tackle and has been in that post- | line-up most of the sea- | main factor | team. Of the Big Three, Ha’ ond Yale cach land a player. different from the old days when|{n Washington and Jefferson's team | | both on attack and defense, and has | | lite Just ten appeared ag Yale, Harvard and Princeton monopo~ lized the honorary teams. years ago on Camp's team Princeton end Yale cach furnished three men, Harvard two, with the remaining po- sitions filled by Devore of West Point, Dalton of Annapolis and Jim Thorpe of Carlisle, who undoubtedly was the greatest star of al) time. ican, another reminder that football has become a great national sport.| Vick of Michigan, California supplies an end in Muller, 2 remarkable athlete, who can pass a Pigskin as far as most long-range re kickers can send it. he other end Is pric: e; ind down in the romantic hilla of | Amen a a Kentucky in “Rea” Roberts, whose | backs, and rrific interfering made it possible | class ‘d Bo” McMillan to make many ot! bines these qualities, his sensational runs, especially the 19-yard rup for a touchdown that) ty beat Harvard. ¥ rhe Weat has its share of “honor” | forward puss, cath, and in fact men, while most of those selected by ‘amp in the ast come from Wash- | Besides ington and Jefferson, Lafayette, Penn | model of State and Cornell, with Yale and Ha vard only getting a single player | defeated. pamed and Princeton none, reason that he seems to need |Steered away from several almost | unanimous selections by other ex. | Yal perts which put Stein of Pittsburgh at centre; Keck, Princeton, at tackle, | quarter and McMillan, centre, in the b |feld. Slater, the giant negro tackle F of Iowa, who was considered the) *Tendler has, in addition to un- |Steatest star in the Middle West, was | Goubted ability, a I nf relegated by Camp to his second team. “ ¥, @ lot of the class that /""rhe eleven picked by Charles Brick. | plished this fe the names of six players selected by | Camp, while Brickley gave preference to Keck and Stein. mard, the public is mever-to be| | whom MeMillin relied for al! sorts of | } When an injury laid him up. After thrown for a dig loss in 1921. Ts old order of football was Not only did supremacy pass to How far the decline in power of | Camp's 1921 team is truly all-Amer- In forming his team this year Camp ley for The Evening World corltained In detailing his selections, Camp says In part: and this is all the more remarkable because the present-day end has the biggest job he has ever had in the | UL 4 flaw. history of football. In addition to all his former regular duties, he is really | Corn becoming a backfield man as well, | Muddy field th since many teams intrust him with a great deal of the forward passing and | Kicker, forward pass @ considerable amount of running | 8 with the ball. about to be t “In making up the All-America this | back fleld to-da LIVE WIRES BY NEAI R. O'HARA, (New York Eyening World) by the Press Publishing Co as arrived from France. r of the Christmas shopping rus}: . year, therefore, we take two men of | this especial character. Ioberts has | been the biggest factor on the cle Centre team this year, the man upon work, using him both at end and in the backfield. “Mueller of California, who reached his perfection of play late lust season, | began in 1921 with a marvellous game against Ohio State on New Year's Day, and followed it up later with es- | pecially brilliant work in running, | making and receiving passes and ag gressive defense until mid-season, | missing three games, and when the | | Score was a tie in the Southern Cali- fornia contest, he went in and with a single long pags turned the tables, He | finished out th ing ia in| the second period of th t | the Coast, In which Californ: feated its main rival, Stanford, 4 Mueller is the longest and most money. Thereupon Gibson took | curate passer in the couniry t is Present stand, from which he «ays will never recede. | Attempts have been made since t), pair together. Rickard has | Leonard the equivalent 0%, tionally well with the ball to sign articles, but without a‘) of getting Gibson's, consen'. He is a wonderful receiver of the | | pass. Me weighs over 190 pounde, | a deadly tackler, can box in a tackle ffectively, and can also run excep- “In connection with the selection of this pair of ends one must also con- eidex the work apd stapding of iy But when his eyesight goes bivosy they make Lum au umy, bsdleaihidesieialaal “4p91. P’S ALL-AMERICAN TEAM. CAM THE EVENING WORLD, th REE” PLAYERS CAMP AND BRICKLEY AGREE ON THESE ALL AM How Things Have Changed in the Intercollegiate Football World in the Past Decade. Time as Was When All-American Selections Consisted Almost Entirely of Harvard, Yale and Princeton SCORES K. 0) OVER Players. This Year—Just Think of It!—Walter Camp, Famous Yale Football Authority, Only a Ve Places Two Men of the “Big Three” on His Team. Camp Names Six of the Men Charlie F Brickley, World-Famous Crim- ROBERTS IN 121H ; —_ ‘BIG TH ERICANS son Player and Evening World Expert, Picked for the Team He Selected for the Readers of|Staten Island Heavyweight 1s This Paper. KILLINGER, HALF BACK, PENN STATE. FovoGaams... Eleven Colleges Represented On Expert’s Honor Team Advance of Football to National Sport Stage Shown by Selection | of Players From Widely Scattered Elevens—Agrees With Evening World’s Candidates in Six Positions. M¢ GUIRE, TACKLE. SHICAGO. © PauL THOMPSON... , ROBERTS, END. be tale SENTRE COLLEGE QUARTERBACK, KEYSTONE WEW <o, Inc. a a. KeysTone forni, team, over State last New Year’ latter Middl ship, and has « her present ningly defeated Ohio one through this year | ase by small | without a ‘defcat, winning the Coast | . {s OPINION IS DIVIDED OVER QUESTION OF “SEEDED” TENNIS DRAW The proposal of R. Norris Will- jams 2d to seed the draw for all causing a division of opinion among the tennis fol- Metropolitan dis Camp’s All-America Football Teams Compared With Brickley’s Eleven CAMP’S ALL-AMERICA TEAMS. First Eleven McGuire of Washington McGuire was o | cago Jefferson, | tor in the powénful man, with a tremendous id ability to diag- | BRICKLEY’S | big. charge and eplen Second Eleven §wanson, Nebr: Slater, Iowa. ‘Trott, Ohio State Larsen, Annapolis, Bedenk, Penn St Keck, Princeton Notre Dame. MeMillin, Centre. Owen, Harvard. Davies, Pittsburgh. Mohardt, Notre Dame. (Reproduced by permission of Colller’s.) NEW SCALE OF GOLF PRICES ON PUBLIC LINKS IN BRONX SHOWS GAMES WILL COST MORE Players Must Pay $10 for Season Permits, $1 for Daily Privileges and $10 for Choice Lockers—Queens Faces Increase Too. Commissioner Hennessy the Bronx to-day announced the new| in other cities and the up-keep of| scale of prices for golf players on|the links and golf houses is largely | the public links in Van Cortlandt,| in excess of the revenue received. Pelham Bay and Mosholu Parks. The cost has gone up. The annual per mit allowing access to courses will be $10 and the price for| a daily permit will be $1, The locker charges will be $10 for lower lockers used by one person, $15 where used by two and $20 where used by three |The upper lockers will be $7.80 for} | one person, $12.50 for two and $17.50, for three persons. While there have been some pro- | tests the Commissioner says the fees country. Stein, Wash. & Jeff. . Schwab, Lafayette. ... Vick, Michigan, .... Brown, Harvafd. -MeGulre, Chicago. Roberts, Center. Devine, Iowa. . Killinger, Penn St. s,s Aldrich, Yale, Kaw, Cornell. tournaments tion in tl lowers of the How | son, He has been the favored the proposal that it should be applied only to national tournaments found sym- pathy in many influenti ters. And that is where the fight on the proposition nst him throughout the | season, The guards a ette and Brown of Ha is a strong, active, brainy pia @ physique that equips him fully for| He was the vab of Lafay- | ; SALIFORNIA.. eogh Selected _ As Referee of | Big ‘Pool’ Match has been selected to r pionship pocket the job, fayet Har United States Lawn Tennis As- sociation next February. It was pointed out by tho who were opposed to the proposi- tion that there were record where special players had been imported to a tournament to In other words, they were willing to trust the national officials to do the in national d gets the other position, not so much as a showy player cause Py sh his work, as he is about the only season gressivencss to steadin tenc Save a cup. eree the cham- | billiard match Green'eaf and Woods, which will | grand ballroom of the Notel Astor to- and Friday nights. ed to accept | either Keogh or Alex Brooks of Phila- traight thing championships and ve that othe the same time a high nsive man, and Vick com- rback position ts given ubrey Devine of Iowa morrow, Thursday | star be directed against th MOORE BEATS BIG FIELD ear Rogers Pect:— ; IN MILE SKATING RACE. | senascy, 1920 °% purchased, "emone jood a threat in all four ways to opponents. y throughout the | 3 gone un-| A pocket billiatd tournament for ful qual-| the amateur champion hattan was started under the auspices Asociation of Ama- layers at the Morning- | season on vine has won Joe Moore, international ice skating in A handl- Golf players in Queens also face an Just what that in-| be Commissioner Ben- ninger has not decided. permit of 5 $1 and there the locker. charge. is $5 for a locker used by one where used by two persons and $10 The annual permit for playing on the Forest Park| last.season was $5 and it may ‘The Forest Park course is| considered one of the sportiest in the ulfback positions go te Inoregas) in prog, State and Aldri two shining lights of the gridiron. r winning the one-mile Cla: cap race at the 181st Street Ice Palace 4 last night. Moore started from scraten|carceration and detention for one year and, catching the field of twenty start- |in several jails of the Soviet government ‘s*who had allowances ranging frum|in Moscow. I was released on August increase in| 10 to 85 yards, won on the tape by foot from 8. Goldberg, in re teur Billiard cents will be raised to ck on his team, t pe craleed (0) 1 contestants in ths event the halfback . ” \ virt virtually borween Chart opening game The present price yards, who finished secend an former won by a score x be stopped. that “Chacivs J. have entertained of com- | peting in tho final round of the na- championship tournament started in a race for this distance the ot! siderable margin, | dines hi the Ice Pali n Who com- Remarkably here were many wonderful ends | ¢! h developed in the country this season, | through and with a fine| the semi-monthly events. A) Muller, who holds the women’s Inter-| ¢;, ty rs national title, started from the scratch| fit to go into society, in fact it looke h for la-| hardly the worse for wear. Eastern Bowlers Have Big Lead In $2,000 Two-Men Team Match Another Brooklynite, finished second wit), $1, witb G06.” Bill Filer Feecived the Driz) offered for the highest score, me will be written 1 f football as a player with- | when he was defeate in two matches, Neustadt had his number in encounters on green cloth, winning by 150 to 88, and the veteran, Louts 4 mark in the quart dies and easily defeated her pa NEW PLAYFELLOW TRIAL SET FOR NEXT MONTH yn goes to Kaw of st performer or ervatius, wh> York State championship Lindsey and Trucks Have Sev-| enty-Six Pins on Marino and Blouin, Supreme Court Justice Gannon an- | nounced formally in court yesterday morning that the jury had disagreed in the Playfellow case, following the trial last week in which Harry F. Sin- clair of the Rancocas Stable sought to recover $100,000 which James F. Johnson for the horse last summer on the ground that the full brother to Man O° War was a cribber and a winasucker. : Philip A. Brennan, attorney for Mr. immediately served notice with the clerk of the court to hava the case restored to the calendar on forward when A Rubber Dusk Sweerstakes will be rolled at ckled of any man in the ie Schumacher’s alleyes, Broadw ue, Brooklyn, Sunday eruing. Billlard Players, d in the second conte: J Steinbugler twenty-six good teams tn the having won all ich they comocted’ up to date (eigh as are the Mohaw sccond piace. Up to the Dresen have won four games without suffering & loss. —_———_— With the first half of the fifty game | w home and home Inter-City match be- | tween Mort Lindsey of Stamford ind Charley Trucks of Chicago completed, the Eastern bowlers have a lead of 7¢| HARVARD-CALIFORNIA on their Chicago opponents | What makes this advantage so pleas- ing to the New York pin knights is the fact’ that the games were rolled on Blouin and Marino's home drives. ‘The second half of t jrolled on the Casino alleys, Philadel- |phia, on Jan. 5, | will decide the match, which is for a | $2,000 purse. GAME NOT ASSURED BERKELEY, Cal., Smith, head coach of the University of California, just back from an Eastern tour, was non-committal the "prospect of contest next Oct. 28 in Cambridge. “Whether such a trip can be arranged remains to be seen,” he “tt | might Interfere With our men's studies, it would be unfair to them ad to play Harvard a day or so after arriving in the Haat. rub, and I want to he had made a: ements with the Uni of Illinois for games with California in 1923 and 192: Sho ghallenges the win- He also served notice on Henry F. unsel for Mr. that he had moved to have the case restored to the calendar for a new trial early in January, SRSA, Important Developmen i im I. S. ©, Affairs, The work of reorganizing the Inter- national Sporting Club and placing the | institution on a sound basis took Gutzon Horglum, Who is Presiaent of the 1. | C.. to Washington for a conference ye: y. President Borglum left for t! Capital last | purpose of reviving the Army, Navy and | Civilian Board of Boxing Cont aiscussing with supporters in the Capital his plans for the complete reor tion of the I. 8. The world was created in seven days, and Judge Landis will have World Series settled inside that time limit, too. e match will be to-day as to change that football needs next season is in the capacity of meetings of the big leagues are getting tame. * Rudd'e Schumacher's Broadway fight experts covered 'em. jBave bam engaged for three nights & ive it much though: Now they let the basebali writers | the balance of the season by the Brookirn Branch | af the Caditise Motor Company. Along t middie of January the Babe Ruth's class at last. around 3,509 a week—only it ain't mone Now he's getting Walsh has been made which is a tough reward for and Manager: 1). ‘The club leader de- % clared he would not return to this city ‘association | wntil to-morrow, when he expected to | have an announcement to make on ! | portant developments witb regard to t fi club's duture, 1 oli a score of 3 goals to 1 championship There was tie 14 the winner attendance ever seen at a football gam Ol, dane ls Spain, CAPT. BOB ROPER Floored Five Times in the Final Round. Capt. Bob Roper, the Chicago heavy- weight, knocked out Al Roberts of Staten Island in twelve furious rounds at the opening show of the Brighton | Boxing “ub in the Staten Island Colo- seum last night. There was @ crowd of 2,600 on hand. Roberts was floored five times In the twelfth by terrific left punches to tie body and right swings to the jaw. While the count was going on over the pros- trate Roberts for the last time, Roper's seconds showered water over him and there were wild cries of “foul” by the friends of Roberts, but Patsy Haley, th referee, ignored the claim, asserting that ten seconds were up when the sprin- kling started. Kohler Gets Decision Over Henry im Ring. ‘Willie Kohler received the judges’ de- cision over Billy Henry in a> twelve- round bout that sizzled with action at the Broadway Exhibition Association ta Brooklyn last night. While Kohler won, his margin of victory was a small one, as his opponent gave as much as he re- ceived nearly all through the fight. Johnny Dundee Easfly Defeats Hanlon, PHILADELPHIA, Dec, 20.—Johnny Dundee, world's juntor lightwetght champion, outpointed Jimmy Hanlon of Denver in an eight-round no-declaton |bout here last night, Dundee had the advantage in every round. ‘Tom Gibbons feats Madd GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Dec. 2).— Tom Gibbons, St. Paul light heavy- weight, outpointed Bartley Madden of New York in a ten-round no-decision | bout here last night, in the opinion of i er men. | Gibbons opened cuts over both of | Madden's eyes early in the contest and this handicapped the New York fighter, Parl France Trounces Green, | Barl Franco made a decided hit at the Star A. C, last night—trouncing Maxie Green, a veteran. France proved {himself a busy fighter and very _ hing lightweight contender who shoud make it mighty interesting for such as Kansas, Jackson or ey. He was given an ovation upon leaving the ring. Frankie Murray Wins Anoth HARRISBURG, Dec. 90.—Franki@ ray, the speedy Philadelphia bane ee yent was claicis, tre charatane ship of Pennsylvania in his class, di feated Indian Russell in ten fast row here last night. This is Murray’s thi win in ten days. {Dear Rogers Peet :— other 3, @ gray greatcoat with a light gray checked wool lining. One of the incidents of that trip av @ newspaper correspondent was my in- ipt of 48 ate Re the demand of our od 38 | State ent. third,| Now to the point! During the awful melas ane at gasaaaty in Te| Winter in Moscow, in the dame, ul Py B- ra? ated jails, this faithful ol’ overcoat Tt was the biggest field thet ever! vas all that stood between me and the Moore skated in his|Lord knows what. It was both blanket | usual brilliant way and after catching|and mattress to me, for I used one-half | up with his fleld kept in second posi- i tion for the last two laps until the| Under, one-half over me when I slept. | head of-the stretch was reached. A big crowd turned out to witness! true to Rogers Peet traditions, has stood Miss Elsie| the test remarkably well and still looke In spite of that rough deal, this coat, Sincerely yours (signed personally) Plenty more of these good greatcoats at the “four corners !’” Men’s suits. Youths’ suits. Boys’ suits. General price revision all through the stock—our finest qualities included. Christmas Gift order forms in attractive Christe mas envelopes, ROGERS PEET CoMPANY Broad Broadwe: at 13018 “Four at 34th. i Convenient Broad vey Cornere” Fifth Ave, en at 4108y,