The evening world. Newspaper, January 14, 1922, Page 7

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sone Reaper rte ne ere Bo ES a THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922, 7 IG HANDS CARRY THE REAL PUNCH IN EVERY FIELD OF SPOR (Copyright, 192%, by Robert Edgren.) THIS CLUB WILL | CHAMPIONS WHO-OWE THEIR TITLES TO THEIR HANDS STRONG MITTS HAVE PROVED ~ REDUCE THE HCH GST OF GOLF Hoot Mon! New Organization >in Westchester Will Only Charge Small Dues. Bl ASSET TO ATHLETES A NORMAL FIST « «+ In Football, Tennis, Baseball, Weight Events and Boxing Hands Have Great Deal to Do With Success of Principals—Even Billiardists Need Firm, Supple Fingers Which Requre Much Care. ——— By William Abbott. HE high cost of golf is finally on the toboggan. After a long pe- riod of extravagance the thrifti- mess of the old Scotch pioneers of the links game is beginning to show itself In American golf. Close on the is of a substantial reduction in the rice of balls and clubs comes the an- By Robert Edgren. ANDS have a great deal to dé with success in sports. The billiard H player's hands have to be extremely supple yet firm. Willie Hoppe sacrificed his interest in many other sports to save his hands and keep them in condition for billiard play. He likes baseball, boxing and other sports, but for years has been forced to content himself with look- Bow Fitzsimmons’ ing on. nouncement of a further saving in Big HAND Grips KNUCKLES WERE ace Young Schaefer's hands are as delicate as Hoppe's, and since he club dues and expenses, “The Bate * or EVEN « t began playing billiards as a small boy he has taken care of them. If Up in the Westchester section Wil- WHEN HEAVING @ HE FULL RIP Bos SADE SECRET Schaefer could do whatever he wanted to, aside from playing billiards, Nam C, Fox, veteran architect, is de- 60 YARD FORWARD Pass: Yosed ahead go agaac OF HIS HARD WITTING be would choose handball as his favorite sport. But he doesn't dare to. signing a course that is planned for b WITH WHICH ABE WAS THaT MLL HIS: | soft ball Id ruin his hands and keep hi the golfer of limited means, This MITCHELL DRIVES A | Hitting a hard or even a would ru’ ands ani eep him KNUCKLES LANDED ject is the fi 4 LONGER BALL THAN ar out of a fortune. He can't even play tennis or golf, except very rarely, projec rst step toward cut Once. ting the soaring cost of club dues ANY OTHER GoLFER.. because he would develop muscles that would work against his delicacy which threaten to make golf a game of touch. only for millionaires, The officers behind the club Fox is constructing expect to keep down heavy expenditures by maintaining only a small modest club house and not adding the upkeep of other facili- ties to the cost of golf It will be a golf club for golfers, something aiong the lines of the average club in Scot- jand which are models for inexpensive Participation of the ancient sport. Dues for the new club in Westches- ter will be $80 a year. ‘The initial yost is the purchase of a $1,000 bond, | But for nearly all athletes a pair ot @ Leading Managers Now Plan big strong hands is a winning asset, JACK KEARNS SAYS Liick Muller ty famous as @ football Srl) tackle and for his ability to make for- DEMPSEY WILL BE To Check Home-Run Hitting | sss mt como than msty saris! READY FOR CARP AGAIN With Many Curve Pitches| ‘cits’ sitet 2c it] ytO%esANQEbes, te. 3 —>—— es strongly built and has such huge| Dem en told that Georges iunds that he can fairly wrap his| Qechentior ie planning to chal. ay anything about) aneery around a football. That ts! eoming fight with Ted Lewes, de- i © ball. The ALY rly ea the vdeciine part of the secret of his speed and ac-| clared that Dempsey was \eady Baseball’s Big Problem Is tonever heard us the so-call Revive Twirling as Best Way} }i!tine | TEM Yoon hich can be spread over a long pe- “HE Discus FoR. w \ ; ae shines Ae 4 to defend his title as world’s T.TILDEN'S FOREMAN h eee of natural curve pitching, You curacy In dehvery. riod at the rate of @ small monthly @& RECORD “THROW ays nies Sy prominent to Curb Batting Epidemic. [a2 eviience of that in the Wo Jim Duncan, world’s record holder| fime'Pang goatgoreght, at any Ray ay TOE thelr bonds aleaen rae WAS EASY For. € 3 ane A Series, The moment we discov: for the discus throw, who earned @| that such about would be die deemable when resigning, and pay TC BUREN Te B that Jess Barnes was in shape We] |Joutenant’s commission at the front] cussed whenever sufficient finen- started shooting curve after curve at! during the war and ls now In France,| ja) guarantees were put up b 'y Bozeman Bulger. the heavy hitting Yanks and the| has the biggest hands I ever saw on| thdse who sought a mathe oe HAT Is the ono great problem|heavy hitting stopped. Their curve| in amateur athlete, His little finger the regular §80 dues and still be many dollars ahead of the game as played in other clubs. While tt ew vent has hardl. in baseball right now? ball pitchers stopped our heavy wal-/ig as thick and strong as an ordinary RRS been Barted more than Atty success. New York Five En ages BASKETBALL SCHEDULE. If you, Mr. Fan, wore mo-|!opers in exactly the same way. The) man’s thumb. His palm I» broad and {shing his drive like an tron shot ful applications have been received | 9g id i difference was tha ©] thick, and bunched with muscles, Els Powerful wrists and hands give for membership and it is expected the} « bilizing a team to take South in the) curve ball artists to spare. That|fngers are long. ‘The discus never |kim much of the distance. full quota will be filled long before 3 TO-NIGHT. next six weeks, on what particular} won the series.” saps from his grip, although he geta| W. T. Tilden, world’s tennis cham- the 15-hole course, designed to be U7) -Staters in ea ue ame Lexington Post, American League | point would your efforts centre? “Certainly,” agreed Wilbert Robin-| {ke record distance with a tremendous | pion, weara an 8% glove. Tilden ts pne of the best in the Metropolitan | vs. New Rochelle Caseys—New Ro- Would you reach out for a strong/son when I talked to him down at whip and gives a speeding whirl to the | over six feet tall, but his hands are F’vection, is thrown open for play some | ———_ e cheile, catching staff? Would you go after| his duck shooting lodge on the Chesa-I micsito with a tug of the fingers. large in proportion. He uses a heavy e this s 5 | y F Se is Pa 0 “lye said that right! . b Hime ‘this summer. °° Prohibition. | Original Celtics’ Second Game| Hal Brootdyn. In the evening con- don AcereFranklin Ace “8° Ta stonewall infield? Would you sink |Prine TAN Twas swith, McGraw Bethe pple gedaan ect dist | incuse asounctiue tote eee, pend which closed the old favorite 19th | OFIgl ond Ga test ‘the Dodgers play the Paterson| Fivky Five vs. loyal Big Five of | your bankroll in a string of .300 hit-/] always worked the young pitchers | (vey forty-five feet, spent years de-|grip is about 45-8 inches. hole and incidentally the largest Is With MacDowell Ly- Crescents, which is composed of all| Jersey City—Haverstraw, N. Y. ters? Or would you centre on a fast|on that basis. veloping his hands, acquiring bunched | Norman Brookes of Australia uses source of revenue for golf clubs, the} star players, each of whom is more tfield ed os? I called Robby's attention to the! goles of thum> and fingers that|@ racquet weighing only 18 ounces, Increasing costs have become a ‘seri-| ceum at Garden than six feet tall. The Assumption Foo e AT reo CNperhabs: you" throw all this aside| ‘Bat wnat, he waa credited with win- | gave him a great “ip” aa the shot left | with a 4% Inch grip ous problem for thousands of players. I. 8 ys. Coatesville— y 8 aside | ning his two pennants mainly on his | Ave him @ gre __ A big hand is an advantage tn swim quintet, has already defeated the] Original Celti Not only were dues jumped but most home team this season and the|Madison Square Garden (League|and go after pitchers. That's what| soul pitchers RC ORURR BUR RNOOKOUT. thing. “It {a like using a bie paddle in clubs, in order to meet both ends, 5 Dodgers intend to make amends for | game). most of the managers are doing.| “That's true,” he sald. “I've always E . driving a canoe.) Norman Ross and Koc ie Bee ey ere Ts Original Celtics, representing | that loss. The Crescents will line up| Ttallan Catholic Club vs. Winton! y.., nave noticed, very likely, a great|*ad pretty good pitehers, and T be- ae cere A Porches is’ all Prats Duke Kahanamoku, two of the puy bonds which great t New fi a cen * ad ithe ional we! rowers, has a hi Y Ages New York in the Eastern Bas ‘Aloystus | Shifting of pitchers in all the trades. {lieve it is because 1 hav sional weight and | world’s best known swimming chan. with Ed Roache, Sid Barger, Baker, | Five ammany Hall cost of knocking the little pill around. 8 : * Fork Bei ssa that measures Just six'Inches across . bp : : 2 etball League, are scheduled to Paul Mooney and George Simpson.| New York Separates vs. $ sisted upon them de hat mi pions, have large, broad hands. I've A large part of the Increased ex fashioned, natural curves, rather than | the knuckles, "As an ordinary blg|noticed that many of the Haswatian yorkville— ‘4 | Often y ve been unable to . H y v1 a Baker and Mooney are at present | Club of Yorkville—Bronx Castle Hall. | Often you may have 5 pense was caused by the erection of | Play the Coatesville team to-morrow ‘ se trick balls sueh as the shiner, | man’s hand measures only 8% inches, | swimmers, although always trimly * & 5 members of the New York State on Hig Five—| understand, because there seemed FE ee ene Rae Teel te ae pennaon Bauare Garden. ty cage, such Httle choice. I didn't understand | the spitter, and so on.” it.can be seen that Carroll has @ pow- | built, have large, wide hands and feet an’s Casino, of establishments that were not in- |, 4 iman's Casino, eee ! i re tended solely for golf, ‘The reat goit| 1feBton captured the honors for the “at jopiing’s Casino, Bronx, the | Oniinal Triangles vs. Bronx County | i see until 1 saw John Medraw |. Robble says that pitchers have gone | erful engine to give the final tmpetus| | They are brought up in the water layer requires only ‘vessing space, a| ‘rst half of the league race, and the Bronx County Five tackles the Orig- | "ive—Lbling's Casino Jin so strong for the fad pitching dur- | to any welght he throws. and can swim as soon as they can shower bath and a place to eat a bite| New York representatives are deter-| inal Triang of Portchester. The| _West End Post, V. F. W., vs. West- | and Wilbert Robinson. ing the last few years that It will take He tried boxing once, but after) walk. Their hands develop on the between rounds. But instead he was| mined to gain sufficient victories dur- V!Sitors are coming with an impres- | chester County Sta Savage's Inst!- » there was no problem in|,overal years to bring the youngsters | knocking out a couple of men by/same principle that changed the seal's salled upon to share the expense of (00) OO Mig oe 4 : to 8iVe line-up of Driscoll, Gordon, Sul- | tute. . 4),| Whether the World's Series should |yp to the old standing | dropping his huge paw on their chins) makeup. Seals were once dogs, but in elaborate club house and the ex-|'ns the Gnal half, now in progress, to jivan and two other star collegians,| Danbury Separates ys. Bearcat Bis |). ying games or seven. There| “It tho fad stuf wasn’ good, why | he gave it up for fear he might kill) thousands of years in the water have tra burden of holding numerous jazz|enable them to conquer first position ‘The Original Triangles represents one | Five—Star Dance Pala | : Mies auoctsaccianaa|didithee odep bite UL inquiked some one. ‘The first professional| turned thelr iegs to Mippers, accord tournaments throughout the season|on the standing. The Celtics finished of the foremost heavyweight combi-| Corrigan Separates ys, ‘Tolentine | Wasn't much bother about a change did they adopt itt’? Inaliul | | heavywelght he boxed was knocked|ing to the evolutionists, that he probably never attended. {in jast place. for thefret half, but tions in Connecticut. hive—Corrigan Ca Hall, in the draft laws, nad the fact that} 1° na especially when the pitcher's | OUt for twenty-four hours, Of the wrestlers, nearly all have Now the pendulum is beginning to|'D last P! eb BER Be ECENT RESULTS. ~~~ |. Franklins vs. Wilsons—B. A. Court,| Qnampions are going to be allowed |sr2, had sone back on him ant he had | Joon 1. Sullivan had thick hands,/1ange hands and small heads. The swing the other way and the new|thelr position was not due to their| REC ds one a muaat jarm had gone back on him and he 1 | wide across the knuckles, and with| large hands are good for taking grips, golf clubs will undoubtedly be built] own efforts in view of the late pur-|, The Be La Fale, first team, scored ys. Assumption |t? barnstorm @ litle didn’t raise a/to roeort Thderatand, the rules have | Yery heavy wrists. Jeffries had thick | and the small heads are useful in slip at smalicr expense and intended only| chase of the Eastern League fran.| ts, tenth consecutive victory last | Growns—Prospect. Kall, lyn. | riffle a ee eee eeaee ine tall piteh. | Wrists, but his hands were not large] ping out. for guif. The club now under way ia aneUS: | night by defeating the All Hollows, SMaabowell Wuvceuhn Settlement| ‘The thing to do ts stop this mur- |:0rbidden spitball and shine pail pitehs |i proportion to the reat of his phy-|" One of the most useful pair of up in Westchester should be the|Chise. On thelr own court the cham- first team, 24 to 10, ‘The Be La] pe palm Ga derous hitting. There 18 no secret |'Ng for the past two years That ace aiaue hande I've seen on an athicte lately plonecr in a general movement to de-|pionship combination has yet to be| Fulle, second team, also kept up its SUNDAY. NIGHT about how to do It, McGraw, Robin- |counts for all the heavy hitting. |" io Fitzsimmons had very big} belong to Joe Ruddy of the New York flate the high cost of golf. defeated. Coatesville is capable of of-| Winning streaky sending the Alt Hol- wall on and Huggins all know the an- |Krery Moning itick balls. ‘When the | hands and very, small feet. Ho Le Sere cum Belg & crack: swim: i | lows, second team, down to defeat, 0 3. acDowall Ly-|swer b Dy u the weapon. |" op ek ba No.6 shoe Tr : on Ht fering strong opposition, and doubt-| opty ‘10 S ucntest marked? the | oe ae coos ve) MacDow ver but they can't get the wi B. |inw suddenly stopped them, baseball |, No 8 shoe. There was @ pecullar/mer, water polo player, handball ° 1 : mate ceum—Madison Square Garden, The problem of baseball to-day is u y thing about Fitzsimmons’s hands that] player, boxer, wrestler and bowler P. e Retains ese the carrying through of the Cel-| eleven aight victory for the win-|“Goinam Five vs. Yorkville Separ-|to revive and encourage curve ball (Was caught with but few pitchers of) 1 never have seen in any other Aght-| Ruddy haa developed a pair of hands urves tics’ plans to defeat all of the other| ners, who have not been defeated this | a4,” pitching. ‘That's It, And, It's a big|the good old type of Mathewson, Al- | org mauleys. When his fist waal that are singly ohecomeonl for ence °. Eastern League teams w: | Season. Bronx Y. M. H. A. vs, Washington order. jexander, Rucker, Phillippe, anit so on. | closed the knuckles former a straight|and power. 6 eed si eag ms will be more x Y. st 4 Orc im ihe peter t Pp Ad Gol it @ jaimeuit than may be presumed b: P. F. A. quintet of Yonkers added| Heights Y. M. H. A.—-Washington Do you realize," McGraw asked, | course we § ud the veterans | tine, Usually the knuckle of the sec-| Talked about Joe last week wit Fay Yl the st "3 Lyceum team to Its] Heints ¥. M. H. A. it in the past ten years old-|but there were not enough younséters| ond finger stands out furthest and|a Columbia water polo player who ° New York fans. list of victories ina hard fought con-| Biucklyn Dodgers ys, Paterson Cres- fashioned curve ball pitching has al-|coming on to Mill the gap. That™ the] the third knuckle nearly as far. had "tried out" with Joe in the New At inenurs MacDowall Lyceum again Invades | tost s night. ‘The final score | cents—Prospect Hall, Brooklyn. most become a lost art? You've |@nswer, [ think When I first noticed this I thought| York Athletic Club tank. The propo the Garden in the evening. The con-| was Roth Robinson and MrGraw, as well| Fitzsimmons's knuckles had been|sition was that the Columbia player test of last week, which reaulte —— _ -—_——_—— = =o us Miller Huguins, say their hardest | battered back by much hitting, al-|could wear Joe out under wate: SHURS —Mem- y Which’ resulted In & efforts this spring will be in develop. | though this waa before Fitz began| They went to the bottom of the tank PINEHURST, Ns Oo ae aecguc at| Victory for the home quintet, has in rTTy, 7 ny sou MV aanve ball panera ng his hands, but he told me/and were seen entangled there f > Winter Golf League o: ° W. ll K. Vi d b lt ¢ Some good curve ball pitchers. eh , but he told mea pntangled stip Maveniine, ee Neck an-| SPired tho Macs to play for all that is House of the Late uitam . anaerou ’ "Phere but very few of the spit-| they always were level. He thoughtjabout three minutes. A ° lo- v1 ° | pallers and shiner wd they are} this had something to do with his| Finally the college player shot up other twelve months in which to lo-lin them. With a strengthened line-up, » y a great hitting power, as the blows|to the surface. But before he could vate some n thelr business who | B ht fe U E. q 7 t C going rapldly—a vould. cover | gre Ing power, : cl ut before he 1 will be able to give R. Murray Purves| Manager McCormack ts confident of | oug or se as XCLUSWE oun ry u the lot. You see the rule makers| Were landed with all four knuckles. [draw his breath he was jerked und: of the Woodland Golf Club of Boston] turning the tables. From all indica-| Ks. Purves retained permitted the spitters in service at ater, when he fought Jeffries the| Water again, and when Ruddy a battle on the Ks PUN Teheor|tions, the number of spectators will tye time the law was niade to con-| second time, Fitz broke the firat two/up half a minute later he had to ¢ “ott ‘Club of Chicago, 4 up and | exceed by far the crowd of last week, tinue using thelr style but no new | Knuckles of his right and drove them|down and bring his man to the sur % to play, which, by the way, was the largest Jones could, Each sj to be| back out of line. He broke them | face, Purves deserved to retain his titie./ gathering that ever attended a bas- | registered by the club at the begin-| again on George rdner. He drov “I thought he was done for whe score, in the apaufging, reungy and age catnole che | ning of the season the first two knuckles of his left hand|he stopped moving and let go." sa core in the qualifying round and j : 16 oO! c .| by hitting Jeffries in the same fight,|the college boy, “and T started w were not knbwn, Jack waa first to| Were much good for fighting after-|breath I felt Joe's hand close on my |develop the spitter successfully—to | ward ankle and down T went with a jerk control it. ‘The {dea is to moisten one|, YOung Corbett had hands Itke John| What did it feel like? Say, I thought Jspot on the ball so that it will siip|L. Sullivan's, and he could hit. The|I'd been grabbed by an octopus joff the fingers without spinning and only great fighter I can remember (Copyright, 1022, by Robert Prigren 0 wobbling up to th aking a| Who had really small hands was — pecullar dip- Jimmy Britt. James was handicapped| FRIARS’ CLUB TO ROOT - ,.|by his small hands, which were little pigbe shiner was discovered by rub. | jirger than a girl's. He was a plung-| FOR CANNEFAX NEXT WEEK smooth substance on « side of th Dg, ageressive fighter and threw ——— ball, (When thrown ihe shiny side |ehtse ot chia amall hana "was not| , 20 Cannefax, who meets John met with Httle friction ¥ the fuzy | Creotive when hitting at the head. | Zavton, the world’s three-cushton side hummed. Tht ga t ball ‘land had to depend on body fighting. ‘lechampion, in a six hundred point Nie respon ennse Keo WnpeAran’® | Hempsey has large, thick hands,| match, fifty points each afternoon layed by far the beat golf of] Italian Catholic Club, which re- erie members of the associati Bl cently defeated. the Allcaaierionn attending the tournament. | cinter|combination at the 69th Regiment Golf ‘Lenzi. of Advertising Interests | Armory, {s slated to oppose the Win- was held last night and the fo'lowing| ton Club at Tammany Hall to-morrow officers were elected: afternoon. The showing which the President, Roy S. Durstine; Vice Pres-| Italian five made in the samo against ident, C. A’ Speakman; Secretary, F. 1 |the Yankees serves as a very good in- Wuraberg, and Treasurer, HL B. Harri-| dication of success for the remainder son, all of New York. of this season. Joe Petrullo, man- ager of the downtown club, ‘asserts dd. that the Italian quintet will be one of N. y. A. C. OLAS | the championship contenders before the termination of the season. Annual Dinner) _ a*2 » sete aetoat out of etentoen games, the New York Separates wil! attempt to make reparation by begin- Gontising tha hott a |whtch he developed by working in/and evening of next week, starting Each year the Veterans’ Dinner te * Pepe gaily eanre eae | fae .. (i Oye aniaes aaa NS wer baring and road-bullding Mende wal nee eek sunport suelo » post, so to speak, In the life o} re f Lecar best exponen hiner wos) whe Dy, ne we e Friar D. 0 c mille EN Spreearriy the St. Aloysius Club of Yorkville at Hod Hiller of the fteds. ‘Remex Of the football players, Eddie Hart |Cannefax fc a member, has ordered pee Bronx Caatle Hell. w he pitched tn t ‘ni {of Princeton had one of the largest | ¢yrty reserved seata from Charite The club was organized un Sept. 8, 1868, and two of tne orginators,| Franklin A. C. Seniors meet the As- William #3, Curtis and Henry B. Buer- | Cension Aces at Franklin Club, in nd the strongest pairs of hands. It| kiino, of the Strand Acad ny, whore ever reached @ runner there wasjthe match takes place. for every 1 g the season? Iave you heard ything of him since t 1 of talcum t N ’ e. for Westchester, to- - (OLE MOVR, ae or ; ae res no wriggling out of his grip, because | afternoon and a hundred seats fo’ meyer, are still living. Members of) post the star quintet of ne Aeneas aly tha gnay Gat, teat. Fillet nuld hold any man If he only got'| every evenini senna et inte the ciub since 1879 are eligible for|Toman™ en auintet of the American) mucha Property| piace for ctu uso, Only the other day ¢ "a Dit of the jersoy between his thumb | Been practicing both at, the Eriare embership in the Veterans and 170] jochelle to tackle the New ltochelte| 5) ndicate rcnas The vain buildings op . =| Christy Mathewscn ised any {Pd finger, Shaking hands with Paddle} gtrand, aod he is on edge and con Metta ace on. tharitae Caseye, Belvedere Post playe nice Thich Will Be Ready for |Richara He Hunt tet speudid three, |more than a square mile. Thee will | of the tick deeleee bn hiten fi. |! like putting your fingers into a vise. | fident of beating Layton as. badly ‘The yearly dinner will be held to-|gide Post in an American’ Lerioa Which 1 ‘ady Mane atm Falls leer aed a Rolf course, polo ficld etull | did atudy the apitrail out of 4 A Yale Player once told me that/as he did when Layton previously night at the city club house, 69th! League contest. Danbury Separates New Owners by Spring. BPEASOMMANE. Wan ideatcoscm be Hiamond, trap-shooting grown’, in-| and he could piteh uw prett Fone. | tfter a Yale-Princeton game every | held the title 90 Street and Centrat Pari Souti, One| Zo to Perth Amboy to meet. the ew , tapestry brick trimmed. with ning track, tennis courts enclosed (| Tut he rarel ' tHe ai Ao TARE BAS SUNG Tae DAOGE ORS | oes goal catnehio’ Welloxs) GsalA table will be set aside at which wi | Speedway Five. At the 8th Coast Ar- — — and limestone. The main t 3 and electric Hghted ways stuck to the tn ul, | was desors ed with black and blue | Benet ay eat tar the ban et be seated the omy elxht living mem. | tillery Armory the 08th Meld Art. sme syndicate which recentty pur-|alone Is more than 200 fort 1 | winter swimming, ya i curve ball pitch Dee sl OU ll adel . pera of the Nqw. Yor! pletic ery die ¢ Tolentin syndlea 150 feet wi ne landing, nei skating | ore he ena. nompeteol on. the first outdoor | Site of the Bronx. 2 Hour,"" the beautiful et wide. ponds’ and camp ground: | That ia why Mathewson retired as) Great of Russta, who was sald to be ‘ athletic track built in this country at) 2) oo chased ‘Idle Hour, ‘The interior da Anished, witt iran of members bably the greatest pitcher the [able to bend a gold coin between his |Care® raven Mott Haven, New York, on July 2%} | Startling Grey Big Five ts echeduted | country 6 of the late Wilam K.| woods and marbles beautifully « will be an ample restau ne ever knew. lingers, If Peter could do that, Eddie jqutid'is a recently formed orgaalznt ‘These eight include Henry B, Bu fants Gnatna tact eae aan nail Ry rbilt at Qakdale, for many Soe every detail is in kee members may have li e Mel youn [of authors and newspaper writers, “Phe i 1 lude Hen oi -mo: rnoon in| Vanderb! kdale, the central idea of the architec if they desire. And rvea. He tn past f und HANDS LIKE A NET. 1 speak and Rev, Francis , Jolin Drew, Cornellus A. Mi Bs ' ° lain of the 6 emte honey, Benjamin G. Williams, George pec dngy and game Of & hame and home| years one of the show places on the|the wealth of the builder. ere are already plenty ‘of facilities | pitched a corking + Y| Finns Wagner, famous Pirate ball. |P: Putty. the Chaplain of the oath Reg: 1. Stow, Waward Merritt, Edward %, | tee aret contest by a marsin er ine leouth shore of Long Island, for an| There aro twenty-seven n paseR, Sensing» and othe nt aA o rae last ‘ayer for many years, had & huge |aiso be heard \ wants Jr. and Dane} pee Fon (pointer ia tha praitininecy nor ee south § tev olih has |Pedrooms in the main wing, # 1 arate nts. I's A Be shitter w nf i n on 1 f hands, He was one of the |nent of a novel ¢ pre facsimile of the programme of | Van Nest Five meets the Mercer Five] #! lie year aro ATTADKYD eo Build, anf fpassl of the old % ‘) Walsh out of t t test shortstops that ever lived. |sented. Among thus ar f mors first, amateur athletic handicap! of the Bronx, who formerly played ut|been Incorporated with $5,000,000 cap- filver ered Patins The cloiste family retainers will be ee ; | n he spread is big and fa front | promiaed to” Sp neeting held in America. 's Casin ub) ASE as twelve chambers. And thi Yne of these, Jame r eel 7 8p ball {t was all off. He | AUr This ‘programme was made up of eases ba see own court! ita: and expect to have everything | ante’ quarters include tw« as Leen in charge of | Pea canta che rates th , never missed, It was like knocking events-—100- Me bo rrow eve! a ‘001 \ » e J a oa and three second trial | zai, Brooklyn, the Beookien Aect*| ready for members by spring, |Tooms mn thirty-four are rai | wee how the trick ba : {the ball into a net, ' yard run, with three y oklyn Basket. | Tat) st Mr. Vanderbiit| Mr. Vanderbilt did more e Goldmann, | houseke OF | taded, ‘There have haae th { Having a pair of big hands A . nile run and two-mile | ball Team plays the famous St. Vin-| Though the place cost 3 merely to bulla’ Limasié ot y as long. ‘These were \ young. ‘conl dure : xreat help to a golfer, Abe Mt u 1 our 0 cents of Greenpoint, The Brooklyn| about $6,000,000, with another million] q beautiful site. He built a tr t when the old house t S1yainped th teva jthe English player, has huge hands te team will take the floor with the] pq, hings, the price pald by the ®, Including a power 4 heard Mr bAC# the heavy t : nd takes a full grip on the club Danny Frush Scorex K, 0, usia) line-up of Brugge, White, Ma organized by Major Frank|Water works, ‘There !4 0 ¢ , “Build me ono that t) “Yes, to revive oli yal CS eet ear a oi peor h ea 0 er Sunda s YO. Jan. M4-cDanny lone, Dreyfus, Harvey and Riconda ie r ae 1 to have been|Nouse for the engineer, + ball pitching Ia tho t «. [ited with being the longest driver in . Cleveland featherweight, knocked! Brooklyn Dodgers me: «= hh Wy aad stables, dairy, a home for t nbership in the new olub t# to| ball to-day, Smart 1 are Kngland, and perhaps the longest in Me dee Thomas of Tochester, .Y.. in en CHE irate gine only about $4,000,000 for It, Only @!intendent, avd a laundry | el re restricted and obtainable only ling down’ $ ts wee the world, He takes @ fairly short || See Creofos Adv. on Page 4 ‘Second round of a led ten-* Sut B gam : sone be needed to Gt the with living auasters’ toc the ; ation, what they can do about tt. swing end short follow through, fins bout here last night, to-morrow afternoon at Prospect few changes will iz a @ for t \ } A

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