The evening world. Newspaper, September 20, 1922, Page 21

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THE EVENING W cing Stable of Giants’ Own- er Seems to Have Just Hit Stride. By Vincent Treanor. fThe racing string of Charlie Stone m, owner of the Giants, got off to late start in tho purso-winning bus- ess this seavon, but it is making up r lost time, judging by happenings the track. No stable started the with brighter prospects, but an demic of sickness in the spring put HBbe whole outfit, including Trainer ck Goldsborough, on the shelf, from hich they are just about ready to amp off. At Aqueduct yesterday the S jam Stable added another purse to its ngs and incidentally uncovered a hree-year-old in Flannel Shirt that aks a real runuer. James ey remarked after the one irplant” colt. had on ‘I want to have a bet on that baby e next time he goes and I don't cure hang who goes with him." Cascy @ good judge. = Flannel Shirt won tho dhird race ke the best kind of u good thing, while the price against him before post time, it ed altogether too big after the had been run. The colt, who is King James and Turkey Red Il., mee the odd name, didn’t have ch to beat, but he won like a Man ‘ar, Ho just galloped through the etch and hung up 1.58 for the fle. Taplin didn't waste any time in ting Flannel Shirt away from the rier, and as early as the first turr 8 looking around at his opponents id actually beginning to t up. emed as if he was saying, “It won't b to beat these birds too far off. After that ‘Taplin just steadied hirt and he never got out pull, The favorite, Pirate Gold, ; Scotland Yet looked lke a couple : 20 to 1 shots trying to keep within , Eve lengths of the Stoneham colt : Flannel Shirt graduated from the : widen ranks only in his last start Pn that occasion he ran behind High peed until he was ready to go to the ront and then bounded away to vic- jory easily. On his race yesterday here fs no telling how good Flannel Bhirt 4s, and with the ranks being hinned out by shipments to Canada nd Havre de Grace, he is likely to And May Be Coming Star develop into a second Yellow Hand for the Giants’ popular owner. During these closing days of racing one shouldn't be suprised at any hap- pening at the tracks. The victory of Scottish Chief in the opening event yesterday was a startler, considering that he hasn't won a race since June, although le has met the cheapest va- riety of horses, but no one shoud find fault, with the form reversal Owner Jolin Shaughnessy hasn't been running in the best of luck lately and a break was coming to him. The real shock, and not so easily absorbed, was Violinist in the fifth with Sande up. Sande is a great rider, but it is expecting a lot of even him to make a mile and an eighth horse out of a heretofore rank quit- ter, Last time out, in a seven f long race, Violinist broke a string or omething and pulled up fourth in a six horse fleld, beaten eleven lengths by Nose Dive, St. Allan and Brides- man, terrible favorite in the fifth. Last time out he won from behind and in his winning race at Beluiont he ran in front all the way. Yesterday he couldn't do a thing any old way. uler was Consort, with Fater up, was eup- posed to be the real goods tn the opening event, but after chasing The Peruvian all the way he pulled up a lucky third, Butts” Fairbrother plainty put it on Sande tn the last race. Sande, on the hot favorite Rigel, headed Fair- brother on Hobgoblin at the eighth pole and seemed to have the Oneck Stable's maic t away. Just at this stage Fairbroth let out a wrap and Hobgoblin showed he had a lot left by moving away from Rigel un- cer a smooth, hard ride. The Ran- cocas had a small fortune down on I ane Seing, although beaten, was in the Mellerose Selling Stak ered jl the worst of the early ing luck and was only a stride or two late : ehind qut- Noctial. 1 and Aladdin got a rough deal from MeAtee on the win- ner. Mac beuty Aladdin to the rail ut the bend, and then kept Aladdin pinned in behind him. Fator didn’t have time to take out. With clear sailing he would have been second at least i buth Wind Breaks Forestay Plate When Leading by More Than 100 Yards. ‘aurus won ler second tea for the Star C nship yesterday Wie she sailed a good race + good luck through a tune, South Wind ass n1 on the the repre the Central Long Island Souid Aeso ition, had wained 4 fine position at th and had stesd improved tt fon until she had cro 1 b ‘aurus with more thay luv vards to rs re, Then the plate on ler stem which tho forestay sets up pulled a WR ond she was forced to withd of ir a timo ft looked as if tier mast Id carry away, but W. J. McHugh skipper, saved that. She will be dy to start asain to-day, but her he Aces of success In the series aro very iy n® SP Phe race was sailed over a triangular be we with turning marks at H 2) d Harbor and Parsonage Voint and etart was off Lixcet fon Light. The d was fresh from coutheast and this de it windward work to tho frat x. rk. South Wind had 4 posttion at ch start to windward of Three Star im: fo and Tara, and Taurus was so close + it she was being backwinded and was += Freed to tack. She stood Into the ong tide running to the east #n urus held the otarboard tack until e was able to tack in slacker water d was able to cross the bow of South 3 Ind as she eteod out agai 7 hts split tacks and ain Sout hd weathered Tsuru th Irew uth Wind held well to get Inte slack water niishap occurred - Taurus, hold lite the nore, } away from the other bout he the weather mark at 2.12.50. , a5 seco and she ' s followed by I SoLand ra. They had a broad reach acroes the bund to Parsonage Point Taurus few further ahead, She the ie at 2.54.40, Brow eds There was no change in the Ader of the others, Reaching in tor b.-:@Bur miles to the finish, Taurus drew y from wnie and finished at ho.08. 5 crossed the line at 4.38, Fe, t 46.05, Three tar at 7.31 and Tare 3.51.94 The third and race Ww De Balled “M-day under auspices of the Man- t eset Bay Yacht Clut 5 Aithe cumin IBECOND RK. Owner and Fleet Western L, In Star Class for Title Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock ©, Loug ie Penns nla n, who has not rwvelght champ fought in several month i eturn to the ring a been signed up for three t man. iger, Al Lippe. On Qet. $ at Mon- eal hep Bert Tay lo ut Beth hein on Ort 9 i" meets Tommy Willard and on i. 30, at Hazelton Va will clash with Steve Latzo. Loughlin las already fought thirty-three bouts this year ind lepes to participate in fifty be- fore the first of next year i Huet i acelphta Nas w f Aelberawlght ehamplon 1 ¥ bent alt the second jac hoy esatvely a Brown | Monday i a at iis inanager 16 box sid aren at De Gene Tupnes, Gre 8 favorite tatlan da ¢ the J City ball 1 tur hiladetphin Vilin, vip-crosned Aniertean h Dundes ¢ unior x nene Par important he eh? mane t t Avenue sand Joe Tiplite bate} twelve-round. star bout. ‘Marks. th : has Sean Sean t aes : the 0 Bar ‘ A leur lene ha get rie of Tiplite. Th ‘ Hi we every tri with the ‘lek Comiskey, the sensational youn middlemeight, who hea never beet meets Jiminy Cabby. the holier an boxing tities, In Rock Sept. 25. Ng a cor hout (st The American Legion on there on that billed chan Rozenberg i n this ect uniair to bum ORLD, WEDNESDAY, SE eighteenth Autumn Cup Handicap, at Woodbine to-day. Winery and Bontface and the Sea- gram’s entry, running of | Favorite — Exterminator Money Choice to Capture Toronto Handicap. TORONTO, Ont., terminator ranks as cholce Golden Sphere, stone and Brilliant Jester are consid- Is Sept. the Even 20. in Toronto to be run J. K. L. Ross's Red- the for Canadian Horse Race Classic an ered the rifhners-up. Gre. Lag and Mad Hatter, which were eligible, will not start. The Jockeys and probable odds are as follow even; Ixterminator (Johnson), Boniface (Turner) and Finery (Claver), 3 to t; 1; (Chalmers), 80 to 1. PTEMBER 20, 1922. Brilliant Jester (Ambrose), Golden Sphere (McTag- gart) and Redstone (P, Walls), 6 to Bit of Whito (Wilson), 15 to 1; Eleanor S (Gregory), 30 to 1; Guy EVENING WORLD'S OWN SPORT HISTORY TILDEN AND JOHNSTON PLAN EUROPEAN TRIP PHILADELPHIA, Sept, 20,—Willlam T. Tilden 2d, national tennis champion, and Willlam M. Johnston, runner-up in this year's national singles champion- ship, plan to Invade Muyrope in 1924, @ cording to the champion. Tilden said ho talked {t over with Johnston and he wermed to think that twu yeara hence would be a good time to make the trip. The champion sald if the trip Js made sthey\would play in singles and pair up in dd\bles. MISS BROWNE MEETS MRS. MALLORY FRIDAY Mrs. Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, wom- en's national tennis champion, will meet Miso Mary K. Browne of Califurnia former champion, in one of the feature matches of the East-West series to be contested at the West side Tennia Club, Forest Hills, on Friday, Miss Browne has decided to make her home tn this elty and has been practicing every day at the West Side Club for her meetlog with Mrs. Mallory. They are scheduled to play at 6 o'clock on Friday afternoon. Woodrt Syracuae Sprinter, Run Against Thoroughbred. SYRACUSE, N. /¥., fept, £0.—Allan Woodring, Syracuao University sprinter, 1 get a new teat of speed w to feature the State convention of the American Legion, Wovdring will race eighty yards against a running horse. The horse, after years of service in Manuel Alonso Defeats Palmer in Tennis Singles —— Spanish Star Avenges Broth- er’s Downfall in Castle Point Tournament, Manuel avenged the defeat of his brother Jose Castle Point singles at the Ho- boken Tennis Club yesterday by elim! in th nating 8. 0. Palmer of Montclair in the Alonso, Spal 3 tennis ace, fourth round of the annual tournament. Palmer played every bit as impressively against the he drove the Manuel was too and too exper! had stronger of the brothers as against Jose on powerfully and lines After the set at 6-1 principally through Palmer's lacit of control, the latter steadied re- markably forced Alonso to his best eff vent the sets. vision the game, and and match from Palmer of play into d when through service, the enced a anfard had taken the first corners agile his carried fast Monday daringly, court but coverer atticlan for him. the foreign aggressive going attack rts to pre- into extra second ice games result in doubt up to the sixteenth star broke at with The victory advanced Alonzo to the semi-final round, in which he will meet Jerry Lang to-day, In the other senil- final Perey "L, Kynaston, Nassau and Queens champion, is to play the win ner of the Howard Kinsey-Willlar Rosenbaum Ky pleted. twe was not con’ lose sets GOULLET AND PIANI WINNERS OF 1-MILE |Free to Public and Will Lead MATCH RACE HERE Alfred ha w become Goutlet favo Ites at d Orlando Pian! the New York Velodrome, defeated Altred Grendu and Regsle McNamara iu two atraight heata of a mile tear bh race last night before a crowd of 8,900 fatig who did not appear to mind the coo! weather Plan! won the first heat of the race and Goutlet the second. Ip the initial heat Plan! pulled Goullet, and he as well 26 “Goullie’ crossed the finish tine tn front of McNamara, who sprinted for the Grenda-McNamara team, In the second heat Vian gave Gouilet « great pull and then retired, leaving Goulict to battle it out with Grenda. Goullet won by tnches and sprinted the just elshth of a mile 1f 4-5 seconds, the fastest time made for the eighth at jocal tr be battling It out, it 1s expected, in the 62tg-mile team rac chedwed tor the Bronx t t Arthur Spenc’ feated Ray Bato mile the rear handicap f ' GRAND RAPIDS The seventh game of t championship two straight match race. heat from the fror Fred Wi k from the GRAND RAPIDS NEEDS ONE GAME FOR SERIES wa XG alinost broken ur sep e Central Leasu tn. the sixth inning here to-day when nine of the Ludington and local players en- gaged in a fight over an umplre's de claiov. Grand Raplde continued the confest under protest and won in eleven innings, 4 to ‘The localy require one more victory to win the pennant and the right the Michlean-Onteari: ha nm tn State inter-league serie —s Peter Earl Wins tn 86,000 Stoke COLUMBUS, CG, Sent. 20 (Aszociate Press),—Nat Ray, Cleveland norsema yesterday piloted two horses to. first place positions at the local tirand Circuit races, winning two of th richest stake entire nieeting nd Pet he Horse “it old whic 600, M. and M. $5.90 stake from @ fine fleld of trotters heut of the Horse Review Fut af the eeason fc {tis age. Peter the Trewe , rajgnt lente. Botliiof ‘ tayore ites He and played from Ralph M. De Mott of the home club. William Rosenbaum triumphed in « hard extra set mateh over Anton Von Bernuth, In the tenth game of the third set Von Bernuth was three tines match point only to be turned back by Rosenbaum's persistent court covering. In women's singles Miss Margaret Grove me J into the final round as the result of straight set victories over Miss Dorothy In contested meets Mi ner w. Brand and Mra, the other sermu-final which to-day Miss s Caroma Winn. 8 not extended to reach the senil- G. B. Hirsch. will be Wagner Misa Wag- Marlo final, but Miss Winn had very little to spare agalnst Mrs, Theodora Sohst. The summary follows MEN'S SINGLHS—Third Round—Wiiltan feated Rulph M, de Mott, defeated 3. Alon: baum @ nd: defea 6—0. Dor . 4, ated Anton Pere ted I oS. r defeated Mra, Mins thy Brand 6— ch defeated Misy Helen M: Miss Marie : tchard 3 defeated Mri Round—Miss Van Bernutt y I. Kynaston da. 7, 6-4. Manuel Paimer, a1 1, C. Tremaine 4—4 —Second Round J. 0.6 Margaret Grove o~ deter’ . =. Theodora Bolist Wagner Grove defeated Mise Billiard News G. Lake and R. Marsh were the win- ners in last night's play in the English thoroughbred races, starts from the mark ond has been timed over the 80- yard route in 9s., the time which Wood- ring at his best can equal. In fact, Woodring has stepped 80 yards in 8 2-6s, Committee Chosen to Prepare A. Uillards tournament at John Doyle's A UL. Boo billiard rooms. Lake defeated P. Bay-| One of the tirst acts of Hermny Ober zant, 200 to 162, while Marsh was turn-| tubbesing us President of the Metropol ing back J, Maxwell, 225 to. 154. Lake] tan A. A. t ‘om- had a high run of 35, biggest cluster wan 23. 1) while Marsh's this depart- was to appoint a mittee to prepare in book form copies of the Amateur Athletic Unton const ment he trailed Maxwell, who had one] fiijcn nnd beclawa for. distribution dun of 33. Bayzant’s best was 82. hinong the Went lubes tnothe fine ” gr . o| stages of the annual meeting at the Ho Wille Hoppe, deposed world’s 18-2) te) “Mestpin late yesterday President balkline billiard champion, showed som< | Obertubbering appointed Harold Dib- 2 bebe * mee Be bs NS: Mel lee of the James FE. Sullivan Officials’ for so many yeara at the Hoppe Peter] ciub, Murray Hulbert of the Annuncla defented both Peterson and Gordon in| Yon A. C.. Jeremiah T. Mahoney. Slew exhibition matches. Hoppe ran riot in| TOUK 0. foi Miner ea Charlee A. Tl his match with his partner, Charles Bart ie Hoe As cd arabat ot the Peterson, and beat him 300 to 69, Last eR yeh ipee night the old master engaged Gordon, committee to prepare the book an amateur, and trounced him an - even tore decisive margin, the ecore| Columbia Suaad tn Easy Football this time being 300 to Brich Hager of Germany, twice defeated ler in 18.2 balkline at Daly's Billiard Academy yesterdi Hagenlacher won by a score of 200 points to 241, and in the evening match he was viet The German champton had # high run ot 175 and an average @ high run In the afternoon match 300 to by of 37% in the afternoon an er, billiard champion Albert Cut- exhibition matches Dritt. After the hard scrimmage of Monday afternoon, which resulted in a number of stiff joints and sore knees, the Co- lumbia coaching staff sent the men ¥:|throuxh a comparatively easy session yesterday om Raker's Weld. Had Buck O'Ne! and his assistants ordered a repetition of the previous day, a con- siderable portion of the first and second string men would not have been able to scrimmage without endangering them ous of 263 and an average of 75 in the evo- | ery Mm Re 17, He averaged 80% and 31 3-3. veloping the forward pass game. Rod Three More Games Added —_ Up to International Waterbu! Meadow bury, 1 Matches, welin ary to the schedule of the Games were adiled Monty y Cup polo tournament at t Brooks Club grounds, I., next Monday and Weat Tue to determine the teams to meet tn th veml-final and final matches of that series. All three will be free to the pubile. Incldentally the Waterbury Cup series will be played on a handlesp basis as originally planned, This latest change any way thi championship team sand? nor the exhibition ¥ ated for Oct hat game will be Hasteott and Orar rr’ which are to be docs not affect in natches betw the Argentine Federation Meadow ¥ “ple held on Octobor ch se ds 2, eave that the teams for County instead of AU-lreland mingo, The ghanges were made by tha Meadow Brook Club Committes 2 result of a full discussion of the cond! u of the Monty Waterbury Cu tournament relattve to the low gout teams originally J to take pa The teams later untarily withd in order that the four goal teams w have played through the n and Philadetphia tournaments might be 4 to meet in that series “on the fut” In What would be tantamount to cha Plonship conditions, Jt was beld thet In view of the fact that the bis match between the Meadow Bro Biz Fou and the Argentine during the week wou en international that tt ow me a Sep All-Irelen Meadow County which th Arg helburne Eep 4 the Hi and ided up withdraw series, @ard and ntina wld be ould b alme 6 best to a veduled nt wil mateh t. 25 YY eo] Brook lamingo and Ea ‘Then e tour! wil! gain the 0 tn 1 t will ot ® et the eq hart All-Ireland ¢ ¢ ' To Big Polo Tournament erick and Gehrig did the throwing, while the ends and the remainder of the back- field were on the receiving end M Ederle tn Handienp to Ury te New Records. A handicap race at 200 yards been arranged by the Women's has Swim they haye been lined up fn the t ming Association in order to give Misa etd ia tntr he Aru aee wren of 1922, a chance to broale three world R Wbridva will play for Shel-|fecords tn the Brighton Beach open alt Pee ahie ee Je. Thorns | POOL Next Tussday afternoon. Mis THtcbcock Je. Elliot Bacon and Devers| Rderlo will strive for new internation TOO tee ERC On and tcc tow |#landurds at 150, 200 nnd 220 yards, cu Mitt ns i constitute the Mi Mus “double ‘Gentine cass wae aes Ch reee rue) te) Rabarnat A {{opeed of this marvellous mermaid. for ay be saved for the semi dnal ane jail three dietances, She will continue Tournsment, and for the (nternational ave dropped ot 200 5 mes of the following week, the Shel-|fents Bave dropped out at 200 yards § rte tote ne ely | Liberal handicaps will be allotted to Burne-Allstreland: genie on Bron: draw out Mier Fiderle to her suprems take place on the Cochran Field, best possible for those going to GLIDDEN MOTOR & SUPPLY CO. Authorized Buick Exchange Dealers 259 West 58th Street, New York at Broadway effort of the year. ‘ng at 9.30 o'clock In the afternoon while the Meadow — Brook-Flamingo “ » game and the Baateott-Orange County] Garland “Jake” Staht Dies ta Los mutch will take place respectively on Angele Field No. 2 and the Cochran Field,| CHICAGO. Sept. 29.—Garland "Jake" slinultaneously, beginning at 3.29 o'clock | stahl, President of the Washington Park on duy afternoon National Bank of Chi 1 F : ‘ational Bank of Chleago, and former : the games on Monday And} i iiveratty of [linola athlete and major \ mill be free tickets are reauired| tocue bull player and manager, di for all others, ‘Tekst sold and marked | Wocue bull Dlazer and manager, died “frst game aro fox the mateh* on| of ™ HW paid LS The game of Sept. 28 will be the] % th Be ibe Beredeey Bane Ohi eaine oa Robins Beat New Haven. wile the Saturday, Sept. 29, game l pees New Me) . be the third match. The fourth game} SEW MAVEN, Conn., Sept. 20.—The of the series will ba the exhibition | Brookiyi Robins defeated w Haven, natch between the Easteott and Orange | Eastern League champions an ex County teams on Monday, Oct. 2, while] pinition aame here yesterday, by the Afth and sixth games of the series|. gcora of 6 to 3. Woodward pitched will be the Argentine-Meadow Brook} eguciient ball for Hill Donovan's team, Big Four contents but poor support cost the game tho three preliminary metehes to park |tndriteanoy Falls to Swim English (inl sutomotiias 1a kine scace Channel. ong Isinnd Ratlrond Comp Nee ees "AD SURI ALES ' ciel tralns before the i ) © Ruselan ewonmer tod 5 so that thore who des va v nen we ere no} Mor and Tuesday contests will|d 2 able opportunity ¢ be obliged to use the normal meana of | xwim tie sh Char flarted his ' the club's grounds, which isfattempt at midnight Monday night. He ny Way Of the Long Island Rain wa ged to abandon It at 6 o'clock rden City and thence by tro this me owever, owing to u axivad to the fleld favors ions P e You can buy your newor used BUICK outright or turn your present car in as part payment when you deal with the i o Yriday during the track meet which ts SOE ET LANNEL SHIRT LOOMS UP AS STAR AMONG THREE-YEAR: oo toneham’s 3-Year-Old 2T OLDS Rutgers Football Huskies Got in Perfect Condition by Doing Hard Work in Vacation Sanford’: Linemen Broke Rocks, Built Roads, as Stevedores, Stoked in Iron Foundries and Handled 10-Ton Trucks. By Burris Jenkins. Br aking rocks in a road-building gang, manhandling ten-ton trucks, stoking {n an fron foundry and stevedoring on a river Loat—these pastimy recin to be the Rutgers football man's idea of how to spend a plaasant summer. At least many of the husky linemen * — now practising in perfect cdndition on| tackler, Robert Lincoln, Injured bee fore he made his letter last year, ts eison Field got in that perfect con-| aimost sure to fight way into the dition through one or the other of | Tanks in many of the games. Ako Ellis Enander, a 145-pound youngster, hone abo’ amed oc 8. : "a those above named occupations. It's) fast as a bullet, will likely 0 used, common knowledge that Capt. Howard] While Jack Scrimgeour, a brainy end, Raub, the twenty-year-old veteran} end “Dinty’ Warner Moore have @ tackle with the youthful face, the] ©ltnee of making the grade. shock of yellow hair, and 235 pound. of brawn wrapped around Nis six foot tw-inch frame, his “vacation’* Ru spent summer ot in the of a rubber plant, and Part as a stevedore on the river, and tho rest building roads around New Brunswick. In this wry ho took off Afteen pounds of superfuous weight and now 1s as hard as nails. Then George Smith, another tackle from last year's team, kept his pounds and ounces down to 210 by shovelling coal tn a New Jersey pipe foundry. Dante! Feller, « guard, by wrestling all summer with a New shipping truck, now welghs only 230 pounds. And Ed. Dickinson, star end of the 1921 rnity, wielded a pick and shovel with # road gang In and around part the time “heater gang’ und sho part ‘and'dates his famous ‘ multiple halves drop on their faces at a sige the quarter places the ball on the tips of thé fingers “forked” tm the proper v boots the ball for a fleld goal—it he This kick was invented by Sane ford in 1916, and it was largely tne strumental | hington ca Brunswick nal, w year. It's t utgers, od of n. moat of his time there vig scores condition Is yeste ki It a backfield h Sanford year for is putting preparing for line is already in from handling trucks Sanford spent a gre: rday teaching the bacie Invention, the where the two His ick,"* Way, and the fullbaci¢ n defeating and Lee team he cracig in thet has been used since wit, sreat effectivences: — QUARTERBACK BANK IS OUT FOR THE SEASON Ridgewood until his 175 pounds are] ANN ARBOR, Mich. Sept. 20. all sleek for the first game on Sep Hore Bank of Cleveland, quarters 80 with Pennsylvania Military Col- | back on the University of Michigan 1926 = as footbal| am, probab! will out of lege at Neilson Wield. Several other} the game for the entire season, It was men, including Gaynor Brennan, the |#"nounced to-day An of hie 175-pound running mate of Dickingon, | 1%, 1nuired Io praction ia on the opposite end, kept in condition] Injuries kept Bank out of the line-up with heavy work as playgrounds {n- | @uring most of 121 The injury ts a blow to Michigan, although Uterlt, structors. se strenuous jobs were] jase yon quarterback, and several taken in spite of the fact that most other aspirants to the position ave of these young athletes are from{ Velie i wealthy lies ny temmtlt CENTRE COLLEGE ELEVEN t takes a head coach} TO PLAY AT CLEVELAND with strength of mind and a loud! Gayprer, 0. Sept. 20.—-A footbull voice to handle « bunch of hardened! gamo between the Centre College and youths like this. But to a spectator i 7 y Kenyon College clevens has bec watching the Rutgers squad put on : bac erena ye! Lae we, Gy.) Scheduled to be played at Cleveland ta o grill with a hard scrimmage, G.] Norotpsn igen, amet ec ee fm Foster Sanford, why-has been head! Kenyon announced here today” coac! at Rutgers etical ever He declined to name the date or ta since he Jeft his own Yale team an] give any details, but said that the eime all-American end back {n 1891, an- scheduled, swers all the requirements and then some Notwithstanding his gray hairs, the slightly bent shoulders ou his fifty ord can let loose his his six-foot body Coach san sours and had been definitely Harvard Reathicts Football Tlok CAMBRIDG objectionable > , Masa., Sept. language and more the games of many non-Harvard season volee on a candidate until that can] (cxet holders has made it necessary te «lic no mad he could fight his] restrict the sale of season tickets for way through three miles of wildcats. | the future to members and ex-members That's the way he makes his football | of the untveraity.”’ is the heading on one pupils play football. He teaches them | Of Several envelopes mailed to-day to the game and then makes them mad Sometimes he makes them mad just so they'll pay attention to what he teaching them ne Mat DIAMOND NELT MANILA, Sept, 20 (Assoctated Pres 87,000 Harvard men w ot th the Crimson’s big footb: names are on for tickets to 1 gam one ollgtb! _ ‘OR VILLA, But the new candidate at Rutge Vriends of Pancho Villa, who recently op sa snc Aapaypanccalulle pesto alee America fron Johnny Buff, have ratsed lust vear's varsity team, now lined Un Tnaip o¢ $2,500 with which they propos as first string 1 tha carly season |ty purchase tho native pugilist a de practice, erans would filllwond belt, every position on the team if neces >. —- sary, They are Haub, Bender, Hren-|BUENNY'S NROTHER SCORES K. 0, nan, Benkert, Loppacher, Kingmon,] HOLYOKE, Mass. — Joe Leonard, Dickinson, Gibson, Chandler, Maloney, |itentwetght, brother of the champlon, ler, Keiter, Smith and. the twolinocked out Joe Moran in the thint udder brothers, J. and D., dar round. Michy Travers, New Haven, won hatred heavyweights, tackle and}a round decision from Jim Cooney, guard. Hh & scrappy, demon} New York Built to Stand Long Hard Service Itis all truck. Has no passenger car difference. It means a “s parts. Thatis the important peed truck” that can stand up to the hard knocks and steady goi fast delivery service. don't distress it. Has electric starter, electric lights, erful modern motor, tion, bamper, heavy duck storm cu 414° cord ures Big loads Alemite lobric ing of +. POW HERRMAN MOTOR TRUCK CO. 607-615 West 57th St., New York Telephone Cir le 8360, 8361 ag8?. 8:

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