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a THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1923. s = —~ — . ® nian - VALE BEATEN HARVARD AND THE WAY IT USUALLY IS. - pene oe - By Thornton Fisher NO BOXING LAW. | a . : : . ——>_- 5 Sticking to Old-Fashioned Football Is Seriously t Handicapping Old Eli on Gridiron Declares the Governor Is En+ : fst d ; tirely Satisfied With Way ALE bellevag in being old-fashioned, apparently, judging by the the Sport’ Is Conducted. @ Y latest football surprise. Old-fashioned ideas—or, old-fashioned football, caused the defeat of the Blue Saturday by Iowa 6 to 0. William Muldoon, Chairman of th; Howard Jones, the progressive, Jed his men to victory against the conser- New York State Athletic Commission, vative Tad Jones, his brother, and Yale coach. Maybe the Old Eli faculty declared to-day there was no truth int prevents Tad from becoming up-to-date {n his gridiron methods, but any- reports to thé effect that Gov. Miller way, his boys lost at New Haven Saturday because tueir ancient mass s pe ila ed taking action In the di- plays were not able to offset the Western team’s modern style. TWO PRELIMINARY Se rection of a-repeal of of the Walker Beers uhe caatitt tin atic GAGA Rie ane Me NONDER OF ROUNDS te virhere is no more truth in thai such thing nowadays as a “setup” for a big college team. Time was when Rip STAY TAKE MORE rumor than in the pater) about m they could count on sure-fire victories by arranging games for the early CHANCES THAN THE GUARANTER resigning,’ said Mr. Muldoon. “Par season with so-called minor college teams, It 1s different now, as the MEN. from having any intention of bring. small teams are playing almost as well as the big teams, espectally early Wh FS ing about the repeal of the present in the season, This is remarkable considering the fact that small college RECENT RING STUFF sweet boxing Jaw, Gov. Miller has assured: = A FIGHTER 1S OFTEN MORE me he is entirely satisfied with the teams hav eso few students to pick from for a team compared with the Has SHOWN THA’ F way in which the Comniission has thousands available at Harvard, Yale, Princeton and other large unl- THIS GUN CAN TAKE Z AFRAID OF HIS TOUGH CHIE conducted the sport, and that he will versities. A Sock OND 4 — SECOND THAN OF THE sustain the Commission in its efforts Harvard was given a hard game by Bowdoin. Years ago the Crimson Uke te l “Yih See ee eae He yi . sf ae oa Got: Sine ’ an a rule smothered these Maine lads, Saturday they had to extend them- SEN fa fou that ie anylohmnges in Ge EW) told me that if any changes in the law, would tend to better conditions, he stood ready to help. I replied that the law, as it stood, seemed adequate, and that we would go forward on ex~ isting conditions. In fact, the Come mission has had the constant support of the Governor in Its efforts to con- duct boxing in a manner to meet the approval of the public. “While there have been some una pleasant events in boxing I thinks the same fs true of nearly every branch of professional sport. It 1s my opinion: that the boxers of the present day ai the best behaved athletes in the his tory of the ring. ‘Their condition, physically, {s better and thelr conduct in und out of the ring is an Improves ment over that of their predecessors. The boxers have not made any con< siderable amount of trouble for thé selves to win. Princeton was given the most strenuous sort of battle by Colgate, and just managed to win out. Alabama Poly held West Point scoreless for three sessions, Penn nosed out a victory over Maryland, West Virginia defeated Pittsburgh, Bucknell gave the Navy a scare, cuse amd Brown played a scoreless tle, Carnegie Tech held W: and Jefferson to a tie. Dartmouth, Cornell and Penn Statee were the only important Eastern teams that won handily. Centre, who certain wise men say is going to trim Harvard this week, had all it could do to win from Virginia Poly, and Vanderbilt and Michigan, playing to a scoreless draw. Light Football Practice To-Day For the “Met’’ Coliege Teams Columbia Players Appeared|* the game progrossea and made a touchdown in the last Haggard After Contest —noiaing ts opponents te a lone nent Syra- ‘ashington SocanerFan2-co UMPIRE ATTACKED BY FANS AS ORIOLES Iowa Vietory Takes Place THAN ONCE - S ) |Commission, but the managers have With Wesleyan goal tp the third quarter, ‘ é . been and are now an obstacle to prog= : WIN “LITTLE SERIES” F tb l H t y Wi th THREE HANDLERS WHO KNOW LESS aBour fe | | ress In the sport. These men do not ——- Stevens was considerably handi- pale See n 00 a is ory U OLD STUPID HINSELE, seem (n care how much they bring \ By Burris Jenkins. byeeed in the game with Hamilton! sr, PAUL, Oct. 16—The Baltimore sport Juto disrepute, and they appar 7 by the absence of O'Callaghan fi ATURDAY'S football games of| the backfleld and Turnbull and Guede local colleges were tho most|from the line. Glacser, the substi. trying yet experienced. Two| tute in the backfield, was not able to Metropolitan elevens won their con- gain against th strong Hamilton line, tests. Columbia won from Wesleyan, 16 to International League champions won the Junior World's Series by de- feating St. Paul, American, Association leaders, by a score of deto 3 yesterday, giving the Orioles five games to the Saints’ two, Derr of the International League was ently would be willing to wrecle the enttre boxing structure If it would ac~ crue to their financial advantage. © am determined to teach these men that they must walk a straight line in the business of boxing, and those who are slow to understand my attitude Other “Big Three’’ Defeats Shamrock Five Defeats Albany 1 No Question That Hawkeyes Had Better Team, and if Anything At Basketball by 15 to 13 Score the Breaks of Luck Were Against Them in Game With Yale— Rutger's victory over Lehigh Is the Rutgers beat Lehigh at Le-| first in four years : , . in| Will learn through bitter experienc high, 18 to 6. N. ¥. U. lost to Ho- —-—>— escorted from the fleld by police after i Elizabeth Easy for Celtico—j The Dodgers won over the Brooklyn) "isin as a whole, boxing never bart, 20 to 0. City College was beaten} HARVARD NEEDS OWEN the ame, when the crowd swarmed on Parkin Star of Western Eleven. team by the score of 30 to 20 and lost was in a more favorable position than it is at present, and I intend to keeg it there to the field to protest a decision made by the umpire in the eighth inning, A shower of cushions fell about Derr, but he was not hurt. Golvin, St. Paul player, was called out on what would have been the tleing run and this started the dem- onstration, ‘Jazz Rogers, Baltimore fan; Charles Schmidt, Vice President of the’ Baltimore Club, and John C, Toole, President of the International League, were jostled by the angry fans, Police, however, rescued them. pole Was ex to Visitation by the score of 25 to 23, The Visitation team, which fs offering strong competition this year, won out after an extra period was called. ceum also broke even on the playing of the week end, The Macs lost to the Knights of St. An- thony last night by 26 to 22 at the Knights’ court. On Saturday Visita- tlons were the victims to the tune of 17 to 16 ina v Danbury Separates Beaten by Italian C. C. BASKETBALL RESULTS. SATURDAY NIGHT, Paterson, 37; Knights St. Anthony, by Providence, 16 to 7, And Stevens} © FOR GAME WITH CENTRE 7a was held by Hamilton to a scoreless ———— tle. Fordham had no game. To-day,] CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 16.—While the if there is any practice, it will be| Harvard coaches were dissatisfied with light. the play of thelr eleven {nthe Bowdoin game, particularly because the cena ne attack was so often slowed to fourth umbia-Wesleyan game feel that Ahe|down when inside the Maine team's 6- Blue and White team has been over-| yard tine, they aro looking for 4 a estimmted when It Is called the ‘best 3 A im nine yearn’ and In the statement | UP this week, aa the eleven a whipped By Robert Edgren. five and six-yard gains, Locke car- lec beat Yale Saturday in a hare-| Ted the ball often, and several times a THOMAS AND LAWRENCE } STEAL LAP AND GIVE THRILL AT VELODROME Lioya “Cat Thomas and Percy Lawrence, San Francisco hoys, lapped broke through Yale's centre, whien f , scoring the only i eee ees coed ne atter when} Seemed unable to hold him. Now and Parkin went oven fen a: touchdown, | thet a punting duel started and there There Is no question that Towa had| Wi# little to choose between Minnick the better tent If ‘nnythine, the, Of Towa and Wight of Yale, both breaks of luck were against the West-|PMCIng long high Kicks 2G ners. lowa's victory takes place in a arches ore ASD ONe. saa! football history with the defeats of] 1 the third period Yale raltted Many who witnessed the close Co- | | | 36. Dodgers, 30; Brooklyn, 20. s < aoe ¢ a a y close game. Kearns, | the field in the two-hour team race at that {t possenses one of the “greatest |!82_ condition to play Centro College. | Corte {0 the Ser Paul Clubs oMee, White] the other members of tae eee ane ener made the SUNDAY AFTERNOON. one of Frank McCormick's recent ac-|the New York Velodrome yesterday, backftelds in the East.”’ But theso| gdi@tvard surely In one team when} Paul and International officials. termed ae Titaryard and Princeton by) gest down of the game for Yale,| MacDowell, 17; Visitations, 16 gulsenee ate) Played with Trenton} afternoon and won the race, Elgl are judging superficially. They noted] another when he is not. eitione Oats tuo pffaff™‘unfortunate entre anc hissed which up to this time had been un-| Celtics, 15 bany, ELAR ORMOR AUOTSS |B . thousand fo the largest Sunday Yale played her best men and did everything possible to hold off defeat. Toward the end of the game Yale made several substitutions to throw in fresh men when Towa began to show signs of weariness, but Jowa made only one change in her lineup, when that Wealeyan had a team of much] even Buell can't get things to move as smaller men than Columbia, men who] well as when the big halfback Js in the went through the Blue and White line| ame. Owen is expected to be right for and stopped the Columbia advance| the centre game, but if he is not Har- almost when they pleased. vard will be up against as serious a ‘Wesleyan beat Bowdoin a week ago| Proposition on tt was last year when Boek at ee 21 to 0. Harvard beat Bowdoin sat-| "ste" § t0 © by the Colonels. ast ten seconds of the side in t West End Post, 11; St. Jerome, 11. play. SUNDAY NIGHT. Italian C. C., 29; Danbury Sep+ arates, 21, Visitations, 25; Dodgers, 23 Broooklyn, 33; Paterson, able to penetrate Iowa's sturdy line. Several small gains, followed by a fumble and an eight-yard loss, forced Wight to try for a 40-yard field goai. The kick failed, Minnick of Towa had also tried from 48 yards away to crowd of the season, cheered the two Coast stars as they succeeded Jn steal~ ing a lap on the entire fleld. All sea- son long Thomas and Lawrence have tried to gain a coveted lap to these! long races, but not until yesterday, in the last meet of the season at the up- $< LARSEN TELLS ABOUT HIS BOUTS WITH SIKI Brooklyn gained a victory over Paterson last night at Arcadia Hall. The Brooklyn baskethall court was jammed to the doors, as it was during Wolf Larsen {ts the only fighter on this slde of the big pond who can give é & . ! cross Yale's goal bar without succees.| 4. oe town track, were they successful im urday 15 to 0. With Columbla win- the public a real line on Rattling Siki,] Parkin was injured and taken out nights, MacDowall, 22. the greater part of last season, and . ning by a margin of four points over] QUAILE OUT OF YALE Tecent conqueror of Ceorgex Carpen-| near the end of the last quarter He tried again from 40 yards and the} Coltics, 38; Elizabeth, fans abo cheered the Brooklyn quin=| taraine the trick ball went low, There was a tight spot in the third, dlinger fumbled and the ball was recovered by Hancock on Yale's 44-yard line, Towa worked two for- ses without success, and in able Parkin was hurt and nly a puncture prevented Tommy. Fitzsimmons of the team of Fitzsl mons and Harry Horan from also lap ping the fleld. It the teams of Horan and Fitzsimmons and Lawrence * and Thomas who dashed aw the twenty-eighth mile of the race and opened up a gap of three-quarters of a lap on the rest of the fleld. When it appeared as if these two teams would lap the fleid, Fitzsimmons had the hard . luck to puncture a tire which put him out of it ‘Thomas and Lawrence, though reliev~ ing one another every two laps, rode camel, and after four miles of hard riding succeeded in gaining the lap. Gaining a lap on a small track Nk@, Madison Square Garden 1s a dificult enough task, but turning the trick on a big saucer like the six-lap track up in the Bronx Is surely some difficult feat, Alfred Grenda and Orlando Pilani fin- From the start the game a struggle between Parkin, lowa's great running quarterback, and Mallory of Yale, who alone seemed able to 4 him and drag him down, Parkin was as active a ground gainer as the E. has seen in years, Ile showed h quality early in the first quarter when he ran dodging through the thick of Yale's line, twisting out of the hands of four tacklers in succession and guining fifteen yards where it looked| Passes and made ground too slowly Baie Weide lucky Soveee one, through the line, although tn battling The scoring by Parkin came in the| ¥P and down the fleld the Bulldog second quarter. At the end of the] team made five more first downs. in first Parkin had nearly escaped the| Plunges and end runs by Wight Yal tet felt much better aft lil’ team had defeated Paterson by a 83 to 26 score in a game which was by no means one-side¢ Dame, Holland, in 1919 sparring partners in th Club gymnasium, the la club in that elty, Larsen says: “When I first met Siki it was in the Amster- *, Holland, W: In the gymnasium, Wesleyan, this may not mean that} GAME FOR THE SEASON Columbia could beat Harvard by ten points, but {t does indicate that the] new Haw a ee little Wesleyan outfit is, in spite of | j,., hae OL ead AR hae ita weight, one of the smoothest foot- game closed the football ‘career of ball machines in this part of the] Pmerson Qualle, the left tackle, who country. replaced Ed. Greene. Quaile is a senior. 2 vo we, | He has had a bad knee for several In last part of the Columbia-Wes-| years, Saturday his injury was to his leyan game on South Field both} other knee, and he will not be out for teams had scored a touchdown, The| the rest of the season. The only other only difference was Burtt of Colum-| injury was to Hoxie Haas, who played bia intercepted Wesleyan's kick, los- |!" Captain Jordan's place at right half- fhe We abel pont Oclumbla rane ack an who had hie face stepned on. 99 we Injury was temporarily painful but did not shout, “Touchdown, Colum} not serious, and he will be out with th: bia!"’ as they had at the beginning of | squad to-morrow. the game, but “Hold ‘em, Columbia!" | ‘The week will see the return to the The Wesleyan team, notwithstanding] game of Les Miller, the regular teft their size, appeared the fresher of the| tackle, and the contest between him and two. The Blue and White players|Greene for the place will be clon were haggard. Capt. Koppisch 8 Doe Jordan will be back in the game Albany basketball advocates will have to do better than they have heen doing lately if they are anxious to send a quintet to New York which will score a victory over our own Original Celtics. The Shamrock Five defeated the Albany Five yesterday afternoon at Columbia Park by a 15 to 13 score, Evidently the teams which come down from the State capital are getting better and better. Last season the Albany All-Stars played a tie game with the champions, but they were easily conquered this year. And now the Albany Five almost regained the lost prestige. The Celtics had quite a task to defeat the visitors, but everything ended with the champions The basketball team of the Com- monwealth A, C. will soon be seen in action at the club against the Monica Lodge of Manager Jess Mc- Mahon of the Commonwealth Five has constructed an aggressive and formid- able quintet, which consists of Stran- glet Forbes, the two Jenkinses, George Fall, Edwards, Ricks, Johnson, Lee, Kimbrough, Slocum, Gumb, Sess Johnson and Hubbard. dam Club in Notre Di boxed often togeth T had been at sea during the war and the Negro had been in France. He married a Duteh girl and was making his home with her in Holland, Siki had boxed while in the army, and because of his wonderful development above th waist had been advised tomtake up the game as a profession, He was striving to pick up the fine points of tha game and was anxious to have me box with him, He knew little about boxing, but possessed some hitting ability 1 was very much his master at that tm ee CUBS THE CHAMPIONS taken out, In the last quarter Yale tried every trick the team knew to score, but was unable to do anything with Yale tacklers and had been dropped| Teached Jowa’s 17-yard line, which d was "Yale's high-tide mark. Thore the ball was lost, and a moment later the last whistle blew. by Mallory on Yale's twent line just before the whistle blew. A changing goals Varkin made no A new league, the New York Inter- borough Basketball League, is under , n on top. ; ine. prepared: ¢ is . wie 5 j Copyright, 1922, by Robert Ed, way and a schedule is being prepared. |... eee ets polite wadie Made back, limped. Also the fact that \ ay: Diller, Locke made four yards and The evening game was not so In-lteams in the city, including the Ital-|Sointe, and Keggle McNamara and Ray Quarterback Burtt chose to have Rod- ees = then ripped through Yale's centre for| CONROY AND WALKER teresting as the afternoon contest.lian C, C., West End Post, Starling| atom fourth with 58 points. erick kick from placement rathor ROPER TO STRENGTHEN CHICAGO, Oct 3s Bree first down, Parkin plunged to Yale TO MEET IN FINAL Elizabeth, with Frank Bruggy, Harris Grave Franklin A Ree vernnia ee ; s|ander whitewashed the e ut-¥ : 2 the ae rus Is | Greys, f tran Sy. for another toushdows THE PRINCETON LINE] i score of 2 to 0 yesterday’ and w eR GAA iouniieseiethae The. of Washington, Harvey, Ripley.|c, and Montana A. C., will compete] COMPLETE ENTRY LIST 10} hat Columbia not fk team refused to give another inch, FOR S. I. GOLF TITLE and Towa was penalized five yards se SS, for holding. In the annual Staten Island golf It looked sure that Towa would] championship tournament on the Fox either try for @ fleld goal or attempt yiiis Golt Clb links,’ Thoreas D. Con- a forward pass. Parkin drew welll poy of the home club, medal winner, a ne Te RRR ie ta and A, Lyiclen Walker Jr. of Richmond Grimstedt, Lavan, Clemons and Sugarman, were easy for the Celtics. At no time during the game weré the champions in a serious position, Nat Holman and Johnny Beckman played es well as usual, Dehnert and Leon. ard scored several times. Barry played a good game, Harris proved title of Chicago's city champions for the Cubs, The Cubs won four games to the White Sox three, It was the first time that the Cub veteran ace has been able to win from the White Sox in three series, This victory of dhe Cubs ts the first since 1909, when the White won the title and retained it until yes: confident of gaining through the Wes-} pp rsoipox nay ; for the title. leyan line, This indicates how stroug pay OR ARwih shhy the “little” team was. two weeks intervening before th Columbia outplayed the visitors.| Chicago game, Bill Roper will bead Koppisch and Roderick and Geh every effort to develop strength in his the now-famous backfield trio of Co- | line Tt was apparent in Saturday's lumbia, did all that was expected of] Victory over Colgate that the Maroon FOR BILLIARD TITLE CONSISTS OF SIX ST. a NEW YORK SOCCER ELEVEN BEATS VIKINGS With the receipt of the entries and 250 forfeit money from Jake Schaefer, world’s champion, and Welker Cochran, Meeting with slight opposition In the t tounty, fo , and in- {f the National soccer| the field of six players who will com- then Une was consistently outplaying | the | Wray. ‘ tevae foward Yates left end, well coverod| County. former Staten Island and tn-1 his worth by his fast work on the| °PoMIns Found of the National socoer| the, field Of fan bassin ie national Tiger forwards, and the right side of he game, the seventh of the series ; tercoliegiate champion, who was run-|°0 (OFT OF f championship the team of the New Yor te beta ar. the line yielded time after time to the| Was a pitching duel between the Cut| by his interference, Bowling the Yale Fete et, “the quelitying| Court. He Was received with much 18.2 balkline billiard tournament at the Hobart's defeat of New York Unl- oe, the Football Club defeated thé Viking Foot- ball Club of this city by a score of & goals to 1 at New York Oval yesterday. Burnett, off a pass by McGhee on the left, scored tn the first minute of play and A. Stark, also from McGhee, shot the second five minutes late} ne game had gone 25 minutes when Mc » Kot possession and came right across with the ball, making it 3—0. Soon after, Burnett sceved from @ mixup. A. Stark star and Dixie Leverette, the former outpitching his youthful rival GOVERNOR'S ISLAND POLO FOUR WINS CUP tacklers over, the moving shield swerved straight down field toward and will oppose each other in the the goal line. But it was going too round Saturday. slowly for Parkin and Yale men were] | Sore Bye Lied Baia yr Pvc sth coming with a rush, leaping from] final round matenes wien oe attled nal for the line. Three Yale men hit hin | Conroy eliminated W. H. Follett, a almost at once and he went down on|cjubmate,- in the semf-finals by 1 up, his elbows, but still moving with a] Wollett held the title until he met Con- momentum that enabled him to give a] roy. wriggle and a roll and jam the ball] Walker beat in auc onslaughts of the Colgate backs. favor by the fan: versity was no surprise, The day be-| "Ay in the previous games, the fore the game Coach Tom Thorpe] passing and kicking saved the d wal an the season progresses it is apparent “We have sinall chance of winning,| that Princeton will rely largely upon But we will give them a fight—1|the open game. . know we've got & fighting bunch even —s if they may not be the football mate-] MICKEY WALKER MEETS Hobart." New York University aid JACK BRITTON NOV. 1 were the survivors of match Hotel Pennsylvania, Nov. 13 to 21, in= clusive, {s now complete. Entries closed yesterday. It can now be announce definitely that the following stars wil compbte for the world's professional championship Jake Schaefer, who won the tith the international tournament at Chi a year ago; Willie Hoppe, who pre- viously held the title for fifteen years: Fdouard Horemana of Belgium, the champion of Edrope; Roger Conti, the Danbury Separates met defeat at the hands of the crack Italian Cath- olic Club Quintet at Webster Hall by the score of 29 to 21, McKew and Witski of the winning team displayed unusually good form in shooting from difficult points, SRE The Governor's Island Polo team de d the Fort Hamilton four on the parade grounds at Fort Hamilton ye terday afternoon in th the Shore Road Pak te up a fight, holding the visitors to West End Post, Veterans of Foreign : ¢ touchdowns, though Kraus did i sion Hf, A, Sat- | } | saat déal ot klbkig, ‘Toorak! | Jack Britton’ has tossed hie alien sat ingen Pg ON down across the chalk mark, ‘The at-| fer, 7 and 6; 2. G. B. Rellly, 7 and 61 Ware, played a tle game with Bt. | brought In the fifth tally near half-time, Jehamplon of France: rich Hexenlachers ; New Yoru University’s fullback, tried] beaver Into the ring and accepted the ‘ 0 ok nal failed d the) and F. 1. Markey, ¢ Jerome's C, C, yesterday afternoon Hardy contributed the sixth count] th P vs New vim y was marked by] tempt to kick goal , and the . e! el esenta- ‘4 *y 0 he hird ae! challenge Mickey Walker ney" Walker's opponents were representa-| 1,044 teams played on even terms|after the restart, Finally a fine burst|Cochran, who finished third In Jost Pig to compete in the punting battle, but La Palen ned ; and during this} score was Iowa 6, Yale 0. N odtay Pinte ti t splay PB Shas as Week ree meres epi Rie ead Aa dae a without much sucess, There are no} Mert at last and to a D Feta N The| period both Capt. Yul and Col, Pal-|" From that time on Parkin was a ————— Sirughent He Rreaise part of ant Lindquist shooting the goal. McGhee's > r a ‘are on the Violet eleven, | Caskets who have been harping on the] mer were unseated from thelr mounts. | o a 7 IS ene game and neither could score an addi-| 1 : os ; é Prt Movers, Cast. Faylon. Toorock | fH8t that Jack would not face the Pla xen player finished out Coa teil twa tman put of tince| BARNES AND WOOD WIN {fiona point to win the game, ‘The| Del? 10 A: Slark, resulted in another | Siating Races af toe Palace Fe eyers, , peth boy in a risky bout will now have] Major ‘and Col c . of three » + and the etx f ms -* and Weatherdon vovered themselves] to shut up traps, Tex Rickard has been| the outstanding players for Mere and was nearly always good for «| GOLF MATCH AT PELHAM] fina! tally Was 11 to 11. last was put through by McGhee un-| Another series of handicap races will 3 with the most glory in this game, working for months to get the boys to-] Hamilton team, with Bocth and Krog-| gain, Shortly after the touchdown = = see eee Taian i aided. be held at the 18lst Street Ice Palace = gether, and has finally clinched the] stad carrying off the honors for the] Parkin made a perfect forward 3] Jim Barnes and Warren Wood, rep-| Paterson scored a victory over the} IRE a to-night. With Jimmy Smith, Willlany The City College of New York for Madison Square Garden for] Governor's Island team. to Kadesky, lowa left end, just after niing Pelham, defeated Fred Decker Knights of St, Anthony at Paterson on Victory for Murphy and Don Boninsan valromgp faced a much better team Saturday aa - TARE an MgO VERE Tui and’ tie of Knollwood in a West-| Saturday night by a score of 87 to 36 the Ice Palneo and, Wesley Becker and & than their first opponents in fftec aie ~ Kethall Double-Header, | | pase und Kadesky's run gained 31 er County match team yesterday. Jin the closest contest staged this sea-| One of the hardest fought soccer bat-]Paul Forsmun conipeling for, the new # years, St. Stephens, a week Navy corgia Tech Game,.| To: pFrow evening there will be (Wo! yards before ht pulled Kadesky final score was 7 up and 6 to play. son in the Metropolitan League. Pat-|ties of the season at Harrison, N. J. a h tandleap event, the inter:cuy > Providence thought at the begin ng | te ls oot i atc ee er ead Het nnd Gite et,| down, Before he fell the flying end] The morning round, pis: yed at Peltor, [erson made a final attempt in the last} rook place yesterday between the! competition should be’ execeptionally Fi Eppa oontash when they made (WO) with ¢ ch, the Naval Academy | Avenue. In ihe frat cane the Liberty | bad shaken off three other Yale taok~ | Mute Win & YitOiy AOt ene Pele |tWO minutes, and the efforts of the} sevens of the Harrison Football Club interesting, touchdowns in the first quarter, that] eleven will direct all its energies this] Counctl, Knights of Columbus team, led| lets. Parkin was used so much in t!¢ increased this advantage in| team were rewarded by a victory. Five/and the Philadelphia Football Club. ham pi first half that he was run ragged, but | in they would win by a high score he the best possible] by Jack Smith, will pl y Lafayette 60 extra minutes were required to decide round, which was played at Philadelphia won by the score of 4 goals PROFESSIONAL BOXING and body bull Cy College of New York improved condition for the Georgiana L Council, be started the second with seveial Knollwood. the winner. a Pee ws ing taught, Prof, Meade, 100 W. 96th oh t ‘ t ) 2 . ‘ 4 ‘ | 5 ‘ { ~ ~ ~ — 4