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1 un THE LITTLE FELLOWS CONTI CENTRE OUTPLAYED HARVARD.“ °- ELEVEN IN THREE PERIODS Kentuckians Made Good Their Boast to Surprise Crimson With mee New Formation—New Trick of the “Praying Colonels” Noth- GRANDRITHER. ing More Than a Gang Walk. — OF By William Abbott. ARVARD lost prestige winning from Centre. ‘Iwenty-one points behind and weakened by injuries, the Kentuckians rallied and actually outplayed the Crimson for three periods. Figures of the game show Centre gained seventeen first downs to seven for Harvard. ~ ' Never before did the Crimson yield so much ground in its own stadium. Centre made nearly all tts gains by rushing. The right side of Harvard's line was a special mark for the giant Eventually Harvard began keeping pace with Centre and no gridiron ever > Covington, who | Produced such a rare spectacle as the 3 Fer a te eo ee amee, [tWO clovens walking across the field GRAD, YOUNG ably took “Go'' MeMillin’s place. Jiorore each play. ‘The Crimson line cracked every time when Roberts crashed against it with his 280 pounds of beef. Quarterback Covington, Centre's letest sensation, fs of the rabbit type. He darted #round ends and sneaked through tackles on fake criss-cross. No opening was too small for him, He could probably squeeze through a keyhole, Covington made all Centre's points and also the longest run »f WHERE CENTRE’S COACH GOT THE IDEA, Charlie Moran, Centre's coach, says he got the idea of his new shift from a peculiar formation the Car- lislo Indians used back in 1903. ‘The chief defect ot the Centre formation is the long time required to run tne play off. And quite frequently therc is an offside penalty due to the eager. ness of a forward to get underway before the ball {s snapped, In the Lenox Hotel Saturday night the game, a beautiful twisting TUD | Roberts was the objective for en- of forty-two yards after catching a|thusiastic Kentuckians. The folks Harvard punt. from the Blue Grass State were highly g: ver : boys’ MADE GOOD BOAST OF SURPRIS. | "EHY gratified over thelr boys showing. “Those early fumbles were tough, /Red,"* said one loyal rooter., “Two of them were unavoidable, answered the huge Centre captain. Roberts explains that on tha first play Snowday fumbled because ho re- ceived a painful muscular injury to his right side. He should have left the game then, but remained in be- ING HARVARD, The Kentuckians made good their boast of surprising Harvard with a new formation. The Crimson was not only surprised but bewildered; #0 were the 52,000 spectators. Centre’ new trick is nothing more than a gang walk. Quarterback Covington \, OLD NASSQU ame EVEN AFTER. & GAME AT PRINCETON YOU GET ANOTHER THRILL WHEN THE OLD 0% EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922. NUE TO GIVE R “BIG THREE” LOTS OF TROUBLE GRAD nton Fisher By Thor Copyright, 1922 (Ne we World), by Press Publisuing TELL eM IH Sick OR KILLED OR IN EUROPE- ANY THING = ¢ Cnr MSS = GRADS AND STUDENTS SING “OLD NASSAU” WHEN THE BANO BEGINS TO EAD THE Loy TINE FROCESSION THE FlELD. WE NEVER SHOULD Have OUGHTA LOS THE COLLEGE GRap IS ME ) AS Koo Koo OVER HIS Foor- Bau AS HIS OFFICE Goy \S WER BASEBALL, CANT CONVINCE THE @LO eran THAT THERE WAS AKY HE BEEFS ABOUT CARRNING & SPOOL OF FEATURE S OF THE GAME « cause there were no competent back- field substitutes available. In the first period Snowday made anoth barks out a signal. Instead of the ball being snapped, the yellow Jer- seys start walking in the direction of Downfall of Colunbia © WuITE COTTON HOME TO THE WIFE —BUT ON THE DEN OF THE GAME ill! AND THEN HE TRIES to EXPLAIN Iv TO AIS WIRE AFTER THE GAME VTIGER REGULARS Floyd Johnson Says He Is Ready for Any Heavyweight but Dempsey. Floyd Johnson, the big youngster from the Coast who recently stopped Bob Martin, wants to fight Harry Wills. Johnson weighs 194 pounds, which {s only a few pounds under Wills's weight, and he says that he is willing to take on a match with Brennan, Miske, Wills or any one else except Jack Dempsey. “T don't know enough yet to figh® Jack," said Floyd, “but T am going to fight all others and work my way up to be champion, I think ft «won't take me more than a year." Johnson, only twenty-two, has @ reat chance to make good. Wills, Miske and Brennan are oldtimers compared to him, veterans who have seen their best days. Johnson will improve steadily unless he is over- matched, and there ure very few heavyweights who would have much of a chance to stop him, He is strong, game and aggressive. He hits hard. He is a little slow, but training and fighting will give him speed. It tsan't likely Johnson will have the side lines, the linesmen in lock- tebetenunee oe Laity fumbling a much of a chance with Wills now, wt with hand mm eacli ther's jarvard to roll up oe ° but in six months it may be an en- ee nee HTS toe pointy IN te lait Laid to Overconfidence Original Celtics Win Two Games | iiss sitesen stor If the walk is to the right tho left | Period. ee end remains tsolated with the ball. Questioning brought out the in- . & formation that the Centre players Le- Heve a special jinx is camping on their trail this year. Everything has gone wrong. The hardest bluw cume when Bartlett, admittedly the best forward passer in the South, bocame sick and couldn't oppose Harvard. It was the first time in threo years Bartlett failed to start an importan' battle. The Centre ctar was taken last Friday to a Boston hospital, He serves as the snapper-back and also controls the formation. Some times the walk is only a few paces im one direction, then the lock-step- pers will return and stroll to the other side of the ball. Frequently the bunch will walk far to one side and come back when the ball is put tn play. The backfield men walk on lateral line with the torwards. There's no set position for the backs. Coached His Men an Old Trick. By Burris Jenkins. HREE blocked kicks rare! football game. Y. T Harvard next season, the Kentuckians already have received invitations to play Dartmouth and Colgate eithe: in Boston or New York. NEW BILLIARD LEAGUE OPENS HERE THIS WEEK ately mixed up. My signal tells who'll get the ball and where he'll go. After this the end controls the formation. It's up to him how much the team walks. At the end of the walk the ball ts flipped sideways to the back who ‘s usually in the rear of the diamond- a wild scramble of athleton the crowds. Strangest of all 1s that Thorp of N. Y. U. Eleven Has grandstands. Spectators were included in the battle when fumbles over the sidelines sent players tumbling into IN GOOD CONDITION From Brooklyn’s Favorite Team oneness, Ee is now the outstanding hero among r his classmates. . in Thorp had coached his men in a Steet Ea, Sy aith Gisie go clu Uaabteenl orgctiaty & FOR CHICAGO GAME FirsteBventianv exciting One | WrmiebouelllanreuantiN alae play popular“fifteen years ago, which —Holman and Beckman = JOriainal Celtics... 5 0 1.000 is planned to send gne man in to block ze oe ” Visitations ’ 1 832 a kick while all Ms teammates play kee) Stars of Contest. Knights 3 +500 for that one man to get through. It ine yy " ~ aE Brooklyu 500 y win a] was nicely executed by N. Y¥. U. Princetotn Coaches to Con- Blisabetn 500 {t huppenea| Thorp bad also anticipated Colum-| Centrate on Eleven to Start BASKETBALL RESULTS. Dodgers +833 bia's overconfidence from his frequent Paterson . ‘4 : . . - -200 “when the line begins to walk we|Where He will remain for at least a] 18 the Columbla-N. Y. game! eports of misfortune in the Violet in First Big Contest. ‘ SATURDAY NIGHT MacDowalis 187 backs do anything we want,” Coving- week. Saturday. It is even more unusual|camp. Other defeats mean nothing AS ay y : ls aiine im ton said. “Our places are deliber- | _ T° take the placo of the game with | for the winning touchdown to end in|if N. Y. U. beats Columbia, And by riginal Celtics 25, Brooklyn Dodg- ca ers 19 Visitations 88, Paterson 82. Starling Greys 31, White Plains Re- porter Five 16. PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 23.—Prince- ton coaches will concentrate this week on the eleven men who will start the Chicago game next Saturd It is ex- this one blow Thorp turned what ap- peared to be an unsuccessful year Into a successful one. There {s some agitation among un- in the The Knights of Columbus All Stars, a team composed of the star basket- ball players of Casey teams in the ee awe th es metropolitan distr defeated the Fi- dergraduates of Columbia to present | pected that Chicago will test the Prince- rye h Amboy 27, Englewood Club] aejty Council Caseys at the Garden a formal protest claiming that the |ton team to the limit. Princeton's over-|~ in the afternoon by a 30 to 27 tally team| touchdown scored by N, Y. U. in the GUNDAY/ ARTERNOON: a whelming defeat of Maryland Saturday Visitations scored two victories, one first period should be really counted sey All Stars 80, Fidelity Caseys which has won ever previous. con- Was one vast experiment, twenty-nine over the Paterson team by a score of shaped formation. In front of wo f ‘ a safety giving two scoring points dua a é Sai N A at s ¢ " . si y abel ball carrier is a long solld line cf} The National Interstate Threo,Cush-| test this year and been rated, as Co-|instead of six and turning the result ese Mg’ Pale she tbe, the, Diner Uslian, C._O.7a8) New York Big, 16)\9 24 and inp ofne! oes Maren ne interference. Aside from the novel] on Billiard League will be inaugurated|!umbia, one of the best elevens InJinto a Columbia victory. Me Five who occupied one of the second atv character of the walk the secret of|tn this city this week. George Moore,| the East, should bow to a college] The argument ts based on the sec. | Gray and Tillson by virtue of their) Knights 27, MucDowalls sion berths in the Metropolitan League the new Centre shift is the dense | formerly national champion, will meet | which has lost every previous gamefOMd page of “Approved Ground pels py RetUnaay's) wares wily un SUNDAY NIGHT. last year, are playing good enough interference given the runner. Frank Lopes of Cleveland on Thursday | but one and was considered by many | Rules” Which reads *‘A blocked kick, pabtealy be the cholce for ends] Original Celtics 25, Brooklyn Dodg-| basketball this year to place them cl Harvard fest Cour new Les afternoon and evening at Thum's. The|the season's weakling in local foot Miavecta’ ee hile eee AES the | eens rrecen ne eel HN arae SIT act CAE a entreaties un! y een points. | games will be of 50 point: ch i ~{kicker's goal line and goes into the |reserve, Treat and Baker will be the Visitations 38, MacDowalls 13. any dispute about the Celtics winning The lock-step of the Kentuckians vas | Cannefax, aloo a former champion. Ie age 4 , stand or among the spectators, shall | tackles, while Capt. Dickinson and] Elizabeth 27, Brooklyn 25. the ite: the Vieitations appear to! be funny, vo the bewildered look of tne sheaves oer Lopez at the Strand cae ay , eeastosenrt a rennee eaual asa nae a Sniveley will flank centre. Ollie Alford] Knights 36, Paterson 24 the one quintet which will give the meee. Pearena.: Ss. B seseen- sical sl - departure of one tet f Koal-p pyle by Re (ake) Moric ane ae nee will hold the pivot position. The oack - hardest fight for the honors. 7 : a swirling mass of enthusiastic cele-| yet such action is not without prece- [Te4 offers a problem. Jack Cleaves EW YORK invaded Brooklyn] Knights of St. Anthony also scored ; brators and with several unscheduled|dent. Something on this order oc- |‘ of course, a Oxture, Newby and Saturday night to do a little} double header. On Sunday after- i A L shysical encounters in the crowd,| curred in the Columbia-Brown game |Caldwell seem t» most Ikely possibil business with a Brooklyn bas- | 200" the Grsennalnters:datces d aan . which ultimately necessitated calling|or 1919 when a reversed decision {es for the halfback positions, but} ketball team, the Dodgers. Original] DOWS! bY the score of 27 to 23 um A perigee yut the police reserves {ter the game brought the score |WNo will occupy the most important | Celtic fans journeyed pees | 8 thee evan\ ne) they conquered Vals \_ PrrTresuRGH. pAMHERST. All this occurred Saturday at South! hack to a tle. position, that of quarterback 1s doubtt- | 2 fans journeyed across the East erson, 86 to 24 14d 0| t—Bowdoin Field. The game was the most ex- é ful, There are five possibilities. Frou ver to watch their own quintet] gfac anh f ol be ——_.- fs ) facDowall is running true to form. bt “ao traordinary, one yet Bayete the met. DONATE 400 PRIZES ne bases peat dang op Leelee silence Brooklyn rooters and, inci-| With such star quintets as the Dodg- Cont topolitan season, on a day of ex- Cement Sony aan e most Ukely | dentally, to get a loud laugh the}ers, Celtics, Visitations and the 4 je pees e R i . choice. Pagerkopf and Bergen have been » to Bi d laugh at th elites paixceton. \erent Pea oe ae alia Heald abd See tears FOR BOWLING TEAMS | kent trom practice recently an account| Brooklyn rooters. The Celtics were HES ieeevoirimieneet: OBTAN COLLEGE, [#8~Case, D a ; the sie sana of injuries, Dinsmore received his first | y ‘ - ‘i Tan on the 5 ol coe CW ire Aa (}one least expected to win—New York c z . varsity experience Saturday and does| ctomous by @ scant margin of five} Meehan {s about the only man on the 10--Golgat ar—Muntenbari 1? University, which beat Colum 7] Frank Dwyer, President of the} not seem to have quite the quallfica-| Points. Manhattan fans (although| Macs team who plays the game ex- 20—Maryland ORRIN. Y University 0) & van 0] to 6 Rational Recréation Company bow!l-| tions needed. Willie Wingate may be|somewhat nervous after the suspense] ceptionally well, but without team- n i4—Pitteburgh. 21/55 RINNESOTA | Fordham went down before George- ling alleys of Brooklyn ures that | {led upon to give the signals in the{of watching their team almosi de-| work Meehan is practically useless 121 File _,BOWDON. [ET Iwinnan ss. G|town, 28-13, a much harder defeat yn. hat} Tigers’ first important game, but {t|feated) were able to wear off t! The Macs lost both games over the 9 : te Amherst: j)t—Northwesiera-s> T]than was generally predicted, city |tere are exactly 256 teams bowling [ferns that Gorman handies the team|citement by collecting from their| week-end which gives them a standing |, PASH. AND JERS. |) O—Har 7] College of New York lost a gamejat the Rational Recreation alleys] ¢, ae if Rarer pissin A n had Brooklyn brothers. of one victory and five defeats. em eney : every one expected this team to win, | which are be © New Yorl Deda arial “i ii b (135—Weetminaier, {| _omro state. which are membe few York |more actual pridion experiance, The Manhattanit ct Brooklyn, Knights and Elizabeth eee z | 5—Ohlo W h 5- ieara walk Manhattanites feit much better y » gl t—ernegle Tech: “g—Oberttn TU Ea ine Rutgers was de. | powling Association, which is a rec- |. The reeulars are in excellent physteal Jatter the game was over. Brooklyn|are tled for third place In the league Leper Naw eeaeee hee, team, Bathanye 142. Only, Stevens {Fd for one academy, ‘aht'a little in |eoneeauence on Battrday, ‘Gener pack [Put & team on the floor which held) standing with on Sverese St Oli sey i; y 7. Or evens consequence ; 4 k 4 A . he Celtic re Seo gi8 did as well as was hoped for in hold-| °xcess of the mark the: Kecreation|feld men may be selected to start the | (he champions to a 9 to ® foe it hali| are expected to be, on the top, with Teo Kansas. cis 0} WEST VIRGINIA. ing Springfield to a 23-2 victory set when the drive for-a-team a day |&*me: Howell Van Gerbig ts the best | time and to a 17-17 te at the end of) ane ret record of 1.000. Visitations Alabama Poly:; Glow Va Wesleyan’ 0 <4 wes pa punter that Princeton has, and if u|thegame. An extra period enabled the]? P* S3-N. HL stat Overconfidence beat Columbia. Coach} began, Over 400 prizes will bx cond with five wins and a loss 7 \55—Martetta. 0) 2}20-—Purdue yb 7 : " M v¢ }kicking game is employed, he may be| winning team to score seven points|#re Bec —JeoPitebures!':). 8) pony cross, (se2be Pauw O'Neill of Columbia was so confident | donated to some 200 of these teams |used. Watson Crum showed patricue|more, while the home combination] oF an average of 1883. The Dodgers No—Waeh. O06 Les, 22)19—-Submarine Sii96 of victory he left an assistant in| who, besides joining the ation, |larly well in the last quarter of the|tailied only two points. All of the|dropped back to an average of 338 Fy. sed Sh {) WISCONSTN. charge of the team, Brooks, and went} have also contracted for th Maryland game, scoring a touchdown \ aie Of the! after thelr two defeats by the cham a ¢—Vilanova 1—Carleton....... 9]t0 wateh the Cornell gan Cornelllin the metropolitan tou afer covering 81 yards on four consecu- | Bro°Klynites contended that the Cel- Joi.” paterson stands next to last lo—saneficla ne, —Boston U. N-B.Dakotwaggion 8) plo imbia Nov. 4.) me Co-| These prises will be the git of the|tve plays. Beatty looked like a tics won because they got the preaks.| 111° 099 and the Macs are at the bomIndlans..sss+++ Hmbia supporters offered 8 to 1 odda| peer, Drisee ; : Ne Tiive plunger. Caldwell and Newby, how: | “Walt until to-morrow night,” was} WI) oni a S| before the game. ation Company and will beJevor, mre the most consistent perform. | the retort to thelr opponents’ smiles, eee > LEBURY. | | CENTRE. i ¥ r ded to the teams and their mem- ers, The former has stepped in P .lph O—Harvard., 20 F At the start N. ¥. U. rooters dem } ; ph} And so last night the Dodgers four- N OF 0 ry its Mhe:-cate ewan ¢ on what they doin the next |Gilroy's shoes as defensive halfback and CHAIRMAN MULDOO! 7— William: str 1 "Ce ‘ ° ick ani pyc! Je fork w’ ° 3) 3 Wiliams, - hJonstrated more spirit than ‘Columbia ropontan championship tourna iflling hia duties well, Newbe die,|neved to New York with a crowd of OARD SOUNDS 0—Dartmouth. e The Violet team from the first whistle | mene played some pretty playing end Lroken | Brooklyn fans, bent upon trimming] BOXING B c gap Showed such fight and determination fleld running Saturday. the Ceitics and, as well, to retrieve FOR OFFICIALS pgm CGR NEL. i) ‘S, - the Blue and White seemed stunned, |, tarry & Brien, 5 rhe Tigers will bave three days of|some of their losses of the previous WARNING anki zariyeecersraare e SPRINGFIELD, (|100 cia THON. | Then came the old trick that Coach cor Mey er {20% |practice on the home fleld this week, |night. But alas!~ the visitors were A ‘ f sa NV Baie. : GEORGIATECH trom Thorp of N. Y. U. had planned nig the data for hie Woag aa they depart for Chicago on Thursday | defeated by a score of 25 to 20. William Mulngen: Shalmanse 7 O19—Daridson 0 Roderick ‘o} abla back, attemptec i date arry w atternoc 1 i ’ sent outa 08 aoeenne A Nialutoe pate tietabeeea thas Bute nd Sateen Were it not for the exceptionally] the Boning foal Hi eh 4 u o kick from his 20-yard line a - { tice to all the rin ° 5 ae fmmeraetar beatin : ; Ww good work of Nat Holman and John| no’ + Secs 2 ee Rh ce delg T FRENCH WOMAN Beckman at Madison Squars Garden| the State, warning them against ; } 0—Penn Biate ysterious way, bro! hro and eama int t . foMladieiies 47—Burauehiani locked the kick er when Colum- etaries aesigged ¢ ATHLETE SETS MARK lest alsht phara/\a 1iteie GOURy Hie be talking to spectators, boxer Vermont 28— Muhlenberg ia rig hs 7 jodgers would have e di id the lik a Here FOR THE MILE RUN) victory of inst vear over tho cham-| manaters, nator ae ne a : rw ; ¢ ni : eckle played the game of his] on other ring busin LAFAYETTE LEHIGH. ne r punt, Again Berk pions. Be : . Tichmon 9) 0—Gettyebure t The t PARIS, Oct,. 23.~Mlle. Bracque- [basketball career. And Nat Holman,| Ie not unlikely that Muldoon hi T Pitemon ® 7 all bounced o nee. Siat—Bt. Francia FN ody aD fie goal, In the eubssquent mond, the star of the women ath- | Who, for some reason or other, 18 USU-| heard reports to the effect that %—Lucknell..0..... 1) teBrown 8 21—Bowdo! Golisge. amble possession the pigskin letes, yesterday established a [ally greeted with everything but aP-| certain judges and refere in 7 phe a 1013—-Georgetown unded Into the west stands and a world’s record for the mile run of 6 |plause whenever he makes a £00d Play.) geen gome time ago In conference SNSYLVANIA. | -- un 73] wa ¢ jerseys followed over the ‘etal minutes 92-5 seconds, handled the ball so cleverly thatthere| With a coterie of betting men in a MF. and Mi... 0 RUTGMRS, os 10 COLUMBIA. 2 N.Y. Ue falls | nese for the opening ef the university” tw: vs was no alternative for the sportsmM&n-| prominent uptown hotel. It also HoUnle on wouih:. HAR —Peng, Miltary. 0)" witazasts 48—Ureini et ke Se Penne OF ae ere te There 1s no means of comparing like spectators who applauded Nat} j, probable that if the chairman . i2— * lamtiton. 0 45—Amheret a of ma & 8 ‘dha, Road and Je ra this record with the American rec- y i 14—-Swarthmore s\5 Lehigh 8 14—Middiebury 010 Wert ’ , » Pores. : * with all they had. obtains evidence of such conduct bag Sf) 7—Bethany 14 . u wn. e l Weatherdon this evening at,8 P an ords listed in the oficial Athletic ‘o 4 soy ate 7 Blenderma tna] Almanac, because supervisors of Itallan Catholic Club Five had no] on the part of any referees or 3 Rovt roll th 4 PENN STATE, “hoped 4 ue : fina! quarter, when Roderick rier ty . women! heey re in this country difficulty in conquering the New York judges, ‘thers will be a number of ry) NION 4) N. ¥, UNIVER an ates ChE Zvi 1ave not {neluded races at the mil g Five in ThteCleskeas. omcano. oh: PNVEROITY. | jem 1 hick goal after Aaya Ra im Mlistante ie tke late Ar Pere Big Five in an Interborough League wacansies an t LAL if ol , ring 0) 6—8t. Lawrence Georgia 0) O—Byral ‘umbia's touchdown = whic would | 1 e League w nite a ‘ erenia ‘tandaea individual event game at Webster Hall yesterday af, offloia’ e order to referece | —Amnerat Northweatern.., 7) O—Hohast, Sl neva: pinan the faa nok tata a t Thum'e Wh Kiephact Alleys, | Syenth Bandara ii be recognized |ternoon. H. Cohen, the star forward) and judges to keep away from ongete - ue So) t-Columbls Slgume, Berkwit broke through « Bigadaay end Set Sutilamebare’ end iy | in thie country do net exceed 320 of the Italian Club, scored twenty| epectatere in bexing clubs is ex- rae 40 { i and blocked this final kick Berkwit Dock teams compatiig. : rde under the published rules, fouls out of twenty-three attempts. ) SIKI PLAYS SAFE IN MATCH WITH BECKETT. Battling Siki, the Senegalese who knocked out Carpentier, has taken on a match with Joe Beckett of “in ‘and. This ought to be perfectly safe, Beckett had a hard time beating old Frank Moran, who has been a pugi- listic relic for years Siki, or his manager, slowed good common sense by not coming to Amer- ica to fight. He'd probably bo knocked out in a few rounds by any one of half a dozen men who might be matched against him. Norfolk, a man of about the same size, woud beat him easily if Siki is as poor.a boxer as he is said to be. Siki wants to come here and get a tch with Dempsey. Of course. He'd take a sure knockout and get a bigger purse in one battle than he could earn in a year of fighting in Evrope, even if he goes on winning. The New York Boxing Commis- sion, directed by Wiliam Muldoon, ts doing a lot of boxing. Sometimes wo don't agree with Mr. Muldoon's ideas, but there's never any doubt that his intentions are right. And there's no question that he’ getting resulte. When anything comes up that needs to be investigated it usually is Inves- tigated, and the commission decides one way or the other promptly and permanently. GIBBONS LANDED BLOW BE- LOw BELT. There was that incident of the al- leged foul when Billy Miske sat down and stopped fighting with Tom Gtb- bons. Many people believed that Miske had seized a chance+to quit, and that he wasn't really hurt by the blow. The commission held up the purse and started an investigation into the I saw Gibbons land two hard blows in Miske's stomach, doubling him: up like jackknife. But a third blow struck him squarely below the belt. That blow wasn't placed to do much damage. It was on the muscles of the abdomen. Probably {t didn't hurt Miske as much as the body punches, which caught him fairly in the solar plexus. But boxing rules never put {t up to a referee to decide whether a foul blow caused injury or not. A foul blow ts foul, and the penalty ts dis- qualification, whether the effect of it is serious or not. And Miske claimed that the effect was serious. Seeing the blow that was un- doubtedly foul under the rules of the game, choice in the matter. low the claim of foul and disqualified McPartland had no He bad to al» Referee “ibbons, Too bad, for Gibbons had beaten Miske a million miles and had the bigger man nearly out when the accident occurred. (Copyright, 1922, by Robert Ede ele Amen e areen PINEHURST TOURNAMENT SEASON OPENS NOV. 6 The winter gold season will get away to an early start with thep laying of the quallfying round in the eighteenth annual autumn tournament at Pine- hurst on Noy. 6. ‘The annual amateur-professional best ball tournament will also be stagod earlier than usual, It is scheduled for Nov. 16-17, seventy-two holes medat play, with $1,175 In cash prizes to the leading five professionels. her annual Pineburet fixtures ached led for the month of November include the Sandhill harness and flat racer Nov. 7, 8 9, 10; the fall polo tourna ent, taking up the week starting on Nov, 97, and the Carolina golf tures ment, Nov, 18, 20, 31, 22, 28.