The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1922, Page 19

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, WARD PASS. The word ‘defen: ie defending itself against an attack. I would denote that a tes not de to take the ball away from its v Proper mental attitude Generally speal to drive the runn o ard cé ~ attack is contined to a definite The salient principle to force the of the pass * is psych » theory of ng ntre as of play which may transpire In the several methods of defense, there are aguin two schools. Ono of them believes that the men trom tackle to tackle should stand squarely on their feet, but low enough to meet the charge of the offensive linesmen. At the snap of the ball they should advance against their opponents with thelr hands on their opponents’ bod- fes, In this position they are ready to continue t aiou always diagr ofthe play before acl vea to any one direction The other school believes t these same men should assume crouching posit Cree BOL hichAual on the ground en the ball is mapped these players should chars into the spaces between the oppo nents opposite the In this way they are suposed t yarious chinks between th onents, and also t carry them back into the offensive play Against plunging types of plays the ground method is stronger than the other, but it has the great dis vantage of committing the players in a given direction, irrespective of the nature of the pay, and is also further faulty because the players canno: see the impending play diagnose it as quickly as if they were in thé wu right position and could use their hands to ward off their opponents THE ENDS’ TOUGH JOB. Pitted against a close formation, the @cfense really needs seven players on seri nag » be sure ment leaves the backfield weak ainst forward passes, but on analysis the of fense can, by using ce-tain of th backfield as buffers against the de- fensive ends, bring all of their line- men to beat on the remaining five defense. More often the off bring five against three, and at apex of a plunge the are r against one defen As has been s\ of the ends to hera in sweep as quickly us possible complish this they cross the line of scrimmage on the snap of the ball and aim at the outside interferer in order to drive the runner in where the tackle can get at him. As the offense usually detail two in- it the duty an impendin; To ac- ferferers against the end, he must be careful not to get pinched between fhem, thus allowing the runner an outside course. The best method of preventing this is to use one hand on each of the interferers In this way the end keeps free from the shock of the interferers’ blow, He must also keep his feet, else the run ner will certainly flank him All told, this two against one hattle is always worth watching Meanwhile the tackle is doing his Dest to come to the rescue of his hare pressed end, but the offense, before the ball is snapped, are apt so to manoeuvre an end, especially, when u loose formation is used, as to de well on the outside of the tackle in ques- tion, Consequently unless the tackle fg clever with hands and feet he will be ‘boxed’? by this nimblo end, wh is reinforced at the critical aiomc.:t by more interference from the back- field. The guards and centre are asually outdistanced on a play of this nature but the secondary defense are sure t play an important role, in case both end and tackle are vanquishe Although the secondary man, too, is usually other offensive players, he enjoys the great advantage of a roving position, thus making |t difficult for tne inter ference to lovate lim consistently and with precision. Yurthermore, tecause of the direction of the play he meets both interferers and runner obliquely, at which angle it is easy for him to deal an effective blow All told, th on play defense menuced by of this na- ture the secondary defense man is in the great majority oi cases the salva- tion of the dete and the thom in the flesh of the offense (Copyright, 1022, by Marshall Jones Compauy) The eighth Haughton article will appear on these pages Wernesday, pelts Ad CANNEFAX WINS AGAIN. At the Strand Billiard Academy, Broadway and 48th Street, last night Bob Canne former id's three cushion billiard cha Jefented slin, State amateur ehampl in fort awning high rune were 8 8, 6, and Un'e 6 7, b HOW TOWA By PERCY D. HAUGHTON NINE YEARS COACH AT HARVARD eee ve IN SEVENTH OF A SERIES OF ARTICLES, FAMOUS FOOTBALL AUTHORITY WRITES ON GUARDING THE GOAL AND DEFENSE AGAINST THE FOR- ologically poor ending itself pponent, it would more ¢ f @ team not in possession of the all di in that it implies that the team f some phrase could be invented avhich but is constantly striving Jequately express the ball efense against a running attack is quickly as possible. In this way the small territory. of defense agd passer to get rid of the balkquickly. nd often so hurries it that the receivers have not sufficient time uinst the forward pass is far the line This disturbs the accuracy to get into their proper receiving positions, Against a kick, the line 1s ine called upon to hurry the kicker on | SURPRISES RECORDED all occasions and to block the kick if IN THE CONFERENCE possible. But the defense must always ayotd FOOTBALL CONTESTS committing themselves so thoroughly CHICAGO, ‘ . CAGO, Oct. 23 (Associated Press). to any of these objectives that they] with fve team still in the 1,00) per will not be ready for any other kind |cent. column, Chicago, rch ed to play Princeton here, ind inree Western conference games carted for next Sat- urday, followers of “ig ten football have settled down to watch ( pping dope bucket, which all but emptied {tself on two occasions Saturday, That it was not entirely overturned] was aue to an all-important safety which Towa 1 out Illinois oy « score of 8 to 7. 7 to 7 tle betwecn Minnesota and orthwestern proved the other upset. Michigan's 19 te ory over Ohio 8 not altogether unexpocied, as the 08 keyes have a green eam, while the Wolverines boast one of veicrans. Other games followed sctailons rather closely, Chicago winning fem Purdue and Wisconsin easily The Mlinols game beating Indiana. was the day's sur- prise, as Illinois was considered a weak team. The Chicago-Princeton game next Saturday will draw the attention of en- thusiasts from coast to cou team has had an epportuntt Its real strength. Chicago's showing since the Georgia game has not been considered as satisfactory as could be t. Nelther to present wished. Indications are that Stagg again will try to beat the Tigers, as he year ago, with the East's own -the plle-driving and slashing of straight football he Conference standing follows: Won. Lost. Tles, Chi 0 Mic 0 Cae 1 t 1 0 1 6 lndiana 2 0 ie CaS, M’LEAN AND ANDERSON WIN CLUB GOLF TITLE George MeL Grassy Sprain pro- fessional, and John G. Ancerson, ft up in the nutional smateur championship, won the Westchester County amateur-profes- sional club title for the Bronxville club, beating the Pelham comtina- tion, consisting of Jim Barnes, holder of the National Open. Championship in 1921, and Warren K. Wood, foriner Western Am.teur Champion, in the thirty-six-hole home-und-home by the marg.n aand 8 ‘The first eighteen holes were played at Grassy Sprain and McLean and Anderson took a cormmunding lead ep their Pelham rivals. When hostiuties were ended at noon, tho Grassy Sprain pair \ © up on Barn and Wood. The last half of the mutch wus played at Pelham, and Meiean and Anderson increased their leat to four up ut the turn, ending the match at the fifteenth hole. The cards final, MORNING fi an-An e8- Wood Par .. 154 McLean-Anderson .5 4 4 Barnes-Wood 554 AFTERNOON Out—Par 45 McLeaa-Anderson .4 48 Barnes-Wood 548 In—Par 344 an-Anderson <8 4 4 Barnes-Wood . 834 —————— A. LUCIEN WALKER WINS S. I. AMATEUR TITLe In the final at the Fox Hills Club A. Lucien Walker, former Columbia University golf captain, captured the Staten Island amateur championship Representing the Richmond County ‘ub he defeated Thomas Conroy of the Fox Hills Club in the final by the score of 5 and 4, The morning round: out— Wail 8645 BS Conroy 44536 In~ Walker... 5 44 5 8 5 pnrey.... 5 64 OG round: DR 5 4 4 5-38 6466 4 3-42 Walker Bhan 4 Conroy. e464 HAGEN AND KIRKWOCD BEATEN IN GOLF PLAY WASHINGTO! Hagen, British open golf champion, and Joe nirkwood, Australian title holder. were defeated yesterday by John Far- rell, Quaker Ridge, and Wilfred Reed, professional, at the New Indian Spring Club, in a special match, formally open- ing that course, Farrell and Reed won by three up and two to play. baci af Mcholson Released by Braves, BOSTON, Oct. 23.—Fred Nicholson veteran outfielder of the Boston Braves has been d outrieh to th Te do Club of the American Association the Natlonal League club announced to- day. 23. — Walter BALL Just AS I WAS GONNA PUTT A Two FOOTER AN’ MADE ME MISS - GOSH , NO BREAKS AT ALL - How CAN A GvY ‘bo ANY THING WHEN Ev'RY THING GOES boda HIM? Here he is—the boys call him Alibi Al. YOU. Al has been following the “Fussy Foursome” out with “Doc.” Watch him! You probably know several like him in your club. There may possibly be one in your foursome, but it couldn’t be You have seen him—now you will HEAR him! Alibi Al will appear each Monday in The Evening World. Copies will be reprinted on hard paper and mailed to Evening World read- \E I'D USED MY MIDIRON ON “Ty' SIXTH INSTEAD OF TRYIN’ “To GET ON WITH MY MasHie DOF HAD A FIVE — 1 LOOKED UP ON MY BRASSIE SHOT ON THE NINTH AN’ “TOPPED (T TEN FEET — 'NOTHER SHOT WASTED —— AND A BEE LIT ON MY = OCTOBER 23, THREE BIG STAKES WILL BE DECIDED AT EMPIRE. THIS, WEEK \ KNOw 1 922, around their eighteen-hole match. gust How You FEEL AL + (mM ROTTEN “oo! Le ‘ FOR MAKIN’ HE HE'S GoT MORE REASONS BUM SHOTS Tha | HAS FoR Good ONES! > ers on receipt of a5-cent stamp foreach copy. You will want the series in your home golf club. This is the first of the new series. ning World. Leads All the V Way in K. C. Contest, Finishing Quarter of a Mile in Front. By Joseph Gordon. HE easy victory of Gustave Sand- Tecate a novice of the Swedish- American, in the five-and-one- quarter-mile road race of the Knights of Columbus yesterday stamps him a foremost aspirant for more honors Considering that this was the first race of major importance tn which he has ever been entered, his victory over a large field of veterans by more than a quarter of a mile was quite « feat. The race wag from the clubhouse of the Bronx Council of the K. of C. and followed a zigza® course through the Bronx, Sandquist took the lead at the outset and by the time the first Mile post was passed he had a lead of 220 y er his nearest rival At the third mile {t looked as if the youngster was beginning to weaken But he braced up and began to run as if the race had just started, and there was never any further doubt as to the result. One of the most thrilling incidents of the race was the battle for second place between Eddie Mather of the Knights of St. Anthony and Ed Hahn of the Pastime Athletic Club, Hahn seemed to have second place clinched but Mather, with an astonish burst of speed, soon overtook him. Another novice to distinguish him- self in yesterday's athletic events was oO. henback, a youngster who had been walking less than a year. He on the weekly five-mile walk of the Pastime Athletic Club, He won from Dallesandro by fi‘ty yards. Harry Lewis, Erasmus star, made another when, at the P. § Columbia University pool, he made the 100-yard swim in 692-5. Brown ot Flushing made a new season's mark for the fifty yards in 36. Ten thousand cheering youngsters on Saturday, representing all the schools in Greater New York, saw School No. 64 win the big athletic meet of the Sunday World, held under tho auspices of the P. S. A. L. A total score Of twenty-four points gave the Brooklyn school the team trophy over twenty-two rival schools. swimming record Saturday A. L, meet in the The Newtown team carried off in- dividual and school honors in the group No. 1 race of the cross-country competition over the Van Cortland Park course Saturday. Alfred Cran- dall accounted for the Individual honor by finishing In 18.35. New- town won w enty-nine points. Erasmus Hall was ancther to score a second victory, capturing the team honors of group No. with the low winning score of forty points. Witt Clinton scored ors by crossing the Nicolaides of D a HOPPE TO PLAY RICE. TR. B, Benjamin, General Manager of the Hoppe- Peterson rd Club, yes- terday announced the following list of exhibitions for this week: This evening Willie Hoppe will play Julian Rice, the Class B amateur champion; to-morrow evening Hoppe will play Edgar Appleby pion i ni 1 year-old Japa star; ‘Thursday will play M. Isaacs, and on Frida Hoppe will tackle Francis Appleby, { Sandquist’s 8 Road Race Victory Over Vets Quite a Feat for Novice Although th Ing to a close, the Hole-In-One Club |atiske-Gibbons battle on Friday iy is peeeplbe suebets : ng, Oct. 13, figured up $88 ©. Doty of the Hudson River ia ; Country Club is the latest. He made|WBle the Charley Whit 1 on the 185-yard eighteenth hole [battle last Friday evening brot nd beat par by The drive fell/xate receipts up to $41 ‘ short and the ball rolled onto the/state received 5 per cent t green and into the Leer receipts of these two rtainny it consequently drew down $3,646.4 SOCCER PROTEST DECIDED IN VIKING'S FAVOR}; " ‘ i Cup Committ he 1 me ' Football Association on the Hotel Astor for the pu of mak-] An tmiportant tout ing drawings for round of ‘of News the annual competion f national ' soccer ch nship. ‘The of the mt the I Viking Football Club of this city aguinst i New York for making 1 player ny. properly registered ided in hrev favor of the Vikings and the game or tbe dere slay round inust i be by a « the goal | HOLE- IN-ONE CLUB CONTINUES TO ADD TOITS MEMBERSHIP @ golf season is draw- Frost and beat the The Overseas Wanderers stride yesterday at Ste defeated the stront B Club in a New York & l of 1 goal to 0 WANDERERS DEFEAT BAY RIDGE 1 TO 0 struck thelr € Ridge Oval and Football » game The teams remained on even until ten minutes a tho restar when Owens, the inside right in the Wenderers line-up, took a pass from defending Lacks to YEW YORK F NORTH ball Fall Club pla Rivers 1 League series yesterday and to g. Archie Mardy and New York, the time, by 2 to tallled for Fall kers Thistles { Cup competitio tro k h gonls to} SWIss Centro-H 0 yesterday and M PENY fying for the s« sr yed n the before won Star! The soccer team of th 1. Pe Ry ~- re u —— PATERSON LOSES AT The Paterson Football ¢ figured in a no-scoring gam: elphia on Saturday, was det terday by the Bethlehem eleven at Q' ic Park, Passi final score was 2—1. He away first for Paterson, ized before half-time tvin shot C. WINS AT SOCCER. TIVERTON, K New York Foot- againet Ameri ecore Mekelvey Visitor Hawth _ SOCCER The Swiss soccer team easily defeated t Star nd ste Ww TEAM leven ht Pa in, each two, Fishe At an t IN SOCCER 1 b valf famou 1 Soccer yple here 4 goals wice and BROOKLYN WANDERERS WIN, Replaying the er by qual won Wins, 7 goals k. Re and ach one time the BE. en. Pranks lem Ra oly: ‘aged Ich accor arker than expect the of the staged by th Chie Government tax of Jdio Ja 1 ‘for 1 at Sydney, A Jacks will eng 10 per cent Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollo Within a week there were two box ing shows stag t popular prices in Madison Square Garden which brought in the sum of $80,291.80, including th SHORT AND RAPID By Neal Address Sporting Editor, Eve- GOL ~ IF HE CouLD ONLY PLAY IT Lik’ HE CAN “TALK IT Next week he goes ic||OCALSEASON COMES TO AN END NEXT SATURDAY Fordham Selling, Yorktown and Ardsley Handicaps Will Wind Up “Met” Meet. By Vincent Treanor. This is the last week: of racing In New York for the season of 1922. ‘The end comes on Saturday next at Yon kers, After that most of the horses and horsemen now engaged here wil finish out the year in Maryland or go further South to New Orleans an Havana for the annual winter spor at those places. Judging by the at tendances during the firet weck ot the Empire meeting the sport here will wind up very satisfactorily. Aside from to-day three tmportant stakes remain to be decided at the Butler course. ‘These are the Ford- ham Selling Stakes, the Ardsley Han dicap and the Yorktown Hondicap The Fordham will be run to-morrow It 1s a three-year-old and upwari affair at a mile and seventy yards and has thirty-two eligibles. Tutter, Ral- co, Nose Dive, Whisk, Little Chief, Sedgefield, Duncecap, Modo and Cos- tigan are among those which may go The Ardsley 1s a two-year-old han- dicap of $3,000 and will be rua Thurs day. It ts over the longs’? route and has many good youngsters eligible to face the barrier Among them are Blanc Scing, Mu tiny, Cyclops, Best Love, Little Celt Battersea, Tall Timber and Wilder ness, The Rancocas Stable has seven eligible for the race. If only half of thoso named go, it will be @ borse race Saturday, of course, will be the big day. The $5,000 Yorktown, at a mile and a furlong, will be the closing ITEMS FROM TWO FAMOUS HEMISPHERES GRABBED OFF WIRE AND SUFFICIENTLY GARBLED TO DELIGHT MOST DELIRIOUS TASTE—NO BLANKS. ipo O'Hara. day's attraction, Hephatstns, Horo- logue, Exodus, Mad Hatter Knobbie, Prince James, Sennings Fork and Sedgefield are the best of the thirty originally named for the stake when it closed on Aug. 14 last, A. A. U.S VOTING POWER REDUCED FROM 35 TO 23 Dissension among American athletic authorities with regard to the nu- tion's preparation for and participa- . lvza (New York Evening World) by Press Pubilshing Co tion In the Olympic games of th: NEW YORK-—-Last of World War biographies goes on presses, Pub-]| future in general and the 1924 Paris umor next wa games in particular is expected to be \NTON, O.—Elmer Vosh, well known efficiency estimates | removed at the quadrennial meeting bp urd dots punched out one-arm restaurant checks would supply|of the American Olymple Associa. Utah nfett: for tliree months, 1f collected and done up in] tion which has been definitely sched- bib paper eylind uled for the New Willard Hotel in hent LONDON nba lor Harvey ac- © Washington, D. C., on the morning cools invitation to speak before Lon | oF spirit lectures published as follows: | °C NOY FT By Seip my ; . jon Grasshopper and Cricket Club or One rap means Y: Two rape mean lee Jd akg Sores Bak flag LONDON—Newspaper correspond-| No: Three rape mean Chairman Istiowing nigh lights: of what) appear i ady to| Winging gavel to get re-dy to intro: |i, te tho end of a long struggle: arpen ys rendy 1° | duce lecturer. Conan Doyle cooks ear| "nn. voting power of the Amatet i“ Bee arti Harvey in Pa") ¢9 hear call of three rape. Athletic niga: thee: heen raga hai ome. turns | TULSA, Okla—Statistics from {ce} trom 35 to 2, thus removing any ont Sea ee ee eeae se'uo0,000 tg | Creu plo mines show 11,870,288 tons! oreanisation trom absolute power. eh lkeop faith with fia 1 young mo- | Of Hard ¢ Tho Army and Navy, which have r Al ware clatributed las deferred joining the American Olym- Y a aare ’ : plo Association, approve of the 1 NEW YORK—Five thousand phone ECZEMA, Del.—Homer J. Blount! operators, about to displaced by beg ey yal Dire S Merah ‘i 8 chosen director general of peach} automutic invention, prepare to take| come into the fold. 4 canning trade without being called| jyie in theatre box tans [rine ete ods as ea ° Judge Landis of the Canned Goods. | chirping such phrases as: “That row | pote, .,Natonal Amateur Athletic t NEW YORK-- ri that turn: | iy all sold out,” “Try. again in seven | gition to the A. A. U.. and p24 Tease eae aesncctaa sophomore {O° Cl&ht, weeks." “The press agent | withdrew from the Olymple Associa slopes | with Erinceton sophomore | ig busy,” ‘Your reservations ware| tion, may now become a member with at SWARK.. Ra acai are” unwed sold by Tabak ce Tae PLEAS OR one vote if elected by a two-thirds Tier’ | world's record splitting forty-eight in-]CUSe Wer” am MT ROR RMRPSTHE OaJON ty ty [fnitives in fifteen tale AX, Neb.—Gas company hires SE aie ag NW TORRY machanie¢ sie palitatcaltnanee staat Prrveapesg hdd eta AMAT Ls) Se ee ee » #8, Consumers retaltate by iyn ut MeGoldrick's Ficld In Brookisn el is es ; tens to £0 1? L inserting lead beer checks that 100k | yesterday, the Lexington Football Club . Uke two bits. won at the end by a score of 2 tol blind tigers instead ‘ EVERYWHERE-Ice Trust gets ready for smallest ice crop In forty- six years, which will mean record high prices next spring NEW YORK Ve mechanic jilted by chorus gir? reputed to have made $10,000,¢ WASHINGTO Aviators making altitude beyond three-mhe limit scored t Anti-Saloon League for climbing above its jurisdi NEW YOR girl that Jilted flance sues n for annulment of r we States she plans to wed fir WALL STRENT rampant that Edison cooks up t question naires to {nr rand tear on lego t mid nas NEW YOr 1 ent theatr agnate gives that chorus girls are not me 1 ZENITH, hi Ba cuts hatr of Ithy Yn n hout dl LONDON—Internation spook code NOTED RACE HORSES ARE BURNED TO DEATH HARTFORD, I horses, Aln ‘ uN D. O and t r 1 Daybreak, well v 1 to death s earl 4y morning ¥ through the fa ci r harter ¢ Pork, Roa tr y that he v lat Gre Its kept me ‘warm and LOOK FoR THES POINTS OF PERFECTION Qi twanm uy Slaasoner Caines (tah We) = and | grow. to like it better every day O many fine old New Yorkers have said this about “ Stuttgarter” Underwear— that we feel we must repeat it. To have betned preserve the health and comfort of Si “Underwear fr°"Men - * wearers for 53 years is some- pinay pespatl pir) Dependable underwear at the lowest ice consistent with quality—that is Stuttgarter”. Form fitting union suits and shirts and drawers in cotton, cotton and wool and 100% guaranteed pare wool—at the best retailers. H. LOEB & CO, Inc., Max Kaha, President 456-460 FOURTH AVE. + T. AMERICAN MADE NEW YORK CITY ER’ We

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