Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 30, 1916, Night Extra, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 191G
o
PAT MORAN UNALTERABLY OPPOSED TO MAJOR LEAGUE GAMES PLAYED IN THE MORNINi
BASEBALL MAGNATES INSIST
ON KILLING THE GOOSE THAT
IS LAYING THE GOLDEN EGGS
In Order to Increase Revenue, Ebbets Obtained
Tener's Permission to Stage Morning
Game at Brooklyn
BASEBALL magnates Insist on Wiling tho booso that lays tlio soldcn eggs.
There Is no question that baseball Is tho national grtmo and is kins of all
American sports, but If tho magnates continues to mako tho dollar mark tholr Idol
tho public will Boon get wise. Yesterdfty's; game between tho 1'hllllcs and Brooklyn
was halted by rain before two Innings had been completed, and Charles Ebbets.
president and owner of tho Dodgers, pulled ono of tho most unusual outrugos that
1 ever has been perpetrated on tho dear old public when ho got President Tener's
' permission to stage a morning gamo today Instead of playing a doublo-headcr
this afternoon.
Mr. Ebbets used up several columns In tho New York and Brooklyn papers
this morning explaining why a morning gamo should bo played, but tho only ap
parent reason Is that tfle magnates want the monoy. It Is tho custom to play off
' postponed games as part of a double header, and the fact that tho National Lcaguo
pennant Is at stake should not lnfluenco the magnates at all.
According to Ebbets, every scot In tho ball park was sold for today's gamo
several days ago and tho Brooklyn ball club cannot afford to honor rain checks
I on such 'an Important day, henco tho scheduling of a morning gamo desplto tho
protests of Manager Moran, of tho Phillies.
"With the pennant at stako ono would naturally suppose that tho ono object of
tho magnates would be to seo that everything was carried oft In a business Hko
1 and decent manner, but Ebbets, snnctlonod by Presldont Tenor, added another to
the long list of "public bllklngs" when ho pulled tho trick that never will be for
gotten by tho Brooklyn fans. Tho Brooklyn owners flguro that close to 30,000
fans will bo on hand for each battle today, whereas not more than this number
' could be crowded Into the park for tho twin bill.
Moran Opposes Morning Contests
MANAGER. MORAN has sovoral reasons for not wanting to play a mornlnjr and
afternoon gamo, the most Important of which was that ho had planned to send
- Alexander the Great to tho mound for both games. In case the double-header had
been staged In tho afternoon. Alexander is In wonderful shapo nnd was anxious
, to mako the remarkable record of having pitched every gamo of a pennant de
ciding series, but Manager Moran realized that tho lay-off between tho morning and
afternoon games probably would tend to stiffen his muscles.
It Is rather odd that wo should have mentioned tho meeting of Mornn's board
of strategy yesterday, during which this plan was discussed. During tho session
Oscar Dugay and Goorgo Whltted pleaded with Manager Moran to send Kantlehner
to tho mound yesterday, as they believed that tho former Pittsburgh southpaw
would bo able to trim tho Dodgers, but Moron picked Eppa Rlxey as his twlrler
after having warmed up both the Virginian and Kantlehner.
Offhand, we should say that Moran Is somo picker, Judging by tho way Rlxey
performed In his two Innings on the mound. The lanky southpaw never looked
better and It is unfortunate that the game was called oft beforo two innings had
been completed. While Rlxey looked Just as good as ho did on tho western trip,
Pfeffer appeared to bo oft form, despite the fact that the champions wero not ablo
to scoro In the first innings.
When Ffeffcr'a fast ball Is not breaking porfectly the Brooklyn star Is nearly
helpless, and yesterday ho did not seem to have very much on his fast ball. Tho
Phillies wero meeting the ball cleanly and It only was a question of time beforo
the break would come. Pfeffor appeared to bo suffering from "stago fright," Just
as Cheney did on Thursday, and the entire Brooklyn team lacked tho ginger ono
would expect from a pennant contender.
One Load Lifted From Ebbcts's Shoulders
CHARLES EBBETS la drooping with tho burden of apparent defeat In tho
National League pennant race and until yesterday ho also had to bear tho
attack of fans throughout tho country, who charged him with raising tho prices
of all grandstand seats to $5 In the event that his club won the flag. Now there
Is no grave danger of fandom wreaking Its vengeance because of this financial
boost at Flatbush, hence Ebbets is comparatively safo in that respect.
"But should Brooklyn win out Ebbets will not have to bear tho brunt of this
feeling regarding the prices of grandstand seats. President Tener, of tho National
.League,, has Just Issued a statement, In which he otatcs that the national com
mission at Its meeting In Cincinnati on September 15 set tho prices themselves.
Pennsylvania's ex-Governor also comes forth with tho statement that tho samo
prices would have been charged In Detroit had Jennings's men won the flag.
He gave as the commission's reason for this that tho grandstand seats in Detroit
and Brooklyn wero so limited that It would not bo fair to tho players and club
owners not to boost the prices.
It is true that in former world's series the commission has put the prices
of all grandstand seats at C where tho parks wero small. However, the fans
are not looking out for tho prosperity of tho club owners, Just as tho club owners
are not looking out for the fans, unless It Is to their financial advantage. Hence
It Is Certain that as long as prices continue to soar tho public Is going to wax
very soro.
Nevertheless as long as America Is America baseball owners who win cham
pionships will have their parks filled during the world's series games.
Mack's Days of Experimentation About Over
ITH the. downpour of rain yesterday causing a lull In tho hectic National
League race, relieved only by the amusing chortles of Charles Hepatlca Ebbets,
noble squire of Flatbush, fans turned their attention momentarily to Connie Mack
and his flock of recruits.
The silent builder Is following his own path these days around Shlbe Park,
intent only on mending his machine for next year. Outwardly Impassive to
ridicule of humorists, ho tinkers with tho broken parts and gets his fun in watch
ing the morning practice games played between youngsters wearing tho Athletic
uniform and some of 'em even haven't that and teams from around tho city.
Connlo Is sure to havo tho laugh on his critics; his friends aro confident of
that. The Tall Tiogan said yesterday that Healcy had improved wonderfully, and
the lad's playing at third during the second fracas with tho Senators on Thurs
day ourprised tho fans. To be sure, he had one fielding lapse, but atoned for
tills with graceful handling of hard drives and bunts and smacked the Reach for
two safeties in four trips to the plate. With Schang behind the plate, although
Connie would not say whether Wally would be catching regularly next season,
and with Johnson, Bush, Myera and Nabora as a steady hurling string, backed by
a good infield and a stronger outflold, tho Athletics look as good as at least Ave
other teams In the Junior major league organization. Mclnnls, Witt and Healey,
with a new recruit at second. Is an Infield that is bound to bo better than the
average, while Bodle and Strunk, -with possibly Thrasher, the youngster from
Atlanta, are a trio of outer-gardeners who cover as much ground and who can hit
as hard as any In the league, barring three similar combinations.
Giant's Record More Ilemarkable Than It Seems in Print
FEW fans realize how really remarkable the Giants' streak of winning twenty-five
games has been. In spite of the reams of stuff written, with dusty archives
as an aid, on their wonderful spurt, when one sits down and thinks of a team with
no chance of a pennant hanging gamely on and pushing team after team out of
the way, it Is more than an episode of baseball; It tends more toward an epic,
Perhapu Grant Rice or another Ernest Thayer will arise and chant the pralso
of McGraw's nine in blank verse of doggerel, but until that time the bare accounts
ot the game must suffice as a sketelton from which to build an Imaginative yarn.
It seems a shame that the Giants were mathematically eliminated from the
pennant race yesterday, "when rain postponed their game with the fast fading
Braves. If Charley Herzog and his teammates can't do anything else, they can
batter the record held by Corslcana for twenty-seven consecutive vlctoiles, made
In the Texas League in 1902.
'
Trls Speaker deserves all of the honor and glory he can get from defeating
Ty Cobb for the American League batt(up title. Of course, It Is a pity that Cobb
fcould have been beaten when he had a chance to make a world's record by
winning the honor ten times In a row; nevertheless It must be won, and he fallol.
Wn
L(
SOME CHARACTERS YOU MEET ON ANY GOLF COURSE
i
t . -. i cn. Ambitious, is BeeM vurtrifc w
22' ... . NOT STAR BUT . dBHenAlUV mkijc 3o YSR5. tNfiLtSM.
FW LcSSonS good stMV 1 Tmc coursc vmith LWta ThC 19fH.
BUT CAM-T . PARTNER IM A I M M WHO TryNltt MV RIGHT IK VOU
DO BCTTGR FOURSOMC. I Si?lCK BuSua " KNOW MOW To
Than 110. . -v I coMPsMioMNOue 1 ,JiJL Taks him
Took it op for, His
health. Plays Sundays,
PRIVG5 WITH IRON.
ALUW MA SAMC
pAq-TNCf
MEOPLV PtAYJ
fiOLP OE:ose it
AMUSES HIM. CQi
SlfiORS IT AH
OLD MAMS OAMC.
FHFCHS TOMMI!.
on Polo ,
UNroroLAR.
tight
PLAYS dOOO GAME
Gets into a tokcr
Game at night plays
Strong at iqth.
good fellow. (.ota
of Mowev
f i ij un ihii i . I hi
olo death meat.
Takss Gamo auifullY
.semooi caisj to B.
lAionRies, Poo paktncr.
NO GOOD AT I9TH
FAMOUS DRIVE
OF JAP TENNIS
STAR EXPOSED
Secret of Kumagae's Cele
brated "Hop" Ground
Stroke Made Known
LIKE MURRAY'S SCOOP
By WILLIAM T. TILDEN, 2D
No tennis player who hai ever graced the
courts of America has caused more discus
sion or awakened more widespread Interest
than has Ichlya Kumagae. the wonderful
little Japanese racquet wlelder. From the
time of Kumagae's first American appear
ance until he stepped oft the famous Casino
court at Newport as the conqueror of Wil
liam M. Johnston, then national champion,
tho question uppermost In the minds of ten
nis followers of America was whether or
not Kumagae was a serious contender for
the national title.
Did lie have championship caliper? Would
ho take the tennis title to Japan, as Molla
BJurstedt had taken the women's crown to
Norway?
It was only looking over his record prior
to the national that we could nnd an answer
to these questions. Kumagae won three
tournaments Central West. New York
State and Newport. He has defeated many
prominent players among them being Grlf
nn (threo times), Beekman, Cannon, Hoerr.
Whitney, J. O'Neale, Prentice, Lamed, II.
C. Johnson. Walters. Nlles and Johnston.
Ho has been defeated only Jive times by
Murray (twice), at Seabrlght, by 2 sets to 1,
and at the Crescent A. C. In straight sets
by Washburn In his first tournament on
grass, by Armstrong at Longwood and by
Church In straight sets In the national.
Jap Developing
Kumngao Is now In a state of develop
ment. He came to America simply "to see
how the game was played here," as lie put
It. He knew nothing of our style of at
tack; had never tried to meet It or play It
When Kumagae came to America he was
purely a bat.ollne player, never going to the
not. uy tne ena oi me seuaon ivimiagu
found that It was essential to success on
t-rnn.1 to reach tho net. and Newport and
Forest Hills found him making occasional
net attacks. He still Is. and always will be.
owing to his small stature, a baseline player,
but another year win nna mm iniiuiu a
slight net game with his marvelous back
court game.
Much has been written about Kumagae's
"double-curve" ground stroke. It Is mainly
exaggeration. His ground stroke Is really
nothing more than a greatly topped drive,
placed with singular accuracy, llecauso
Kumagae Is left-handed the natural curve
and twist to his shot Is the exact opposite
to the curve and twist on tho shot of tho
average player and for this reason seems
peculiar.
Kumagae's drive Is not unlike the "scoop"
Llndley Murray uses from his deep forehand
corner. Where Kumarae differs from all
other great players Is In the fact that he
steps away from the ball Instead of Into It,
thus pulling the ball sharply when hitting
cross court or slicing away from It for his
line Bhots.
Uses Western Grip
Ills grip on the racquet, which Is on the
order of the western type, only even more
eccentric, allows a sharp "wrist snap,"
which gives great pace to the shot and Im
parts enormous "top-spin." Time and again
Kumagae drove to Church In the national
higher than the tatter's head and the top.
spin held the ball In the court.
His backhand has not the beautiful full
swing of his forehand, but It la accurate
to a point that Is almost uncanny. He
almost "pokes" his straight backhand shot,
but has a wonderful "pull" shot cross
court
HERZOG RAT-ED AS THE MOST
VALUABLE INPIELDER IN GAME;
MAIDEN, WONDER GOLF TUTOR
His Hustling Qualities
and Wonderful Play
ing Make Him- Real
Asset to Any Club
EARLY In the season, for the first three
weeks, and then on through June, July
and August, McGraw rarely could find a
pitcher capable of lasting out five Innings
of any one game. This list Included Tos
reau, Perrltt nnd Donton, with Schupp
occasionally tossed In.
In game after game these were shrap
nelcd from tho hlltop and driven to cover.
Now, over a record breaking stretch last
ing for a month, they all are unbeatable.
Tho samo men are thero with the same
arms. The same men that couldn't last five
innings now are lasting five weeks. And
yet there aro those who look to the con
sistency of the Grandolddope.
The 1912 Hero
Some one has referred to Joe Wood and
Christy Mathewson as the 1912 world series
heroes. Not precisely. The 1912 world
series hero beyond any debate was IJuck
Herzog. He not only batted .400 or more,
but ho saved the Giants day after day
by his spectacular fielding.
But for Herzog the Giants would have
been beaten 4 to 1 In that series. As It
was, they carried the engagement to eight
games. Herzog's work In that historic
quarrel was on a par with the play of Duffy
Lewis last fall.
Herzog and 1916
Which reminds us that Herzog today Is
the most valuable Infielder In baseball, bar
ring no other candidate.
He Is of greater team alue than Eddlo
Collins or George Slsler, the two American
League stars, for Herzog's help to the
Giants Is beyond all expression.
He has shown his ability to play wonder
ful ball at second, third and Bhort And
he has shown more extended hustling qual
ities than any ball player we ever saw on
the field.
Next Week's Finish
In the turmoil which follows next' week,
winding up the National League season,
Brooklyn faces four encounters with Mc
Graw's murdering Giants, while the Phillies
hive six games left with the Boston Braves.
A wind-up of this tempestuous sort Is a
fitting climax for one of the great seasons
of baseball. Both leading contenders are
forced to finish against tho toughest com
petition they can meet, where the Interest
is likely to be carried on within a breath of
the closing game.
We knew the price of lumber had gone
up, but It never occurred to us that It had
advanced IS an Inch. It remained for that
Stirling or sterling economist. Colonel Eb
bets, to discover the sharp upward turn.
Cheer for the Navy
We understand that In Vldal, of Dakota,
the army eleven had a football star even
better than Elmer Ollphant.
If this Is true the Navy should adopt
Germany's system and discover some' Kiel
Canal along the Atlantlo Coast before com
plete demolition arrives
Any football team that has an OllphantJ
gether should be forced to play with four
men, the other two being a center rush and
a quarterback, In order to maintain fair
competition.
You Said It
The three-foot putt look simple,
An eav job, out when
You're two down and you need It
It tomething tin again.
IL TOITY.
Atlanta Pro Has De
veloped Miss Stirling,
Bobby Jones and
Adair,
npHERH Is a chunky little Scotchman
J- from Carnoustie way with headquarters
at tho East Lake Golf Club, Atlanta, Ga., camo running up,
who soon will be recognized generally as
ono of the rare geniuses of his profession,
the same being to teach the young idea, as
tho saying Is, how to shoot for the pin.
This chunky little Carnoustie Scot, quiet
to'lhe point of phlegmatism, must have a
rare instructatorlal touch If results are to
count for anything at all. His name Is
Stewart Maiden. He Is tho one who first
took Bobby Jones and Perry Adair, the
phenomenal youngsters, In charge He also
is the Instructor who built up the game of
Alexa Stirling, the Atlanta girl golfer, who
now Is conceded the best chance to win the
women's championship at Belmont Springs
In the early October tournament .
In addition to these atari youngsters
Maiden has several other kid golfers com
ing along, and one of them recently de
feated young Jones 8 to 1.
Maiden's Work
A great admirer of Stewart Maiden's In
structive ability sends us the following in
teresting comment:
"Stewart has spent a big part of his time
with Bobby Jones, Perry Adair and Alexa
Stirling on the East Lake course for tho
last five years. He took these Youngsters
when they wero scarcely old enough to lift a
putter nnd now they aro sensations In the
golf world. Alexa lives right by the course ;
Bobby Jones has spent his vacations in a
small cottage by tho second green, and
Perry Adair has been Stewart's protege
since he took up golf.
"The whole story is In the form these
youngsters have acquired. To Illustrate
last year when Miss Stirling was playing
Mrs. Vanderbeck In the championship semi
finals at Chicago I happened to be In the
gallery following the match. At the third
green a big fellow near me exclaimed after
her drle: 'Blow me over, but the child has
the form of Stewart Maiden.'
"I aBked him what he knew of Maiden
and he replied: 'Why he was the Carnous
tie champion at sixteen and had the best
form Scotland ever knew,' On further In
quiry I found out that he never had seen
Stewart since he left Scotland ten years
ago. I told him that Alexa was one of
Stewart's pupils. He nearly had a fit. !
knew that form, he said, 'could come from
no one else but the Carnoustie boy.'"
The Test
Takes Turtle in
With Brassie Shot and
Amphibian Bites Dust
Other Shots
By SANDY McNIBLICK
JUST plckfe my bones. Thus plaintive
to the celling have been viewed the
yips of many a golfer, but to few has come
tho fate which befell a small six-Inch
amphibian at tho Sealew Golf Club.
Today they are Bcrvlng HEAIj golfer'o
soup there.
'TIs snapper and It has the exhilarating
outdoor tang of links action such as Is
seldom tasted.
Danny Darreff took the medal for his
own yesterday for low scoro In the ancient
and honorable tourney over the seaside
course, but while he as doing It, "strnte
add American golf history" was written
with a vengeance by IX D. Hemphill, West
Chester.
Golfer Hemphill did a deed such as one
reads about, but which seldom comes to
pass In real life.
While the Heavens Wept
The bottom was falling out of the skies
as he took his brassie In hand for the
second shot on hole No. 6 at tho Absccon
course. It deluged over his Iron-gray
head and poured from tho tips of his
beard. But he minded It not as he cocked
his eyo nnd took aim between two saplings
that blocked his npprdach to, tne green a
couple of hundred yards away. His ball
was on tho edge of a sand trap and It
needed a mighty wallop on a straight line
to carry plnwards,
Hemphill took tho mighty wallop.
Columns of rain clouded his view of the
flight of the ball, but ho heard a dull
thud and thought It had struck ono of the
small trees. He and his partner, Emmet
O'Neill, Cricket Club, and their caddlcsr
Boarched eerywhere on the fairway and In
the traps but could find no ball.
Some moving thing, limping In tho di
rection of the hole, caught the eye of
Veteran O'Neill.
As he watched fascinated, the thing
suddenly turned over and after a short
pawlngs In the air with four feeble feet,
It was still.
Golfer O'Neill approached It cautiously
and turned It over with his nlbllc
He at once recognized it as tho well
known spotted trotting tiger turtle. Its
turquoise shelter of a back was crushed,
and, set like a Jewel In Its midrib, was a
golf ball, gashed, slashed, but yet a golf
ball.
'It's mine," excalmed Hemphill when he
There Is no longer any question about
Maiden's uncanny ability to teach the Scot
tish game. There are now five youngsters
in Atlanta between fourteen and eighteen
who can play a test course between 74 and
78. And this list does not Include Miss
Stirling, who Is conceded to have the best
chanco to be the next queen of the tolling
domain.
Maiden's Instruction Is all to the point.
He wastes no great amount of words, being
about as talkative as the Sphinx. But he
ha an rye for form and the tenacity to
continue Instruction until an error In mak
ing the stroke has been corrected. Most of
Maiden's Instruction Is spent upon Iron play,
and without exception his young pupils are
wonders with a maahle or a mid Iron or a
driving Iron. They all have a certain ease
In using any of these clubs, and yet It Is
an ease mixed with a decided firmness.
He Is a great believer lit a compact style
fit play where the club head travels back
no further than It has to come to get the
distance needed. It Is a Joy to watch Miss
Stirling make a shot, and It was as great a
Joy at Merlon to watch the mingled ease
and compactness of young Jones and Perry
Adair.
By OKANTLANU BICE.
Sure enough It was. Tho turtle had been
headed on a straight line for the hole. But
for tho heavy rainfall and the premature
drowning of the "critter" all present agreed
that the ball would likely have been carried
to the flag, and likely the turtle would have
fallen In the cup, making as perfect a golf
story as was ever presented for local
fandom.
Good Snapper
As It was tho turtle, lnterlorally speak
ing, was converted Into soup, and tho lively
thickness Is attributed to the rubber con
sistency of the golf ball, which, of course,
could not be left out of the golf concoction.
Those tasting thereof today were fore
warned, and only the dyed-ln-the-wool
fanatic, of course, ordered the delicacy.
The skeleton nnd shell of the turtle are on
view at the clubhouse. The turtle has been
bottled against the assaults of time In a
Jar of alcohol. It rises simply to the sur
faco with a reassuring bubble or two at the
pressure of a hand It recognizes as that of a
true golf fanatic and solemn believer in the
casualties of the great little game of golf.
Those not believing that Golfer Hemphill
actually made the remarkable big-game kilt
may view his victim between the hours of
C and 6 at the Seavlew Golf Club, Absecon,
N. J from hence forward.
Tho silver-locked West Chestcrlan hunter
has had some few years of golf.
"I havo slaughtered a robin In my golf
wanderings and I once killed another kind
of a bird," said Hemphill, as he held up his
lctlm of yesterday by its tall to the ad
miring throng, "but never before have I
kilted a beast of the field."
Also on Land
The high and low record for successive
holes was made by Arthur M. Wood) Aronl
mink, famous as a cricketer long before
he began to achieve prowess on the links,
yesterday at Seavlew.
He got Into all the trouble possible on
the dltllcult twelfth and before he had
tinned out his ball he was guilty of the
same number of strokes as the number of
the hole, the twelfth.
He then toek his old cricket stance, grip
and mashle and faced the thirteenth much
as ho would have faced a bowler of old.
The result was that he got a two. Which
is the well-known game of percentage.
The greens at Seavlew yesterday im
pressed the veterans, none of whom were
less than fifty-fit e years of age, to a great
HEMPHILL MAKES HISTORY.
WHILE DARREPP CAPTURES
GOLF MEDAL AT SEAVIEWJ
Ribs Montgomery-Stone r,.
Play the Royal and Ancle I
e.lT .?r?on?;. A,' Prt.lt,
inJhhi nh,Rj ,& v.i'rvp"
Slrsnttlr mouth hi, Vh,tl im.'JL '. !
pimrn.. kit entirely en the tSt'H ,f &
h Joined (lie rants if rWhffi.ff""- 16
now In the ilr.t iu", wW,- K.tn "
knows. I. the .beclsnlni el hi JI"7 "3
lefM&tt&hfe
and ftpfiikf r InrnUhrd ill iV, 'JlHltt
Montfnmerv n I lJZ V?-'!?11" OMmt. mm
Nprnkrr took the roe nnd7.ll ii... . ,.
soil firane at rrnlrh. r"n "
oinlr Irrlnr fn i.tii? "l.,.?wni ml.
othfr two. "" 'n el ft,
and'Vn'o'" """ ,hft 'M Stone.
.I'eSJiyfcteSBr ,he " ' Kt.lM.f
JW fUrM brs -a-."''
be two years. Then wsfah yffl' ' "
ucgree, ana mere was a chorus of J
The course Is the nrr,,i .. ..
renins of ninmnra it n.i.. .. "" I
founder t the club " lU hea?S SL5
the praise of his green spaandeti
told something of his troubles.
"A golf green IsMust lib. ..!..?
said. "It has to be nursed along and tW
care of Just like an Infant. A fellow
"V, l" " P nignts with t After
a while It begins to Ret hMlh ..... C?!Ti
Then It has to bo disciplined and pamMr2l
to bo qulto a daughter, tt n... i
and silk dresses nnd nil that Bort of mL71
It a a whole lot more finicky and worse bel
haved, though, than any daughter evil
i..wUC,... w. wcinfii a uimcve,
-
Today's Football Games,
With Last Year's Results
West Virginia, at Pcnn, 0-7.
Princeton, at Holy Cross, did not
play.
Bates, at Harvard, did not play.
Boston, at Dartmouth, did not play "J
Carncglo Institute, at Yale, did notl
Play. ',
Susquehanna, at Colgate, 0-44. r
Mlddleburg, at Union, did not play,' t
Fort McKInley, at Bowdoln, did iet
play. 9 ,
Rhode Island, at Brown, 0-33.
Albright, nt Bucknell, did not play, .
Eastern College, at Cathollo Unlver.
slty, did not play.
Clarkson, at Hamilton, 6-12. '
Fordham, at Lafayette, did not play,
Urslnus, at Lehigh, 0-20.
Westminster, at Pennsylvania State,
0-26. ,
Villanovn, at Rutgers, did not play,
Norwich, at Trinity, 0-27.
Lebanon, at West Point, did not play,?
Dickinson, at Annapolis, did not play
New Hampshire, at Maine, did net'
play. ''
Geneva, at Washington and Jeffer
son, 0-7. j j
Conn. Aggies, at Weslcyan, did hot
Plav.
Hensselaerat Williams, u-lo.
M&
BRYN MAWR
HORSE SHOW
Sept. 28 to Oct. 3
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
SUITS TO ORDER
$-1 f .80
See Our 7 Keduced from
Big Window!
lISO, IJ5 and 180
PETER MORAN & CO. "SS?1
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Athletics vs. Washingtc
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