iff&irtytjtiXrp i y, f.y,!'M' MUM $wy fl f P Hi J m' !" 1 f- TV ' , ,t u (A I! ," 1 fa !i' I is! K 1 :. r. ' i . . ' : f kVU. ?"- IS EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1921 FIGHT FANS AGREE TENDLER AND JACKSON PUT THE MILL IN MILWAUKEE THE OTHER NIGHT JUDGE BONNIWELL, V.A., HAS RIGHT TO A WARD GRID CHAMPIONSHIP TO BOSTON COLLEGE, SO'S ANYBODY Ily ItOUEIlT XV. MA.WVKI.L. Sports l&litnr Ktenlnr lutlic I.nlirr ?IinR Hoston College football tenm has born mranloil A the runtcrn champlonsnip of the I'nitnl Stntrn for 1020. Thin wag done by the Veteran Athletes of l'hlla dolphin Thursday night, when Captain Lou I'rban was presented with n championship trophy at the Hotel Adel phln. It wai the Rift of W. Treeland Kendrlck and was XirMfntfil by .Ttulco I'ngene C. Bonnlwell. Hernusc there is no refular intercollegiate association In tlio Eust nor any ort of nn organization which con trols tre gridiron sport, It always has been difficult to determine a champion at the end of each frcaion. In the Middle WeM, where the Conference Association holds forth, they have a champion por? year. In the Kat it I the privilege of every critic and every coach to select his favorite for the honor. At the end of the 10U0 season there were five candi dates for the crown. Princeton, Harvard. Pittsburgh and Penn State went through the season without a defeat, but plajed in tie games. Huston College had n clean slate, defeating such teams as- Yale, I'ordham, Holy Cross, (Jeorgcionn and Marietta However, the New, Englnnders were ii"t serinuoly 'tildered because of the o-calleil "cas " rh'dilc ! was pointed out that Princeton, Hurvard, P.tt and I'cnn State plajed harder camc, but to us it looks as if Holj Cross, Georgetown nd Yale were as good as any in the. I!ast and capable of txtending nnj team to the limit Judge Honniwell had a perfect right Jo award th championship to Hoston Col ege He was speaking for the Veteran Athletes of Phi'ad';ibin, and that orennizn. tlon has as much to ay about it as the critics or any on lsc. If the Veteran Ath'e'es say that Koton College won the championship then Hoston College is the champion elected bj the Veteran Athletes. The team did not Ic-e a gani". scored l'sl points against 21 and defeated aie by the jmre of 21 to 13 when the Blue team was in top form A remarkable record was made, and while there was no opportunity to conmnre the trength of Cmanaugh'ii rlevi m with the other four con tenders, ever? one admitted that noston College had one of the best teams in the Kast. It had to be good to be ranked with the other four leaders THERE teas much Hiicusiinn amomj footbill men yesttrday about the atrnrding of the champion $hip trophy. To settle a lot of arguments, allotc us to state that this in no cay s official. According ' to the Veteran Athletes. Ronton allege ic the cham pion. Others may have different virici. Attacks "Closed"" Competition JUST the ,ame, it d d one gooj to listen to the address of Judge Hnntrwei! when he fearlessly attacked the "aristocracy of athletics" and condemned the artificial barrier erected bv three of our leading colleges, meaning Princeton. Harvard and YaV. He said that closed com petition would ruin the sport in the future and character ized it as unsportsmanlike and un-American. It was Mr. Hoiiniweil who first conceived the idea of honoring the Hoston College football team. He had his reasons, and they are good ones. Before presenting the trophy to Captain t'rlvm he "-aid "The Veteran Athletes of Philadelphia have viewed with concern a widening endeavor to create an eiclusive class 'n athletics. M'udful of the importance of clean athletics, not merely for the sport itself, but on the life of a nation, wp have noted the menace that has begun to creep into even amateur and collegiate sports. As men who believe in the democratic influence of competition, we repudiate the theory that a man or team can justly claim a championship who refuses to meet upon equal terms worthy opponents regardless of the nristocratic pretensions of n rhrpie of col'rges or the creation of n religious or a racial d vision. No man is n champion of the world who refines to mept any challenger to his title, and no team n vntitled to rank ub the best team in its class whirh. by a sjstem of careful selection, provides in advance for a scries of hollow victories,, m order that it nd one or two other colleges may between themselves pretend to decide the football or baseball championship of the entern United States "We view with ontempt the boxing champions who. made so by the doubtf.l virtje of a referee's decision, rematn champions by the easy r.plient of locking up their title in a safety drpoit stmlt : iind we hope to arouse such a ohinie of sportsmanlike sentiment throughout the country as to cither deny to these people the money thiit they seek to convert their honors into or to iiijiilro them to surrender their crowu to men who have the real idea of sportsmanship. "I think I speak the united voice of our association a judgment predicated upon a life-long experience both iu the direction und supervision of all kinds of athletic en deaor when I formally proclaim that, in the judgment of the Veteran Athletes' Association, Hoston College, upon its season's record, having played out the strongest chcdule that could be urranged for the team, success fully met and deieated all coiners, including Yale, and both by the tpc of Its performance and the total of points scored, appeals to nil fair men as the strongest football team iu the eastern United States. In no other form of endeavor could it be successfully maintained that any team whose record was marred by n lie game could be placed in the ascendancy oxer a team that had success fully defended its own goal line and crosed Its opponents'. JT IS therefore with pcciiluir pleasure that vr of i Philadelphia proclaim our independence of ri her a social or an aristocratic clique trho teould seek to confine the football championship of America to three certain colleges. It i not merely unsports manlike, but it is dangerously un-American, and as men who are believers m fair play we decline to assent to any such mcre.rtctous standard." Small-College Isolation BOSTON COU.nc.H played Yale in 1019 and won by the score of 5 to 3. Last jear the Hlue was out for revenge and again went down iu defeat. The Ho-tonlans in each case demonstrated their superiorly and the vie tories were not flukes. Ynte dropped Hoston off her 1021 schedule. There was much adverse comment in New Haven when this was announced, nnd more protests were made wheu it was stated frankly that Boston College was entirely too strong for an early -season game. That didn't help Yale an . but It boosted Boston. The public always is with the under dog nud felt that the game should be continued. When a smalt college steps nut with a high-class foot ball team it soon finds itself in an isolated position. The larger schools refuse to schedule games, ghing the old excuse "we have everything to lose and nothing to gain." They forget temporarily that football is a college sport, competition keeps it alive nnd a real schedule should be arranged instead of th usual "set iips.'1 Princeton is the first of the "Big Three" to invite strong opponents. When Bill Hoper took chnrge he chal lenged the world, so to speak, and in u remarkably short time had developed one of the greatest teams in the coun try. To my mind and I am speaking only for myself Princeton had the best team last fall. However, that's only my opinion. But the Tigers are not afraid to schedule hard games early in the season others should do the same. It has been claimed that Boston College plays mucker football. That is not true. Frank Cavanaugh has taught his men to play hard, but indulge in no dirty work In the lfUO Yale game Dr. Williams, the umpire, disqualified one plaver for unnecessary roughness. That plavcr was n Y'alc man. Last year Tom Thorp officiated in the game and I asked him If there was any rough work. "It was one of the cleanest games I ever have seen " said Thorp. "Both sides played hard football, but I saw no dirt play." That's what happened m the Yale games, and to me it looks as if BoMou College has received a clean bill of health. nrilAT being the case, why is it that the Yrir Englandcrs are offering a guarantee of $10,000 to any representative eleven for a aamc in lioiton on Sorrmber Zt Looks as if Cavanaugh' 3 team is too good. Covtrtghr, MOVIE OF A MAN GOING HOME LATE AT NIGHT LOUCSOMt A&fTlONl o ISAAGIMC8 fOOTATHPi tJCMIMP FfilUMTSMtt) Af VKiunc ksitee SCahc t ov Copa illf llv64 M F PL6PJXV or oofM Te pass "Tmes 7c loc Tousn Te to Mec;p mind Of F,C.T Of USRGB wueiOBP oe MOLDUP.3 weccwrtv Imoomt M6 jaw LvmKiMfi 4?iuRe out IT ProsCD To Ue Ouji SmDOsaj Loexs ncrvooJlv right amo lcft 0Q ND WT xKiifvr AtJlCA HOM( and SLAM& ZooQ ij PamiC A3 IMAgiuAAv -Vr RvWmCs Toi;ad 1X JTiLU .Shaking LIKt rR0V6BAi. LPAjf WAtw T roy APftAlD To coe hom t FR.i LH) u. s& Wieg I Ml -" ml1 DANNY KRAMER HAS SCORED FIVE KNOCKOUTS IN A ROW Puncliing Bantam PacJcs a Wicked Wallop in His South Mitu Victor in Eight Bouts Since Coming to This City 67-YEAR OLD ATHLETE DISCUSSES SPORT IDE An Amateur Sports 10!l. bv Tu&l c- I.riotr Co. RETIRING GOLF CHIEF HINTS THRONE WAS NOT TOO SOFT G. II. Walker, Lamenting Oun Inexperience, Pays Tribute to Whitney, Suggests Lh-ction Aliuiys From Executive Committee and Comments on Rule Changes "VU By ssn' McNIUMCK took me out of the opn bills stated that the executive r.mmittee and th" ploughed field" I hid little ith ppt,-n of lh n'es w''at the meant, the trad tlon surround r.g them and th" e.inditnns under wh. h the; were formu'at'd. nor had I anv real no tion of whii : v d.'bs a ;,r.'s; ie:it of the United Ma'es l,olf Association were to mean w ,-n I ae'-- pted the h.on :. ' This wns the s'.bs'an "Iti 'osing remarks nit ! ! ; 'iu-j ! ;ert Walker r'tirns presd':,' f tn 1 S O. A . in his valedicti u . i" -it h. year's meeting And in '1.' 'T g M.at he had "'fpt ped in w! ere n-.;p f"ar to tread " Mr. Wh k r p.i I - ' ,' to the new pre..!ert It ward I' Whit ney, of main- llar onVia! servico and rrcoinnirn ld that in the fut ire a', pre idents of the 'md !e ehcted from the XCCU'IV" oinn.ittee beca'isu of the xpei if in t w.ci'd ha All of v. 1 1 ; p' '!p, ar, r-vwin reason for Mr .1 ker -e- gust; 'n after bu' a vara -Mce n otfic, Golf "Kdur.itlon" Kssntlal Indeed, tin- un'" unz noti .f Mr Wn'ker m -iwe. 'i ,1- .. ii - n'j. peri, ni s ' f'n ' 1 - .! r 1 - ti i.i cave fu'l approval to local ru''-s For i-tanee .n the ease of a mud lv eonrse Mr. Wa'ker aid that a loral rule ' ii'h made provisions for an imbedded !a'. wit Id te accepted. Mr. Wa'ker pointed to the amateur nilc a-s e'ear and satifing Th definition is rbat "an nmate :r golfer is one who after attaining the age of sixteen yta-s has not iai carried club, for hire. b ' received any eonsidera on. ei'her directlj ir indirectly, for p'uymg or for tench. ng tne game, or for playing in a match or tournament ' Amateur standing i forfeited by 1 first 1 lending one's tjnne or llkenciss fo' the advertisement t a'e of any thing except as a dea rr. nmnufacturei or inentor thereof in the usu-il course MISS ANNE MORGAN BLOCKED IN CHICAGO Windy City Authorities Ban Charity Boxing Bouts Chicago. Jan. 2S Blocked m their p'an to stage a boxing match for' the benefit of charity, Chicago" society lenders aro prepared to announco n championship wrestling match, to be held as one of the society events of the winter next month in the Coliseum. Among those who nre in charge of the arrangements ure Mr M.irnhull Field 3d and Major Frede- ck McLaughl'n No "parlor tactics" nm to be encour aged. The bout will be a finish en counter. The principals have not been definite'? decided upon, but negotiations are being conducted to bring together Stanislaus Zbyszko. the giant Pole, ami 1M "Strangler" Lewis, the champion The charity bout is an outgrowth ' the attempt of Ms Anne Morgnn. of New York, to promote n ohamniunsrit boiiitf match here for the benefit of the children In the devastated districts ,f France. Miss Morgan tried to interest f leaders of Chicago's fashionable . t m -ui-ii u 111111T iji j r wiicn tlie mitt, :"IOu First Dnlrli Juniors rouM like to hear roil fourtcn-stxte(n-ear-nld azxreratlons 'Ithpr nt hntnp or nwtLV ThomnM 1,. .Innm 2271 North Huncroft trot. Tlie Alilon A, C. a sventeon-nlnetcn-r!ar-old nrst-cUns traveling (le would like ti nrranff gamej wltti tennin of thle clsse at homo or awn. D. Carr, -1108 Brandy wlnn stret. Munuirrr John Martin wlchta to nnneuni-e that tho Crescent Juniors, ot South rhlla ufll'hta have disbanded for the remainder of th" eeaion. Any teims liavlnit Karnes with the Creecent Cluti will please consider raid nmi camelrd. " AMon A. V. lUserres, ft fourteen-sljtn- .. r.. -.... . .., . i rear-old team, would llko to arrange Ily GRANTIiANI) TUCE Barnes with teams of this class ofTerlns fair St. Petersburg, Fla., Jan. 2S. 1S(K) miles away, but it's a great trip t y'?, ,l" Cou""" 801 Nnrt,, SU" HE main foundation of sport, busi- dowu. Wc have n tent along nnd we! .The Ciimbrln A. C, a first-class toam. 1 j 1 lf.l- mi it- . lanisvslM MfriAa !. tfiima miiltip fall" trllfir cump ny jne ronusiuc. jnai s one great -"" ........... ""..."' :z,- ; L,... taw n.I .A..H, .., c J ,.-, .'. .........n.". "'' '." " Aennnclutloii ('. ( . Juniors made it elKni straight last nleht 5 hen It defeated th South I'hlladelph a A A. Juniors 21 to 14 Tho Hnburtwn II. O. would llks to hi from all fltteen-slxteen-year-nld t' imi havln Says After You Pass Sixty Is the Time When Recreative Sport Counts the Most Is in Midseason Form at Checkers and Chess rTUin man with n punch Is desirable In " the boxing business Just like In any other profession. All of which Is the reason why Danny Kramer, former Boston bantam and now representing this city, Is establishing n remarkable reputation In the ring nnd Is being picked by fans nnd critics as u future champion. Kramer invndcil Philadelphia last summer. He came hero heralded by Phil Glnssmnti as the "hardest punchln' fool" he has ever seen, and Danny has upheld everything said of him. Since becoming a resident of this fair city Kramer has had a total of eight bouts, nnd his knockout nvernzc has been something llko ,700. Six of Dan's op ponents have been socked kicking, or else the referee decided to call off hos tilities before It would be necessary to back nn ambulance up to the club. Dliiv licrnns, tlie rugged iip-statcr, was Krumcr'x first opponent, it 1 1 1 suc ceeded in staying the limited eight rounds, after assimilating n terrific trouncing. Then Moxie Williamson was stopped in two rounds. Battling Mack showed cxellent footwork in keep ing ofT the floor for half a dozen rounds, after which Danny piled tip five consccu tivo knockouts, stowing nway Frank Riualzcr, Young Solsberg, Dnvc Astey, Tom Sharkey nnd Joe Uergcr. Kramer Is a remarkable puncher for a lad his weight. Although Danny Is n legitimate bantam, being able to eorae In at 118 pounds without hurting him self, the former Hostoninn lilts with the velocity nnd crushing powers of n wcl- IJf LOUIS II. JAFFE terwetght. Danny's hefty wallop in in his left hand, but he also Is developing quite a wallop la his other mitt, Ilelng Iu tho same stable with Lev Tcndler, It Is a coincidence that Kramer Is a ringer for the local lightweight star. Like Lew, Danny is a southpaw, and It looks very much ns if it Is only a mat. ter of time when thev will nrovi ttiom. selves pugilistic kings in'thelr respective divisions. Trot and Pace Notes The local horseman. John Toy, hsa a tulr of four-year-olda sired by Ban Kraneisoo and out of a half slater to Manle Winder. 2:00U. Ex-Sheriff 'William Bttehtr. of Mount Holly, la lonklnc for another 1111a. (.', or rrlncesa It. Ills return to the camo vlll bo welcomod. Tlleliard W. Wills. ertarr of the Mount Holly Tair. la wlntnrlnr Judce Bala. 2:18 Li, and the trotters I.alrdell and Bllaiio. by Tho Laird. Wills say he will bo ready for tho early races this year. J. Wirt Willis, of Wllmlnston. haa bsn ?cted a vice nresiaem ts in of Amateur Brivlmr Clubn. Tho former Philadelphia trotter. The CM nrado Ilelln. 2:00 VI. has Joined the Newark, N. J matinee brigade. William Crawford, of Hokvlll. Md who trained his stable at Ilmont trark last year, has located at Dawson, Ta., for th) season. Nick Clrady. of this city, who trained at Itlchm md last yar. will nt a rnclnr rtable over tho Heading- track this year. -- ncss or life, or whatever else you may bump into, is a correct philosophy. Today wc ran across a sedate athlete of sixty-seven, with chilly white whis kers and a complexion in the pink ot condition. He was one of the best all-around athletes in Sunshine Park, being equally wel' broken at checkers, chess, quoits and roquc. He bin! traveled 1S00 miles from the snowdrifts of tlie Nor'hwest in a flivver with his family tn find his annual tour nament battlefield nt St. Petersburg, and was opening the campaign In mid season form, as it is sometimes put. Ills Itrcalt of Luck T'Vn been pretty lucky," he re - mnrked. "I might have made n lot of money, nnd in that case I would either be up North trying to protect it or else nt some resort like Palm Ueuch. As it is, I vo saved just enough to or thrpe months of real i way to know your country and jour; people to camp along lbOO miles of roadside and take life ns it comes. Wc start with a few dozen hard-boiled eggs, some other food, nnd wc either buy the rest or kill some game. AH the i time we arc traveling from the bhows I toward the sun. And wheu wc finally , arrive we nre sure to meet hundreds I that we ve met nnd known and liket halls. A C. JUng-nuw, B007 North Amen can street I The Twentieth Century Clnb basketbal , five would llk lu luar from all fourt'ivi , rlxten-esr-old teams haWne halls. Jolir I Masjulre, 31 tn Hast Hartvllle street Claremont C'lob deslrea to book games with before. Some of them live a thousand inducements Ed L llanjo. otl South Pec-1 miles nwny. They come from Iowa.'ond street. I I Michigan, Ohio, Nebraska, the Dakotas. and not so many from New England We nil have about the same angle on i life, which is to have our big bcasou of fun from January to April. ! Tho Veterans TTAVEN'T you seen u lot of people here you saw last year?" he asked. "Quite a number.'' wc replied. it's n great thine nt sixty-seven to hnve two or tnree ililler ent Karnes left where you can take it, man to man. und have just ns competition and just as much fun un if two football teams were playing. There has been a mistaken idea nil around that when a mnn is pnst nlxty his day of port is aver. That's just the time he needs it most A youngster around tif- teen or twenty doesn't appreciate his I playtime. He takes it ull ns u matter I of courbe. He takes it as he takes his food or wears his clothe-. Put out be- I ond fcixty wc know what :-port means to us. The Ulg Srason T'.M PHKTTY busy through the late j -1- spring, the summer and the fall. He-ides, if I wasn't the home folks (of I Main street Kd. note) wouldn't quite understand how n man of sixty-seven i would want to waste a lot of his time 1 phving games. They don't understand I that many of us arc still kids at heart. . een up to eighty. So I don't get nuch play in the pla.iing Keason up 1 North. All the time I'm looking to w Inil begins PHILA. JACK O'BRIEN'S HEALTH SYSTEM rOK DUSlNEfiH MEN Flesh Reducing : Body Building IWXING HAND-HAM. nOVS' CI.ASKKM J.AIMKHT HYMNASU'MS IN THE WIIRI.n MADISON MirARK (1ARDKN. NEW YORK H. K. COR. 1BTII t CHESTNTT. TIIILA Trei'ments A'l "-. " 'n t si give me two or uinee. menui-1 u r-ui , .., f fllm ,nnir ( (llftr hn,,n.. sport here, where you can still get a1 - -- - -- thrill out of life. I'm sixty-seven. J moved from beneath the bnmc oak since where in most sports I would be out- ' Juuunry a year ago." classed Hut I'm ten years younger, ..yC!1 .. h sni(1 ..tllev cvcn pick th(1 than a lot of the boys around here, and sJne (mU tfre s,ia,I(J for-ti1Pir chess und this gives me a big advantage. ,.i,ecker mntches. I can come hack unv ou know- it s n great thing nt i u.nlk ... c.rtl.in trp In tllls ... "and know what old friend I'll meet. J l It's the greatest sporting headquurters ( n,lUCf i 'n 1 world, for it is made up of bun- i ureds. even thousands, who are far be- ' yond Uie nge limit of competition, but ( who can fiml here the big thrill again, , who can have more fun playiug now thnn thev ever had fifty or sixty years ago as boys of fifteen or bixteeu, where in that day and time the boy of that ' age wan either working in a store or ! out on th'j farm. You know thnt back ns far ns fifty or bixty years ugo sport i or plnv in mauv luces was n form of in. Only the idlers or the loafers had tunc for it. So they are making up for NATIONAL A. A. TOMORROW Nioirr RENNY HS is. MATTY IlKTCHKn I CI.UF RENT vb. FRANKIK CONWAY , JOE CHRISTIE s. MARTIN .HIViE I1ATTI.IM1 MIRRAY ts. LEO REYNOU)- ' KRAMER vs. WHITE Wactory-to-Yoal OSforcj in Principal Citiesl Specials for Today and Tomorrow An Annual Event DOLLAR DAY$1 HATS I FOR Value vd to SS Droken lots, but all sizes, styles nnd shades. See them. The bigRCst values you ever saw. We'll clear ur f'eeks for "tw los cominjr in. CLOTH CAPS Values up to $2.50, now , Think of it! Tho most iimailng alues ever. All styles, fabrics nud blzes. Somo with car tabs. For today and tomorrow only. kBr 7M hi l'hll.idrlphli TtckeU ut DONAGIIY'B, 33 h. llnffulo 11th Nt SEE OUR WINDOWS Everything 1 hat Men Wear 11 Market St. UrzN EVENINGS Business is Good! this lost boyhood I know," lie added, "that your baseball games nnd jour football und your boxing mutches get all the newspaper space, but none of tlich" is real Rport compared to what you find in Sunshine Park with 4000 or more youngsters of sixU or seventy from as mnny ns twenty different states meeting each January for a three months' season of competition. And only thoe who have passed sixty can understand just what it all means to suddenly step around the corner nnd find the plus u-nier. When l re winu occins to "liistle and the first snow flurries start I ground jou left a half century ago. I'm getting ready. I know ht. l'eto IS Copyright, tstl All riohla rrtervrd. "i iiumries imfmiiih permi'iing one i"ti 'imi'iiy anu aipiomat carv .ip name to bi adMTtised or published fot . proai-hed the proposal was fr nd pa as thf author of books or ni tides upon. Hotli state und inuni"iii otfi ' n go.f of winch one is not actually th; cials refused to promise that the rgu u'lthor " Millions governing prizefights w ' i. t,j i,i ' lifted for a night even if oharitv no-ild Serious Problem I benefit thereby. M- Wo ker stated that the M'uir . ta - -' . t tnilja.e t I,- n i e f h' ni' i'n " th'r with B'ld a' ie u if h ". ' jih-s n rriui'i' t " coiner- to an " ntr uere the 1 ; I'd and undei - miiii rt, p ,f (. has tw-nt-oue ' P'"-t I . k tu th' tee III - i I m ' t sohed ii'Miiol to sity ut a I t ni' oughly ( hoi r-iii. greatest iu'e) men situations of n 1 aimles wrii'h n.ay arise In Mr W In r d n if.on of the I trip nhri ad und the m- - - n Mi t e i Uritish 1 1" itinttee I e i;irci-.e 1 who I wete wi tnoT t ot tlie Ati.pri' an. iu pri hc'itiiig "ii i of the rml n it . ic paitiin.- n in n! a augut l""J in a guni" .i- - w i ' i, i BtOo.1 The rules and g 'f rtoul mi. I Am tent members It 'uis to r general meeting of St AioIpwi each September, when recninmeudut. 'ii.- are dopti d "T ICJ'vted. .lnhii I. owe has hcen chairman of the coimiiifti'e for twenty tinr, 'd Mini Onlf lliinelf." hiiiii- one miki'MciJ and it win. men like this the Americans Diet mi the trip Mr l ker explained changes in the rules hail Ik1 on, or not. n' attir main ami ii grim dial of av r i ' 1 1 .-, discussion The- S.imc Tlie pennltr for n ball out as made the same n that )r uup'a.Mil ball, -troke nnd (o make tho rules uniform. luasmucb ns mauv clubs have so Binny "out of bounds" a second para- raph was inserted giTlng permission mike the penalty distance only I'leaJ.ruIe i'.'SI,.-) pii-seuted a MTIOUS difil'Mj t) abroad and t'.at the final rule formu- ' ated lad failed to secure unanimous' support in the rules committee and !m! . not therefore ben submitted ut tho pt mber meeting ' T! . was th- r'i'i' lojud ir t -1- Hmuteur championsl n at "tic I'i,- Uerrs I'li.b Il.e rev rile, which will be giw n n, fair fr al tins jear, eliminates al. defit it., n ,,f "styui.e" and leaves tje i i-ocupire to the plujer's judgment , Tl.c n- w rul follows : j "U'hen either ball iu ou the putting green the player may remote the op I ponent's b.x I , the opponent shall then be deemed to hu'. e holed in his next stroke." liolfcrs were tremendously inter ested iu the announcement that the r-i odificntion of the ru'en, ns written i o Janics Prnncis Uurk' c- nufrpj- i nihil, had heeu submitted to th" It A A . with the possibility of adoptim in, a few years. ' New St. Joseph Manager t. Jovoh Mn., Jan 2s -I--, n p Ow-ns v-tir'i raicher of tf- M - n '..n hji.T.i.i j lanauer of r Jifp i- ub OLYMPIA Brotd tad Btinbridre f EVE.. MOVI)A V H I. HARTMAN MENDELL WI I II' SPENCER ARE Goldstein lot m B0GASH 'fill on Bitt" nou J.m n 3i vs. MOORE vs. WAGNER vs. MURRAY II t.Mt vs. McGovern vs. LATZ0 Hotel M 'Iton bnlTet, si Iterolsr prlres MM' ORDERS TROMTTLY TILLED Merol Siqpplg Ganpcmg ArmyrkQ0jzGoods 434 Market St. Parrel I'nut I Or I'.ttrx I omltsril IUI7 Open I'rts Special Officers' ihoeH est Pointers Heaty 0 D. woo. LONG PsNTS 3.75 Philadelphia j iiW ME; rrrc ' ...Mai. i n On1- is n woo i nr. overeo.iti K ma- " ' tertal r-1-i an 'ii rr Mads .'l for 17 Ileavy Wool Root Socks. Moleskin Officers' Style Raincoati yy v Illf. VALVK v ur'r IIIKIS it ri iriitut iict. nirJ inr f k f" Wln'J fr mi AUes iflKR K x' sS 20 '" 30 ompleie Assortmeni of Underwear, Work Shirts, Shoes, etc. OPEN EVENINGS, There Is No "Buyers' Strike' Here! mL. .ntc who are bleating about "people not buying" are not facing conditions squarely, repric K their goods low enough or taking thei? losses cheerfully. km m m -. 'V IMA lJAKjSnAfL luc KuSrisjaiara3iaM3'a'sg ll a f I he ii agreed iiu'i tings niiituaieu of hounds f '- a lost dislutli e. I meet 'other coudUious Ur. Walker trememloui-lv Calm Vaten Mr Walker raid that he had in tended to refer nt some length to the Western 'io f AsHui'lntliin, but that it was happi i nunc, esMiry, .i" that bod) untjld ri'iiuiiu sectional uriil the "njles il! ii'iitui e to he made and iuter ; icteij ii, Aim rim bv the L". S. O A " There are now 153 uctivc clubs and Mo n'ned nienihcrs of the V. H (',. A The f inner pay, $30 and vote, the lat ter .?lu dues, without vote. Mr. Wn'lier urged more active clubs, sa ing that It xtas perhaps wrong, as the W ii A oi fended that ail clubs did not I'lin' a oti It g, therefore, proposed Io -.end u 'etter to each of the allied clubs, and If 51 per cent so iudicnte a common fee of J20 for one class nf member'hlp. with the vote privilege, will be estab'iehed The results of tbli canvass should representation ' situation I. i DANCING) ONTKNT ro.MdiiT S .VI ( Sll 'ltlP.4. $T5 1st 33 2.1 iti 'HI SIS 4tli Tunlitlit wsrnetl hy pon iinpUnae Tnnlihl Palm Garden ntXL?.lW, IION'T MIH Oil. sT M(,IT IHMK, JW)0 MASQI I.RMIK. Till Its. IKH, 3d. ICE HOCKEY TONIGHT j AT ICE PALACE ,!?. QLAKIIt ITV i. NK1V RIH IIKILIS Tomnrrnw Mshi . hT NtrilOUs , ROSTOV MIOH TRAIIKS (,lrl' dame Mori N't .phi' vs v ork PlIILK HltXTIVO AITKR OtMKrt Inhibition. b .lie l.ani- hro'hers the Mol- lers und Mlts Leah ( niter. Horemani vt. Phila. Amateurt Tilt KK FRI. SAT JAN 17. 1H 20 loon, J: i& bveoing, 8:15 K Hiiiiaru Academy tOR BUD 4 C1U3XMUX jpajsrajBiajaiEisra j SHOPS GENTLEMEN OVBRCO VTS lIATS-llIAHEROASIIERY m Largest Ulstrlliutnr of MAMIA1TV.V MIIRTS In I-hlldelphl I Our Entire Stock of Dependable Shirts I MADE SPECIAL FOR US OVER OUR OWN GOOD FTT- i iinu fA l l UK FROM THE FINEST DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED SHIRTINGS. MANY PATTERNS IN NEAT AND FANCY COLORED STRIPES AND PLAIN WHITE. A.Ir.QUiTf A FEW OF THE FAMOUS MANHATTAN MAKE. ALL SIZES. AT ONE FLAT PRICE. $4.00 (tjP-A 5.oo ; SHIRTS Now $2-50 We are proving it, for Business wSuswas never better We sacrificing our stocksnd takmg SSlSSgIhOES FAST - and new customers tor tne iuu We've created a value for your hard-earned dollar bigger than ffi SHOE fpRICBS in Phila delphia finally and forever. WeVelingthlundhoes LTalurn Quality Shoes real f If lather thousands ot Sovrto styles, at prices you fuTian't afford to pass up! Every Day Buyers Send in More Friends, Swelling the Croivds at This Price-Breaking Sale of Men's Shoes Where the 500 Styles in Our Windows Tell the Story of Competition Defying Values! FOR EXAMPLE HO Calf Shoes Today and Saturday Tan, Brown or Black, Superb Quality, now 33 Wo Below All Philadelphia. 6- If You're No, satisfied With YnilV Piiffhrian Airmail Ttnrl'f 8 to $9 Shoes $4-65&V5 & $12 to $14 Shoes $?6iT 9f)1Il?rack 0ur Battle to Keep Prices Down and irf-i me rrpareiT sfloe vn.l,up w vn hj th 9 fOfftl! OMLBOOT SHOP OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF $1.50 NECKWEAR FOR 75c 101B JM blNUTsVlKfebT 113 SO. 13TH STREET ft !ffijaisaeaiaaaa2raaaisaesaaj vrtfv tLvenr r t6 Hicium HAiFRinnr l- 'M --'WSkll: m TZLZ. sTA M ttrim. vj.vvfi Km UIU pi, NtCHT OAZ. AtJESS M BttOW MARKET St.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers