Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 02, 1921, NIGHT EXTRA, Page 17, Image 17

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W?7
lpan Tackles United States in Effort to Take
MAXWELL IN LEAD
1 1 PUTT
Ipddie Driggs Defeats Fitz Sar-
gent In State AmaTour
Golf Championship
j, j. BEADLE SURVIVES
By SANDY McNIBLICK
lln tho first round of match piny bf
ho Pennsylvania nmntcur jrolf chnm
plonshlp over the Merlon 0. 0. cast
Lrso today Norman Mnxwcll, AN hlto-
S, w '""" J- yVoM VlM' 1,1S
dubmatc, by 3 up with 5 holes to play
Maxwell was 8 up nt the Rlxth but
Watt brought his rival's lend to 1 up
' i- some brllllnnt work nt the ninth and
, Khotes. Mnxwcll Incrensed his nil-
iSrfif nt the twelfth nnd thirteenth.
' i inotlicr great mntch Lddio uhrbh, ot
'J?P01 V. .1 I'll Horrent, n sn of
I' 4 nnd 3. Drlmw had n cnrtl
of 75 for the elirhteon Uoics, which is
rif.for the course.
1 1' Their cords:
PrlW"7 R 4 4 K 4 3
$' ;. 4 4 4 0 0 3 4
',""! B li 0 4 3
Pl " 3 a a i r 4 4
4 3T
43471
B 12
4 31 7S
" , ,,- ,r.. If..
As was cxpecicu. jh ."'j;"'"". -i.f
n from Mnurlcc W. Hmedloy.
, another Merlor plnyer. Man-ton will
tackle urtfips in hic ij.wim ..im...
John J. Headle. of Cednrbrook, and
J A. llrown. Merlon, utaRed a hnrd
battle which Beadle took 1 up.
Unless that well-known Rolf jinx,
hlch has followed the medalist in
match play through the nees, sticks its
lon talons into the play, Mnx Marston
jg figured as premier candidate foivtho
Kcvstone State crown.
The course is his by adoption. lie
knows its every tiny worm-cast nnd
it's at Merlon he's played some of his
fined Rolf.
Yesterday he won the medal with
really remarkable Rolf when ho went
irotiid twice in 7.T for a totnl of 1-10
ftrokes. In tho thirty-six holes, but
two over fours, he had onlj five three's.
There nni onlv one nlnyer in the first
flight todny who matched Mnrston's
rational reputation, nnd this polfcr was
the. home-bred and former city cham
pion, .7. Wood Piatt.
Uotu nave renciicu me Kcmi-unai
round of the national nmntcur. They
were the two locals invited 'to compete
en the Americnn team nbroad.
Both Marston and Piatt have been
loing well this season. The difference
In medal scores doesn't mean anything
in the match play to follow, but Mars
ton hnd the edge yesterday by eleven
strokes on his rival. Piatt scored
7M8-ir.7. ,.
They have only played one mntch so
far in local Rolf, or anywhere else.
That was at the inter-club champion -chip.
It resulted in what you miRht
call a "love-Bet" for Marston, but that
baa all been forgotten nnd tho chances
of a mntch between them this week has
the fans nil worked up, for this city
has never bad two such nntlonal stars.
Flatt has been touching on scores
. which equaled course records nt several
links lately, so he's riRht n-strlde his
game like Mnrston. The former,
paradoxically, has been playing bril
liantly at Merlon. The greens have been
eating up strokes, more t-o thnn is the
case with Marston, perhaps.
The surprise of the qualifying round
yesterday was the flue nlny of J. II.
Gay, Jr., Cricket Club, who turned
in a (S-io 15.J. At least one stroke
in the 75 was a penalty, when ho hit
a caddy's foot at tho thirteenth.
Gay was unaccountably left off tho
national eligibility list this jenr, after
playing in the event at the ICnglnecrs,
but his scores yesterday ought to prove
that he will be n contender and fix
everything right, flnv had to with
draw from the match play owing to a
marriage in the family nt noon today.
Eddie Driggs may pull borne sur
prises In this tournament. Like Mars
ton, he is playing his home course, nnd
Merionitea themselves ficure this Is an
advantage. It Is a course whero there
Is an abundance of hanging lies nnd
it pays ofttiines to know just whero to
piace me call. Tlicn all one hns to do
J place it. At tho sixth, for Instance,
the canny Main Liners were noticed,
more thnn one. nlnvlne- fnr tho mmr).
In order to have a lint shot with no
fawning bunker to catch a shanked
nan.
i JACKSON WINS AT NETS
Captures' Second-Round Match From
Evans, 6-3, 6-2
William Jackson nnd Itobert Coles -oury
advanced to the third round in
tne intermediate class of the tennis
n "."wnent for the Thomas S. Cooper
..i 9lln lield nt tho I'MisdowncReero
Mlon Center. They defented .Tnck Kvnns
na Baldwin Hrown, respectively.
4,,;P the, fir8'-round mntche3 of the
Junior class, Fritz Muhor, Edward
wvit, Bernard Welllcr and Harry Hoo,l
" viors over Joe Case, Frank
rJ? 7cd Lcwl nnl Morton Mnc-
?,n the nnlcr named,
iw 'onrnnment is open to all resl
wnts of Lijnsdowne. and to every one
""ending tho Lansdownc schools.
summaries:
TOimTEUMEDI'VT SECOND ROUND
e-S i e'?m Juckson dffeateJ Jack Evans.
e-sJ'V-u'. Co8burr defeated Ilaiawln Brown.
junior rmsT hound
erux Maher UefeivtoJ Joo C'aoy. 4-0, CI.
eWward Ult deteated Trnnk I.ecch. O-O.
f Uernard Welller defeattd Tod Lewi.. U-0.
jTl Uwi dcrctt'"l Morton MacCoonib,
BIG GAME TOMORROW
Colllnuswood and Audubon Will
Meet In "Ruber" Contest
I'tJS? "LnR Bamc of i
jween Audubon nnd Colli
P ayed on tho former'!
the scries bo-
ingswood will
U cpotimls in
K'iuuii, .
tomorrow nfternoon.
Mttteeii 7 . ,mvp WI PlH)wl
credit. "b lms a bllllt"t victory to ltH
Ithen?cH!iM,k,,r.,, ,hp Mnr w''"
PPwt jr h" l'l,lbs' ,wl11 0Me ""'
these two , ,'"'' ",M, ""' hln- With
other, tbn , u"'knB "",u,,st r'"'''
doubt ,,l"c"e is very much in
Manlzntinn'1 ;V,',U,,0 "outers, nn
11 at t m;'li,l,.V011,lml ,M"". nnA
,h "dMr of f?h ..i ibci,,K """clpnteil on
dUvlV" ' ever held
150 Rfnnrt t -
Awuo.li ... r 'avy fcleven
.'.''.Academy r.r.i urJ" ,c,'tt" . .? the
OVER
?y tr. :&..& CA yeiterday af i.mZ' '
. 5;nWib;iiS?iV.?.W'tlon. and the 'PR
V WiPS thr JoV?hJ. i, w,y?er reinalni
-E
Story of Davis Tennis Cup
Told in Short Measure
1000 (at Boston) United Statca
beat Great Britain
1002 (at New York) United
States bent Great Britain. ,
1003 (at Boston) Great Britain
beat United States.
1004 (at London) Great Britain
beat United States.
1005 (nt London) Great Britain
beat United States.
1000 (nt London) Great Britain
beat United States.
1007 (nt London) Australasia
beat Great Britain.
1008 (at Melbourne) Austral
asln heat United States.
1000 (nt Sydney) Australasia
bent United States.
1011 (at Chrlstchurch) Austral
asia beat United States.
1012 (nt Melbourne) Great Brit
ain bent Australasia)
1013 (nt Loudon) United States
bcnt.Grcat Britain.
1014 (at New York) Australasia
beat United States.
1015-1010 No challenge issued
because of tho war.
1020 (at Chrlstchurch) United
States defeated Australasia.
T
Tilden and Johnston Will Meet
In Fourth Round if Dope
. Holds Good
PHILA. HAS 23 ENTRIES
The luck of the "blind draw" has
determined thnt William T. Tilden,
2d, of Philadelphia, world's and Ameri
can chnmplon, will not meet "William
M. Johnston, of California, his chief
rival, in the final for the American
Inwn tennis championship, which begins
at Germantown Cricket Club on Sep
tember 0.
But the draw, which was made yes
terday in the offices of the United
States Lnwn Tennis Association in New
York city, hns assured the greatest
competition in the history of the con
test for tho American title, with tho
eventual possibility that two rhiladcl
phians will come through to play for
tho title on the court at Manheim.
IU Norris Williams, 2d. twice na
tional champion, now captain of the
Davis Cup team and Philadelphia!,
though now playing from Chestnut Hill.
Mass., is in the upper bracket with
competition that ought not to trouble
him greatly in his race to tho final
Tilden, in the lower bracket, will go
against Zcnr.o Shlmidzu. the great Japa
nese plajer, in the third round and then
will piny against the winner of tho
contest in the third round between Bill
Johnston and Vincent Richards, the
brilliant cightccn-year-old Yonkers
vouth. who beat Tilden recently at
Providence. This, of course, is all
based upon the assumption thnt the
players run true to form.
When the entries closed yesterday,
just before the draw, 108 players had
listed their names.
In the list are eleven foreign en
trants, the grentest showing in the
history of the American championships.
Four Australians are listed, three Japs,
two Englishmen, a Mexican, and n
Philippine plnyer.
Philadelphia vies with Tsew York in
tho entry with twenty -three playerw.
representing all of the leading clubs.
There was an amazing showing in tne
entry list of former champion plnyerB.
Every man who hns held the title since
1000, with the single exceptional the
great McLoughlin, are cntoredT This
includes the two veterans Hill Lamed
nnd BlU Clothier, It. Undley Murray,
tho Southpaw; Norris Williams, Bill
Tilden nnd Bill Johnston.
When the drawing was noio. ine oi
ficcs were filled with tennis officials,
players, fans and newspaper men.
President Julian S. Myrick, of the
Tennis Association, presided, sjnd Sam
uel H. Collnm represented Germantown
Cricket Club, while Joe JcnnlngB. of
ii.n,tnl.,).ln trnnsiirer of tile United
States Lawn Tennis Association; Sam
Hnnly, Robert D. Wrcnn, George A.
Adee nnd a number of other officials.
William T. Tilden and It. Norris
Williams were present. Tilden drew
the first enrd, Williams drew the sec
ond and Jennings tho third, pulling
out tho name of Craig Biddle, tho Phil
ndelphian. Myrick and Collom drew
the next nud then the newspaper men
and Paul B. Williams, field secretary of
the Nutionnl Association, completed tho
ib- , w i
Tho first ten names drew a byo and
will enter tho second round. Also tho
last ten drew n bye. Tho others play
through the first round. Norris V il
iin..,u' firi.t nnnonent will be Sydney
Thayer, of Philadelphia Cricket, whll
Tilden drew tm Tcucruu living vj.
Wright, of Boston.
Lamberton End Coach at Lehlfjh
Ilrthlrhtm, l'u., Sept. 2. "He." I.ambor
ton, former Princeton star nnd olaMmiUe or
Krunk Click, recently nppolnted head root
Kill coach nt Lehluh. wua jeitordny ap
pointed end conch ut tho Urown and White
m &ri iunr
ACE
4-11 Linucn
Inrrmiird munufucturlni
facilities now enable ui to
hrcp up with the con
Htimtly Increailne demand.
SMAI.T,
1'lltST
HAVERFORD CYCLE CO.
AMKItirA'H IltflKHT CYCI.B 1IOUHU
r.i ni...l...l o..nn4 I'.l'i
au.J Miunivt auBk Pt Xi
ENN1S STAR
IN NATIONAL PLAY
.
UVE1IY NiailT 11UT 8ATUUD.V
EVENING PUBLIC
DAVIS
"Walliarrrx
U1 1a.ia.eaa
PAT BRADLEY IS
E
11
One-Time Lightweight Star,
After Five-Year Lay-Off,
Now Middleweight
By LOUIS II. .IAFFE
Most recent among comeback fistmen
in Philndclphln is Roxy de .Carlo, one
of the most populnr boxers ever turned
nut from Littlo Itnly, nnd known fisti
cuffily as Pat Bradley. During the sea.
son of 1012 and 1013, when nt the
zenith of his career nnd boxing as a
lightweight, this Italian puncher loomed
among lending 133-poundcrs.
In those days, when the National A.
C. then under tho supervision of the
Inte Jack McGulgan, Bradley was a
strong magnet at tho box office. When
ever Pnt was the other fellow in the
main contest a capacity house virtually
was assured. Among the top-notch
battlers of thnt time ngainst whom
Bradley showed in fine form were Bat
tling Nelson. "Hnrlem Tommy" Mur
phy, One-Round Hognn, Knockout
Brown, Pncltey Hornmey, Harry Con
don and Matty Bnldwin.
Durine tho season of 1010 Bradley
found opponents few and fnr between.
Ho was about growing into tho welter
weight division, but for some reason the
'chunky, rugged and terrific southpnw
punching battler wns unnble to get suf
ficient bouts to his sntlsfnction. Then
Pnt Bradley, boxer, decided to step out
of the fistic limeglarc and onco more be.
My
ij
' 111) " '
RING
1
DIM
" AUOne Price 9 5)
LliJDGEEr - PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1921
TENNIS CUP DEFENDERS
lilv . .,ii. -', ';-:v . mwimtvnm
PHV M Jolxto.
"A7xllxa.T. s
Facts About Japanese
Davis Cup Challengers
Icliiya Kumagne First visited
the United States in 1010. Plays
nn aggressive driving game nnd has
wonderful endurance. Has been
ranked as high as No, 3 in the
nntionnl ratings.
Scnzo Slilmitlzu Is particularly
good nt the bnck court gnme. Is
stendy nnd forceful driver and fair
nt volleying. Rnted as a weak
server
Soiiclilro Kashlo Essentially a
baseline plnyer with great endur
ance. Not a star driver or server,
but is very steady.
enmo Roxy de Carlo, just plain fight
fan.
In tho meantime de Carlo, because
of ids lay-off, began to increase In
avoirdupois, and when ho got heavier
than he relished Roxy resumed gym
nasium stunts. Ho skipped the rope,
punched tho bag and did some shadow
boxing. And, after five years on the
sidelines, several months ago Roxy de
Carlo conceived tho idea that he would
like to become Pnt Bradley, the boxer,
onco more.
Weighing 155 pounds and twenty
seven yenrs of ngc, Bradley prevailed
upon his pal and side-kick, Snm Rob
erts, to get him just ono match so that
ho could get an idea of how lie could
handle himself in the squared circle.
Roberts, known as "Yeller," to his in
timute friends, picked on Dnrby Casper
nnd they met nt the Eleventh Street
Arena. Bradley stowed away Darby
In tjje second round.
Bradley wns overjoyed, he became
optimistic and announced that h6 would
Five Foot Style Shelf
icaaquarters
1307 Market Street
(Opposite Wanamaker's)
Look in my Wiridpw Today
Davis Tennis Clip Across the Pacific Oceai
jrftSjKtb
lcmuin in the gnme. A bout followed
with Patsy Convery, of Gray's Kerry,
and Pat knocked Patsy, who weighed
1(17 pounds, for u iov of chateaux in
the second session. Thnt night Brad
ley weighed 1"7 pounds.
After this mntch came one with
Jimmy Gibbons, another Gray's Ferry
ite and a clever two-listed boxr. Gib
was on his feet at tho finish, but Brad
ley was the winner by reason of his
aggressiveness nnd harder punching.
Now thnt Italian southpaw is more
thnn anxious to mnke good in the ring
and get the opportunity he was unable
to get when a lightweight box for a
title.
"After the regular season is on for
a while and I have had three nr four
moi e matches under my belt," said
Bradley today, "let them bring on
Johnny Wilson or Bryan Downey. I'll
show the world who's the best of the
middleweight boxers."
Pat also has n brother, Joe Carlo,
u fenthtrw eight nnd twenty years of
age, who lias started a ring career.
Josephus has been knocking out his op
ponent at a 1.000 per cent average,
having scored with tbrco haymakers in
as many battles.
Five Leading Batsmen
in Two Major Leagues
.
NATIONAL LEAOrn
O. A n. It. II. Ave.
Hornthr. ft. I.ouls 127 407 113 201 .111
CuMlmu rittft. .. 84 310 44 100 .3.12
ItoiiHti. Cincinnati. KM) K7A .111 IHO .3111
Koiirnlcr. St. I.onl 125 48 8(5 10(1 KIT
McIIcnn, St. I.otilx.125 477 7H 103 .342
AMEIIICAN UEAOCE
O. A.n. It. II. Ave.
Cobb. Detroit 100 423 102 .107 .303
Hellmiinn. Detroit. 12.1 BOO m) 107 .301
Until. Nrv York 123 133 144 1(17 .SHI
Sixnker, Cleveland 115 443 0.1 1(VJ .370
Msler. bt Louis.. Ill 4C0 IW 173 .309
forJtaxs
WALKER'S BATTING
STREAK IS BROKEN
As Mackmen Wjn, Tillle Stop3
After Eighteen Consecutive
Games of Safe Hitting
MEADOWS' GREAT TWIRLING
AiAt.,. Vinttlnv ntrenk in broken.
Goldle Hnpp started the ball n-rolllng
uy inning wueiy in iwniij,;" ..1m
from the day he joined the Phillies.
Babe Ruth, the mighty bludgeon -wlcldcr,
went twenty-six games before
his bnt was silenced. Now it i8,Tilllc
Walker who has been humbled in tue
midst of n bntting nprre.
The Athletics' left-ficldor did not get
to the heights of Ruth or Rnpp. put he
wns swinging along nicely until yes
tcrdny, when Jones, the Red Sox
twirlcr, put nn end to his streak up in
Benntown. Before leaving these shores
Tillle hit safely in eight consecutive
games. On the Western trip he lam
basted all kinds of hurling for ten
strnlght games, bringing his total up to
eighteen. Yesterday he went to bat and
failed.
While Tillio failed. Joe Dugan did
not. The former Holy Cross star, whose
jumping tactics have earned him the so
briquet of the "Gourdin of baseball,
smashed out four hits yesterday, one n
double thnt nided Eddie Rommcll to
tnko ills second victory of the trip.
ttnfarn lnnvltil Iierp fnr the Occident tllC
Baltimore lad stated that he would win
three games or bust. He busted, if slang
is permissible, for he won two and lost
one.
The Mackmen won 4 to 2 nnd in such
n manner that the Bostonesc scribes
gave vent to considerable outpourings.
They stated that the Mackmen looked
like a real baseball team when they had
the proper kind of twirling nnd when
the batters showed their skill.
Nine hits rang off the ashes of the
men of Mack and most nil of them
enmc nt the right time. Rommell, on
the other hand, permitted only f.ewn
nnd hnd the enemy shut out in eight
of the nine innings.
Johnny Walker Returns
Johnny Walker, who was hit by a
hatted ball in the second gnme of the
Clcvclnnd series nnd who was forced
to spend severnl weeks in the hospital,
returned to the game yesterday, get
ting n single and plnying the first sack
as though he had never seen the inside
of n hospital.
He accented fourteen chnnces at first
without n miseue nnd hnd an nssist
that played a conspicuous part in the
Athletics defense. Probably the return
of populnr Johnny gave the Athletics
renewed vigor, for they certainly played
better ball thnn at any previous time
on the trip.
While the Macks were bringing a ray
of sunshine to their rooterh the Phil
lies were doing the same to their clans
men. Lee Meadows, the bespectacled
hurler, had ono of his right days yes
terday and when be is right he is
virtually unbeatable. He held the slug
ging Brnves to n quintet of singles, all
scattered, one each coining during the
last live frames. For four innings
not a bravo was able to register a
safety.
The victory was the second straight
for Meadows and makes him runner-up
to Bill Hubbell for consecutive wins on
the Phillips' staff. Last Saturday
Meadows humbled the Reds, -1 to 3.
Jimmy Smith, whose second-basing
has been of the brilliant variety of late,
played a great game jjt the keystone
sack yesterday, accepting eleven chances
without a miseue. Several of his as
sists were of the scnsntionnl variety
that elicited no end of npplnue from
the small crowd of sweltering humanity.
Yankees Regain Lead
The New York Americans climbed
into the lead by a double vietorv over
Washington jestcrday while Cleveland
was losing a hard-fought twe've-inning
battle to Detroit. The Pittsburgh Nn
tlonals. though retaining their fir-t
place position, suffered a double defeat,
and New York, despite a contest lost
to Hrookl.wi, gained a half game on
the Pirates. The two rivals in eacX
league are tied on games won, but
each runner-up hns dropped two games
more thnn the leader.
A triple play, the second made against
the New York Giants this week, con
tributed to their defent. Of their six
hits made off Grimes, of Brnnklm.
three came In n row in the fifth inning,
when tho p'ft.v ended the rnllv. ' '
Portion, of the St. Louis Cardinals
figured in twelve of the putouts in his
Pershing Will Sea f
Martin-Kciscr Bout
Baltimore, Sept. 2. Announce
ment was made today that General
John J. Pershing would be nt the
ringside tomorrow night when Boh
Martin nnd Fay Kclscr squnro off
for a ten-round fight before the ex
service men here to cclcbrntc Bud
die Week. Gcnernl Pershing wns
present when Martin and Kelser met
in the Cirque de Paris in 1010 for
tho heavyweight championship of
tho A. E. F. Thnt night Mnrtin
won by a referee's decision. Persh
ing later declared Bob the greatest
fighter of tho forty million fighting
men.
victory over Pittsburgh. Ho struck out
four Pirates and hnd n putout nnd
seven nsslsts. Sherdel, of the Cardi
nnls, yielded only four Jilts in shutting
out tho Pirates in tho cecond gome.
The two victories put St. Louis in
third position ahead of Boston.
The Washington Americans have lost
seven straight games. Johnson, of the
Senators, was hit for five consecutive
singles before n mnn wns put out in
the fourth inning of the second game.
SUZANNE PLAYS MONDAY
Mile.
Lenglen to Exhibit on South
ampton Courts
New York, Sept. 2. Mile. Suzanne
rTcnglen, European tennis champion,
will start her exhibition tour Mondaj
at the Meadow Club, Southampton. Her
opponent will be picked from Mrs.
Molla Mollory, American champion ;
Miss Mary K. Browne, Mrs. May Sut
ton Bundy, Mrs. Marion Zindcrstein
Jessup and Miss Eleanor Goss.
No announcement has been made as
to the plans of the French champion
regnrding her invitntion to play in
Philadelphia.
Scraps About Scrappers
Charley Lefl, known an Putrid to hie
frlnntls will net back Into rlntr hnrnexs to
nlsht at the Cambria A C lie will tro on
In the etar bout pilrei off with Hobby Mr
fnnn, of Orai Kerry In th fcml-nnul
Waltar Hennlo tncklns Johnny I'axFon. Pre
lime, YnunK Mullltran mi. Kddli; Dmuwy
Johnny Royco ti Little Hear and buddy
ltyan vs. Jack McCormlck.
Tommy Clenrr, of Manayunk. was all
dressed up ready to Co In axulnat Jshnn
Dundee at ShlbnPark Wednesday nteht ns
substitute for Willi Jackson Clean- wants
to meet tho New York Scotch Wop
.Toe Nelson has been tnken over bv Jo
Conroy, of Mannyunk. "Nelson Is a good
battler." says Conroy. "and I think that I
nn brine him In line for some Rood
matches " Al Nelson, Joe's brother, says
he has turned him oer to Conroy for a
ear, but will continue to act as his adlser
iK'tween rounds
Chick Jonnettl succeeded In rematchlnn
I'rankle Hrltlon and Tommj IxiUKhrnn for a
bout next Tuesday nteht nt the Eleventh
Street Arena. They recently put on a swell
scrap EUdlo Demp'wy and nushy Caspar
will box In the semi. A special bout be
tween Jack 'Malono nnd Alfonso Cottl will
bo stag-cd. also the follow lnc prelims Unkle
Scott vs. Mickey Dorr, Ray Mitchell vs
Franklo Palmer and Joe Thomas a. Lew
Wuener.
Kli Wainer defeated Jack Rappaport In
his last bout in Jersey City, and neuotlatlons
now nre on for a match with Johnny Drum
mle there.
Silent Puryeor issues a challenge to Kid
Patlllo and Jim Hemic, of Atlantic City.
Tony Daniels Is anxiously awaiting
matches with any of the 128-pounders
Hull Krssler, North Penn middleweight.
Is plannlne a comeback He will bn read) I
for any of tho men his weleht this fall.
Jimmy M'ndo, of this city Is to meet
Jackie Jones In Scranton tonteht.
Jlmmv Jordan, local llshtweleht. made a football accident in Western 1'ennsyl
ffood show In npnlnst Sammy Heme Renn vnnin wns reported w-rcrdiiv when
Ixonard's sparring partner, at Scranton last i lanm s rei'f'l'" ! , , '"',.i,
wtek I James Kntzenmyer, practicing with the
Tim Dronry Is matched with Sammy
linker at Illnirhamton. N. Y Sonte
it Illnrhamlon. N. Y September 0
There's Real Economy in
EXTRA TROUSERS!
GeiVan Extra Pair With
Your New Fall Suit!
'" 1
Suits
Made to
Measure
Including
Extra Pair
of
Trousers-
$24-50
OVERCOATS
Order Now & Save! $OA tft
The man who orders his overcoat
NOW saves money! Don't wait for
cold weather we'll make your over
roat now nnd hold it until you need
It. Come In ami look them over J
Orrpr V htrtll S,n,P1" nJ "If-minaring blsDki mbI
SIIAXZI Kjy 1V1U.IL out of town on rtqueit. Writs today 1
P.B.WHITE&CO.
TOM MALONEY, Manager
808 CHESTNUT ST.
Opn AllDay Monday
17 s; M
DRAWINGS MADE
FOR POLO BATTLES
Open Championship Will Be
Held at Country Club Sep
tember 21 and 22
JUNIORS START SEPT. 10
Announcement of entries nnd draw
ings for the Nntlonal Polo Chnmplon
ships, to be hclft from September 10
to 24 nt the Philadelphia Country Club,
Bnla, was made today by tho Philadel
phia Polo Committee on behalf of tht
National Polo Association at New York.
The sohedulo of mutches follows:
JUNIOR CHA.WIONHIIIPS
Saturday. September 10, lfi2t. 4.30 P. M.
ARMY KIIIHT MKADOWtmOOK
Major A II Wllnon
-MaJ H. D. Chamber
I'OXHUNTKIIS
f 8 Von Htade
lain
Lt. Col. Lewis
llrown, Jr
Major IV W. Kruln
Hodman Vnnamaker
niilon " llnron
11 i: Striiwhildis, Jr.
Monday, .Veptembvr 12, 4-30 P M.
piiila cou.vntY Aiisrr second
CI.UH Major V. I'. Krwln
Thoman Stoke jiaj. j q Quoken-
W. Stnndley Htokcs meyer
p. Lowber Ktoken .Major I P. Swift
Uarclay McKadden .Major (leo T PattOB
Tuesday. K-ptember l.l, 4 30 P M.
Ilryn JiKr Polo Club (J W Convom,
A M Collin) winners of S-pl.mber 10.
Wednesday SeptrmiNT 14, 4.31) P M.
Me-i.low brook Wanderers UV A Ilarrl
mxn Renjamln K (latins, O M. Heckscher,
Mornnn Uelmont) vs. winners of Septem
ber 11'
Friday September 10 4.30 V M.
AMnn.rs of September 13 s. Winners of
September 14
I OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP
WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMRER 21. 4:30 P. M.
T-i,i "OCKAWAY MHADOWUKOOK
Elliott Mason rilEEHOOTERS
I', ,S, H2pplnB '" 3 Van HUde
Malcolm Stevenson Harry East
J Cheever Cuwdin Captain K. E. Quest
Devereaux Mllbun?
THURSDAY SEPTEMIIER 22. 4.30 P. M.
I SI5ADiJW."no,OK "I MAWR
V iv .Ilum,;?.yu Thomas Hitchcock
r Ai.ati;,.n w'bD Renjamln K. Oatlns
brutes' JV' Morcan Uelmont
SATURDAY, SE7PTEMHER 24. 4 30 P. M
PINAL
Winners of September 21
September !2
winners of
The senior chnmplonships probably
will begin September 17. The dntcs and
nd
reams win ue announced later.
HOT FOOTBALL DRILL
State College Sqid Practices and
Perspires While Berdek Watches
State College, Pa.. Sept. 2. Hugo
Bezdek pulled n surprise on the ad
vance squad of Penn Stnte griddcrs
when they reported yesterday, for in
stead of holding just the customarv
rollca'land preliminary talk, the Blue
and White mentor ushered them out
to the practice field and gave them
two hot sessions of re.nl football prac
tice. About twenty-five men were on
hand for the openiing workouts.
The scorching hot weather was bet
ter suited for baseball, but It failed
to take the dash out of practice. Extra
poundage put on during the summer
suffered severely in the first dny of
practice, several of the players re
porting n loss of more than ten pounds'i
FIRST FOOTBALL ACCIDENT
Latrobe High School Lad Breaks
Collarbone In Practice
Iitrobc. Pa... Sept 2 The firsb-
, , ,' ,li.' .
Latrobe High rk'hool eleven, oiiltcrcu a
oroKen ruunruunv.
, $29-50
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