'- ." irift vyo', to--a yAtltf ?''., . , , t. :v u ' fl-a , r w' ' . if 1 ,J1TP.. '-" , - , II ,4 . 1 1 .,' ' vl'V H' YV HA iT ." iV '"'' ift I, w''"V' 6 H ft . j - :.-,,.- i - ,- ', i " : ; " feoiith, With jck Oaniiil as Coach, Has feright Prospects for Successful Football Seasotg iJpHAVE CHANCE pBEIIERRfCORD IVMflckmen Win Nine Games ,Tney Will nave bosi nvr u age Since 1914 WIN ALL Sf E remembered that In thafyear 4F1"..06. "... -,..nf rndde nil opposition lrM,c!., " . tV,..,. and won -the ii?,nl. only to lone the worW.Mrlea fitf'iLS MUST Ttr.n tli -TLrfWcntytbree games? u y rer rl and his mates can perform that .... ...i !.. tl.nlr An the Athletics win " - "- ? T ..u,.i will finish the 1021 M -i.t, n fitter percentage In games IMM"1"" . . . i mi It tfjgr Jtraight gam to George Stall fcrf BraTM. u : nf:. fiinii lhc m.- - --- MBVr .".-. - , . . -... UMd or trnaeuiuu -- .r-- fo .. i r- . f i fc,e been the sole holders of the WMmotonshlp. Mack, sold, re- if .a nr traded tho stars ot ms inmou k"" r. "n".Vm, nnd Htnrted the fol .?lW"!"fr: ( build a new team. 1 V1 : - ..nMn tn ntniit .ltlom. nc nns dcc, .... .v - --v - J fTnS10l7? the first year of the jvnr, ... ??JriwiVt finished In last place, i i...n rnolnta behind St. Louis, a buc 'B defeats on the closing days of 'KVa 1 1 Imc. though he has tried out J,B?.i ,-nl "nlaycro of nil grades nnd 5?':..,rBn forcing the men or ." bck wv""' -,! Til ln all fifty-five games nM.nf wna till' best .tace 1014 nd up until this sea- iffieliw-dcht lost for an average ' e( .339. foood for This Season ' Rn fr this season the As have faftr.Mven victories and eighty-four fflV their credit. If they win the fSt nine gnmes out of the twenty- SJte'to be played the season will end Sth fifty-six victories and ninety 1m" defeats, which will give them a ' Sti"of .304. This Is taking into Moderation the fact that this senson I, one of 154 games. " miQ l.n nr vinr. whon nnseball Wdl around Labor Day, only 1-8 Sines were plajcd. In that year tho Athletics attained n higher average than I1017 and higher than Is expected this inr. In order to eclipse the record of thit year with this year's schedule the Mackinen' must win sixteen of their twenty-three remaining games. Then tber will finish the year with a mark of .409, ns compared with .400 ln 1018. With BoBton, Cleveland. Detroit. St. Louis, Chicago. Uoston nnd New York yeti to be played in the order named, he, Athletics have little chance to outdo' their record of 1018 with Its ncheduleof 128 games. The record of the Athletics this year U certain to be much better than last eir, when the Mnckmen won forty men (antes and lost eight -four for nn arerage of .307. So far this scasonMho A'i har? equaled their winulng mark ot bit year, the nvernges this morning tofing forty-iCven victories. Klghty four'james have been lost for an aver ite of .nr,o. The worst year in the. history of .the teanioccurred In lOlfl.when the Mnck-menvwon'bufthirty-six ganics and lost 117t'Thc previous year, 11115.- forty tiree games were won and 100 lost. Tbq.rtcord for the year not nlrcady Stationed, 1010, was thirty-six won id 104 lost. 4 AanitlheTilIs The Phillies have been In Ihc cellar for two seasons and are certain, unless a miracle occurs, to remain there this season. In 1010 the Ilnkerltcs won fortMeven games nnd lost ninety for vciiniuigr in ..wrt, i.nst year thev won aixty-one gnmes nnd lost ninety- iw percentage or an even .400. ju mil) mo runs won the pennant, lixtt i in ioi8 '" 101 nn(1 1"17, nnd .t?7" iili,'!nvc nftocn gnmes yet to ffif I Chi?R0' St- Lo,lls- oi"cin M0. PittsbiirRh nnd New York in sue ees ion, and if thev win all of their re laalning KAmes will have sixty-one vic f!,:t0 tlieir crc,,it nn'l ninety-three .a2 i ..necailf,c of the lfi4-gamc Jw. i ,e.t?oy win be ,lnnb'' to tie their P'tll Of last BPnsnn n.. . 1. Ifi.."6 "('he(,,1,e was not plny'cd. hi.-. , 8 .Brc 8Ure tnnt they are play to win the pennant, if the New iMic newapnpermen traveling with the nb are to bo believed. Thev oncn a 4. In Cincinnntl this afternoon that M.i,iIeo Btfonf! bearlnB on the chnm 'ftSS? BirnT'.lo?H of the men of AIIS.i V ' . "i uie Jicurawites, Vfifularly two of their twlrlers, Rlxey "1 r,1' n ,,r"-nw nffalr. and ?inHn,fntK,wh?, have bcen P'ny'ns j-and-out ball nil season, get awny aerie0. 0Jlit,.of.,thrS2 "W wln c"" i ekft,M SUh h,e Plrntw on Friday j lull of confidence. aQXZ! Xlu th0 QinntH will just I !m' Ke Jfe fate of tb0 Smokctown ,-- f"uu, inrpn ntra li ,1aama- l na ...JT" ""'"B"- UUICUW III1U l Zltal.D for O'bson'n men. nO Otlr tr l.nA in , ..... Iin,.i. i iS "" 'envo nil e hough they w i not be out of tho A three. straight triumph nnd the R-.v ..Atueuingiy intricate. it i tff rwiii 'hat May Happen JnBaseball Today Clok NAT,0-,fAIi LEAdUK KKvVrk ... WAn Z ?!? Wn I. !. Lonli 82 5? ,003 -P00 .600 DiiuiM . S2 g .552 .bu .sot OS .sai .asa .nn wChli 'CAN LEAOUE fc?.y,rk u;'V,IAt M. ?na .::: .; ss ?" RK' ...v." wici .; 5 " .018 .Oil S? 01) ,40 1 08 .48 00 18 .47 J? 2? -4'0 T 84 .830 Win Ijom ,033 ,8J3 ,020 .018 ,nnn ,48(1 ,4in .418 .304 .818 .811 .401 .48 .471 .418 .336 YESTERDAY'S RE8ULT8 jjNATIO.VAT, LEAOUK lk -R'CAN I.EAOUB -- ...... r. nciinialM. i I 1 Ii.,uT. C.,AN Afi"ciATioN fcifi. fe.S' JP.tn.. , BUbhuiJiI'. -!'. ?"n"'Pil. S ( xuniiLu r5.",."'pni ii .D,t ,.,ul 111 fllmfV T. llii iratn.l not KPhtduled. Btwvid Vr a,N "MOCK .- fiwjfij ,NfcTATI0NAL LEAGUE ' frtW V. F YE8TEHDAY JSSfisinta--i J5?ln rm). nr Cltr ttponrdt wt ''r-Toronta vt j.j....j TANDINOB or tor cmtoV lit- . ....- F)iy JV WT COACHES IN FOOTBALL THIS YEAR Canncll at, Dartmouth, Glide at Lehigh and Spears at West Virginia Among Those Who Have'Clianged Affiliations for 1921 By EDWIN J. POLLOOK nnd has had several years under 11111 I.P.Or .ito M M .418 SI M aa fTKi. 1A01 fnf.ll.n11 iflflBnn will nn oler the sporting horlton next 8nturday when the University of Miline takes on I'ort McKinley on Us own lot, but the real rise over the sky HnCwllI not take place until September 24, when the ma jority of college teams in the East will get into action. The present season, unlike last year, will see few conches changing thclr-nf-filiations. Virtually all the tutors will he on the siftnc camping grounds aa in 1020. However, there arc two notable exceptions. Fat Spears, the former Dartmouth mentor, who will guide the West Virginia eleven, and Frank Ullck hns moved from Princeton to Lehigh. In Spears place at Dartmouth Is Jncksou Canncll, who called tho signals Jn the Green backHeld n few years ago. Canncll was one of thu best field gen erals in the game in his day nnd he knows football from cover to cover and from the middle to-both ends. Canncll is n likeable chap with a personality Hint appeals. He assisted Snears last year and was so well liked that he was given an opportunity to run the Bhlp uimHcir. . Green Prospects Good Dartmouth's prospects nre good and it looks ns if the Green were ln for nuothcr excellent season. There are several vptornna linrlr In nnllpirn nml li. sides the varsity material available, many good men from the freshman eleven have moved up to bid for regular berths. Last year the Green yearling team wns ono of the best ln the country nnd it breezed through the season with out n defeat. Lehigh is looking forward to a good season under Frunk Gllck, but ns the Iirown nnd White success hinges on do feat or victory in the Lafayette game, there are tough days ahead fur the for mer Princeton star. Lafayette has an nrmy of letter men back this year and Sutherland should turn out one of tho grentest teams in tiie Hast. Gllck is a close student of football IS HARVEY LOSES TO MRS MALLORY Local Woman Defeated In Straight Sets by National Champion at Cricket Club Hopcr as assistant cdach in the Tiger enmn. this will Help nun considerably. Glick's assistant at Lehigh will be Hed ninbcrton. oncn n Princeton end. Last season several big colleges were switching coaches. Jack Hclsmnn was beglnnlneVt Penn, Hob Folwell was starting hlft work at Annapolis, Larry Hankhart left Colgate and was suc ceeded by Huntingdon,,, Gilmour Drtbie went from the Navy to Cornell, Tnd .Tones wns given full charge at Ynle and O Nelll departed from Syracuse to tutor Columblu, Light nnd Tackling Helitnan Is starting his second year at Penn and ordinarily should be able to better his record made ln 1020. but unfortunntely the Red andlllue material this season is Inexperienced and far from promising. However, Hclsmnn Is surrounded by an excellent coaching staff nnd he should get the best out'of what Is on hand. Tho Red and Blue prnctico at Cape Mar is rapidly developing Into real foot ball, and It Is likely that the Quakers will stage a scrimmage before they leave the seaside. Hobey Light joined the shore coaching staff on Sunday and probably will remain at Cnne May for the rest of the week. Light's main job will be to show the boys how tackling Is done, and there are few better able to explain by actual performance than the I.tbnnon dentist. When Dr. Light played on the Penn team he was rated as one of tho best tacklers In the country. Hls tackling wns of tho vicious variety. Hobey never merely brought his man down. He knocked him down. There's n differ ence. It is the intention of the Penn coaches to rig up some kind of n tackling dummy on the beach sand anil lot tho athletes go to It. There Is no danger of any one. geuing nurt on tiie soft sand, and yet some excellent points in the art of tuckling con be gained. "FAIR TONIGHT" FOR LIGHTWEIGHT BOUT Terfdler and Friedman Put Extra Day in Gym Before Return Match in BOTH IN CONFIDENT MOOD Uy LOUIS II. JAFFE "Little drops of water " may mnke the "mighty ocean," but Lew Tcndlcr nnd Sailor Friedman didn't care much nbout that yesterday. All they know was that the weeping and dripping skies put a damper on their rpturn bout, mndc the thing all wet and necessitated nnothcr dny's work. All of which means thnt last night's contest nt the Phillies' Ball Park wns postponed by the inclement weather and will be put on tills evening. "Fair tonight" Is the prediction of Forecaster Dliss, and he Is supposed to know whnt he is talking about. This may soothe the Irritable feeling of Friedman, who was anxious to hnvo the entire thing over with Inst night. He snid: "I wns all set to give thnt Tend ler fellow a nifty socking and the weather spoiled it all. Hut weather won't snve him tonight. I'll wallop him good and plenty." Fricdninn hns recovered todny from thnt grouch he nursed throughout Mon day, lie wns ns sore as the proverbial boil and didn't care who knew it. So it is usually in the general run of ath letes while in training, but Friedman's grouch was very much ln evidence. The postponement meant another dny's work for the Sailor, as well as for Tendlcr. Both went through the regular rountine of gymnasium drill ingpunching the bag, skipping the rope, shadow boxing and pulling the weights. Today each said lip was fit for the fracas this evening. They arc supposed to weight in nt 2 o'clock nt 130 pounds. Tcndlcr nppenrqd In a tnlkativc mood today. The postponement apparently did not nffect his disposition and he wore that "What-I-could-havc-done-yestcr-day - I - can - do today" expression. "Friedman will find himself against it different Tcndler tonight than he did n month ago," smiled Lew. "If it wasn't that I was the uggrcssor throughout Friedman wouldn't have bcen In the battle at all. "Watch mo tonight. I don't know wlietner X will do any slugging or not, but I am sure thnt I will box a lot more than tiie last time, nnd it will look like a one man's fight. Friedman is a tough fellow nnd thincs like that, but he'll look foolish trying to hit me tonight." Spenking of ills weight, Tcndlcr said : "That's the easiest thins I enn do come in under 130 pounds, and it is just nn easy for me to mnke 13n. Wish thnt weight waB the only 'question nbout my ability to win Unit title from Ijconnru Benny would be nn ex-champ now." Half a dozen youngsters will nppcar in' the throe preliminaries to be decided previous to the Tendler-Friedman con test. Scraps About Scrappers mil Brrnntin, tho Chicago heavyweight Who stood off Chatnnlon Jarlc l),mnv tnr Rlmoit twelve rounds, will, be the hcadllner In the opening wind-up of the regular 1021- a sraaon iu mo .National a. a. lirennan la matched to meet Nod Carpcntler. a heavy uelKht from Australia who was brought to America oy lorn Anarews inicK Jannettl. who Is matchmaker of the National thl season. Is worklnr on tho remainder of hla program ter mo inuugurai oi tne new season. Manuel Aznrdo, a . of Joe. who boxed In Philadelphia years ago, Is houui o come r.asi iro. jmento. Ualir., to s'ek llghtweUht opponents. Manuel will be escortej through the East by Harney iicmensiein 01 .nicaeo. wno writes: "Aze edo without a doubt la tho most senna. tlonal lightweight developed on the coast sinco ino oesi oays oi wmie interne." Joe Jackson, local 14B-pounder has started training for the resulur season. "I'll ttia nny ot the welterweights from Jack Urltton aown. inciuaing jimmy sumvan, says JKCKBOn. Al vnno, a former local bantam, Is matched to meet Johnny Wallace In a bout at the HuntH Point A. A New York, to morrow nigni. Al trbeeken, who Is hero from Okla homa, made good In his flrst Philadelphia appearance In a match with Pete Hoaa at tne uamoria uiud last weeic. Croaher CoU, of Hughey McLoon's White Elephant Club, Is entered In the 108-pound class of the ahanahan C C. amateur tourney lonigni. I.ew Srhnpp. up-State welterweight, has placed himself under the management of joe lvenneay. acnupp is maicnoa to meet (leorgo Stone at Scranton Friday night. f I v SX I fte TV KV Ready Now! The new Autumn Oxfords for men. Note particularly our display of Imported Scotch Grain at $12.50 CLAFLIN, 1107 Chestnut EttablUhtd 1868 High School Gym Suits Special price to High School students Students' price $0.00 Central High West Philn. High South PhUa. High Northeast High Germantown High Frankford High Jersey $ .75 Pants 1.00 Shoes l.SO Elastic jock.... .75 $4.00 3 complete uit Pure worsted v-neck sweater. $6.50 Marshall E. Smith & Bro. (Incorporated) jmw Furnftngix724- Chotnut Street Atsutu codf ' i 7J n ' ' 11. asm MISS CARPENTER VICTOR CHAMPIONS OF 17 YEARS ENTER U.S. AMATEUR GOLF Entry List for Championship at St. Louis Contains All but Two Winners Since 1904 Qualifying Round This Saturday By SANDY McNIBLICK Mrs. ailberlWlarvcy, former Phila delphia clinmpion, succumbed before the drives of' Mrs. Molla BJurBtcdt Mnllory In the ' flrst day's play of the Middle Htntes women's lawn tennis champion ship nt tho Philadelphia Cricket Club, St. Martins, this morning. The national champion was in splen did form and defeafed Mrs. Harvey ln straight sets, The scores were 0-0, 0-1. The only game won by the local woman was the fifth game of the second set. In the vtwo' sets; deuce wns called only twjee. 'Tjiat was in tho fourth gome of the second set. Miss Virginia Carpenter. Cricket Club, was one of tho first of the locnl entries to win in tho opening round, which was postponed from yesterday on account of the rain. Miss Carpenter, who wns n finalist In tlm cirls' clinin- plonshlp at Forest Hills, defentcd Mrs. Ulunchnrd. Uoston. 0-1. (1-4. Miss Elcnnora Hears, of Hoston, one of the several out-of-town stars entered, survived her flrst match by defeating Miss Sauor In straight sets, 0-1. 0-'Jt.' uiero were a number of defaults this morning. Miss J. Green advanced through the default of Miss Florcnco Ballln; Miss V. Wiilard went to tho next round whon Miss G. Osthclmer failed to put ln nn appearance, and Miss Anne Townsend will play In the first round due to the default of Miss G. Paine. r 'This is the first time the Middle Mtatp.s ehamplonshlp has been staged In this city. In previous years It has been the custom to hold the matches in New York. The summaries: ,?".". Virginia Carpenter, Philadelphia, defeated Mrs. lllnnchard. Huston, 0-1. 0-4. tFSVl.I, Dixon. Philadelphia, defeated Miss H. Coffltft 0-1. 0-a. Miss J. Green won from Miss Florence Bal lln. by default. Miss V Wlllard won from Miss O. Ost helmer by default. -Miss Anne, Townsend won from Miss O. Paine, bv default. r..xLr,V. " Newhall, Oermantown Cricket ..',,1?r.",,ed. Ml" ' Ferguson. Philadel phia Cricket Club. 0-4. (1-3. Miss K. Cottrrran defeated Miss P. An derFon. 0-3, 8-0. n Mis Molly. Thayer. Philadelphia Cricket niub, defeated Mrs. Alius. Washington. 0-0. Sin, Molla njurstedt Mallory. New Tork. jlefcated Mrs. Gilbert Harvey. Philadelphia, Mies hleanor Sears. Boston, defeated Miss Sauer, 0-1, 6-2. Mrs. It. Ilerold defeated Miss R. Newton. 0-1. 7-3. Mrs. M. II. Huff. Philadelphia, defeated Miss Phyllis Walsh. Philadelphia. 4-6. 0-0. Miss Gardner defeated Miss Warren, 0-1, 0-1. Miss Daman defeated Mils Porcher, 6-0, 0-1. Rlckard Cancels Herman-Moore Bout New York. Sent. IS. Tex Itlckard. box. InK promoter, has announced the cancella tion oi tne rroposua nitcn-rouna oout Be tween Peto Herman, world bantamweight champion, and Roy Moore, veteran St. Paul top ntam weight, which was scheduled to take piaco nero September 28. An injury to Mocre's rizht hand caused the cancellation, he said. their best game In these duellos with Tewksbuy. lloth had planned to enter at SI. Louis thin year. Ituslnesa cares have them talking to themselves in last minute debate, however. Pressure should he brought to chase them out there, with Tewksbury. It would be a great quartet In there from Philadelphia this week Marston, Tewksbury, Piatt nnd Hoffner. Navy Yard Athletic Neivs j One of the greatest tunnels for the amateur golf chainpionsiiip ot u United States Is expected to develop over the links of the St. Louis Country Club when the stars of North, South. Kast nnd West forcgnthcr for tho start this week. . The qualifying round to reduce the field to sixty-four survivors will be ployed out there by the Mississippi this Saturday over a test which is said to be ln as good condition ns a champion ships links has ever been the week of the play. All Is commotion out there now. Many of the contestants are on deck and the last touches nrc being Pl Vlast year, the British invasion , Is headed by the champion of the birt i- , . " l ,1... .InnrrlltV illil' 111111- piace OI t,ii ti..i1, tlilu vpnr will b In niulliun f,.r ,h .rl.ll.nn warriors te.r, w"? HU"V.e'"i"X.r, fMnm ever i next week.. aVonlv informal bnsobail con- isam win M piayed, starting today. Thfl Marine hav. rvinn. tVtt rhnmnlon ship of the Navy Yard iraseball league, with twenty-onn ir&m.H won nml ntx tost. Teamwork was the dominating factor In their success. Cormack McCarthy, Smith, Montelth and Whlteley were tho mainstays. wnue tne rest ot tie team alpo played gooa ball. i.lenleoant CommnnnVr Gntbrnnson his ar ranged foe a meeting cf tho various ath letic officers to discuss dels Us for the com ing football season. The Marines haa nl nady started practicing, while the U. H. . Minnesota and U. H. H Hannibal uxnect to get going next 'veek. The Receiving Bin Hon, Navel Hospital I'. 8. 8, Connecll"ut nnd the Michigan ami South Carolina corn lined will also turn out teams. A promising season i in prospect and the football season DEVELOPMENT OF T ENN S EAN RAPID Follower of Court Came Trans formed From Social Aspirant' to Sport Enthusiast KNOWS PLAYERS' ABILITIES Goodman Knocks Out Smith New York. 8ept. 13. Charley Goodman. Brooklyn bantam, knocked out Sonny Smith In the eighth session of a scheduled fifteen round bout In Brooklyn last night. Marty Silver knocked out Mlckev McGregor In tho seventh round of the semi-final. Willie Herman Scores Victory Paterson. N. J.. Sept. 18. Willie Herman, local lightweight, defeated Johnny Donnelly, of Newark, In a twelve-round bout hero last night. Five Leading Batters in Tivo Major Leagues NATIONAL MCACJUn o. An. R. ITomehr. St. I-onla.lTl M0 lis Tutsliaw. Pittsburgh AT 316 44 Fournler. St, Louis. 1S2 B07 OJ Koush. Cincinnati.. 104 3S3 02 Mcllenry. St. Louis. 133 313 84 AMERICAN LF-AGDE G.AD. R. Hellmann, Detroit. 13S S42 107 Cobh. Detroit 1111400 117 Until. New York... 135 4SO 101 SUler, at. Louis. ..m AIS 107 Speaker, Cleveland. 120 480 106 ii. r.c. 214 AMI 110 .S4R 170 .317 138 .847 111 .810 n. p.c. 217 .400 IS! .800 IftS .3SS 103 .87 170 .360 where tho greatest American team ever ...... ..- . lift n foreign crown fell num. um i" .. " by the wayside one by one. Hunter is backed, ns w? T"",'"1 year, by three, other British, star. Tom Armour, Scotland, is one. He made the third round at the Engineers when his fellow -country inc., wcri'ii li able even lo qualify,. Swift and Xickry, are the other two, b6th said to be cx- I,CAmcrIca holds both the British and American open cups. The question is, can Britain win the American amateur nni.Mnn nn.l (I.1IO KnilOrO tllf COUnt .' If over America looked good to hang on to her own crown, the chances loot bright this week. For In the fray wo nre turning nil but two of the cham pions who have won our title In tne last seventeen years. One of those missing Is Harold Hil ton, of Great Britain. The other Is Ebcn M. Dyers. His name docs not nppcar In tho pairings but the Pitts burgh veteran Is expected to enter. At nny rnte, when all the champion ships arc collected into one event whose activities have furnished the script on the side of the victors bowl for seven teen yearn of national- golf iilMory there Is bound to be a real Imbroglio for the title. In Choice Lots On Monday those remaining from the first qualifying test will ploy thirty six holes of medal play nnd tho thirty two low scorers will then be drawn for match play. New York, Boston, Chi cago and the other -big golf centers all have their best assortment entered. For Philndclnhla. It still has a nn- tioiml championship to win. There are many who believe if It is to be brought here this venr It will be bv Max Mar ston, Morion ace, who has won two of the bieccst local tournaments this year One of his great feats was the trouncing of George Itotnn in tho Lynncwood Hall fete and a win of the title over J. J. Beadle, where he displayed all of his punch nt the big moments. Another wns to play Duncan and Mitchell even, nnd the third was to win the Pcnnsylvnnin nraatcur cham nlonshln. Marston is paired in the na tional with Cameron Buxton, who won tho Philadelphia championship before the war nnd was only ousted in the third round of tne national in luiu. Buxton is now ln Dallas, but will prob ably enter from Pino Valley. Philadelphia fans nrc of the belief that this city has a strong quartet right now ln Marston, I'nul Tewksbury, J. Wood Piatt and Georee Hoffner. Each has bcen right astride his game for the last two weeks.' More than that. all who have followed them closely feel they are playing the came of their lives Since that historic match back there where Marston only lost in the national scml-finnls on n missed one-foot putt. experts have figured here nnd there that the national title would come to aim some day. This looks a chance. Dad Stars Towksbury is going as well. A record of CO at Aronlmink with all sorts of other fancy scores out there nnd super lative golf ln both the Philadelphia amateur and the Lu Lu tourney last week maJjc the tall Aronlminkcr an out standing player here. In both tourney hero he was drawn in the tough bracket where he had to face one local star after another. It was Piatt, Normnn Maiwcll and George HoiTncr In n row nt Lu Lu. To win he hnd to go nt a 73-75 clip those three rounds, and he did. And of the quartet mentioned above, Piatt and Hoffner both showed they are playing PHILADKLPHIA NAVY YARD UASEDAM. i.eagui: FINAL RTAN'OINa First Division Won Lost P C. U. S. Marines 21 0 777 Receiving Station 12 n .000 Fort Mifflin 13 0 .1100 U. 8. B. Reiier s 0 .4rn IT. H. Naval Hospital in in .400 Navy Recruiting Station. ... 2 8 .200 U. a. wa-'ine uetaenmem 3 13 .200 Seoond Division Won Lost P.C. V. S. 8. Cole 2 0 1.000 U. S. 8. Sandpiper fi 2 .714 U. B. B.' Fulton S 2 .714 U. fl. B. Kansas 4 2 .608 U. 8. 8. Sampson 2 1 .000 Division 80 Destioyers ..2 l ,0'ln IT. 8. n. .Minnesota s z .goo U. H. 3. Strlbltng l l .boo U. S. fl, Lansdals a fi .37ft tJ. S. S. Talbot 1 3 .anil U. 8. 8. Nicholson 0 1 .Ofln II, 8. 8. Barney d l .000 IT. S. S. Maury ... .0 2 .000 U. 8. S. Maryland M D . 0 2 .000 U. 8. 8: Dupont . 0 3 (100 The tennis fan Is n sport follower of distinctive type. This wns the con sensus among both players nnd officials who disciiHied the gallery with nn As sociated Press co-respondent during th off-day, due to the rain yesterdny. The fan's development hns been rapid in recent jenrs, and from n collective standpoint he has undergone n remark ablo transformation. "I can remember," remarked Ed ward Cunlln, former president of the Umpires' Association, and one of the most prominent referees in the giiini" today, "when the gnllery consisted of a few dyed in-the-woul followers ,of tennis and young women who consid ered it fashionable to watch the piny. From this nucleus the spectators have grown to thousands;, nnd they know ten nis todny as well as any other sport fan knows and follows the play of his particular favorite or star, "Back in the old days therr were many persons who came to witness the big mutches, especially the Davis Cup contests, who were attracted because it was n n international match and tlie.v wanted to see their countrymen win. They knew little, if anything, about the game and Its possibilities for t -"' ' All this has changed within the last dec ado and tennis fans who form tlio gallery know the gnrae In all the coun try. They can and do discuss the proba bility of one player defenting nnother and hnck their opinions with facts in just the same manner as a baseball fan uses batting nnd fielding nvernges to prove that a member of one big league club is n better player than another on n different team. "The attitude and action of the fan hns also undergone n change. In the enrlj days of tennis galleries, enthusiasm fre quently caused the spectators to break National Polo Begins f " at 4:30 P. M. Todny The second match In the scries for the national junior polo champion ship will bo played nt the Philadel phia Country Club, Boln, this after noon, starting at" 4 :10 o'clock, Tho mntch postponed yesterdny by rajn will be singed todny, the contenders being the Philadelphia Country Club four nnd the Army second tenm. All matches In this series will begin at 4:30 o'clock, except the Saturday contest, which will start nt 3:,10. Into npplnusc and eren encouraging cries in the midst of most Important rallies. Today it is customary to wnl$ until the point lias been won beforo giving vent to npp'atise. So well Is tills etiquette of tennis understood thnt I have frequently heard, while referee ing n match, a whole section of tho stand cautioning a novice ngninst ap plauding in the middle of n rally. Each person spoke almost in a whisper, but when four or live hundred whisper nt onre, the result is very audible to officials. ST. CARTHAGE GETS BUSY Takes Over Donovan Armstrong Field for Rest of Season The St. Carthage baseball team, which hns been coming to the front with a rush in semi -pro hnsebnll circles apd iecentl defeated Flclxhcr 12 to 0. hat taken over the Donovan-Armstrong grounds for the remainder of the sea son and will play four gnmes per week. On Kotiirdny at 5:30 P. M. the Nor folk Stars play St. Carthage and on Sundny the Saints meet .Tack Hlncs' Old -Timers nt Sixty-third street nnd Cedar uvenue. St. Carthage would Hko to book games at homo and also travel awny on several nighta. Call Art Sum mers, Woodland 0841 R. Gibbons Meets Fisher Tonljjht ht. Paul, Minn.. Sept. 13. 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