Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 25, 1922, Final, Page 18, Image 18

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EVENING PUBLIC 'LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, - JANUARY -25, 1922
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Franklin Field Will Be Renovated, Dry-Cleaned and Pressed in Time for Army-Navy Grid ' Gaiii!
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RECONSIDER DA TE OF
CLASH AGAINST NA VY
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Service Game at Franklin
Conflict With Yale-Harvard, Lafayette-Lehigh
and Haver ford-Sivarthmere Football Classics
Lt.
Hy H011ERT V. -.LVXWELL
ScerM Editor I-enlna; Public I.ed-er
" (fpHE Army Navy football game will return te Philadelphia next fall and the
If cltl-ens of our fair city ere taking this news with enthusiasm, or words
i'ethat effect. Pennsylvania is nil het up ever It, nnd Franklin Field will he
renovated, dry cleaned nnd pressed for the oeraslen. lt is expected thnt the
rebuilding of the Mnnds will be completed by October t. and with extra scats
cloWte 00,000 spectators can be nccommednted.
The Increased capacity of the Held is the factor that enabled the lied and
Blue authorities te reclaim the classic. West Point always is in favor of
itaglhg the same In New Yerk at the Pole Grounds, because of the com cem
pa'ratlvelv short run down the Hudsen te the big town. The Xnvy, however.
had the choice this season, and the Middies, being anxious te escape long land
Journeys, picked Frankliu Field, new that the capacity has been raised te
(jual the Pole Grounds.
'' The dnte of the contest has been set for Saturday, November 2.". This Is
atranga and unusual, for the service struggle invariably is stnged en the
Saturday following, net preceding. Thanksgiving Day. This means thnt
Tale nnd Harvard will have a big rival nttrnctien en the day of their annual
engagement and se will Swnrthmore-Haverferd nnd Lehigh-Lafayette. Tn
ether words, the nttenlien of the foetbnll public in this city will be divided
among four hcndllnerc.
Four years age the officials of the two Government academies entered Inte
a five.-year ngreement. It doesn't tekr a figger-filbert te dope out that the
contract expires nt the end of this coming reason. The point we want le
bring out, however, is that a clause of the agreement stated that in easj'
tie Saturday following Thanksgiving Day falls In December, either institution
can Insist en the game being played in November, and get nway with it.
r Thanksgiving Day is November "0 this year, se thnt the circumstances
havcarisen for the first time since the signing of the pepers and West Point
requested that the contest be waged en November T. The Navy held out for
. December 2, but was out of luck. Already the Cadets have wen that part of
the 1022 nrgument.
t The Army-Navy game always has been the climax of tl;e collegiate foot
ball season The conches nnd players from colleges nil ever the Hast fleck
te, the contest. The appearance of the Cadets and Middies for yenrs has been
considered the final clete-un before the last fade-out nnd will lese some of
Its color in this respect if played en November 25, with se many rival at
tractions and the big gnmes of Thanksgiving Day te fellow. The Array
should reconsider and put the game in its accustomed place. Franklin Field
will be available en December 2. as well as November 23.
THE four big games scheduled for Xereniber 2e tclll te played nt
stadiums icith a total seating capacity of close te 150,000. All
t of which means that if you're lucky you should be able te purchase
a ticket for ene of the four garnet.
' Lafayette Deserved Veterans' Trophy
I(i'A'FATETTE COLLEGE has been awarded the football championship uf
1 ,the East for 1021 nnd received a silver loving cup. cmblcmntic of thnt
championship, from the Veteran Athletes of Philadelphia. Thus the Kastern
Institution has something te prove thnt its football eleven went through the
easen without a defeat and ranked close te the top In the final averages.
' Selecting a championship team at the close of the season is merely n
matter of opinion. The undefeated elevens have the call and Penn State.
Lafayette, Washington nnd Jeffersen nnd Cernell were eligible. State played
the hardest schedule, playing most of the gnmes nway from home, defeated
Qeprgla Tech and the Navy and tied Ilarrard and Pittsburgh. It took a
geed team te get away with a list of games like that. Waohingten nnd
TeSersen had n much better team than any one cspcctcd. The victory ever
I$tt was the outstanding feature of the season, but the best work was done
hr.post-seasen battles.
, , Greasy Ncale's team defeated the strong Detroit College aggregation in
Detroit' and then traveled te the Ceat, where California was held te a score
leas tie. Taking it all in all, the Western game was the greatest accom
plishment. Traveling across the Continent docs net help a football team and
this, with the change in climate and ttrange surroundings, created a handicap
tha only a geed team could overcome. Therefore, W. nnd .1. stauds out al
one, of the best elevens of the year.
Cernell also was geed, but the two bright spots were the Dartmouth and
Penn games. The ether teams en the schedule were weak, and the Ithacans
did net have an opportunity te show the real strength of the team.
. It was. the sa.ine. with Lafayette. The hardest game was plavcd en
October 2, when Pittsburgh was defeatpd. After that Dickinsen, Kuckncll.
Terdham, Itutgers, Penn, Delaware and Lehigh were played, and it was a
ahame that harder opponents could net be procured. The Maroen nnd Whit'e
had the strongest rush line in the country and the backfield also was power
ful. The team wns well coached and there is no doubt that it could have
held' Ha own with any of the undefeated eleven?.
, The Veteran Athletes did net make a mistake in presenting the cup te
Lafayette. Personally, we favored Penn State, with' Lafayette second; but as
ywaa aaid before, that is only a matter of opinion. The veterans figured that
Pitt was beaten. C te 0, and State and Pitt played a O-te-0 tie. That
aeemed te give the Eastenlans the edge.
JAFAYETTFl deserved some
season and really earned the
Afhletes.
Jee Brown, Comedian and Ball Player
fpHE ether night we crashed into the Shubert Theatre and saw a regular
actor put ever some comedy stuff that brought many sincere giggles "from
the, audience. The actor looked familiar, but we could net place him. There
'y8 no chance te leek at the program, for programs are given enlv' te the
cash customers.
Temmy Strain, guardian of the outer gate and a geed guv te knew
aauntered up and said: "De you knew who that is? That's Je Brown'
principal comedian in the Greenwich Village Follies." '
Then we remembered. Jee Brown was a ball player, nnd in 1010 was in
Tampa with the Red Sex. Strange aa It may seem, he was n geed player
However, the lure of the stage was stronger than that of the diamond and
also the weekly envelope was much healthier, te say nothing of stronger. He
waa an Intielder nnd a wonderful man en the coaching lines.
Jee was at the ripe old age of seventeen when he horned Inte the
American Association as a second baseman. He had been playing nil ever
the country witli a circus team, ns he had been following that line of work
since he was ten years old, and seemed te like it. He used te go with the
circus In the summer and go te school In the winter.
Drewn hnd an unusual experience In the N'aUennl League, ne lasted enlv
op meal and then departed. Here is hew it happened: Jee wns with the
St. Paul club and played second base. A scout working for the Chicago Cubs
H E.ln B,ctien early ln the "asen and 8UMted that he be drafted In the
fall., Then Jee went out ene day and broke his leg, putting himself out of
business for the remainder of the sea tn eul et
Urerybedy bad forgotten hira but i Cubs, and he was drafted and
jrW u u"50?- "rWn Cach,, Chl,Hg0 and had "akfast. Then he
dtclded he had better opportunity te make geed en the stage and joined n
' In 1918 he played in a couple of exhibition games with the Red Sex nnd
Barrow ordered him te report for spring training. Brown did ae, but the
!!?? nM,ti7np"S ""J1 M? t!espIan efferta and a g00d b8 pCw
leBt. He. Btlll is geed and only last year was offered a contract by Trls
Speaker. He also had a chance te go with the Yankees.
rJlE lest thing about Broten is his modesty, when it comes te
talking baseball. lie does net capitalise his big. league career
hut prefers te discuss his xeerk en the stage. In this he i, different
fnm. ethers tee have met. And that's the reason we have recalled
se much about his balUplaying days. recauea
4 Scores Knockout Via Telegram
jVOpKINO ever one of the New Yerk papers yesterday we read with con-Ajl-aldereble
Interest of a battle which was staged at the Olvmnln nn ',?
BWht between Jimmy Sullivan, of New Yerk, and Temmy Gelden '.'fij
phla. It was n very geed scrap nnd quite exciting. The spectators enjoyed
U Te7 m.UCb: but ,na"7 MlU be Pd te learn what really happened
Mere is tne story : " '
PJF&au9 bUt- J,mT S,imTa, ef,Nt,r Tork' defe"td Temmy
UeMan, of Philadelphia, scoring n knockout in the fourth round "
V ,.?b,Sn,,,:ht bq, ?' ter, the Kfnt ln New Yerk Probably was In a better
jeajtlen te me what was happening. Jlewercr, te us It looked aa if the
beu b"d Spne six rounds and there v-nsn't even n srmblence of a knockdown
piiFfTArS this is the tray the yew Yerk battler, place se many
K, O, signs in their record books.. It is much easier te flatten
" e guy by telegraph.
i . Cctiuriaht, ittl, by PubHe Ltdgtr Cemian-j
.-..
HARD GAMES FOR MARYLAND
Football Eleven Pleys Penn and
Princeton en Successive Saturdays
JCelle-t) Purh, Md., Jan. U3. Ced-
". 4MivHp. ,1'ennsr van a, rr nceten ani 'JK'j . m mT it un v'ty of , ,. . . M ..,-., '"F .')!0 ,'"' nle"t.. " wat" a '" "' a '"try, Tenner Hetu, i.;ar os Kiir que.
. "TT f ".. .:..... ' ., .... Illchmertd at nichrnend. Va., u. Pennsvl. Sehoe boy Skaters May Make Trb sclentine Itejer beat'n- a sluittier, and De ,ia p.1,1 r,i x--i,. liiVt'
.MM lire nun w u. w len-ga, ne ,.- '-fJ.M, Wnc,ej Chlfal0, '. S5 rrtij.ip.unn , .nee,'. ' Wera0U.r.he VnVpS3f.n.V-SKi; h Ing Tbrd-Ameriea. KaVle Pa
P U!-9n "anl, for the University .of i,K. .a. Jj 4 J f0Vi85,?8Mn'oeJi-,iS: IZfATA 2iruOTrB.el!eacriJifj,. ttSSjH rote, Wmcre. Fourth-Meajiei'oJth,
i -tSfjJnl1' ."? mede P-WIc. Ti. 2t l?Iw lUyenr i" 5hn.'Wnyii.": ttu,n,S ,hvl,Vu?!fli.,i!lf BhWt?i ly i?0' ulda ln ,he third round of the achecfuied i Sea Urch n, Censtantlne. V fth Cy.
SHOULD
Field en November 25 Will
recognition for
trophy presented
the iceiideiful
by the Veteran
October 21 at Princeton nnd Yole Ne-
vcmtjcr Ji at iNew Haven. A feature
t it. l j , , ..
Of the KCbedule is the reatimntien of
rplnllnn-hln -, T,- l,.,i.i-
tr., ......,.... vvmme UVJJniUB
September
The schedule:
I eepiemuer ev,
Waahlneten Celleia
MOVIE OF A MAN TRYING TO SHOOT LITTLE JOE
"tlTTXC JOC'J MY
POtHT ' COMC OrJ
UTTIG Jee!"
" 'at was cl0 3b
baby - njeuj .sheuj'fm
Who'-. Ye' daddy -
'BE Goev Te Ye' PaPPY
Jee "
GOLFERS PKH:
Experiment of This District Is a
Shet Straight Down Fairway,
Say Lecal Enthusiasts
FLORIDA "WOOLLY" STATE
By SANDY MvXIKLICK
THIS UK are few branches of golf
association which have attracted
mere interest since their inception than
the various green f-octleiiK. It is es
timated that national branch, instituted
by the United Stntes (!elf Association,
has bared the clubs nenrly a quarter
of a million dollars e fnr nnd that
this amount will continue te Increase.
Ne work of the local district asso
ciation was mere praised at the an
nual meeting than the Philadelphia
(Jrccns Section. This body una started
i a year age nt the suggestion of Itebcrt
I "W. Lesley, president of the G. A. of 1.
I Geerge W, KlUins. dr.. Huntingdon
I Valley, wns made chairman of a eom eem
1 mittce and he expanded en the idea.
' A dinner was given at which greens
chairmen of nearly all the local clubs
I were present. It developed into a club.
1 of which Mr. Klklns was made chlet
, and several meetings have been held.
Last season the members held a
tournament, which was also an in- '
duccment te bring out n solid line-up
te view competition between various
mewlnc nnd ether golf course machines
as well as te hear n lecture by famous 1
I experts. Members left this session fired i
I with enthusiasm.
i Werk I'ralsed
4-. ,!. tf AL.'At!ntiA timnt inn nna
delegate urose and feelingly stated that
lm enulfl lenrn mere facts of value at
nnn meeting of the local creens section
than from all the books en the subject
I he'd read. . ,
I Twenrv.eteht clubs of the district are
mcmbcrs'nnd 100 individuals. The work
of the Greens Section Ih divided among
flrr. committees of wn cu tne rur
chasing Committee" is probably
the
most important te the clubs.
rri,-ni,-u rlila committee club" can
buy mere cheaply cither through knew-
ing the best place te buy or through
tiurchasing in wholesale
lets, many
clubs cemDining. .,
The clubs arc solidly "for the
Greens Section and are already clamor,
ing for mere meeting.
Flerida Wild
The natives of the North, like our-
self, who haven't been .round much,
have an idea that ller.Ja i a line,
""'....... .i.. i. ,,. ,,.,.
sunKist nrcu, "';r "-"
in the open, golf links flourish en every
hand and everything is lovely ns can be.
A certain coif friend had the eyes
of his audience pepping out
day with a thrilling and "ti
the ether
true story
of .what Flerida really i?
Qel.l lie
.7,11.. .- . . . ..,,.
The folk wlie go le rann i.encu,
than Lake Superior
Nobody
continued
' ,"-V -:-Vnr ,,i te lh- ex-native
''uu' '
And Cowboys
"They talk about, the 'ohevs of the!
TVnt- i 'shaw i ue cuwuvjs ui
Flerida have it all ever these bird?.
They don't have open pluins. They hnvc
te ride lickcty-split through the jungles.
They hnw te ride n real bronche nnd
duck low limbs nf the trees nt the same
fim. And cattle say, there ere mere
there than the West ever had.
The audience icaneu uirwnru.
Se did
the orator.
"D you knew that they have Indinus
down thVre?"
"Yes?" was the in-mlulmi" chorus.
"Yci." nniwcrd the Southerner.
"And lynching why. 1 have n t'lettire
of eight men struns up en the bame tree
like eruamPtitH n u Christmas tree.
They make moonshine out of grapefruit
that'll knock your I' ' off.
"F.iei-vhmlv can it gun in th
wilds of Flerida. 'Im- seacoast, where,
the resorts are, is hardly a handful of
Flerldu. 'ITie blr part Is lnlaml th-j
part they m.ver see. Hut if they want '
te knew anytlitng about Flerida that's
where they ought te go.
"Th-Tauts Uiere v ill cat you up i f
you de'i't watch "'if- Yeu build ui
iifiiit-e and while jeu're hoellng at the!
,nt, i-.uilln'- 11 the Il'Ollt ' OOr ntnltlllT
iirm. il coming in tin1 bark.
'Hut, he entliiueil. .veu ought te
f-.e the reaches. 1 hey re lis Dig eh
i rabblM. Yc3 sir, Flerida in big enj
'it1 "lid."
I I'rebubly he's right.
Reds' Catcher May Quit Baseball
Vrtr Wnrlh. lt.. Jan. .T, Astyanax
DOUKlunH. l incinnmi anenai riiiner. n.19
tl.ned a contract with the Amarllle tTexasi
Hlph Scheel 10 eeacn aii erancne- e ain- 1
I1IKI1 ciKiivit .w v""-" "" .,,. , .,,-
,.. Cl.k.nl tn nnll H hmnrKua nt a , I.
fm
GREENS S
ECTIN
. . l ..I 111. K...
.Miami, iui.il-.. ..... ,......-..- especially, lias developed into one of the
haven't seen ,rl.u,nn,nL'l"v . fhplhest baskcteers In the Fast. These two
"De you real see that He .ilita ha i the , d , , ,d dew , forward pe-
spcend argest lak, one. only wnaller . .,),. ,M,. ,-.,.,. n .' ' ,
111 L(41- VVU1IMJ
fetes. Ueua aSH has net announced whathrr f '",,h,J." . -C-.."".'y '" J.eri St.
h will report te the iteda. altheuith It laiPaul. easily defeats! Lieutenant Karl llalid.
expected that he win roure rrntn uaeeuan.
"LITTLE Jee,'
ATT Daey Jee)
COMK OK) rJouj rJeuj
LlTTLB OTpd- R ,
Nice te Ye Papa',
Little Jee:'
ReAD'GfA boys
am' ZevO!
DIG dick!"
" Nv' MIMO we
KNOUO ITS A HARD
POIfJT BUT UJC Ofsl
MMe IT" L.ITTCG
JOC'3 MY LITTte JAU
Cor-AC ON NOVAJ
jwesTHcrsaT- ..
SMOUS 'EfA .SOMGpy.
Cvrl.lY.tr-la.
Scheel Cage Results
and Today's Card
CATHOLIC UIAOrn BTANUINa
, Catlielle H I n 1.000 Sn'ei'num l -
si Je-Mi 1 .;7W. Cath.. 0 3
.oeo
.000
i iiiftiuna. ,3UM
I. VST NIGHT'S rtCSULTS
Vi.ianeva I'rcp.. 30' Vt Catholic. 22
VUSTEKDAVS nESLXTS
I.nilnn It., 2". Jieverr Merlen II., 21,
1'iihnllc llirl). 27; Kiankfnrtl IIUIi. 10.
I'ranlcfnrd II. 2il. IS: Catholle II. 2d, 17.
W. I'hl'i. lllEh. 40; Giraul CellcBf. OS.
W I'hIU. H. 2J 2(" Olrar.l Cell. 2d, 13.
Nnrliits HiRh til; Dirby Hlsh, IS.
Moerjs'ran l'rlunilr. .14; i'rUnJn Select. 7.
Cnt. II. S)r., 10; Cent II. I'rcah., 10,
C mi.H' RESULTS
N.iib, rtli Hlsh. 23 i Haddenneia lll.h, 12.
TODAY'S SCHCDULU
Sal'Hi.Mi.n.m Hlsh at St. Joe Ircp.
ilirm.i'V.cu'n tilth at Chestnut HID Acid.
Central lll.-h at Penn l'rech. (tonight).
.Media Hlsh nt Chester HUh.
llren'ii Pr. p nt l;le!y Parlt lllcli.
Swaithlpjra I'rep vs. l'acully nt Swarth Swarth
mere. UIRLH' GAJIUS
Ilailden llcishts High at Palmyra Iilch.
ST. JOSEPH7 S ! PLAYS
VILLANOVA FIVE
Mam Liners Have Veteran Quin
tet te Battle Lavin's
Team Tonight
JOHNNY 0AKES IS STAR
The St. Jeseph's College basketball
five will journey te Villanevn tonight
and play the Main Liners I the first of
I n twe-gainc series. "Mllaneva College is
rated as one of the best teams in -the
Enst this season, because of their excel
lent showing with the Penn quintet.
It will he remembered that Mike
Snxe's team scored equally the bame
number of field goals ns did Penn, biit
the Main Liners were outscercd from the
i fifteen-feet mark.
1 he Illnneva team Is a veteran one,
including liynn. the lermcr I.uncriewne
High lad. and (!rny. nt the forward
berths, Krelg, formerly of Ilidler Park
nigii. nt me pivni pest, nnu t nancy
i.eiigniin. formerly et St. Jeseph s
Prep, and Pickett, ns guards.
Johnny Lavin's St. Jeseph's quintet
is reaching tip-top ierm. Out of nine
games played the Stiles Streeters have
been defeated but four times. The defeats
wre administered by Army, Fordham,
I Georgetown and Creecrrf Club,
,,-,i(t.rnting the VlllanHvn qu
Ne
. .... i . ; , i. '. 'i'"""-.. -
nil ntflt'u
, nullity, j.avin iccis continent of bring
ing home the bacon tonight, because of
the fact that his team hns Improved
fiO per cent since early season, when
three of the defeats were adminis
tered. With Johnny Onkes and Frank Duff
ns forwards the St. Jeseph's team pos-
It
,.
pssch an excellent euense. Unites.
I jump renter. i.e guard po-iuens win
ue tnKcn
care of hy Captain Ted Dcady
and Peb Devinc.
On Saturday nlzhf the St. .Tesenh's
team will meet the Urslnus College five
nt St. Jeseph s gym, Seventeenth and
Stiles streets.
Y'S KRAX
TUST. back from New Yerk, Loele
.Tnffe renerts the htilldini-q nrn apt.
! ting taller. In fact, from looking up at
em, tne root et ins meutn is all sun-
burned,
. .
He sayi they have a neie game ever
, there called Saratoga. Yeu play it
ir(f chips.
'
Our Dally CJuessing Contest Hew
many players are there en a football
eleven?
i
Harvard only plays ene out-of-town
football pame. Iloasen the N. Y.,
N. H. and IT. Ilailread.
x Pinehurst traphoeter tot oe of joe,
birds at traps, and thn ever the trap en ,
JJ- f' - "" -l two earl... Seme'
' I
Armnllnr te Cuiinle Alurk, VA llemm-lj
"' " ' " ' "'""'". r nunnrre. I
iirrniii te flrure thn tue p.tre (.3 neti) moils.
The rumor thnt Hryn Mairr tcill taku
up archery started, ue doubt, from the
fact that the yirls are still stringing
their beaus.
!rer pre"..
home people uen t even lielleve wlmt
.. ...
De Fee Easily Defeats Oaird
. . ,. . ..... . .
New Yerk. Jan ",V
of Keattle. In a twelva-rnund twiut thnt ra! !
itured th weekly card of the Pioneer Spert-1
-.! A..nM- J ' nmu-J iriMhMi.i ...vJ aai n i.i-.uii lll
"Lit-tle Jee!
LtTT.e 3weeTMGAaT
OH eev.'' "-a
i i
Lit,
Stwen .
'S-
12 STAR ATHLETES
Slemmer, One of Few 4-Letter
Men in Scheel's History,
Among February 'Grads'
BASEBALL TEAM SUFFERS
Hy PAUL PltEP
TWKLVK star athletes will be lest te
Northeast High Scheel when the
semi-annual graduation takes place ln
February. Virtually every sport in
the Eighth street and Lehlgn nvrnuc
Institution will buffer. Jla9kctball nnd
baseball will be dealt the hardest
blows, each losing five players. The
soccer team will miss four players,
While three harriers will be lest te the
cress-country squad.
'.'Winnie" Slemmer is the most prom
inent nthlete te graduate next month.
Slemmer is n four-letter man and one
of the best all-around uthlctcs ever de
veloped in the school. He was captain
of the track team, quarterback en the
football team, guard en the basketball
team nnd caught en the baseball team.
He intends te enter Penn State ln the
full.
Leu Mashadrl and Ed Ilelmlch, both
of whom wen letters in baseball, foot
ball and bnsketball, will be among
these receiving sheepskins. Mashadrl
and Ilelmlch were two of the outstand
ing stars en Northeast's grid aggre
gation and lumlnarlcH en the linsltetlinll
team this year,
I Tlle, chnmpienship soccer team, which
JX '"L Jl"!.. ?!
services of cX-Cantniti Stnllmnn. N'cil
..,.. .,w a(v4 lV.kb JT-l UllllUUL 11U
zenshi. Uransham nnd Ilianchi. lilanchl
also played en the basketball team,
while Ncdzcnshl played shortstop en the
baseball nine.
Hcsidcs Ncdzenshi, baseball will lese
Hess, Schwartz, Hill and McCoely, all
of whom were members of the track
and cress-country teams. Beb Lukens.
football captain during the'las't season,
nlse will receive n diploma.
niie me coming graduation will
take with it some of the greatest stars
in the history of Northeast. It is ex-
nected thnt llif Ivuni nn-f .,n- ...m
be greatly Improved ever these of this
r.'..uu. nit nuiiuui in net pieaseu witli
the showing made durinir tir in2t.ni-
in the interclass "nines this Kensnii will
he eligible next yenr nnd will be out for !
the teams. They should help censld-I
erably nnd fill the portions left vacant
by the coming graduates. I
The TAenennh Military Academy
Basketball League will get under wny
peme time next week. Kvery boy in the
Jersey academy will be en one of the
teams In the circuit. Rnch team will be
sponsored by n member of the fncultv.
'lhe athletic ditcrter, Coach C. 11.
Uaker, will have charge of the league.
The league games will take place either
en Thursdays or Fridays In the periods
usually used for drill.
SALVADORE AFTIERTENDLER
Coast Lightweight Would Meet Lav
After Dennelly Match
Phil Salvadore. the California llght llght
jvelght. is ambitious. After getting n
peer start in the Fast against Geerge
Chancy he has made geed in thrce
matches, including a sensational victory
eyer Whitey Fitzgernld here hist week.
New Salvadore is out with a chnllcnge
te Lew Tcndler, lecnl star southpaw.
"After my bout with Johnny Don Den
nel y nt the National en Saturday
night," writes Salvadore from New
T0rk'n1 I,,wi11 bi reai1 t0 K against
Lew Tcndler. Alse, I would like te
redeem myself against Chancy."
The Salvadore-Dennelly match is one
of n live-bout program arranged bv Al
Megner at the Fleventh Street Club.
uiuui- uuuiH lire: ,iee JaciNnn
vs.
.iimmy i.iuuens, Kid Wagner vs. Al
wngncr, ueorge Chip vs. Yeung
Mnheney nnd Johnny Maye ts rJV
Cehb.
Beets and Saddle
Tim fmi-li Is ngaln off nt New Or-
leaiiH. Tim feature of the rurd today Is
n luindii'an for three-jeur-uhlh ur six
furlensi. Urilliant Hay nppe.'ira be.st,
with Knet Grass and Hallet Mark ns
contenders.
Ilerseri well idaecd In ether races nre:
Hrht rare Dearie, Ludy Hess, Delu
ive. Second Cornstalk. Dan. yiina
.'..... ....
Crestwood. Fourth Wnnlta. Plmllee
linlunee Wheel. Fifth Kternlty. Mill.
night Sun. Mndse F. Sixth Wnlnnt
Hall, WadHWerth'H Last. Ace. Seventh
--Lively, Captain Tem, Helle Pardncr.
At Havana First race Whitney
i-J(-J Ws
te I
NORTHEAST LOSES
season, nnu is out te stage a come- i .ihi- nnvi.i: t.. khi ii.ti.i.AiiiiVn ' I
. " - .v , ...T iiir. niiiir.x va KAiiiUE ii,nff
back next vcar. The hum ! nln-,i i.r.iv r.ui.Msnv. irtrrm ' -
SPEED A VITAL ASSET
IN ANY SPORT BRANCH
Dempsey, Walker, Ruth,
Faster Club, Fist or Feet Than Rivals
and Lead Title Race
Hy GKANTLAND MCE
TrOIlE and mere It Is established that
J,TA without speed ln competitive sport
one Is very much as tinkling brass or
sounding cymbal, or vice v.crsa.
The boxer who Is ruling the heavy
weight destinies of Eurepe by an over
whelming margin weighs only 171
pounds.
The boxer who Is ruling the heavy
weight destinies of the world weighs
only 100 pounds, ringside.
Men from twenty te forty pounds
heavier, with long experience, are
helpless against "both, the extra dis
placement meaning nothing against
much greater apeed.
And most of theso who may have
visions seme day of dropping Dempsey
haven't Intelligence enough te knew
development of speed is the first etcp,
the foundation, the primal necessity,
the main Ingredient.
Willard found thnt n surnlus of sixty
pounds ln weight, six inches ln height
nnd six Inches ln reach wasn't enough
te last four rounds.
In Oilier Lines
THE worth of speed comes into nil
branches of the gnmc. Hew is lt
that Cyril Walker, weighing 115
; pounds, can drive n golf ball ns far as
i nny man in the game en nn average
turn?
Merely because Walker dcviscii a
svstem. tint nnlv of lilttintr threueh
with his right, but of turning ever his
lert wrist in such fashion that at the
moment of impnet the club head was
moving .with tcrrlllc velocity.
It wns nil mainly a matter of getting
speed into the club head at the right
place.
Hew docs speed help "Babe" Ituth
hit home runs?
lluth can swing a heavier bat with
greater speed than any one else can
swing a lighter bat.
He can make n Ilfty-two-eunce blud
geon whistle through the nir, nnd whe'i
this much weight, moving like a streak,
lands upon a ball the result is bound te
be abnormal.
Speed hns meant mere te Ty Cobb
than any ether single factor, in this
case physical and mental speed working
together.
Speed is a vital nssct te Tllden's ten
nis gnme, because it also helps te make
his change of pace mere puzzling.
And speed has held Walter .lohnsen
around the top for fourteen yearn.
Spring Football
IT WILL net be very long new be
fore spring foetbull gets 'under wny.
The wonder is, In this type of prac
tice, that mere coaches den t go in for
the development of speed.
This enn De accomplished hy long
drills at quick starting, where linemen
and backs are trained and taught te get
under headway in a flash.
It Is almost Impossible te hammer
tee much of this ingredient into a
squad.
In the same way ballplayers can add
greatly te .their value by practicing
quick stnrtlng nt every chance.
We knew of n certain shortstop who
used te get out early nnd practice quick
Btarts from his position te both right
BASKET BALL
DELAWARE VS. PENNSYLVANIA
Wcifihtnian Hall, 34th & Spruce Sts.
Wed., January 25th, 8:30 P. M.
nrserred Srul-. 11.00, en khI nt Franklin
Tleld nnd Olmhfln'. General Ailmlnnlnn, EOr.
START THE NEW YEAR
WITH HEALTH
20 T.rien llely IIulldliiE
26 Iyien lleeh Itrdurln-
13 I.eseena In HOXINd
$25
Kunnlnr Truck, Ilnndball CniirlH, ShnnerH
PHILA. JACK O'BRIEN
15th & Chestnut Sta.
D1 rkI T stii i- uaci: stiikkts
BIJOU in roNJiNmeN with
lllti lll'KI.i:.SK Ullim
, TONIGHT. 3 Star Bouts 3
I mmv Inrrinn vi Ytr Jack D-mn.-v
J,mray .'"??":? . rcA ""npiey
VANHEUSEN
PATtNTED
the Worlds Smartest COLLAJt
l'J.:, by
PHILLIPS
JONiiS
Cobb, Tilden, These Wield
and left until he almost doubled his
normal fielding range.
Glen Klllingcr could swli e Inte top
speed as fast as any man we saw last
fall, and this accounts for much of his
gridiron greatness. It should help te
make him a great ballplayer under
proper Instruction,, for it means that he
is already far along the right read,
The Fastest Man
WHICH brings up the nrgument
ngalu Involving the faster runner
of the decade. Is it Charley Paddock,
of California, or Jack Donaldsen, of
Australia, new living in New Yerk?
Tlu following may be of interest:
Dear Sir I am with J. G. A., when
ha claims Dennldeqn as the world's
champion sprinter. Tfrem 75 yards te
H00 yards, tills or any ether generation
has net produced his superior. I saw
Donaldsen ynce Charles E. Helwny, of
Providence, 130 yards, for a purse, en
the Sydnev Cricket Grounds, the
"streak" Donaldsen, winning easily.
Time. 12 seconds, clocked by Wally
Kerr, the official timekeeper of alt the
big meets in Australia. Fancy 100
yards lnside even time! Whoever beat
that? His 0 for 100 yards was run
in Seuth Africa. If one wants te knew
COME HAVE LUNCHEON AT
I
. AJU-. ' i i i iiinn i i ina i. iiiiiiii i i i i
:-i : ... i-H-i-i-i-i-iitr-i-n--a-Pi-i-M ; : :;. "aiifca-r ..:,:.-... tir i,-;1i:r:..;,i
r -i ityr Mym r
! '''' V'X
TOMORROW'S MENU
Clam Chowder Choice of Perk Chops
or Haliliut Steak (Platter)
Fried Sweet Potatoes, Apple Sauce
Rolls and Butter Coffee and Milk
hherr, (irlll mill
rhlrkrn Dinner.
$10 Shoes .and $
ci i. rv.ic.- "
IIlBli- crade
quality leather
lured - te - teu
shoes nnd ex
cellent quality
steel BKntBj
Women's $12 Shee
and Skate $y.50
uutnts
Handsomely An-
Inhed In ruanct
leather, beautiful
ly stttched.atyllah.
'I'he eheea alone
are worth the
price. ( omplete
wlt'.i lfttea.
$3 Heckey $2-50
akates, new
.5
Open
Thursday
& Saturday
Evenings
5f1s rV'
MHfc
'?"..
I I
Replaces both soft and starched
cellars. Mere comfortable than
a soft cellar, smarter than a
stiff cellar. Ne starch, yet
never wrinkles. As simple te
launder as a handkerchief.
Nine styles, quarter sizes
Fifty cents at dealers '
CORPORATION, 1225 BROADWAY, NEW
Herman Bdetzcl te Vmpira'1
Princeton Baseball Games
-Ilcrmnn uactzci, ene of the bett
basketball referees connected wltt,
the game nnd also a well-knewn1
imscuau aruuer, nas eccn secured b;
Princeton' University te umplrejall
of the Tigers' home games Ihis year,.
Uactzci came te terms with, tj(
Princeton authorities several dayi
age. He Is one of the leading m.
plrcs of the city nnd last year acttfl
as umpire In nil of Pcnn's hemj
gnmes.
hew fast Donaldsen could run, paj6 jjt
E. Walker, of Seuth Africa, wlmxi
of the 100-mctcr Olympic games t,'
Londen, 1008. He turned pre te te
Donaldsen, but he was asy, A titr
ether great runners: Tem Malens and ,
Frank Hewitt, Harry Hutcbens and
Charley Samuels. But from 100 te 30q
ynrua umy uuu ..'uumusea,
O. h. 8.
Cepyriaht, iltt. ail lUehts Rtitrvti.
Tutwller Medalist With 83
Ormend Bench, CTa.. J-n. 25, Th unnuii
TotneUatiwept-los. the first b! evtnt if
the neiuen en ih Ormend Hencti unki
brought out tha Uratst nnd of eenttMinii
ever entered for thlt event. Herbert Til.
wllcr, of Ulrmlnsham. weli the qutlifrin.
medal with a scere of S3, derettn l.f
Adrlance, Duchess C. C. reughketDSlt. l
.inn at-ftV(V '
Postpone Baseball Practice
New IHven, Conn,. Jan. 25. The Ulnin
of
ivrma Temmera. Tale baieball i0j
haaKciba i cea.cn. nna cauitfl a muu..
fnent of tha nr"t attempt at baieball fri;.
tlce at .Tale. Temmera I centlned te h!i
home here with n very aevere cold, kin
... .,1 ii ImnaI n l. t-lt -. -.! . w m..
UiUIVU V i(f-:u iu wv MUIU IU DimTL (fit BjTJI
nt v:erk In the care en Thursday of tbti
wee it.
iii
NOTICE
it'S! 1
Special Orders
Lebitcrt,
Slnki,
Sadat, ate.,
Delivered aa;
part of city.
Nominal
Delivery '
62natfliUTl
;:j:;.:i-Hj
aa Cnarfe
bc
PAFP APFN FVF.RY SIlNnAY ! rartie anT
. w -- llanqnetw a t-prtlnUr
M. & H. SELL IT FOR LESS:
Oh, Bey! Skating Time New!
Tlie crcck8 and lnkcs In the country nre filled with merry
skaters, rosy-checked lads nnd lassies, enjoying this healthful pas
time. "Celd wave's te continue" says Weather Man. Get your;
skates new, we say, when the assortment is complete nnd prices lewV
Sale of All-Weel
SWEATERS
Seme v-neclie, some
ellp-evers. Just ene or
two of a kind, a let tee
small for our wholesale
orders, 3 and 10 values.
$12 All-Weel
Sweaters
Pure werated,
made of finest
yarn.
$8
Skating Caps,
50c &$1
By Pared
Peit Mi
10c Extra
yeuk '::M
3
MM
!l,
I
. .