4

THE SUN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1919;

"Devotees of Ring and -- Mat Will Be Entertained This Week in Contests --Leading Boxers and Wrestlers to Appear

toppled under In 1910 and then had his LIKELY TO HITTERS ARE four greatest years, In which hit .334, ELLER NEMESIS OF FULTON Wrestlers Boxers Who in ght This Week. .300 .347, .336 and .319, Baker's sixth .300 and Are the Limeli average was compiled In 1918, when he hit .306 as a member of the Yankees. JACK DEMPSEY BECOMING RARITIES Sherwood Magee of the Reds, Larry AMERICAN LEAGUERS MEET D'oylo of the Giants, Hal Ch,ao of the . same team and Bob Veach of JDctroit i . are the players who have hit over .300 for five seasons. ', Hod Bowled Over Cleveland in Kcwark Promoter Believes Only Twelve Men in Game To Magee'a .300 averages are scattered through a iflfteen year career in the Na- 1917 as Easily, as White Plasterer Would Give Hard day Have Fivo Averages tional League. Ih 1910, he led the league an average of .331. Battle to Champion. Above That Mark. with Sox in 1919. Doyle Fire Times Amonir Elite. Larry Doyle'a five .300 averages are MEEHAN MOST DESERVING COBB LEADS WITH 14 scattered through the period" between LIMITS BATTING TO '100 1908 and 1916. In the latter year he won the National League batting cham- pionship with an average of .320, tho "Wrestling Mntch at Garden Jackson and Speaker Each lowest figures' ever complied by a cham- Bed Pitcher Beat Bagby Twice pion major league batsman. Doyle's ! and Attractive Boxing Bouts BTavo Travelled in Select best year was 1912, when he hit .300 Two Years Ago atul Re and .was voted an automobllo for being peats ,5 in Jersey Carded for Wccfc. Circlo in Tea Seasons. the most valuable player In tho National Over "Williams. League. f( Chase's Ave .300 averages have been i...... Tlr FREDERICK G. I.IEn. scattered over a space of thirteen years, Chicago's White Sox wer6' not the ij ' nr ch.vhi.ijs jiaiiihu.1i League to Ciptrlffhi, rtghti rcervtd. and take In three leagues. While wltn first American combination In view of the probability of Jack oil the of tho American League, discover Hod Eller of Cincinnati In baseball Yankees that Dempsey, the heavyweight autocrat of There used to be a time he hit .323 In 1906 and .316 In 1911 as a pitcher Is a regular Eller. Cleve- .300 was fairly common. the year he was manager of the team. land tumbled to fact when with the squared circle, demonstrating 'n a when the hitter this That was In the daya of the old twelve Jn 1914 he hit .354 with the Buffalo Feds. the Reds they were competing for the In Jersey his methods of dealing: Joining League Ohio In line National League circuit when the Reds of the National championship of the State of with those who question his supremacy, club In 1916, Hal hit .339 and Joined the 1917 and were running up a deficit of player wae nobody If he landed un the selection of a sacrificial offering; be- a a league. He was under .300 In 1917, but S430.ll for tho National Commission. der1 .300. 1895, the National League hit .301 In 1918, the year he was ac- then took two fall out of Lee comes a matter of much Importance. In .Bller had more men above .375 than It had cused of not giving Cincinnati his best Fohl's crew, limiting them to a batting While numerous boxers have enthu- efforts; average of .169. He was right on hand siastically announced their eagerness to over .300 last season. many Veach, the new member to balldom's at the psychological momentUo end the Itntcr the ring with the man who mal- How men would the select'battlng class, hit .342 In 1912, .313 eerles. treated Wlllard at Toledb. there Is a average fan say have hit .300 or better only In 1916, 306 In 1916, .319 in 1917 and Eller's work of 1919 against the Sox 'exposition on the part of devotees of at least five years? There are a ,362 In 1919. was In fafct practically a duplicate of ring events to lnqulro of the candidates dozen such men In baseball of 1917 against Is his labors the Indians. whether, after tho combat, they wsmld Bobby Veach, the Tiger slugger. the to- - Cleve-lander- s, batting Hod, Introducing himself the prefer to be sent homo or to a hospital. twelfth. He got Into this select didn't fan six men In a row In fact, the belief Is quite general class by hitting .352 laBt season. The THOROUGHBREDS TO or declare tho plate forbidden territory, that no matter who draws the assign- list also Includes Hal Chase, whose .300 but he did pitch the game that put his ment he will be led as a lamb to the average In the Federal League, makes team within one of the title and then slaughter. It possible to Include him In this select BE SHOWN IN GARDEN pitched the game that gave the Reds the Fulton, Meehan, Levlnsky, Brennan society. title after the Indians, their backs to the rrf several others have volunteered to Of tho twelve players, seven Cobb, wall, had fought their way to victory go Into the ring with the Knockout Jackson, Collins, Speaker, Baker, Mc-In- against Fred Toney and Pete Schneider. King, ana cacn naa caiii-ubbu- jiuuiivijr and Veach are American Leaguers, The Reds two years ago defeated the the opinion that tie would be returned four Sherry Magee, Daubert Wheat Oldest Breed of Eqnincs to Indians In tho first two struggles for Doyle are Leaguers ; while the tie lctor. and National " Ohio championship and then made It .300 averages be- Chase divided fivo Play Prominent Part at three In a row nt Cleveland on Sun- Compliment to Fulton. tween the American, Federal and Nat- day, Oct. 7, with on leagues. Show Eller the tee. If Fulton reasonably could accept as an ional National Cleveland then obtained six hits and compliment Mact&aya ot- Ty Cobb, of tho Tigers, of course, two runs. Chicago gathered three swats Implied Dave In $30,000 purse to Dempsey for leads present day players batting over and no counters In Its first game against ter of a .300. Cobb .has hit over .300 for four- n eight round contest with the Plast- Prominence will be given to the thor- Hod on Monday, Oct 6, 1919 doubt proposal, as teen (successive seasons4n twelve of Thero was a big difference In the erer. Without this led League In oughbred, the oldest breed of equine In contrasted with the 125.000 offer for a which he the American size of the turnouts that watched Eller $20,000 for a batting. Ten of these averages are .370 the world, at the National Horse Show pitch gamo tattle with Meehan and Tyrus his first of the Ohio series meeting with Levlnsky, represents the or better, and twice has soared which will be held In Madison Square in 1917 and tho world's series of this . i , 4 Vi cesDCC- - above the .400 mark, the acme every n n f" the Garden from November 17 to 21 for the year. The receipts Cleveland were CBUlliaicr v. nmmntr'nf - batsman strives for. at the attractiveness at the box office' of benefit of the Salvation Army. They $470.67, at Chicago 397,839. opponents the three proposed oi uie Fonr American Leagners, will be shown to halter, as saddle horses, Toney Opener. holder. Based on performances In Wlns title Cobb, polo the ring against Dempsey, Meehan should Only four American Leaguers, as hunters end Jumpers and as Fred Toney copped tho first combat t...... ih. nrofArpnre. for he has stayed Farrell, Lajole and Jackson, have gone mounts. The new class tor thoroughbred 11 to 2. and ho was picked by Christy above .400 and no National League bat- the limit of three four round bouts with mares that have produced a foal, to be Mathewson to make it four In a row over -- champion, and In the last encounter ter has hit .400 since 1897, when Willie the tribe. However, the big Tennessean the Keeler, then with the Baltimore Orioles, Judged for conformation and quality, received the decision of the referee on however, did not fill. was not In form on Monday, October 8, hit .432. Cobb's .400 averages are .420 1917, and Ed Klepfer, the Cleveland In 1911 and .410 In 1912. The only The thoroughbred strain Improves Onthls showing Meehan Is Justified every other breed with which It Is pitcher, was. As a result ,Uio Indians . , MAiAMorl nn next OD- - American League average than 8 0. - k. the better crossed and never works deterioration. won, to ' the Cobb's was made by Larry Lajolo In Vonent of the title holder, because For that reason first consideration will Pete Schneider, successful in tils first Inference Is strong that he would be apt 1901, when In the first year of the time out, 2 to 1, In thirteen Innings, got hn chamnlon American League's expansion to the be given to appearance In the ring and than to ability to Improving the breed of the pitching assignment from Chlrsty knocked out In eighteen of tho best bouts ever seen In this city. East he hit .422. on Tuesday, 9, Fulton, who was leading horses for general use. Racing per- Mathewson October and seconds, and Levlnsky. who was bat- Lewis and Stecher arc the rivals Joe Jackson of the Whtto Sox and Stanley Covleskle beat America's great- of Earl Caddock, holder of the Amer- of the Clevelnnd Indians formances will not count tered down In three rounds. The stallion class has five entries. est fungolst, 0 to 3. Nevertheless, MacKay, who Is a ican wrestling championship, aro tied for second place with ten ave- Eller ended the world's series of 1919 style, rages over .300 Speaker They are: Mrs. F. J. Van der Beck's Shrewd studefit of pugilistic drawing and the result oi the the mark. had on Thursday, October 9( by beating favorite over bout should determine the next opponent a chance to make It eleven last season, imported bay, Allumeur, by Sir Mcddlar, power, makes Fulton the Mackay In ; Claude Williams for thc second time, and may been Influ- -' of the tltleholdet. Lewis's record Is bet- but he fell under .300 for the first time bred by Clarence H. France ho the others. He have J. Macy Wlllet's Uncas Chief; Mrs. W. ended the Ohio series of 1917 on enced by the belief held In some quar- ter than Stecher's, for the scissors ex- since becoming a major league regular. Wednesday, October 10, by conquering might do better In a pert was decisively beaten by Caddock. Already one hears foolish tales that Austin Wodsworth's Undo George, ters that Fulton Harry W. Knight's Elllsdalo and Oyama, Jim Bagby for the second time. The second bout with Dempsey, especially while the Strangler lost on points at Tfls's new managerial duties affected Indians then got one and five wal- of fact taat the Mlnnesotan the end of two hours and thirty minutes his batting, but Speaker was only hitting a Commando horso bred by James R. lops. up In view the Keene, by Troop K New York Bagby had been rested for the Jias had the benefit of Tom O'Rourkes of desperate work on the mat. Caddock around .260 last season when he suc- entered of Cincinnati games by Lee Fohl, but hu handling. gave hlra'tho ceeded Leo Fohl as the Cleveland chief. State troops. Uncas Chief, Uncle George admits that Lewis hardest In got It in the neck both times he pitched. Fulton a Good uoxcr. battle of his career. Jackson Is one of the few players and Allumeur are albo entered the The Indians hit .169 against Eller, the strongest baseball ever produced who has been class for stallions suitable as the sire It is conceded on all sides that Fulton Lewis unquestionably Is the thoroughbred Sox .191. His average against both Is a man engaged in the wrestling game and able to hit .300 from the time he broke of racehorses. teams was .180. They 133 Is a wonderful good boxer, that he Into the majors. Cobb only have batted mitt and his head lock has brought many an ex- Even hit times, made eight runs and twenty-fou- r destructive hitter with either .237 In thirty-seve- n games year Dosen In Saddle Class. an Imposing speci- ponent to grief. MISS TRACY NAMED the first hits (fifteen singles, five doubles, three that physically he U he broke into the American League. twelve In class men. The only drawback that can be Stecher Is a clever wrestler, who de- There are entries the triples and one homer), drawn six brought up Is a lack of spirit pends on his body scissors as a means for thoroughbred saddle horses. They passes and been fanned twenty-fou-r fighting Jnrkann Made Fine Start. hnve pedigrees and are registered In Fulton did not first show this disap- of winning, but in late contests he has AS SHEPHERD JUDGE times. pointing trait at Harrison. He ex- not had much success In applying It. Jarkson took part In a few games the stud book. Scores of other horses Tris Speaker, who now Is on a fishing hibited a lack of grit in his encoun- If neither gains a fall In the time with the Athletics In 1908 and 1909, but which will figure In the ring will be half and hunting trip In Cadana, batted .671 ters with Carl Morris ar.d with other limit of two hours and thirty minutes not enough to get In the batting averages or three-quart- breds. Among the against Eller; Elmer Smith, .500. boxers, and It Is to be feared that a Iteferee Bothner will give the decision He joined the In the dozen thoroughbreds nominated are George Weaver, .444 ; Eddie Collins anil boxer with that defect is nopeiess. to the contestant who has done the Noted Fancier "Will Officiate fall of 1910 and hit .387 In twenty Harvey 6. Ladew'a Leading Lady, which Ray Schalk, .333 ; Joe Harris, .250; Joo Fighting spirit cannot be Injected Into most aggressive work. games, topping Cobb. Ty, of course, was was raced last winter In Cuba; Miss Jackson, .222 ; , Jack Gra-re- y a boxer, and no amount of wise counsel Wrestling has a large clientele at Specialty Show at the batting champion, Inasmuch as he Belle W, Baruch's Kershaw, George H. and Chick Gandll. .143; Ray Chap tnd advice can change Fulton from a this city and If the bout night played all season. Ever since Jackson Chlpchase's Ben Dahv and Mlsa Janice man and Harry Lelbold, .125, and a timid boxer to a man capable of giving gives satisfaction others to follow will Mincola. has had ambitions to beat Cobb out, but Llggett's Kitty Quince and Shrovetide. whole raft of athletes, nothing at all. the champion a hard battle. Combatlve-nes- s reap the benefit Ty always has been able to keep the The class for thoroughbred hunters How the American Loaguers fared Is an Inherent quality, and a boxer jump on nim. ihas drawn twenty entries. The pure against Eller In game3 for the Ohio and who begins his career without the bull- Miss Anne Tracy, one of the most In 1911, Jackson's first complete year blooded stock Is steadily Increasing In world's champion hips follows: In In the majors, ! dog spirit so necessary to Buccess Tendler Exonerated. famous Shepherd dog fanciers In the he hit .408 and forced favor with American riders to hounds. In any length Cobb to go .420 to . Told Detroit. the ring Is not apt to last A majority of the ringsiders at the country, has been selected aa judge for beat him. This is for no other horse can so well stand time, the only case on record where a young- - j present pace country Tris Speaker. .571 Three tingles and one cf Tendler-Noy- e bout In Denver disagree the specialty of the Shep- the fast across Steve O'Donnell, who was one of the annual show ster Just breaking Into baseball has up to triple In seven at bats Walked onne. with the decision of the refree In dis- herd Dog Club of America which will hit and fence perfectly the last ounce Elmer Smith. .600 Two singles In lour ever drew on a over .400 In his first real reason. The half-bre- cleverest boxers that qualifying the Quaker for alleged foul be held grounds of Its endurance. The d and at bats. glove should have at the Mincola fair next season Joo hit .395 and forced Cobb 44 and who on his form In the third round. The dissenters on November 22. even the as soon as George weaver. .4 Two ilngles. one n. tut a ii.irklv eliminated , up to .410. they begin to tire bungle their fences. double and one triplo In nine at bate declare the blow that brought Noye The show promlsoa to be the largest once. by simply because Steve. It Is reasonable to say that the re Lieut-Co- l. - fanned Peter Maher down was In the pit of the stomach and and most successful ever held In this Herbert C. Cox of Ennls- Eddie Collins. .383 Two singles and one was entirely lacking in ine ugiiuut. markable work of this youngster. Jack- claro Farm, en- entirely fair. vicinity. More than 11,600 has been son, Oakvllle, Canada, has double In nine at bats Fanned once. spirit Fulton when opposed by a man away was the direct cause of Cobb's two tered five thoroughbred hunters, among Hay Schalk. .333 Two singles In six at Noye, who ran from Tendler donated by members and friends of the .400 averages. was this bats. once. who Is not apt to hurt the Plasterer from the was caught In Tendler'a among It Carolina them being Indian. Arrow, a champion Fanned iVi.a .IU f, r l win...... nlllrVlV.. first club. This sum will be divided youngster who furnished Cobb with the Joe Harris. .260 One single ana one .'6' 10 niui willlUGlinn.4..A (.,.', corner He doubled up when he paw fifteen D0 prize, 130 at the recent Rochester horse show. double In eight at bats. Fanned once. but as soon opponent gets over .classes, for first competition to enable him to soar to bat- as his the powerful left hook of Tendler aimed $20 Other nominators are Isaac II. Clothier, Joe Jackson. .3z: una aouDie ana one s Fred wilts. for second and for third. ting heights which were unknown to the In hard punch Ferocious straight for his stomach and yelled as present Jr., wtth tho Pennsylvania hunter nine at bats. For that reason there Is reason for generation of fans. champion, Elr Ltnsln : Miss Constance Terry Turner, .143 One double In seven the blow landed. He dropped limply slipped at bats. Fanned once. the belief that Fulton, despite the coach- ropes. Jackson to .301 in 1917, the Vauclain enters Arblte : Miss Llda from the ring from, between the remember an Instance In the American lowest he has ever hit In any league, but , .148 One single In seven ing of O'Rourke, would not last much A near riot followed and the ring quick- Louise Fleltmann, Golden Duck : Thomas at bats. Walked once. uempsey kennel world of such liberal prize he was back to .354 and .350 respectively Gamlll, .143 triple seven longer In another bout witn ly filled with excited bettors who had money J. Regan, Pretender, a bay Chick One In than he did being offered at a specialty show. in 1918 and 1919. by Hamburg Salllo of at bats. Fanned once. at Harrison. money that Noye would not stay the quest tho prizes dogs will come Navarre, bred by Harry Irflbold. .125 Onn single tn tght In of H. Whitney: D. limit Phil Glassman was knocked over from all parts of this country and Can- Speaker .220 In 1008. f. Charles Lanier, at bats. Fanned twice, walked once, Attractive Bouts In Nevrnrlr. policeman weigh- nit Down hy Yankee Lady Tarentella, Itay Chapman, ,123 One single In eight the ropes br a surly ada. Wilbur Purcell.- - the manager, said East ing over 260 pounds in the controversy Like Cobb, Speaker didn't make much bred by John E. Madden and winner of at bats. Fanned three times. Admirers of vlcorous Bport will have yesterday that he expects more than of a batting start when he joined Byrd Lynn, .000 One at bat. a spread that followed. first the lightweight hunter championship .000 profusion of entertainments S00 dogs. Entries for the exhibition Boston. He hit .220 In his first fall year, Eddie Murphy. One at bat. Fanned beforethem this week. The first offer The club physician was called to the on Mr. last while Miss Carol Smith of once, hit once. close November ni with Purcell with the Red Sox, 1908, when he suc- Oakvllle, Ontario, one Roy Wilkinson, .000 One bat. lng will be a wrestling contest at Madl ring and made a minute examination 20 and of the best at Fanned no tho at Broadway. ceeded Gabby Cravath. present Phila- riders in the Dominion across country, once. son Square Garden night of Noye and found marks that .JOO blow had been struck .low. delphia manager. In the outfield. Cravath enters Ondremon. Josh millngs, One nt bat, two of the ablest catch as catch didn't show much In Boston. But begin- Herman De llerry, .000 One at bat. can experts In .the world. These are A big entry already has been received Fanned once. Boxing; Scandal In London, for the annual show of the Newark ning with 1909 Speaker hit over .300 for To Oppose Arabian. t Jim Bagby, .000 One at bat. Joe Stecher and Strangler Lewis, both years, l .000 Kennel Club which will be held on Nov. ten successive mtll he fell last Thoroughbreds will opposed ni Wambsganss, One at bat In the first flight of grappling athletes. The National Sporting Club of London He reached his highest point In be by Tlill James, .000 Two at bats. Fanned de- 15. More than 200 dogs have been en Arabians, British polo-bre- d Having viewed this combat the has a scandal on Its hands. Joe Conn, Jeason. he .386 and stock, and nee. in- SWARTHMORE TRIUMPHS. tered and It Is expected that twice this hit snatched the by many half-bree- In Uie Clauds Williams, .000 Two at bats. votees of the ring and mat are then the English featherweight' champion, PRINCETON HARRIERS batting championship from Cobb. was classes for vited to go over to Newark on the fol- met a boxer named Rossi In a title bout number will be on hand to compete In It polo mounts, to b shown with mallet Fanned twice. tho different classes. the only time Ty has been beaten out and In Fred Coumbe, .000 Four at bats. lowing night and witness four eight and at the end of the seventeenth round Noses Ont Urslnan In Keen Content. VANQUISH YALE TEAM for the American League batting crown ball and tested the ring for Fanned once. great- The signal triumph of discovery, tho handlness. Tho lightweight class .000 round bouts between some of the Referee Douglass stopped the affair 13 to IS. since 1907. has ten Hobby Iloth, Five at bats. Fanned est boxers In The contestants Contest" on the ground bulldog which Elbrtdge Gerry Snow, Jr.. entries, one being A. Smith Cochrane's twice. America. and called It "no Next after Jackson comes Eddie Col- Steven O'Neill, .000 Five at bats. are paired In this manner: tho men were not boxing on their Special Despatch to Tns Sox. Swede First Home in Dual uncovered at the Hudson county show In fleet little thoroughbred. Dove of Peace. that - Saturday, has caused lins, the clever little captain of the Chi- Walked once. Johnny Dundee, the perpetual motion merits. They will be tried by the board Swarthmoue, Pa., Nov. 1. Swr.rth- Chase Score, 19 to 41. Hobokcn last a Thore are eight entries In the heavy Joe Evans. .000 Six at bats. - lot of discussion among the fanciers of cago White 8ox, who hit better than .300 weight division, among boxer, will meet Tommy Tuohey, the of boxing control, and as Alf Mansfield moro team beat Ursinus 13 to 12. for nine years. BJdle drew eight .300 them Peter meat In jersey. suspended for three years the breed. Experts who saw the dog Hauck, Jr. s, thoroughbred Mynora. win combative lightweight recently was Carter's goal from the second Hwath-mor- e Epcctalpefpnteh fo Tas Sox. averages In a row, starting with 1909, Augie-Ratne- mid- brand him as one of the finest specimens ner year, D. Iglehart's a contendor for the for striking a foul blow tjonn ana iiossi Nov. 1. years. last and Stewart d, Princeton, The Princeton country. but dropped out two Last year dleweight title, will box Soldier Bart-fiel- are tremming in tneir ooois, touchdown in the first quarter was ever exhibited In this He Is thoroughbred Guaynlta, bred In South doubtless cross-countr- y he again was back with the ..300 boys. eye on the titles of tho winning point After tho first period runners defeated Vale an Importation which arrived here only Amerloa. who has his ago. Snow other His best average was .365 In 1911. three classes and Is eager to fight the Farmer Jim Jeffries Is up to date In the Swathmore team was unable to hero tills afternoon. 19 to 41. The first a few weeks Mr. and First Prizes In the two new doIo Don't Suffer competent Judges say he Is faultless and Stuffy Mclnnls of the Red Sox, Zack I holders. he ships his prize calves to market score, It measured tho visitors' goal threo men to finish were Orange classes are 1100 cups given by John E. that but and he will give a good account of Wheat of the Dodgers and Jake Dau- nrj.A l Joe Benjamin, a California light- by airplane. James was up In the air line several times. Dlack harriers, Swede winning easily In that dt.uuoii. uiw vkuwi,.1... null Cecil cullies. himself at the Westminster. bert of the Reds are next with seven po- weight wtth a good reputation, will be a bit himself at Reno some years ago. Yarnall, who played at halfback, made 27 minutes 45 seconds, Is Is for stallions for producing polo Longer and which .300 averages apiece. The unofficial opposed by Joe 'Welling, who Is noted numerous trips with tho ball both around Effort time for the five and a mile nies.' This field will Include Horace hitting, organized half averages for 1919 put Mclnnls at .298 Havemeyers Christopher for aggressiveness and, hard and n.up.ilMUV tjf'Rnrlnritj rw.ntlv- ends and thiough the line. Ho scored tourse. It was the first time In Prince- .297, It Is possible Columbus, bred U Tt K and Wheat tit and Sample Pncknge of tbet Famoaa Benny sensation - n luiTlnv fl itt It .11,.-- -- cross-count- Sir John Barker's great polo stud Valger, who created a a pass mo f i - the second Garnet touchdown on a pass ton's history that the COLUMBIA CUBS the official averages will put both of at in Pyramid Pile Novr by Aus- .4 ttiA a that England. Treatment stopping Jimmy Hill, the noted tt nnhnlnr entertainment from Carter, receiving the ball on i)rsl-nus'- Tigers have beaten Yalo over the Prince- these players over the .300 line and In Oirerrd Free to 1'roie What tralian feather. In Jig time, will face The promoter failed to get his hat back. 10 yard line. The lineup: , ton course. Tho race was run off under BEAT ST. PAUL'S averages In the other new class, for mares Will Do for You. Johnny lightweight crease their .300 to eight adapted breeding polo mounts, It Drummle, the chamr Bwarthmore (lt).V Urlnus(12). poor weather conditions, a driving rain Like his former teammate of tho Attv for there pion of New Jersey. are twenty-on- e entries.. They Include Pyramid Pile Treatment rives COLBY IS STAMPED; . Clancy kft end Helfrlrh nnrt wind making the course heavy and Blue White Eleven Scores letlcs Mclnnls has slumped In batting quick relief from itching, bleeding It would be a difficult matter to ar- ' Lirkln TTtft tackU Grossman muddy. and Stuffy Mrs. Van der Beck s thoroughbred Nell piles, ana range pro- Valentine Xrftt guard ShaRtr the last few seasona hit over ; or protruding hemorrhoids a more attractive boxing The start was made at 4 o'clock from 14 to 0 Victory. Inclusive, giving Cochrane, by Flllgratne Tillle. Herr five ! gramme by Maine. Eleven, Cornell Centra Walton .300 from 1910 to 1916 W. than the above and there should Overwhelmed Conahy night ruard Hoke theOIcCormlck field house. Threo Prince- a run of six straight. He dropped Arabians, entered by R. Brown, and be him pole-br-ed Imported mares, a bumper house. 25 to O. MoGlnley.... Right tacklo Wood ton runners got off in a bunch, Cap. The Columbia freshmen football team to .295 in 1916, but was back with the four A Smith Ogden night end Moser Foresman, Rogers and Swede leading eleven Cochrane's Orthabolla and Biddy and VJLT.T, Me., Nov, 1. The Uni- elga Quarterback Richards defeated the St PauKtvSrhool at ,300 boys In 1917. He again was under Tuohey Will Rattle. Water the rest of the men. Swede set a hard City, L. I., yesterday by 14 to 0. H, P. Whitney's Siren and Royal Dia- versity of Maine used the forward pass Whits Left halfback Light Garden .300 In lMs and during tho past season Those Tarnall Right halfback Brooke pace through the first mile and gained The Blue and White made tine use of .298. mond. Royal Diamond won the cham- who saw the spectacular battle successfully y and defeated Colby, he finished with pion cup Meadow between Tuohey and Willie Jackson will Carter Fullback Schwartz an parly lead the forward pass. Both of th.e New at,the 'Brook show of 25 to 0. Maine and Bowdoin have now 0 0 0 1 National Pony Society. have no doubt that the Paterson puncher Swarthmore 13 Swode, who Is a former Interscholastlo York collegians' touchdowns camo as the Wheat First Hit .HOO In 100ft. the Polo won. two games each and lost none In Urslnu 0 S 0 12 fin- All the polo classes will be Judged by lll keep the Italian bus7 from start to c.mmplon at the two mile distance, result of this play. compiled his first .300 average the State intercollegiate series. They Touchdowns Gelgs, Trnall, X,lKht, Rich- ished strongly. He led Rogers game In Wheat Richard Williams, Jr., of Mendham, finish. Dundee should win on points. Goals at the The first score of the contest In 1908 and then failed to .300 again meet at Orono next Saturday to de ards. from touchdownsCarter. sum-mar- hit N. J., who Is tho Meadow Bartfleld Is one of the roughest per will Earp Carter, Uawells finish by about fifty yards. The the onenlug period following a long for a member of clde the championship. Substitutions for until 1912, when he hit .306. In 1913 he Brook Club and tho son of the president formers In the roped square ond Ilatner for Schwarts, Voaburg for Helfrlch, Helf. ward pass, Burtt to Pyson. This gain was Just over the line, .301, and In 1914 rlcn ror etRurrer. Jtereree air. .Morcett, Swede, Princeton, first : Rogers, Prince- ball on the Long Islanders' 30 of the Westminster Kennel Club and the wui need all his cleverness to avoia me Tyler, placed the he hit .319. He fell out again in 1915, rushes and heavy swings of the Soldier. PURDUE ELEVEN IN FIIONT. Trlnceton. Umplr Mr. Princeton, ton, second ; Foresman, Princeton, third yard line, from where Burtt went over averages New York Racquet and Tennis Club. Head linesman Mr. uurien. Temple, Crosby, Yale, Hllils, but clustered three more .300 This should bs a close bout, with Hatrier LArATETTi, Ind., Nov. 1. Out- Tim of periods 12 minutes. fourth; Yale, fifth; for a touchdown. Blaundell kicked the In 1916, 1917 and 1918. In the last year probably getting the decision by a shade. weighed by twenty-fiv- e pounds to the Pentlold, Princeton, sixth; McCulloch, coal. .335 led the National League Pyramid Certainly nnd Works! Princeton, seventh ; Dudley, Yale, ; he hit and IiEIIIGTf SOCCER DATES. la Fine Joe Benjamin will have his work cut man Purdue triumpnea over me xviicni SEEK XIILIj AND DA.I.FJ TITLE. eighth Morris accounted for tho New York- at bat. Like Mclnnl3 Wheat failed to Such Wonders So Quickly. At-gle-s y. 13 to 7. The Purdue Selm, Princeton, ninth; Martin, Yale, ers next score In the third period. Special Despatch to Tas .cut for him by Joe Welling. It wilt bo ran Bptciat Dttpatch to Toa 6dn, hit .300 In 1919 by a few points, 3c. in the privacy the In squad scored touchdowns In the first tenth. Time, 27:45. Blaundell again kicked the goal. .300 Bethlehem, Pa., Nov. 1. So such rectal troubles, first time since his arrival the Wiluxmbtown, Mass., Nov. 1, Al- v Jake Daubert Wheat's former South of your homo. 60 cents a box at all East that the Callfornlan has met so and second periods, mainly through running mate In Brooklyn, Is another many candidates have come out for the druggists. Take no substitute. A classy a man aa Welling, and If Benja- their hard driving at the Aggies' line. though the enowing of the Williams HILL SCHOOL WINS. who no longer could keep up the ,300 soccer team that two teams have been single box often relieves. Free sam- min wins It will mean his entry Into The Michigan team scored when they cross-countr- y team at the Invitation Pottstown, Pa., Nov. 1. By the score NEW TRINITY ELEVEN. pace laBt season. His record Is some- formed and both are entered In the Blue ple for Trial mailed In plain wrap- the inner of select lightweight blocked a punt bade oi tne goal ana meeting of IS to 7 Hill School won the annual pedal Despatch to Thc Sc.v, thing like that of Mclnnls. He hit .300 Mountain Soccer League. In this league per, if you eend coupon below. circles in Syracuse a week ago hardly ' In . society, t fell on the ball . expectations football same from Lawrenccvllle Acad- IlARTfbRD, Conn., Nov. 1. When the from 1911 to 1916 Inclusive, fell out In the men will get valuable experience reached confidence exists preparation for the Intercollegiate con- Johnny Drummle Is a very clever here that the Purple harrlerswlll makfe emy Funk of Lawrencevllle Trinity College squad faces the New 1917 and was back In 1918, only to FREE SAMPLE COUPON boxer, MIDDLEBURY. HEATS SOnWITp caused among slump again In 1919, when he was a tests. Lehigh's schedule calls for these DRUG COMPANY, although not a heavy hitter, and off with the New England championship consternation the Hill York University team on Tuesday It will games: PYRAMID as Valger It looks MtDDLEBUitV, Nov. 1. Mlddlebury on 15. Capt tho boys when In receiving the klckoft nt entirely new organization. So member of a championship club. Dau- 673 Pyramid Bldg., UsrsbtU, Mich. can both box .and hit Vt. November Brown of b an Nov. 8 Penn State, In State College. as though he would be returned the defeated Norwlth university 3 Williams team led for the first threo the opening of the game he dashed the many of the old men are In the hospital bert led the National League In batting Kindly sesd me free sample of ' as Syracuse collapsed entire length the field touch- Is nothing In 1913 and 1914. Nov. 9 Haverford, In Haverford. Pyramid Pile TtMtmiat.ln plain wrapper. winner. to 0, thus displacing her ancient rival miles at but at the of for a or onMhe sick list that there 6 Pennsylvania, gates stadhim, only down. Both of Hill's touchdowns came (o to build up new team. Frank Baker, now of the Yankees, Dec contender for the cnampionsnip or ver of the a few hundred be done but a Dec, 10 Swarthmore, In South Beth- Name...... mont A drop kick by Parker In the yards from the finish. His Inability to In the second half after a series of hard Long signal drills and stiff line prac- landed over .300 six times, though only ' Wrestling; .Hatch In Garden Mlddlebury. tape plunges. Funk, held dally during one of those averages was compiled lehem. Street third quarter won for cross the prevented the Purple line Touchdowns tice have been the Dec renn State, In South Bethle Regarding wrestling contest, The State championship now rests be from getting a higher ranking than llci'tley 2. GoalH from touchdowns weelc and first class kickers have been since he entered the employ of Ruppert It City 8tat the the hit .30S"tn 1909, hem. cil&s oi the grapplers should Insure one tween Mlddlebury ana Vermont Lthth. Chllds and Bentley. niada out of Lynch and Bruce, and Huston. Frar