
HuoOïns Arrives in Town To-day to Take Cnarge of Yankees Club frescent Grantland Rice Cochran Routs THE GULL, ice yacht owned Columbia Club Defeats ! by Robert S. Johnston, No Chance for Browns Second Lieutenant which won two ten-mile Squash Players Brown in Cue races on the North Shrewsbury In National Guard Yale at River yesterday. She captured To Secure Have Busy Day Tilt for Fund Players Squash the first event by five seconds Peckinpaugh from and the second by ten seconds, Washington Losers Put Up a Hard Struggle and Win Two of Five her best time being; 26 minutes Huggins Considers Yankee Shortstop Too Valuable a Victor in Class C yesterday Billiard 15 seconds. ;ypi°t BULLETINEDin the list of War De¬ Young Wonder Matches.Princeton Club Unable to Get Team Player to Exchange for Del Pratt.Secretary Foster Mails Series and Dangler Wins partment promotions to com¬ Averages 1 00.Gershal Together and Forfeits to Crescent A. C. in Class B missions in the Natonal Army, Too Much for Foss 1918 Contracts to Champions of National League I Officers' Reserve Corps and National Ciard of the By A. C. Cavagnaro W. Macbeth tennis courts of the Crea- LJnited Welker Cochran, tho bill¬ By J. -he»quash youthful The Columbia Club team Miller of the Yankees, set out from Cincinnati : Club were thronged yes- States was the name of Grant- iard sensation, averaged 100 in defeat¬ experienced greater difficulty than antici¬ Manager Huggins, »tAthl pated in last to take a residence in New York and the '/¦8VVV:t''. club members who were en- land Rice, poet and philos¬ ing .Morris D. Brown, former Class 11 (¡owning the Yale Club, the 1917 champions, in, the night up bejnn shaping amateur opening of a pennant contender from the wreck that was left on the .flg ¡. uual handicap play whose famous champion, in an 18.2 bnlkline matches of the Class B team squash tennis Metropolitan Association depart- n three .-lasses. The opher, "Sport- billiard match for the Billiard Ambu¬ are of Smiling Bill Donovan. ¡ornaments championship tournament played on the Yale in clin ¦' .>'>' players was light" contributions for the lance- Fund at Daly's Academy last Club courts yesterday. Colonel of the New York Americans, was ^reis Columbia won Ruppert, president ap- thai the winners ..;" Class 11 night. The score was 200 to S. by three matches to two. of move eastward wire late afternoon. ! rapid last several years have a run prised Muggins's by yesterday e' v r>- di termined. bright¬ Morris opened the game with (_'|a<^ of s while Cochran missed on Princeton was also scheduled to open the series As the diminutive manager made no reference to any other matter it gjdie P. Cvpiot, one of the club's all- ened the sporting pages of carroms, against the Crescent won the Class his first chance. On bis second try Athletic Club on the hitter's is safe to assume he was unsuccessful in his second visit to St. Louis, nd ,- il C The Tribune. "The Morris failed to count, whereupon Brooklyn courts, but the Tiger club allowed ItjM b\ defeating Murray \ einen m Sport- Cochran, masterful nursing the meeting to go default which had for its avowed intention the :;eparatincr of Del Pratt from round match, 15 6, 15 10. through by when it found it was unable to muster a ü final light" appears now tri-weekly and brilliant niasse shots, ran out his team the Browns. .; ;,-, 1 lor allowed his op- 200 of five players. d it was instead of in points. Phil Ball, the Mound ^.c'r; thr only daily thes<* col¬ In the other game played William On the Columbia team are three City piulan-'' -.-. .' ¡encc that en- was ; expi umns. Gershal, the Columbia student, sur¬ members who have earned thropist, rather keen on a irado oí equal worth to this city. On la." j him ti vn his rival. with a high ¡vjth New prised the spectators victory brackets in the York, it appears, lie wished season's form wa. r Shows Mr. over William 1'. the veteran. The tournament and by Roger Peckinpaugh Panel« Aggressiveness Rice, who enlisted as Foss, ,o swap a toothpick for a lumber yard. the most valuable short th<- :; score was 150 tu 1 II. It was a close many of the squash players the Blue fielder of H.W. D ii P1¦<¦¦ aces) captured a with For Pratt, he asked Pcck- if not baseball. :s private the 1 1 5th Field struggle from the opening break, with and White is looked only Roger American League, in ', (-|aSa from 11. Y. Trciss with upon as a Class Urban illy of 15 '-'. 1' 4, Gershal counting frequently A it inpaugh, Shocker, Frit:'. Maisei Certainly he had no superiors. plus ¿see! Artillery, stationed at Camp double runs. aggregation. Therefore was a ..-. .. mil some cash. His estimation of the Of course. plaj proved ¡i surprise indeed when Yale won two Hoggins always has beea .'. Sevier, Foss averaged 5 9-27 and had high .... S. with¬ ralue of mu(h especially Greenville, C., run while liest elïort one these three Yankees is in no sweet on Doc Lava::, and the original ,-.., v i 'I reiss of 33, Gershal's matches, defeat being handed to third vainly in a few won ser¬ was a 22 ami his average 5 15-20. A. f. »vise flattering to any of them. Last deal, which would have Lava:.. ,'.., to ki ice with his opponent. days his Scott, the Columbia captain. The brought mid-summer Ball would have sold Pratt Pratt and Sisler here at the sacrifie ,-; thi Dangler overcame geant's stripes. he Columbia team only won when R. I.. ,i hereafter col- Yesterday Victor for ¡?2."«,000 cash. of several ' j hsndii Clarke Peckinpaugh and pitcher tie was Easy Strcbcigh, Donald McClave and Harold lCte(l his opposition. commissioned second tnfielders and had a t". r< cratch1 has reached In Pocket Billiards Kcllock. the three last men to oppose Huggins Says Nay outfielders, greai ^ lieutenant in the Yale deal of merit on both s:«ies. Lavan i-. .hVfinal round in the C! .-. A tourney National Clark«: another opponents, captured their respec¬ Huggins, very wisely, let it be known t\',h tieorge displayed tive a with his whole carecí. WUg] ium ol defaults. Guard of the United States brilliant game in decisively defeating matches. that Peckinpaugh would not be consid¬ youngster -.., 'toi <-. - « ere over I Joseph Conrannon in a match of the Lack of ered in of practically, before him. Peck iwts seen champion, and A. and to with the billiard cham¬ Stamina any sort deal; at ¡east, in service. He is at the if not |jnes Doig assigned duty New York State pocket none long crest, ... mosl Bro- Tile elefeat which did not bring a or. the decline. Louis Baxter, jr., prominent 30th Division in at pionship tournament at Lawler of Scott can be attrib¬ shortstop already When St. ayers ision, so I hat Tor- training 'thers' Academy, Brooklyn, last night. uted to his lack of stamina, lie failed parte'd company with Lavan it barre«! reace appe ultimate winner of Sevier. The score was 100 to 22. to the door to Peckinpaugh. Still, it ap¬ Camp The rank dates shots and bank follow the gruelling pace of Cyril Ball will ¦>.' tournai Clarke executed Ion;: T. pears consider nobody else Tho surni folio W3 from the time of enlistment, combinations with the skill of a vet- Cooney, the one-time Yale athletic when Pratt's name is mentioned. uni N F eran. The victor the game with star. Scott the first Gull Is Huggir. s's hurried trip Eastward opened captured frame, Victor may from bj default .lames December 1 6 last. a run of 45 balls and ended mutters 15 bear some significance to a new angle-. \ lia mit us - 1, but during this time Cooney -1 cluster «if 27. That is Mi'Oiim an us ¦'< a» -.- with an unfinished waa scarcely likely, however, a> Satrili ua aces) rli only working up to his best form. the head office be consult¬ 17 \ hi the second anel might easily third games Cooney As Ice ed If trade wer«- i. l.r .¦.: us Yachts by telephone. any big pi smashed the ball around the court hard in prospect would ¦. Mid Huggir.s naturally ¡i wo: li> picked the ball out of the- corners on the mini s .'.. e«) for stay ground, especially in view sensational "gets." Scott invari¬ of the e>f rtniuel II. Ï mixed his cross-court present unsettled conditions | S; ably up game Race in Snow transportation. !IC .¦ IVi with railway placement shots and "kills" to From certain .. «roil; Il \\ on 1917Football the front remarks Colonel Rup bat i u wall, Cooney, playing a pert dropped yesterday it is doubtful '¦ Camp met magnificent position game, this at¬ if tack with coolness and anything short of an opportunity to .., del at« speed. Johnson Craft Two corral Sisler would tempt him t<» renew II u By Louis Lee Arms The Blodget-Kellock meeting was the Captures amicable relations with the business \ I' A not select most bitterly fought of (he series. In office of the St. Louis Browns. For TALTER CAMP, dean of American football critic.-, does the first* Kcllock a lack Ten-Mile Contests on tt ,[>lU .'¦'. game displayed Sisler the n _-¦¦ W of to "vt colonel ¡ght a long an Ail-American team this season. In an explanatory preface ability tha hall over the tell¬ way. if th a */\' tale in his to Huggins tangible it was efforts kee'P the ball at North seh.eine to net thi-- first base "Collier's" says: "Tn ;m editorial conference determined a low and Shrewsbury phenom angle, consequently forfeit- he will be greeted ¡ike a long lost bank that out of deference to conditions prevailing in this country the annual ed many aces on errors.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages1 Page
-
File Size-