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Show FPOnTIXG SECTION. THE HERALD-REPUBLICA- SPORTING SECTION. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1915 N, COACH YOST OF MICHIGAN MAK. IS.THE EXPERT AN ALL- - STAR Team of 91 5 Is Strong and Brilliant in Any Style of Offensive Play V ALIVE WHO CAN rec Try From Score Should Stay in Grid Game i ! TROUNCE HOPPE? All-Ameri- foolish and futile agitation fTHi: I has been renewed for the aboll- - I tion of the kick for goal alter f touchdown. There Is no real reason why the j kick should b abolished. Victory or often hlnpd upon the success Somebody Must Be Found to I defor?at failure of that kick and it I should be left in the football rules. Defeat Famous American I t'hlcaito scored a II to 13 victory I over Wisconsin this year because It I made, both Koals after touchdown. Cue Wizard. I whereas Wisconsin made only one. t Yale scored a nd LehlKh each J touchdown In their but Yale pam, the victor by one point because BACKERS OFFERING DOUGH JJitwaskicked a froal after touchdown J and I,hijrli didn't. Those are only ! two of scores of incidents this year wh.r the kicking of a Koal won a pame. Not So Much Because They !! liarIt wa fought miK-i- y hard for Wisconsin. I Lonish aiul the other teams to los-Want to See Him Beaten, on point, but they had the Jutchance I by same to score that point as Uecause they failed Idid rivals. but They Seek Fun. their I was no fault of the rules it was I the fault of their kickers. Because often hlntres upon a team's I a William F. Hrppe iaM!ltv to score a itoal after touch-- I to enjoin HOW appropriating U the capital down." excitement and uame. Interest isEllmto added the pridlron billiard lnatli.tr that kick would rob the prizes offered for balk-lin- e of much of Its interest. rent is a problem that ts exercising II trame The rule is a pood one. It ought the mental faculties of promoters of I to rtard. NASSAU STRONG 1 can - ir"v jsSjv ' ifS&ieSL FOR EXERCISES Per Cent of Student Body Engaged in Some Seventy-eigh- t , Kind of Athletics. s. BASEBALL MOST POPULAR 842 Princeton Men Take Part, Leaving 321 Not Active in Any Kind of Sport. 1 ! billiard tournaments anl billiard hi- thuslasts In general. The carefully arhandicap, which governed the ranged lt-- 2 tournament held at the Music Hall of the New York Theatre building. November 15 to "1. inclusive. was ruthlessly disarranged by the performances f the champion- TONY DA BARB' PRINCETON. NVJ., Dec.exercise mania seems physical to have taken possession of the student body at Princeton university, according to a report which has just been presented to the trustees' commit4. , BREAKS LOOSE - Revlewlnic the lonmannt. Charles T. Miller, vice president of the, .ttd: company, "Owinjr to the superlative work of Ifoppe and the mediocre playing f the of da Feetaball other fire contestant lntrct wa not Gives Origin aaatalned. When Hoppo played th Game; Athaletes Train ona were larg. Other game. were POt attractive. The handicap, deda Raw Biff. signed to iflva every player an equal chance and produce actual contest, wat made to appear ridiculous This result, nv r:n callow. however, doe not establish that the Is a ball aim' It was invent by foota th. failure, it Ia handicap system only system upon wM'h balk-lin- . He was areata Oanlelll. ",uppp between professional can at areata prand fadder of Giuseppe Ianl-ett- l. Present be sensibly conducted. 2S')t) to this Itari'lS- ap af"W Kv secretary for navy of I'nlta State. fair. t would not give f f rimr He was sailor on flairshlp of Chrecsto-f- o about a tn'irnmnl In whtf-- othr American player would hsv to rom-pet- d". Colum. Wen Chree?tofo Colum leava ship to deescovcr I'nita State h scf.Uftt IIcppo cm even tcrrr... To even consider such a project wntld feela vera stiff In da Ice- - He say. absurd. This proposition Is mihUf 1 we potta have playnta good exof by the record of th ercise; we potta shaka da letr. I fecia arames. The exhibition given by s : o vera ftlffa." i da. r Ien fiirjeppi Yam Put i ton and ton. wer" p tl from disappointing. We did not expect pick up wan nlce-much from M,i5r and to hran because Palm I'.ce h. He I jay, "frees. tal you It wa their first e perlti" In chamwe wat. kitka da cocoanut-t- a . r poa Cochplay thelo eompanv. pionship ran ebtalrd sarn": It Is vera Rood Ram' for Suttn was the only one of th f t v who had a w ar ma da colda feet." From decsa chance f bat llopp. He had that time Idea jn foota ball ,'am' is to kkka th champion was In da coroanutta da bean. , chance poor stroke. The opportunity was preIeesa onntra is strontra for t'ree-- a to It. sented and he wa r.ot four klnda ball basa ball, "What lnirre,d me more than any- foota deefrant Rolfa ball. hall, hlsh ball. In else durins t'i tournament wa foota ball thing da playa pusha da ball the continuous effort rf floppy to land hand-dda foot. ball cue on the ball th risfht of the playa have reserve clauseIaIn foota conhis Second object bill. It seemed to nt da basa ball playa. justa Ilka never ceased making that ef- tract pape that no mean he can klcka da ball if fort. When the balls were wide apart he to klcka da cocoanutta-d- a permitted he endeavored to execute It. When the bean. In foota tall Kam da playa ball wer at one end of the table he klcka da ball: In basa ball pam de Cfnva'lr succeeded. Ills work was playa klrka da ump. la foota ball Is Intelligent, resourceful and construc- Justa so beepr like :heanuttn. tive. Wish the exception of the run of It is made of sklnnaItalian da brown pltr on I3t by Sutton. rte of 11. by Yamada. is Inside tube Ilka inner Justa and the average of Z' by Vhr,m, the outbid; we a car. in Ford have methods of the r.ther player were genKvra "Merlcana boy have amhish to erally deptrtictlve, featured by safety he can play foota hall f Ices of favorable po- ro to colletce tactl s and Ia j?am boys who maka da besta sitions Itd Ifoppe played in similar stvie would he have mad.- our- average kick wecth da colteije profess are plcka of SI I 3 and h new Mah run record by head coacha for foota ball teama. Flvra year wan million people ko to of ball ram'. Ia people in prnnda foota Wh-imanner of player will w have da hestanutta ; da people stan seat t. srt to bat Hopper Thar question In de hiepf-?-eat i eat da peanutta. nn- vetinsc last week I.efore da :ani' bepin. da held coacha at th Iledrkranr bv a n imh. r of gen- taka fcoin ball to de college protlemen who tjke an ncMve Interest in fess. da da profc blow In leetla bil'.lrtr.i. nno ,f th parfv was .. Fer- hole fnDen da ball. Puffa! Quick lika dinand PoKicniniri,-- , who hold the da wink It In filla weeth playnta Kood American finblctn cf International hot air. Deesa maka da ball cood for hundred bounce In wan g;am". chanr lor.hir at t : balk-lin- . Hi coupla In foota ball gam' we have wat you version of th consensu i da Koala. First. We win bmve to (n, an jnti. callWan I for wan team. Othra ligent ynunc man who i in love with poala Isj;oa!a teama If dev have for othra billiard" and crmpreher.d the a to uc-da sam. Ia Kam' ambinh involved in th l to nf kicka da ball twalve inch over same. troalo sticks. If Ia t.all hit deesa k sronla sticks, da Second. Such ;i blow 11h ic rr. t i mmf leetla whltle an' he maka la pliyi Industrious a id pr.Ttlre iil;.:- i.tlv. Wen de boys Tfllrd. He ni ;t Acquire execution tak' wan damore klcka.roun around t'a bail an' snat'ha corresponding to that of Ifoppe H stlcka weeth qulcka da feet Fourth. He must have a good phy- Koala Wen da roiitf!i-ancts call In sique and keep blow hi. leetle whistle da foota physical condition, himIf as Hoppe perfect hall playa knyOek of fa da work Justa fo. like evra man who have to work a to F'iralty. He inst be a temperate in live. Da Hofa Parh of Unlta State try every respect A Hopp ts. to passa da law to stoppa da foota ball Womea'4 Interest In Cam. cam". Dees is baycause da foota ball r eevra at hair cut In his whole wi-Amonp- the many ladt laya Kvra witIn I'nita State fijsht nessed life. the of w v 0orit-fUMrs. ball pam. Da foota ila foota hava for of lM:nf.:,ito ball . Is always locate near ho-a J., who scC'imojini'ft b?i;,nnd the final cinw of the tournament y,r spital. Da foota ball flower Is nlce-Clay has a bit Hard tabic in his home' spaghetti flower. It Is name after where he and his w.fe n.iwChreesta n Karnes fcreata Mm ball pitch almost evf-rItalian boys no like noto play U'hiU v"l"c 'Irs fivv over th wori.U-rfustilett Decs Is baycause erthusd plavinL-sh- e foota ball. had wltnesse.j. Is nerniit In da Kim'. j n. f . Hvra year do Army nlay da Navy for t.T admiration ofH ffp:V pre an.l action. ball champeenshlp Unlta State, foota pcjrance rarrtae. artle and hi cl. r skin and i , ti p;e Da nielli maka da Navy boys graceful aune. h.r to pronou--brlsrht tea an' Julse-a-d- a urape. train on I eefa him ar, eje11'al champto'n a year I bat tran hundred dol on an ia'al D. cf V o t a Point. rsrne. boys train on ItalA few days ss v. MI Mr. riaT an.j ian chlantt wine an cocktail Manhatt." a friend were commcntinsr upo-- i fascinations of the kaim, u was t'; It T TIIHOt till. remarked that the apparent slfpll.-ltIs throueh as a fltrht-r- r. of Nelson r.attllnu It when piajed by experts was partfu-larlof the "Dura hi e Ti.e dtirabi'.lty xr p r fasrinai inc. "That l seem to have forever. The lur.f'' pt!(! attne. was the prompt rf.pn or a otd punch Ionic asto disappeared and Eirii rerson. as a fighter, seems to today, Incidental t the tourrament was an Nelsn be but a skeleton of the Nelson of effort to revv sa comparison between other days. nd Hoppe and Ives On this Hat put up a really wonderful flsrht v Maurice save: In Havana last sprinsr aKalnst Jlmmv subject persons sppreciat- - !..t bow difficult it ii to Fryor. but It seems ftsht burned of the past an.l pres- oMt the last fire. Itthat ccmpir took him ent. To players those who have never "n pll that was left as a relic offrom the davs Ives and Schaefer. It Is lmpoud to when lie wa" kins? of the lightweight pfcture themInas anythlnsr lik theuual division. of my opinion, tf Nchaefrr Hoppe. NJ?oti made a woeful showing? In had been perseverimr and careful with Karas recently asralnst a second t'ltythat respect to practp m and playing and r t e r. and has written the had taken proper care of htmselt phy- word "finis" on thboutcareer of the most his would nver sically lad that ever was a champion. superior seen. And yet Ives was a careful play-f popular er. He was also the mot syternat e m:i: lost. might Itirtvr. ever lived. When in Rood player Is not eenerallv known. Although wa It not form unusual to Fddie Mahan. the Harvard captain and run a hundred or two at for him in ont star was at Georgetown fullback, end of the table and never let a. ball co a short time before he to th otSer end. So perfect was his fir. ally for to ro to execution, soh absolute his control of the That wasdecided in the days when Cambridge Kddte Hen-nlworked like a piece of balls, that former Penn the player, Tor reason that he machinery. not ing the Georgetown team. was coachso entertalnlntr a player a ws either Schaefer or Hoppe. was the olayed 1.2Is only once. The reason we most spectacular of all. because Ives demonstrated have 1.2 Delia-fitHoppe Spectator. to the French plavers that he was their afoppe" playintc dellirhts spectators. master at 1S.L They added the extra He) rarely affects close position play. shot In balk to make the came easier. On the. contrary, he keeps the balls m To check Hoppe's domination of balk-lin- e I believe we will have to rather cpen order an 1 drives frequently back get and accurately. Generally he has con- to 1S.1 and make the xrames shorter occasionalhe is confronted trol, but breaks. thev were for the championship Then his reource-fulr.ei- s than 40n points Instead of f0. by touch Then thero is revealed. He roes after most will be a better chance to handicap difficult ho!s without hesitation, usu- so as to make his defeat possible.him It counts and countinsr until h is hard to calculate what will stop him. ally It has been pertinentreaalns control. keeps The larse anchor space doesn't seem to in difficulty Just bother him. That run of r.S was much that he gets ly saidenousrh to be compelled often to show better than his previous record of 307. as an open tai.de player. which was made with the anchor thren p hia"Tostrength compare- Hoppe and Ives one and a half by seven Instead of seven 1S.1. must cenfica hiraislf to Ives Inches square, as It is now." PW 'v."VAl zzz' immx r!! 1- - n ts - 1 .- - h e ?,-.- rfnt i v I'm it.ii, -- v nil1 si i!i I , of Wlsrnnnln, lusrter-bac- k Ilnrrett of Cornell, Fullbnck Mahan of Harvard. Tackle HucW vSZT't w'w -- s -- a jonl pri. ii eq-ia- Ilslfbnck Tibbott of Princeton, Left l K-- a h Iee h-- 5 s- s.i'-rl- - -- Z'-- i (CopyrlKht l?ir. by the Central Press Association.) ii. vost. it v a hleh-clas- s PICKING not seem a difficult task this year. For each position one man stands out conspicuously a. man who hag done brilliant work all season. In my selection I am choosing only the three-yea- r mn Iswho play where followed. It does not seem to rule me to be fair to Include men who have had a chance to play in their freshman year. My team would be made tip as follows: Center Cool of Cornell. He Is a wonderfully heady player, exceptionally fine on defensive work and in dlannos-Ins- f plays. He has Just finished his third year, stands about six feet and weiKhs Left giuard Xehlachter of Syracuse. Height, six feet; weight, about 240. Very fast and appresslve on offense and defense. Many of Wilkinson's Kalns this season were due to Schlach-ter'- s openlnc: up the opposing lines. Jllpht guard Spears of Dartmouth. Height five feet eleven; weight, 220. i'ii:i.:i; Ail-Americ- an player, fast on offense and defense, tackling all over the field. Left tackle Buck of Wisconsin. Height, six feet two: weight, about 200. He was captain this season, playing his third year. He Is a remarkable player, perhaps one of the best tackles ever developed In the west. IliRht tackle Oilman of Harvard. Inch: weight, 100. Height, six feet one He played on the 19 13 team, but was ineligible last year on account of scholarship, so this was his second season on the team. He kept up the wonderful work shown In his first year. Left end Higgins of Penn State. Height, five feet eleven; weight, 183. Fxcellcnt at receiving passes, scoring at least one touchdown from passes In every game except that with Harvard. Fine at blocking tackles. rught end Lambertson of Princeton. feet; weight, 170. A Height, about six steady, reliable man. He outplayed his opponents in the Yale and Harvard games. Quarter Captain Barrett of Cornell. Scored Height, six feet; weight, 185. more touchdowns himself than did either Harvard, Yale or Princeton during Good all-arou- entire season. He is In a class by himFullback Captain Mahan of Harvard. Height, five feet eleven; weight, A great 172. player, very heady. Fine at running from kick formations; also in running back punts and in broken field running. self. all-arou- nd Princeton. of Tibbott Halfback Height, five feet ten: weight, 170. A drop kicker. Was remarkably accurate for victories over largely responsible and Dartmouth. Syracuse, Rutgers Halfback King of Harvard. Height; five feet ten; weight, 180. lias been his working three years,A but this was wonderful defenfirst as a regular. sive player, fine at blocking. Won the d Princeton game by a run. Also made touchdown against d run. Yale with In my opinion, the team selected above would put up a wonderful battel, both on offensive and defensive. It could play with skill any style of game passing, running, punting, or smashing attack. Tibbott is an exceptional Barrett is the greatest punter in the country. Mahan 3hines as a and punter, while both Barrett twenty-five-yar- YOST'S TEAM Center L. G. R. G. Cool, Cornell. Schlachter, Syracuse. Spears,. Dartmouth. L. T. Buck, Wisconsin. R. T. Gilman, Harvard. L. E. Higgins, Penn State. R. E. Lamberton, Princeton. Q. B. Barrett, Cornell. F. B. Mahan, Harvard. j Halves Tibbott, Princeton, i King, Harvard. and! fifty-six-yar- drop-kickin- g, drop-kicke- r. drop-kick- er and Mahan are accurate in passing. The line selected Is heavy and fast. Cool has played a remarkably clever and at center. The guards aggressive game and tackles selected have all earned places on the team by heady,' consistent work. Unquestionably the material of 1915 affords one of the best teams in years. all-arou- Ail-Americ- an nd t discid k-- TY COBB CALLED y -- SHRINKING -:- - -:- - BY 1G0E lEFEATS MAKE ENORS POOR DIRTIEST PLAYER i: -r'- t-c!pls ! .tr rouRh-a-nec- , - tourha-me-dow- K n. . recrd-breaki:i- d-ct- s; r-i- fl Mat-tnso- - n. l x .!, ; Ix-esa- . y y -- iw tht 1- -1 unl-versl- tv s. s - Mays of Red Sox Says He Tries to Get the Goat of Every Young Pitcher. "Cobb Is the greatest ball player In th world, and also the dirtiest," says Carl Mays, the former Northwestern leaguer, who pitched great ball for the Boston Americans last season, In the Butte Miner. Mays Is wintering in Portland and ho unburdened himself the other day in explaining an Incident, only the meager details of which reached the wild and woolly west about the time of its happening. The causo of tho ruction, which preta mobbing of brought about ty a Boston crowd, tiio nearly great aTyrus bywhen Detroit was time pulled at the HeI Sox for the top of the fighting near the close of the season, column, !3 explained by Mays. "Cobb tries to pet th goat of every Mays. "He stands young pitcher." says up to the plate .nd plants one leg out In front of th home plate, although this Isn't allowed under the rules, and the plate to that leaves only when he tried pitch at. meConsequently, I threw the ball straight that on him. at "Hvery time I pitched against him h would get almost crazy at me. One Just past day In Detroit heI sizzled one rapped his bat down his had. and on the home plate like a steam tripthat hammer and shrieked at me:. 'Do Do that you will you, again, acaln.' I'll never speak to "'If you don't Hoblitzel whispered to me you again.' as he came over from first base. 'You don't want to let him get away with that stuff call his "Of course I Intended to.next ball Well. the bluff, anvway. missed him bv less than the thickness and as of a canary bird's left toenail, he threw h s ho swung out of the way It bat at me. If it had come, straight Scott would have killed me. Shortstop I and brought it In and up to picked itbaek Cobb and shoved It outI walked at him. Just as he reached for it pulled it back. "If a look or hot words could havea killed me 1 would be Inhabiting wooOn kimono now. Again I stuck It out at him. and when he reached for it this time I let It fall to the ground. For a minute or two he refused to pick it up. but did so when the umpire ordered. ball I just "On the next nicked his can andpitched he took first base. Hoblitzel told him he couldn't run every ball club That made Cobb even and be led off about ten feet angrier and drew a throw. Then he Jumped back Into Hobby with his spikes about waist high and only Hobby's footwork saved him." ' UtCR ALU tee on morals and physical education. Fully 7S per cent of the students are engaged in some form of exercise or athletic competition and the number of branches of sport in which contests are held has more than doubled in the past four years. Dr. Joseph E. Raycroft, who presents the report on behalf of the department of hygiene and physical education, attributes much of the enthusiasm for sport to the great number of competitive games which have sprung up within the university known as the sports. These embrace fourteen different sports which, aside from the many individual contestants'ln golf, tennis, handball and canoe racing, are represented by 149 teams. A number of men are on teams of more than one sport, so that the total engaged In lntracollegiate sports is 1571, 100 more than were actually in the university last year. The actual number of individuals on these teams is S42. In addition to these there were last year 105 men on varsity and freshman intercollegiate teams and 195 students not members of any competitive teams are known to be regular workers at some form of physical exercise. This leaves but 321 men who, as far as the department could learn, took no regular exercise. The freshman class at Princeton has in the past few years been required to exercise regularly three times a week. A result of this requirement is that 7 I per cent of the sophomore class, for whom there is no regular exercise requirement, continued the previously acexercise. quired habit of taking regular of computmethod According to onewho ing the students report for athletic squads and exercise groups the number is 224S. while the total underattendance is only 1463. Thi. graduate of course, disregards the counting of the same men several times, but shows the active interest in varied sports. enThe most popular of the sports the university, and all gaged in within but football are represented, is baseball, which more than a fourth of the in. Basketball, relay total, competed indoor and outdoor track and racing, are leaders in poputhe other rowingin these competilntracollegiate larity tions. Dr. Raycroft points out in his report the most important fact, that perhaps of all is that these various lines of work call out more men than can be cared for during the afternoon hours with the present facilities. Says thea report. "We cannot expect to reach much larger percentage of the students make additional provision for until we exercise outdoors and parorganized indoors and make It easier ticularly withfor them to get regular exercise out undue waiting and loss of time. The situation represents of a healthy the ideal growth in the direction in the of the university of stimulating habits of reg- - ' students the formation ofand of making ular healthful exercise enjoy It easy for them to learn andcontest two or three of the simple as tennis, baseball and games, such will not only improve wrestling, that capacity while their health and will working be important facin college, but tors in enabling them to realize their full possibilities In after years." intra-collegia- 1 tour-fitmen- A Princeton Backers Have Met SEXTELL te nt'SY. Paul Sentell, manager of the GalvesWith Many Losses; season, ton (Texas league) clubbe last and who probably will next retainedis a? Them by Narrow Count. in year, the same club pilot ofOrleans. He recently wrote New of the Galdolph Dolson, president he several has young veston that club, Princeton, N. J., Dec. 4. Princeton players Tinder his wing who made showings last season and university's famed democracy will re- phenomenal who may be induced to join the Pirates ceive a tremendous boost next June, and Texas league next when the present senior class ia gradu- year. break into the ated. The historian will mount the traTRIO STARS. ditional rostrum at the commencement have Van Dam, Sangree HarCarey and exercises, and. if he fain would tell the been playing brilliant for football truth, he will proclaim that his class is vard college. Their work has been the poorest, from the standpoint of largely responsible for the excellent made by Mike Bennett's promoney, that has gone forth from Nas- showing season. The loss of the this teges sau's halls in many a year. Franklin and Marshall game was colIt will not be because worthy youths rather expected,a as the Lancaster team this have powerful more with determination than dollars legians season. have worked their way through college that the senior class will attain distinction for being the poorest. That The 1916 men know isn't the too well that they will depart from the as the poorest class because university in the four years they have been undergraduates they have never seen the Princeton varsity football team defeat either of Its greatest rivals Harvard and Yale. And having been fairly optimistic bettors, the students will get the above named distinction when only are they a sad granted their degrees. It's story, mates, they will tell you here in Princeton town. Four times haB the Tiger clashed with Harvard in as many years, and four times it has been chewed and mauled. Four time3, likewise, has the Tiger scrapped with the Bulldog of New Haven, only to have been overwhelmed. And with those defeats went much good coin of eight the realm, for Princeton was rarely ad-of mitted to be outclassed before any ; the games in Avhich its teams engaged. The Tiger supporters always had a run season's here. The for their money, but they always lost THE duck out. are black with these Not since 1911, when Sammv White, toothsome game bfrds. There's the Tiger end, plucked a bounding ball plenty for all. Get your gun from tho gridiron and ran for a touchdown against both Harvard and Yale, ready! If your aim is true and has Princeton had a victory over its your load's dependable you'll get rivals in the Big Three combination. share. your There has been much ado about football affairs at New Haven, but Yale has not suffered in the past four years such tough reverses as Princeton. The Tigers have been licked each year for the SMOKELESS SHOTGUN POWDERS past four by both Harvard and Yale, while the Elis can grumble'only at the Dupent Ballistic successive losses to Harvard alone. Yale has always had its annual bite out are the powders that win. Bulk or dense of the Tiger's hide. each has its good points and each has While the senior class at Harvard will its friends. be graduating with the proud stateDu Pont Powders the choice of 80 ment: "We have been undergraduates of Amencan shooters, are loaded in all for four years and have seen Harvard standard ehells or sold ia bulk at your crush Princeton and Yale yearly," and dealer' 8. while the Yale senior class will be sayI JV rite for booklet. ing: '"We have been whipped by Harvard, but we've always enjoyed a triE.l.du Fontde Nemours 4. Company over Nassau," the Princeton seumph can niors Wilmington, Delaware 'em only say: "We hard, but ve got the shortfought end every time." All of rea-son- . one-ha- lf pOOR IIINKEY! smaller That psky animal, the Yale bulldogr, seems to be dnd smaller each day despite the careful feeding of growing; the beast. Never has there been such a discouraging1 looking animal on the Yale campus. Kach Saturday adds to the agony after the scoresare counted up. There doesn't seem' to be a team on the horizon that Y'ale has a chance of beating. All the blame is leveled at poor Ilinkey, too. Little wonder he wanted to chuck the job. He was coach enough to know that he hadn't a blue ribbon pup early in the season. INDIANS HAVE POOH YEAR. The Indians had a hard time winning without Olenn Warner guiding the team. The material at Carlisle was robably below the usual standard, but Kelly has failed tomake good as He was away from the game so coach. long that it will probably be two years before he is thoroughly awake to the possibilities of the new game. Under the old game Kelly was a star, and considered a wonderfully smart and If he Is given time, he mayplayer, prove another Warner. 4 MUCH MOSEY OX DOYLE. Some $20,000 changed hands today, when the official batting averages of were announced. the TNational The money wasleague bet on Larry Doyle of the Giants and Luderus of the Phillies. The race for first place between the two was close and has been in constant since the season closed. Doyle dispute .320 batted and Luderus .315. One bet of $3000 to $1000 Is known to have been on who is the first memplaced ber of a Doyle, New York club to win the batting honors in twenty years. 5 Dupont for Ducks I |