Transcript
Page 1: WS NEARER; YALE OPENS FOOTBALL SEASON WITH AN …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045774/1922-09... · section four tupr lvjprw/ vadit 14fdai ti sporting news eight pages xj.xx_j-inj_j

section four Tu pr lVJPrW/ VAD IT 14FD A I Ti sporting newsEIGHT PAGES X J. X X_J - IN J_j TT ' X \JXVXV XX X_J XV-fVXjX-J Automobile Exchange

[COPVUIGHT, 1 9 2 5. BY THE SUN-HER ILD COB PO R AT I O X.j

??? NEW YORK, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1922.

GIANTS AND YANKEES WIN AND GOTHAM WORLD SERIES DR\WS NEARER;YALE OPENS FOOTBALL SEASON WITH AN IMPRESSIVE VICTORY OVER BATES;

PRINCE JAMES HANGS UP NEW RECORD IN FEATURE AT AQUEDUCT TRACKELIS POWERFUL IN

ALL DEPARTMENTSMaine Eleven Helpless Before20,000 Onlookers in Bowl.

Score, 48 to 0.

BACKFIELD IS STRONG

Pan Kelley Makes SpectacularRun of Fifty Yards Through

Visiting Team.

Fprrial Dispatch to The New Yosk IIeiai.d.New Haven, Conn., Sept. 23..Vale

awamped Bates In the opening footballprime of the season this afternoon. 4 8 toP. and displayed an abundance of ma¬terial which must have opened the ty»>»of delegates from Harvard, Princetonand other institutions of learning scat-tired among the 20,000 spectatjrs inthe Bowl. The Klls showed a sharp at¬tack, a stonewall defense, a keen ryeon the hall and a display of footballomse which, at this early stage, iookedmighty good to the big Vale crowd.

It was too hot for real top notch foot¬ball. hut Vale played good footballnevertheless, and not a first down wasmade against the Blue. In fact the totalyardage gained during the afternoon bythe Maine men in straight rushing wasless than the distance required for afirst down. Yale's forwards smashedthrough on the Bates backs before theygot started, and the only attempt madeby the visitors to gain by way of tlieforward pass was smeared.Tad Jones, with an army of curious

bb e clad young men aroun 1 him onthe side lines, made twenty-five sulst-tutions during the forty minutes of playand each man did well. It was t-ogr> at an array pf talent to cope w ith,and the Bates men. though tightlnghard, were content to keep the scorewithin the half century mark.

Strong Array of Harks.

Advance information has made Itplain that Yale Is to bo strong thisyear In backfield material. The "dope"wasn't upset by tho snowing this after¬noon. Captain Jordan, Neldllnger, Mal-lory, Bench, last year's freshman star,Xnapp, Kolley. O'HeajU. Beckett andHaas all showed olasg.There was wide interest In the testing

of tho new rule allowing a try forpoint following a touchdown, whichtakes the place of tho former one man

play. Vale eleeled each time to try fora drop kick after tho team bed lined upIn front of the goal post on the fiveyard lino, and In six of the seven at¬tempts the effort was crowned with suc¬

cess. Becket missed on goal in th»second period. O'Hearn. Beekct andKelley each kicked two without mucheffort.The touchdowns came thick and fast

from the moment Davis made a mess

of Jordan's punt soon after the game

opened.. On this play Dlller recoveredt' hall on the fourteen yard line andn r a series of steady Jabs at the line.' i-inn took the ball over for Yule'sfirst touchdown of the 1922 season.

flench linns IT Yards.

Bench, who took Jordan's place In theT'. st period, skirted the Bates right endti r seventeen yards and a touchdownen tho first play after ho entered the;.r.me. Mallory made another In thethird period after some good line buck-in" and open field work and Hansbucked his way through Just before theend of the first half. Mallory got an¬

other ono In the third period and Inthe fourth quarter Yale's substitutes ran

the tired visitors ofr their feet.The most spectacular play came In

thin quarter when Dan Kelley. who hadJust taken Becket's place at quarter,d (Iged his way fifty yards through theentire Rates team. It was a brilliantrun nnd roused the big crowd.

Just previous to that run Neldllngershot a long forward pass to Eddy, theplay being the best aerial effort of thed:*y. It netted thirty-eight yards.Yale's forward passing was uniformlygood. The lineup:Yale <tH». BatesfOt.

piair Left end TnrbollMiller Left tackle GulneyCrulkshank Left guard PetnrsonLnndls Centei PriceCross flight guard AapaatnnDiller Right tackle ScottHnlman Right end DeactdauO'Hearn Quarterback MoultonNeldllnger Left hnlfbaek TlutakyJordan (Capt.)...R. halfback... .K. WoodmanMallory Fullback DavisScore by periods.

Yale II »t 7 21.48Ha ten 0 0 0 0. 0Touchdowns.Jordan. Ranch. Mallory, f;

Neldllnger, Kelley. Polnte after touchdowna.O'Hearn, 2: Becket, 2; Kelley, 2.Suhatltutlona.Ynle--Bench for Jordan Cut¬

ler for Rlalr, Knowlea for Hulmnn, Norrlsfor Lnndla, Qualle for Croaa. Racket forO'Hearn, Knapp for Neidllnger, Storrs forMiller, Loeejoy for Dlller. Haaa for Mallory,Denver for Knotvles. Mallory for Ranch.Hddy for Heaver, Lincoln for Cutler, Lnfklnfor Crulekahank. Karl for Norrla, Neldllngerfor Knapp, .Hidden for Storrs, Cross forQualle, Rlalr for Eddy, Hnlman for Llneotn,Josh for Rlalr, O'Brien for Lufkln, Kelley forRacket, Ecknrt for Lovejoy.Rates.Kanney for Deseoteau. Deaeoteau foeKenney, H. Woodman for Scott, Safford forPriceReferee.W. J. Crowely, Rowdoln. Umpire.3. W. Moffatt, Princeton. Llneaman.J. A.

Hutchinson. New York t'ntveralty. FieldJudge.H. A. Davidson, Penn State. Time-Ten minute periods.

cCollege Football Results Il lie. M; Bates. 0.Hnlj Cross, II): Submarine Ruse, 6.Washington and Jefferson, 14; Geneva, 0..¦\vrnolise, 28; ffnharf, 7.Springfield. It; Colby, 0.t'nlnn, 1.1; Clurkson, 0.Maine, 14; Connecticut Aggies, II.St. Stephens, 13; St. Lawrence. 7.I'enn State, 84: ft. Bona, enture, 0.Muhlenberg, .13; Strnudshnrg, 0.Drury High, 3ft; New- Britain High, ft.Hew Hampshire State, 4ft; t'nlted States

Marines, ft..Franklin and Marshall, t3: Albright, t.Bnrknrll. Ill: Mansfield, 0.Butler, ft; Wilmington, ft.state Normal (Mich.), It; Bflanre Col¬

lege, ft.i irncgla Tech, 54: Wnynesburg. ft.T»nnessee, 4ft: Emory add Henry, ft.Wihurn, HI. Marlon, ft.Howard. 12; Jacksonville Normal. 0.Georgia. 82; Newberry College, 13.Mercer. 24: Piedmont. 3.llrglnln Military. 34; Lynchburg. 7.I-ake Forest. 31; Atlantic Christian, 0.

Conqueror of Jess Sweetser

G. L.. ConueyCauses upset in tourney on Grassy Sprain links by defeating national

golf champion and former runner-up.

HELFFRICH FAILS

Runs Far Behind 600 YardFigures at N.Y.A.C. Games.

McAllister Is Beaten.

The outstanding features of the an¬

nual autumn games of the New YorkA. C. staged at Its summer home atTravers Island yesterday were the un-

successful attempt of Alan B. Helftrich,national A. A. U. champion half milerunner, to lower the record for running600 yards and the defeat of Robert Mc-Alllstcr, the newly crowned championsprinter, at 100 yards by William Hayesof the Boston A. A.The figures which Helffrloh tried In

vain to better wore 1 minute 10 4-5 sec¬onds. They were created by Mel Shop-pa rd in a race at Celtic Park, In LongIsland City, In 1910. HoliTrlch was un¬able to cover the distance In betterthan 1 minute 11 3-5 seconds. It was a

very disappointing performance consider¬ing that all elements that contributetoward record breaking favored himgreatly. The weather was perfect, thetrack lightning fast, the pacemakersquite speedy, and there was very littlebrecse. Despite the happy combinationof conditions in his favor, Helftrich atno time during the race showed the kindof speed necessary to give a chance tochange Sheppard's mark, although hewon the race by ten yards. He was a

very tired runner when he breasted thetape.

Hayes Fastest Sprinter.McAllister was beaten on his merits

by Hayes, for In spite of the fact thatthe race was of the handicap varietyboth started from scratch. Each manwon a preliminary and semi-final heatIn good style. McAllister displayed afine exhibition of speed In his semi-finnl heat, doing the distance In thesparkling time of 12 seconds. Burke'sbest time in a trial heat was 2-10 of asecond slower. Because of this differ,ence In time and the caay manner Inwhich McAllister scored everybody be¬lieved the policeman sprinter was dea-tined to go on to victory In the finalheat. However, he failed to run barkto his good previous effort. Hayes lefthis mark quicker than the flying cop.This advantage quickly gained him alead of a foot. He Increased hla lead asthe race stretched out nnd breasted thetape a victor by 214 feet. McAllisterlreat R. Welch of the Bridgeport A. C.for the place by only a few Inches.

Hayes's success was a big surprise tothose who saw him perform unsucccss-fully In the recent championship gamesat Weequahlc Park In Newark. Theform he displayed yesterday was farbetter than he exhibited at the NewJersey meet. The former Notre Dameand national title holder vm certainlyat his heat, because timers caught himIn 12 seconds In the final heat.

Fine Work With Shot.

The best exhibitions of shot puttingIn point of distance registered In East¬ern competitions In many years wereturned In hy contestants In the Iron ballevent. The winner was Orvllle Wanserof the New York A. C. His winningheave was 49 feet 4 Inches. He was Inreceipt of a handicap of one foot, whichmade his best actual heave 48 feet 4

Continued on Page Two.

TILDEN OUTPLAYEDIN FOUR SET MATCH

Johnston Triumphs OverChampion as East Ties

West 3 to 3.

By SAMIEI. J. imOOKMAN.William M. Johnston, unsuccessful

in his bid for the national Utle. isgoln-back to California with some measureof consolation, for in his last meetingof the season with TV illiam '

national and world's champion atForest Hills yesterday, he score<

well deserved triumph over the man

who crushed his title hopes at Phila¬delphia a week ago. In four whirlwindsets, not nearly as dramatic aaanyofthe five of the national championshipmatch, hut chock full of scintillatingtennis, the Caltfornlan scored over hitbrilliant rival at 6.3, 4.6. 8

It was this victory that enabled thWest to tie the Kast In their annual ln-tersectlonnl event at 3 matches all. Aseventh contest, which was to have de¬cided the series one way or the other,remained unfinished, with n* orr

been'greed that unless the contest was

was and (he series tie wa. thus made

"The'West Side Tennis Club had goodcause for regret that all but one oth.

IT*.. been torn.oln The single stand that remainedcould not accommodate half the crowdof tent is fans who journeyed out to the

i «.r *k|t last real tennis attrac-the season Tllden versus John-

ston and KMrs.f Hall^/wou'd |little vondcr that tne o

qthemselves swamped by mowanted reserved seats.

Crowd Overflows Stnnd.The lone grandstand, which could nothoitTmore than 4 000 £ 1

fore the players took the court^first match, and the .

t 4 oOOlem on their hands, for at least^i. ^-"rE'S-'a.o'T.roTaSU

r~r»«u:..Kr,"w ,0

J*,,. ..4 <hHn.j <;r";«;our;."SSSsfeSggRftar ulld'of3 1n"be second. Tllden.reach In» dM«Hng heights, osm. through

Contlnned on I'sge Three.

G.L.CONLEY TAKESVICTORY GOLF CUP

defeats John G. Anderson inFinal After Eliminating

Jess Sweetser.

WINS BOTH GAMES 2 AND 1

Former Westchester ChampionCauses Double Upset at

Grassy Sprain.

By KERR X. PETRIE.The Victory golf cup found Its way

back to the Siwanoy Country Club lastevening in time for the dinner givenin celebration of the winning of thenational amateur championship atBrookline, Mass., by Joss Sweetser.The trophy, however, did not come

either as the personal property or as

part of the season's winnings of theBig Chief of the Links. Jess, with twolegs on for his successes in 1920 and1921 would have taken the cup out ofcompetition had he been able to winyesterday at Grassy Sprain, but thecold fact of the matter is that Jess didnot win. Ho went down in the semi¬final round before his clubmate, G. L.Conley. t

And the latter deciding that he hadbegun his day well enough to warranthis making a double header of it pro¬ceeded in the afternoon to do some more

decapitating and to move on from a

2 and 1 victory over Sweetser to a

similar success over John G. Andersonin the final round.When the Victory cup appeared at

the festive board last night It thereforecame as part of the equipment ofSiwanoy, but not of Sweetser. Jess satbehind the metropolitan and nationalchampionship emblems and had to let itgo at that. By another year he prob¬ably will have the Victory cup. but itwas rather odd that this trophy shouldhave been denied him In this his .great¬est year on the links while he lifts been )able to win it the last two years.

Takes Extra Pntts.

After his remarkable career as thenational champion tt is perhaps butnatural that there should have been a

let down in the play of Sweetser. Fromthe qualifying round It has been notedthut the national champion did not havehis game working at the concert pitch.Yesterday again Sweetser was skiddingquite a bit. That deadly precisionwhich sent the ball to the bottom ofthe cup from all distances at Brooklinewas strangely lacking. On the firstgreen against Conley the champion hadan extra putt and that Initial mistakeuppcared to spoil his confidence. At thesecond Jess hooked his second to thewoods, and at the fourth he became 3down through driving Into the brook.The fifth went to Sweetser, but on the i

next green he again took three putts.Conley, on the green of the seventh,

made the mistake which had beenproving so expensive for St^cet.-er. Therational champion won this one andthen at the ninth he brought hiscp.pon nt back to one hole. Three hole*along the inward Journey Sweetser tookadvantage of his o,;pon- nt's mistake indrlv'.rs? Into the creek, but Jess losthis hold again and away went thenext two.

C htimplon Never In Leail.

So far Sweetser had not been able totnke the lead. High hopes of tils li.'d1 een held out when he squared, but 'heI rospec'a of a si.ee ss for the nationalchampion hegap to grow dim ind. edwhen he dioppel the thirteenth andfourteenth. At the fifteenth Sweetsermanng. d :o win back a hole. Conl y s

bnll hung on the lip. However, with Illsrecond Sweets r was over the green ofthe sixteenth. This left Copley ilormie 3and the match came to a fln'sh with amutual 3 st the -teventeenth. The cardsCONLEY.Out Illll'lll s.ttSWBETHBR-Out ,,,,, 5 6 3 3 4 3 SCONLBY-

Ii, 5 5 3 4 3 5 4 3SWEETSER.

5 5 4 3 4 4 3 .1

With Sweetser out of the way Conleyturned his attention to Anderson. Thiswas a most remarkable match. As one

spectator remarked, "Both ought to havewon by 10 up." It was a contest aboutIt keeping with the final of the GardenCity invitation tournament. In whichRobert L.vne of Pittsburgh defeated BonM Parker of Garden City. Lyne,Parker, Conley and Anderson will have

Continued on Page Three,

SHOWS GREAT SPEEDBeats Five High Class Horses,

Including: Mad Hatter,in a Gallop.

CAPT. ALCOCK SECOND

Winner Covers Mile and Five-sixteenths in 2:11.MaxHirsch Has Gala Day.

By HENRY V. KING.Prince James is probably the best

race horse the once mighty KingJames produced. In the AqueductHandicap, the feature at the Aqueducttrack yesterday afternoon, he made ashow of five real good handicap horses.He not only beat them with ridiculousease, but he covered the one mile andfive-sixteenths route in new recordtime. He covered the distance in 2:11,clipping four-fifths of a second fromthe old track mark established lastyear by Harry Payne Whitney's Dam¬ask.

Prince Barnes Is owned by Charles II.Thieriot and trained by Jack Goldsbor-ough. lie Is four years old and a hand¬some black colt. But until yesterdayhe was considered little better thr.n a

p'ator. He won a fe\y races, but In eachhis opponents were horses which lackedclass. Yesterday he was pitted againstthe best in training. Including Harry P.Sincb ir's sturdy horse Mud Hatter.

Because of his past performances,esepecially his exceptionally fine race i'>the field cup a week ago, when be gal¬loped home the victor. Mad Hatter w: smade the favorite and was heavilyhacked at 3 to 5. AVhen It came to rac¬ing there was only one horse In the race.He was Prince James. Under the lightimpost of 105 pounds he sailed along ina contending position under restraint un¬til the homestretch \v: s reached. Thereli . stepped to the front and without do¬ing his best went past the Judges fourlengths In front of the erratic and sulk-log Captain Alcook, belonging to theQulnoy Stable. Richard T. Wilson'sSedgefleld was third a head behind C..p-tain Alcock.Edward Simm's Bon Hot.ime finished

fourth, Steve Pettit's Devastation wasfifth and Mad Hatter sixth and last.

Mail Hatter Off Form.

The victory of Prince James wassomewhat of a surprise, but the badrace of Mad Hatter was consideredgigantic. This famous horse show.-dnone of the qualities which go to makeup a real good horse. He left the har¬rier sluggishly, ran in third place forn mile Hnd then quit like the worst kindof a plater. Only men who have trainedend studied horses for many years made¦my attempt to explain this race. Some ofthem said that the long two mile eventlor the Gold cup last week had sappedboth his strength and his speed. Otherssaid that the Injury he had receivedwhen he grabbed himself In that racehurt him and others declared that hehad had too much racing and had goneback fifty pounds.Thousands of racegoers who knew the

horse as a great one declare he brokedown. They assumed this because heran such a poor race. Apparently therewas nothing the matter- with him whenhe returned to tflc scales.To sec the race decided one of the

largest crowds that ever visited Aque¬duct wss present. The clubhouse. lawnsand grand stand were crammed. It wasan enthusiastic gathering,' too. and thevictor of every race wss cheered lustily.The Aqueduct Handicap, which was

worth $10,000, was eagerly awaited bythe throng. Although Mad Hatter war.n odds on favorite, every one of thecontestants was supported. At the har¬rier the eignt horses did everything theywere told to do. with the result therewas little or no delay before Mars Cns-sidy sent them away to a good start.To the surprise of the thousands pres¬

ent Captain Alcock was the first to showin front. This sulker, who usually trailsthe field until the race is as good asover, felt like running and stepped tothe front and set a good pace for n fur¬long. Then Ron Homme, a colt tf tre¬mendous speed, went to the front andsrt a dlssy pace f-r a mile, with CaptainAlcock In second place and Mad Hatterthird. Bounding the bend Ron Hommebtgan to tire. So did Mad Hatter. Asthev showed signs of distress Taplln shotPrince .Tames through on the rail and Ina few bounds the aon of King Jameswas In front, where he remained to theend. As Prince James took commandRon Homme and Mad Hatter began to

Continued on Page Three.

National and American League Records.RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES.

NATIONAL.New York. 7t *t. I.owls, S.

Hrm>kl>n. B; I'ltteburflh, 5 (lot game).Hio.ikljn. 8: I'lttelinrith. I (3d en me).

AMKKIOAN.New York, 7; Cleveland. fl.

Ho.lon, A; Detroit. 4.< blrago,-fl; Wn.l)ln(tmi, 3.

Boetnn. fl| Chlrain. 4 (lot 'nine). I'hllndeli bin, fl: St. I.onle, 5.Chlrnfto, 3; Itoxton, 1 (3d game'.

t'lnrlnnatt, S; Philadelphia, 4.

STANDING OF THE CLUBS.

Iflis ? ? I r ?lii-i ilrI'lit

? ?iNew Vat*I. I.1IIIIIlit!I«lMl 1 tl MINI'371.«."» New York... .l.llfllltlMllflllinil B:03|ilfli.flt4PtUabnrah .. II 8 II 12 in |» it B4 (.s ,v.l st. I ...ilv B 11 11 l« 14 itisflrtfli ...wiSt. t ool- flll.1l.!M fl 14 IStll BI Afl .Ml Detroit It f> . ft1 7:|4.Ifl lfl 7B 73 ,.M7

il Hi fl|_ 1114 l.t 17 B»Cincinnati ... I# »! HI. 1114 U 17 Bt OB .S47 Chicago B B 17 . 1*! 7 13 It 77.73i.SIB( hlcngn B t» It til. tl! !» IB 7B 71'.8*3 ( If.Hand ....I fl « IB 10 IB II IH 78 7(1 4(17Itrookl.n BIO B B II .' 14'tI 73 78;.401 Uaehlngton .. HI B Bit 0 . Bllt (Wiflll.441Philadelphia .| III 3' 71 7 IB fl.,13 58(12 371 Philadelphia .| fl' 0 fl 10 11 B t2.lt B« .UStloeton « 10II1I Si 4 «> fll. .VI (171.340 lloetnn Ill 71 5 IB fl 10 10 _ SB HI .303

in loot '37[fl.Vflfl!flfli7n:V(121(Wt.1.| Oamee loot. Bfl «1 73 73 Tfl'Bl flfl 01

GAMES SCHEDULED FOR TO DAY.NATIONAL. AMERICAN.

Louie flt New York (3. P. Of.). »w Y'ork at Cleveland.rittebarch at Bmokljn (two, ¦ P. H.l. Philadelphia at At. lenli.

r.neton nt Detro t.lYa'.hlcctoi: at (lilrngo.

t

j His Catch Saves Giants

Ross Vou N <3

whose remarkable defensive feet in the ninth inning yesterday turnedback the Cardinals.

CATCH STOPS CARDSRobs Smith of Homer andVisitors of Tie in Ninth.

Giuiits Win, 7-5.

n.r DAX1E1,.

What the Giants wrested from theCardinals with a four run rally in th"eighth Inning at tlie Polo Grounds yes¬

terday afternoon was saved by RossVoting with an astounding catch inthe ninth. The fleet*Texan's defensivefeat, followed by a snappy play byDavy Bancroft on Rogers Hornsby,completed the rout of the once proudcontenders from St. Louis by 7 to 3.While the New Yorks were pulling

the eighth pennant for John MeOrawto til" polehead the Pittsburgh;!, withtheir chance for the flag gone and theinspiration which drove them at thePolo Grounds worn off, collapsed inFiatbuah. Now the Giants are sixgames in front.and that is about themargin they ought to show when theyfinish against the Braves next Sunday.Young's twenty yard dash and running

high Jump, which without doubt took a

home run from the fast Jack Smith anda tie from the Cardinals, capped theclimax of one of those up and at 'em.knock down and drag out battles, whichbristled with \snappy and virile fieldingand lethal and subtle power with the bat.Old Casey Stengel, with three singlesand a home run. was the shining lighton attack.

Hornshy Hits Ills Fortieth.

Hornsby did a bit of dazzling too andhit his fortieth home run of the season

into the upper tier of i the right fieldstand with nobody on twee In the sixthInning. This prodigious slam put Horns¬by Into the lead for major leagU" slug¬ging laurels, and put the Cards Into thegame.

For seven Innings the contest was an

Interesting, tense pitr+ilng duel betweenJack Scott, the North Carolina soupboner, for the Giants and Jess Hainesfor the Cards. Srott acted up consid¬erably and made folks ask which gameof the world series he would start. Foronce John McGraw was spared the neces¬sity of putting on his celebrated Jugglingstunt. '

Scott went the route not only becausehe pitched well but h-eause he hit welland needed no substitute In a pinch.Jack always has been quite a slammerand yesterday he connected on each ofhis four trips to the plate. Twice hehit safely without driving in a run, andtwice his efforts so engrossed the Cardi¬nal Infield that tallies came over thepan.

Scott pitched a game of extremes.three hits for the Cards In the first In¬ning. three lilts In the ninth inning.and five scattered blows In between.That rally of the visitors In the ninth.* hlcli got a lot of life from a doubleby Jacques Kournler as a pinch hitterfor Willie Lloak. who had relievedHaines In the eighth, roused the appre¬hensions of the crowd of some 32,000.Two defeats for the Pirates slready had

Inn tin nil on Pag* Two

'D

Football Schedules and Train-ins- Cut.'Prep' Proselyting1Banned by Big Fniversities.

s.niat /> pahtn Tar Vsw York IIkmXew Haven, Con a., Sept. 23..Drns-

11<. steps for the purifl ation of ath¬letics nt Tale. Harvard and Princetonhave been taken by ihe athlotir au¬

thorities of these universities, tjie gen¬eral p'.in for betterment having beenannounced to-night by Prof. C. W.Mentiell, chairman of the bQard ofeont ro'.

Yi)p tert nf i agreement r a tie.! byD-. janv s Row it: 'i AngfJt. pr«-*»id. nt . r\ i|e; prettrtetit A i.awrence I.owel! ifHarvard d-d Prcsldem Htbhen ifPrinceton c-ivers all untie* of nthlot;t Pit thre.- ui.ivi fitii s uni mm b>:r.a!:e reforms whl 11 have h n bin' >d atfor some time. The regulations effect It eJanuary 1 forbid pro elvtlnt In prepp.ra-tory ecsool; refine ti>e status of an ama-terr; cut the foo'liall season to the ex¬tent of limiting the training nmmn toa wyeU before the openlnt; of college;define {he athletic status of «o-c< I ltdtransferred students: prohibit postson ,Tames and reduces the slxc of foot -

huh schedules, among other things. Asto Thi coaching systems now in vogue,no radical changes are ordered, but ItWill be the aim as fnr as pes- itile tolimit the cS#ching to the members ofthe regular staffs.The aBn »metu in its main na-ts fel¬

lows"There Is already a work >, «gree-

m nt a Ip-: eby Hum r ', Y »e andPrinceton submit to a committee com-PO'ed of the chairmen of their athleticboards nil debatab'e (|re 'Ions affect-Irg thtlr relations with one another, andthis commit te has from time io timeformulated v rmu' rules urder whlel,;'lesc It. «tlt ut tors now l ondttel their ath-te'lcs. Tbrot-gii tlie new retnlatlonsohlih supplement those mentlonelabove, the thl universities hope to tin.prove the extant c mil It! ns and to ettah-ilsh Intercollegiate athletics more se-cure'y In their proper : oslt on as a vai-ii ltd' element In a wholesome collegelife.

To I'rohf \ neatlon Income*."The university commute# on e igibli-

ity shall, m advsnce < f roinpelltlon, re-iutre of each cand'date fur competitionIn any sport a detailed statement of thesources of his financial srppi rt, In¬cluding any sum- e rru d during vaca¬tion. In the <ase of e.o h athlete whois shown to h ive reoeiv d flnar.c at aidfrom other than those on whom he isnaturally dep >ndent tor support, thacommittee shall then. In advance of hiecompetition, submit the facts to treominlttee of the three chairmen (rep¬resenting the three universities) whichshall decide upon hi* eligibility.

"In ca c the n #Hves for extending a'dto an athlete are not clear to the com¬mittee of the three chairmen, that com¬mitter shall tak<> Into rnso nt fall-ireon the part of the athlcto to maintain ai redltab'e record In b's ac idcmlc coursein chva tar, scho'ar.hlp and willing¬ness to meet his obligations as evidence!that a continuance of financial aidIhe athlete on erounda of character,scholarship snd conduct eeema unwlew

(ortlnnrd on Page Foir,

CLEVELAND BEATENBV CHAMPIONS, 7 TO 6New York Comes From Behind

and Clinches Gamein Eighth.

SHERROI) SMITH ON HILL

Former Dodger and Sad SainJones Both Fail to Finish

Battle.

Dy w. O. McGEEHAX.

Cleveland, Sept. 23..The "Vanke^Emoved nearer the mathematical cer¬

tainty to-day when they heat the In¬dians in the second game of th.srather mild-series by the score of to

6. While the completion of actualvictory was a plea/.unt thing to see bythose who are anxious that this longawaited mathematical certainty no

reached, the fact that the Yanks came

from behind to win this victory was

»hc most significant thing. The moraleof the expeditionary forces certain.>seems to bo unshakable.Sad Sam Jones started for the Yanks,

hut was knook"d loose from his broganein the fifth by a barrage of heavy hits.One of these was a homer by youngSumma. another a freak home run

which was shot through a wire net-t'ng by Gardner. Hoyt went ir. whenSamuel went out.Sherrod Smith, who started for the

Indians, had some hard luck in theseventh and the Yankees started to

piaster him. Smith, you will recall/used to work for Charles H. Ebbets. the-ood old Squire of Flatbush. Being aeft bander he annoyed the Yanks for awhile, lie was replaced by l hu'.The tying run was driven in by V. al¬

ter Plpp. who continued his habit < r

smashing them out at what are some¬times cailed the psychological momentThe winning run was brought across inthe eighth by Wallie Schang. who sin-gled and scored on a coupb ofa wild pitch and a sacrifice fly whichwas lifted by Elmer Smith.

tl_u.The mathematical certainty i* likei.to bust right in the faces of the ex¬

pedition in a very short time.

t imks Welcome Sherry Smith.

The Yanks started scoring off Ser¬geant Sherrod Smith, who only recent.yjoined the Indians, in the first Inning.You will recall that Sergeant Smithonce used to roam the great open £Pa,'»in the Flatbush section of Brook-1Whiter Witt was ufe when Wembs-

gattas fumbled a poke. JumpingDugan ripped a hit past first.swung and drove one into the ground,which O'Neill shot to first. W alterPipp lifted one to center and Wittscored. Dugan came in when SueO'Neill let one of the Smith fast ones

go right through him.In the Indian half of the second Joe

Seweu started with a single and JoeWood got a base on bulls The Pai^started a double steal and the lank*infield started a pursuit race. Duganchased Sewe'l bark to second base,then Pip-, chased Wood back to second.The no; 'result <W ail this strange run-

nlni, about the infield was that W ordwas tagged hv Ward, while Sew .11finally reached tliird safely.

In the third Inning Jumping JosephDugan. who had been somewhat shyof hits in. to this point connected f rhis' second swtpe of the afternoon.Th»re wen ft wo out whrn It happen.- .

and Ruth euro n<d a hit froi i Sherr «tSmith's mitt w.thin grasping distanceof Jos Sewet'.Sherrod Smith v as given a hearty

welcome by the Inmates of the city orwhich iie so recently has become an

inmate w1.cn ha .ante to bat fo>- thefirst tlnv. lie hoisted a high one toWard McXnlty b at a hit to Dugan,but n moment Int. r Jumping Joseph In¬itiated a double play by retting a Itnerfrom Wamby's bat while kneeling o»vtte of his shins.

Indiana Pile on Jones.

The Indians tied In their half of thafourth and there was a rush of tin mat Sad Sam Jones. Summa singled postPipn. Gardner was safe when Scot,dropped « pass by Ward. Jo Sews.ltried to lay down a sacrifice, butSchang threw to third, forcing Summa.Wood forced Sewell. then StutTy Mcln-nls singled nost first and Hardierscored. O'Neill g"t n base <>n balls andSherrod Smith celebrated his debut <*

nn Indian by singling to left «nd scor¬ing Wood with the tying run stuffyMclnnls was out sliding Into Schang.

In the s.xth Inning with one outWamby. the lnflelder who Is over sup¬plied with consonants, singled pastDugan. Summa, the recruit *ho ' * .

raped the clutches of Barney Drsyfuss^hit a home run to U ft center. '-""Mplaetercd the ball against th. wire net¬ting above the rlgnt field wall and theball went right through the m.-shes fora freak home run.

,This was an ef Sad Sam Jones forthe aft.rpoon. Write Hoyt took up thefi*u of \K Yanks clou*? to th#mathematical ,-rtalnty "t 'his decldedlyinauspicious point of theftewell out Wood ..ouble.1 «" 'cnt- r a

Mclnnls doubled to approxtnaately hasame spot. Which produced another ruv.gpve O'Neill lifted on- ? > deep cen _rbut Whiter Witt, the ag.V> ..lOlnO. nvida beautiful routing catch and ended an

Inning that wa dc Idedl;y £Colonel TllHnghast L llotnmcdleu Hus

t0ThonYanksVdi'oneTn'the sixth whenpjpp got a base on balls and went toLrond on n passed ball. He scored on» single by I»ank Bob Meusel to right

"in* the seventh with two out Wait#Unvt singled to center. McMillan, who^a sent m to bat for Witt becat»aePf

I lanla . « st I 'In dm. t t" M. Polor.randstand Adm »l ID. Inc. lax.-Ad*

ItN-ehatt Tn day. FM.»ts Field. Brooklynvs Pittsburgh. I games. 2 0u I M Aa .

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