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The Charlotte News from Charlotte, North Carolina • Page 10

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Charlotte, North Carolina
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS DECEMBER 5, 1915. 10 ILalU Hi 4, P' BUCK MAYER AND VANDEGRAAFF TO ABOLISH BASEBALL II PLENTY OF MATERIAL AVAILABLE FROM WHICH TO PICK ALL-STATE ARE CHOSEN FOR ALL-A MER CAN nninni iiirnT THE ALL-AMERICAN. ALL-STATE ELEVENS. Irn Charles Barrett and Eddie IVi.lUULL VILUIi. Mahan are the Unani- Carolina Leads in Number ofj Men Selected Davidson Two Shifts in Positions are Made to Strengthen the Team.

mous Choices. Vandegraff's Toe Helps Him Along to a Place at Tackle. TANDY MENTIONED FOR CENTER. or for order to obtain a Second. the Intercollegiate Recom- McDONALD TO QUARTER-1 mendation Made for the BUCK MAYER GETS MUCH MATERIAL IN BACK.

"Big Nine." Here's the All-American Football Team for the 1915 season as selected Parks H. Davie in the New York Herald: End Shelton, Cornell. Tackle VandeGraaff, Alabama. Guard Spears, Dartmouth. Center Feck, Pittsburg.

Guard Fitzgerald, Notre Tackle Buck, Wisconsin. End Chamberlin, Nebraska. Quarter Charles Barrett, Cornell. Halfback Mahan, Harvard. Halfback Mayer, Virginia.

Fullback Driggs, Princeton. Chicago, Dec. 4. The faculty repre- the inauarnration of the aeries. Caro BY PARKER H.

DAVIS, In The New York Herald. Tnpro. Shaking it all up in a lump and then, as best we could, choosing the best men available, here's our choice for an All-North Carolina eleven: FIRST NORTH CAROLINA ELEVEN. End Homewood, Carolina. Tackle Ramsay, Carolina.

Guard B. White, Davidson. Center Tandy, Carolina. Guard Cowell, Carolina. Tackle Moore.

Wake Forest. End Younger, Davidson. Quarterback McDonald, Carolina. Halfback Riddick, A- M-Halfback Black, Davidson. Fullback Parker, Wake Forest.

"Fiji lctLlili; i rv v.nn-. lina all during the first part of the sentatives of the Middle West Confer- season was away below form but to- ence Athletic Association comprising wards the latter nart their nlav besran tne "Big Nine" colleges, this after- let it be stated tw1 01 Dfe The pastime of selecting an honor- i to inmrove and the team reached its nooa voted to abolish entirely inter- arv hut mvfhionl fnnthall pIpvpti which (By W. C. DO WD, JR.) With the 1913 intercollegiate foot-j ball reason in North Carolina now be-; come history and with a temporary lull in the sport world while the bas-i ketbr.H tuning up for their: annual whrck rt the favor of and in, the eye? the football folk all over the state are discussing the past maximum strength on Thanksgiving collegiate baseball. The matter now shall preSent in its positions the VirjnJa- A.

ft M. was decided-'Ses to the faculty of the nine schools. eieven best piayers in the entire lv off in the Roanoke, the South Cr.ro- It wM take only one of the nine fac-; United States hardly is an exact Ima. the Georgetown and the Wash- i uiues representea to retain me sport. ECience, but nevertheless this year ap- meton ana iee srame wniie tne Aggies proaches fair practicability.

The played as of old when they hit the THE EXPE of Edward W. roll of the ball, is relented average of 50 yards for fonrtln 7 ac against Yale and by 3-5 yards for twenty-one Princeton and Yale. Wi g'f ures as a standard it mav noT serted that Driggs against y-Imaged 62.1-2 yards upon punts plus the roll. Against both Hnr vard and Yale Driggs is credftS 2S an average of 51 1-6 yards 1 unparalleled performance inf him position of baeft ft Shelton a Wonder at End In ends the East and West divw the honors with Murray X. Sheltnn season varoima aim just which men have the edse -'ihers in various position- There isuY -i that you can find auy-whec who follows iootball and who is admirer of the game but HAS HAPPE ID considers to himself if not to others Q.

Olipant of the Army; R. S. C. King of Harvard; R. H.

Berriman of Pennsylvania State; J. A. Maulbetsch of Michigan; Richard B. Rutherford of Nebraska; F. B.

Macomber of Illinois; M. C. Lewis of Washington; E. N. Mayer of Virginia; Irby Curry of Vanderbilt, and D.

M. Tibbott of Princeton. Mahan's Selection Unanimous. Expert opinion, I think, will be unanimous in selecting Edward W. Mahan of for the most im-nortant work behind our line.

The cause prompting this advance is due to the evolution of the science of recording the power and prowess of the human machines in. a football squad with the same exactness that a record is maintained of the efficiency of metallic machines. The selections, therefore, which follow are made upon some personal observation, a vast amount of correspondence with coaches and critics and upon an inspection and comparison of the statistical records of the individual, players. The first task in organizing a na- 111 fuai uu uvic tjauiuiir tii- shipmen. Wake Forest took it turn aboui; In their- off -form play finally finishing the season with a team that, judging from past records, was far) from its regular and accustomed I stride.

A Comparison of State Teams, And thus things went all season, I In the games played during the sea-! son between state teams, Carolina quit with a percentatge of 1.000, A. M. dittoed, Davidson broke even and SECOND NORTH CAROLINA ELEVEN. End Holding, Wake Forest. Tackle F.

Jones, Carolina. Guard Young, A. M. Center J. Tayloe, Carolina.

Guard Boshamer, Carolina. Tackle Howell, Wake Forest. End Seifert, A. M. Quarter Billings, Forest.

Halfback D. Tayloe, Carolina. Halfback Sullivan, A. M. Fullback Reid, Carolina.

FORT! COBBi i just which men on the state teams; excel the others. Each man has bis own judement and none of them are infallible. And this picking of what, tacit man considers the best men he state for their respective positions, is the history of the evolution of All-; Something football teams a practice that todav is looked forward to a rractiee that, if quit, would rob the! ornen; uuy Chamberlin of Xebra Robert A. Higgins of Penn Stat' E. W.

Soucy of Harvard; merton of Princeton; C. C. HighW o' Princeton; Bastaii of w.Ll.. Is Wake Forest failed to register a win asrainst state colleges. Carolina de- Announced as Leading Jt selection of his companion involves a studious process of elimination too I feated Davidson about 35 to 6 and Hitter, Though Average Thompson of Georgia and Cohen Ian ideal one, the player so selected should occupy if possible, the ideal -C 1 TTT 1 X.

X- a zaruc or a goouty pan ui us iuic--ok. m-JtH UCieUlCU VaK6 OreSl 3D lO V. A. Al. Slumped.

trx 1 rm of the teams and THiad a merry time of it winning from the jiatement that no man judgment considerable study of the Kv, pnct position for a captain, namely, quarter back. The mere mention of thjs Davidson lost to Carolina by a rather Chicago, Dec. 4. It didn't surprise position will bring betore tne eye oi mit to the fans of the state what we season just past consider the best men for an All-Xorth A uUr Season. decisive score while Wrake Forest lost anybody to see the name that heads corps of superstandard quarter backs, to all three teams to Carollia 35 to the individual batting averages which These are Charles Barrett of Cornell; There arc i rootuaii eierj ucic yaoi ono are those who will disagree with us was one of the funniest seasons everju, to Davidson 21 to 6, and to A.

JNI. were officially given out, at American in ou- selection and there are a scat-' experienced and in this particular, 7 to 0. Thus it would seem that Caro-1 League headquarters tonight. It is Ty terine few mavhap who will back up North Carolina and North State foot-! Una had by far the best team in the: Cobb. His average cf .370 isn't as good tnam'Cnr vaihpr u-hose iude-1 ball proved no exception to the rule, state with Davidson second, A.

M. i as it has been but it is 20 points above elaborate to be detailed here, but which upon completion leaves E. N. Mayer of Virginia, as our choice for the other half back position. In these days, in which punting is a substantial percentage of the offensive department of the game, the best team of the entire United States should possess in its ranks the longest distance punter, particularly so since in Barrett end Mahan we have two super-standard field goal men.

Driggs' Toe is Mighty. The premier punter of the year upon actual statistics of- play is Edward H. Driggs of Princeton. For practical purposes in estimating the value of a punter to his team the roll of the ball should be added to the punt, since the latter is the reward for overkicking the opposing backs aiiux uuu oneuon earns his position by his exceptionally brilliant work iv every department of end rush pfcv He has ably covered the longest that Barrett or Shiverick could deliver and one of these was S6 yard. He has played as well while in the forward pass attack and defense, and such has been his all important service as a defensive end against the running attack that the records dis close that only four times throughout the season has it been necessary for a secondary defender to make a tackle on his end.

Chamberlin's Good Work. Almost the same perfection of pla-may be restated in support of the (Continued on Page 11.) -it, onr Tf vnn have UDsets were irequeni, lapses ie- inira ana wnn wane forest sngntiy IUCUt lUIUllallO 1 I II li the average of Eddie Collins, who is really second on the list, since none of those between Cobb and Collins a team that vou would like to offer, we playing torm oi tne teams aim iue m- uenina me Aggies. Tiiereiore, in seiec- should be only too glad to publish it. dividuuls, the general time-auout oi tion ot an All-State team, there need j. agreed with the appended off-form, on-form by Carolina, Wake be no surprises should the majority selection there would be little use in i Forest and A.

furnished a sea-! of the men come from Carolina un-rioHn, an All-North Carolina eleven I son that was full of thrills and things less it happened to be that teamwork played more than 20 game's. Last season is the first one during which Cobb played in every game for lo these many years. Speaker and and ii is because of this difference or unexpecieu. ijaviutuu sui iucjauu leamwoi-K aiuue was wmi gar D. C.

Watson of Harvard; Frank Glick of Princeton; Paul S. Russell of Chicago David Paddock of Georgia; George Clark of Illinois, and R. A. Pfohl of Wabash. Barrett a Great Player.

The first of these is Charles Barrett, and to him is assigned the position of quarter back and the duties of captain. Very appropriately Captain Barrett is the captain and quarter back of the actual first am of the year, Cornell. He has directed this aggregation with rare powers of generalship. He has played his own position with marvellous skill, as is attested statistically by the fact that he is one of the two leading point scorers of all the players in the entire United States. Pursuing the easiest method of mak opinion that All-? teams are picked.

I past season with a single off-day that nered untol the Blue and White their Fournier are tied for third place with Mclnnis and Veach arc fourth and We fubmit the following after watch-' against Carolina c.t moion-aaiem, recora. individual men have a chance .322. 51 ing the various teams in battle, after when the Tar Hells handed the shine more on a strong team than reading everything available on the vidsonians their worst beating since they do on a weak and hence it is fifth with .314 and .313 respectively. Pitcher Ruth's .315 average hardly counts since lie played in only 42 games. Thirteen in .300 Class.

Including Ruth and three who played in less than 21 games there are thirteen who finished in the .300 class. Joe Jackson is among them. CKawford not aiwajs an easy tasK to mase a selection for a team for more often than not, a star on. a strong team will be able to shine more, owing to the backing he receives, than a man playing on a weaker team. Trying to measure, all these things and trfing to give every player in the barely lost out with .299.

ing up this team, let us first erect a Detroit led in team batting with I back field. This instantly marshals I state nis uue, we nave seiectea two All-North Carolina teams with mate-irial in some instances rather shy for Walter Gamp "Ages" A Bit Discussing Oldtimers The Downfall of the Favorite Team Has Been One of the Surprising Characteristics of a Season That Has Been One Surprise After Another. .268. The hapless Yanks were last 'in array the great half backs of the with .233. year.

These are Edward W. Mahan Neither New York or St. Louis had of Harvard; C. E. Hastings of Pitts-a man who batted over .292.

burg; Wilkinson of Syracuse; Elmer The Putt The Winning Shot In The Golf, Game The Open Champion of America Puts the Playing Value of the Putter at Forty-Five Per Cent of the Game Declares That It Is the "Winning Shot" of the Game. Continued on Page 14.) TEMPLETON'S RUN GAVE HIGHS A 7-7 TIE WITH THE HORNER CADETS (BY WALTER CAMP.) (BY JEROME D. TRAVERS.) ish, they denied him the simplest, yet Some day I shall make good the threat to tell of the men who bulked Larry Speared a Horner Forward Pass Registering Score. Highs Were Outplayed, Only To Be Followed by Good Luck. game on the defensive for the most big on the gridiron in the old days, but now I am content.to just mention their often the hardset, shot in the bag The average golfer starts out upon the putt, his round of the course with an aver-i Cn the other hand, the Fates have age of seven clubs, which are likeL" 1 of ten led me in a roundabout way to be driven, brassie, cleek, midiron, before I came within sight -of -the mashie, niblick and putter.

green. My weakness has been with If each one of these clubs was of the wood, the club that counts less equal value in the task of securing iQ general value. But I have' been nmes and sk the heroes of the present time upon the occasion of some col Reaching up Into the air and lege reunion this winter to persuade spearing a Horner forward pass after the proper score, upon the basis ot strongest where Evans has been the cadets? hart nr tho fiolrt Redden, Heston, Hammond, Garrel! and Maddock, or a Minnesota graduate -with Rogers and Harris and Cap-ron or a Chicago man with HerscWer ger and his kicks or DeTray and ti? running, Carlin Eckersall, Bezdek and Steffen or an Illinois man with Van Hook as a guard or a Wisconsin man with Wilke or an Iowa man witfi Kirk. If you come from New Ecg land ask a Dartmouth man about Hooper at Center or Glaze. Tr! Douglass Northcroft and Dalton the Navy If you are a Cornell me" start an Inquiry as to Warner, Young Whiting, and Starbuck or Thompson-the giant blonde guard or va flw the full back.

If you see a Cams graduate ask him about Johnson ano Exendine, Hanser and Seneca and job will hear some good stories. AA narhans whPTl VOU have QOne certain of the older grduates to tell the stories of their heroes. Here are the men to ask questions about if you 100 per cent for the round, each cluo i weakest, and the cotaparative values to dangerously near the Highs' goal! would represent a playing useiul-0f driving and putting can be shown line. Larry Temnleton added seventv HORNERS C. H.

S. Total gains by each team during the game: Horners 267, C. H. S. 279.

Total penalties inflicted on teams: Horners 45, C. H. S. 33. Number first downs made by teams: Horners 17, C.

M. S. 6. First downs made in last half: Horners 3, C. H.

S- 3. Best ground gainer on the two teams: Templeton, C. H. 162; Wcolcott 94. Total ground covered by punts: Woolcott, Hcrners, 110 for three; Crayton, C.

H. 80 for two. Average, Woolcott 37, Crayton 40. Total ground covered returning punts: Horners 37, C. H.

S. 30. would near some interesting tales ness of about 14 per cent. But this is in the statement that I have won yards more to record long Ask a gray beard of the late seventies where the system crack3. There amateur championships, while sprints yesterday afternoon when he part and then carrying the.

ball, once in their possr-sion, far back wards the center of the field, forcing the cadets to travel over the same distance time and again. Templeton Gained Most Ground. This chap Larry Templeton was again one of the chief ground gainers for the locals as well as one of the stars of the High School play. Out of a total gain for the High School at Princeton about McNair, Bland, Bal lard," Earl Dodge, Harlan and With-ington. If he admits he graduated in '90 ask him of Cash, Donnelly, Snake Ames and "House" Janeway or be outdistanced two would-be tacklers and placed the oval between the Horner (uprights for six points, thereby allowing Crayton to add th seventh.

And this seven points margin was just enough to allow the local Highs, champions of Western North Carolina, to draw a 7-7 tie from the local cadets in their second game of the season one club in the bag that has a great- the very fine young Chicago golfer er value than 14 per cent. It is the; has yet to win his first. In match shortest, lightest, and smallest club i play he bad every shot except one of the entire lot, the simplest anajena that happened to be "the winning yet the hardest to play, the club of golf the shot that makes many unknowns can handle well and up for a bad drive, a poor niaStiie yet a club that baffles an Evans and pitch, or a poor approach, by call-a Vardon from one year into another. I ing for but one putt on the green I refer to the putter, and 1 put the moment of need, playing value at 43 per cent as How Can I Learn to tween tnese two dates or iamar ana Alex Moffatt. Later still try him with eleven of 279 yards, this yound speed till Ballard, Kelly and Baird and this you will not ba convinced tnjj there were giants in those days, Boat least that the older graduates tun Church.

Then with Beefy. Lea. How-ard Henry, DeWitt and Eddie Dillon. king ripped off 162. Seventy of these, it is true, came when he intercepted the forward pass hurled by the enemy and his resultant touchdown but the Highs had the same chance in the last quarter only the fellow who had for never again throughout the en- there were.

agamst oo per cent for the remaining i know well enough," remarked a counter did the Highs over seriously six. teven, or eight clubs needed forgolfer recently, "that putting is the threaten the Horner goal. In fact tne round. imost valuable part of golf. But how ti, and made three first downs to the same number for Horner.

The firsts registered by the-Highs, be it said, were all long runs for this distance If you are a Harvard man ask the old timers about Bob Bacon, Cummock, Newell and Hallowell, Dud Dean, the Traffords. Then later ask him about nf thft Favorite. recoered the blocked attempt at a 4 Knrtf.fivA rtc AAfit 1 a l- 1 crV a i v. 0m. when Boylin called for the forward rni, fontnre of athletlCS while the cadets in order to get- the drok kick couldn't make the ground AS Percy Haughton as a tackle, an Am Jl IX'3 Jiiai icu ii.

go racing lor any one ciUD, a one? herst man v. ith Hubbard and Shattuck the last six months nas Deeu i -tonishing number of cases nere-fnvnritP the man or team thai have made a mistake hermit on tiiP converted it into an unexpected High naye maae a mistaKe Here it is on tne mg, and practising only in the rigtit school senrp nr iuet tnriicr, Jin short side. on wish smno nf thvse. -u- ctnooi score or just enougn to gam or a hrown man with Mayhew or Sprackling. If you are in the South public mina, as well as in the pre ten-yard tape moved up another four i move behind him as fast as this downs were forced to rip their dis- Larry.

This seventy-yard run was the tances off in three, four and five yards. longest of the game but Temp chimed It is perhaps estimating it conserva- in on three other occasions with tively to say that they were in pos- i twenty-eight, twenty-five and twenty, sission of the ball fully ninety per i He carried the ball about fifteen cent of the time but the resistance times from a formation which gives ask about Hart of Georgetown, Coun naj. xuu ncc guiiria suiuuiug uu el who underrate the tremendous value tee practising driving for an hour or of the putter had been at Brook- so at a time, or putting the same line when the open championship oi tjme into iron shots. And then per-America was at If they had, 'linns tbev- will nrartisA nutting ten nr uon oi me fiiu, fnrmpr performances to win nas a i-t tie with cadets. The Cadets Struck Their Stride.

Had it not been for this fluke that presented itself to Templeton and which the Speed Demon promptly 9rp.nt. defeat BegmnmB-, of the' Highs was so stiff that the him an average of about ten yards to they would have gone well beyond my minutes. When I started goll the San Francisco in August this downfall as in August this dow the run. took' advantage of there would have gains were small while always with cuu imi UiC tttiuo I Rnpflt 14 ti lmirli timo rv mnro nt they would lr pos- he cutter at nor ueen no uouot connected witti tut i a goal in sieht vU puner at to per cent. nnttin a did with nil nthPT nhs a itt fa" up to the Present uin.

ti. Uarr nc rn WHO iwv nr and the Highs and force Horner the distance was tumbles taking place in the ra Alec Smith, the Avell known profes- Put together I worked for hours at ai aUer Ui session of the ball sional, kept track of different scores I time-worked' forked and worked Jhe ftensivf Same and up uattl tl.ej would boot it away turned in through this tournament, 4 and he figures that of every one hun- ciub. have froouentlr rnnttsftd tt. xlll'yv: a lonS one. cil of Virginia or Carpenter of more than one team, Blake or Manier of Vanderbilt, Jones of Auburn, Derrick of of Sewanee, Dougherty of Hardage of Auburn.

If you are a Pacific coast player try the California man with the old names of Downing, Krankenheimer, Fickert, Cochran, the Reynolds brothers, the Doles, Hazzard Harretson and Code of Stamford, or a Berkeley man with real wonder, or Stow or Stott. If your 'man comes from the Pacific Northwest try Latourette and Clark and Chandler of Oregon, Dolan, Oregon Aggies, Eabcock of Washing imagine the Athletics ard tte in their lowly positions. m-. Highs Were AH Scrapping. Ably seconding the efforts of this fleet-footed High, were "Bloody Bill" Elliott and "Fatty" Wilson.

These two were always shining on offense and carried the hall for about fifty yars apiece during the scrimmage. Their gains were not so sensational as were those of but they were as sure and as consistent their ef Game Ever. dred shots played, seventy-live were mntner thT "'B wcb. Scrappiest taken on the mittinc srtrn. it 1" Tl I.

1 tneir Dacicr, jaraiactt agaiuRt tr-etr wan one of th sorflnniest. erames 1 0 THh I Vlllll 111! I 111 I 1 1 in 1 11(1 1 ufrl I1MT1 own goal but cv. every one of the ever seen on Weam Tripid and tense three occasions, something happened I did the rivalrv hrnm towards the ard Drew was the lavorite yard dash and was beaten ms T.hor and Kiviat were the e0 uncommon sight there to see track wnen i had the dav off for play, golfers reach greens oyer four hun-, But at lhe same time one must dred yards away in two rerfectiy that averted a score. The cadets dur- end that thprA wore, covernl threats forts. Chuck Pharr ran the team ing the first half completely outplayed with regard to slugging.

Each team the Highs cn offensive work for they acetiHed tho thta nndrhnnd accttHed the other of this underhand like a veteran; always changing the lor tne mne -J- Ti-e defeated them. Kelly Murray fn, thA 120 vard hurdle out garnered unto themselves fourteen position of his men on defencj when played shots, and then scatter three i tise wlth0ut giving any thought to the or four putts all over the green shot not helJ nearly much. tore the bottom of the cup was To bccome a good putter I believe reached I saw one crack professional that a man should stand well over fTi0i tall, so that he can all the easier xwi Mir a iorner move warranted such a of San Francisco beat n.y 9,0 yard is was supposed to first dovns to three for the Highs. They gained much more in thi3 half than did the charges of Coach Ritch work but the officials overlooked a bit of it for they realized that it was the spirit of fight and rivalry and not any Intent to pull any dirty It W.nS ntn -l-l rl nritVi change in operations and getting his plays off well, choosing them equally JIKM UVK QUU UUHIO "fit tllO lino fha nnf at his mercy nut mn, ton, Rader of Willamette, Larson of Idaho, Dimmick of Whitman, Hahn of Washington State, Teghmeier of Washington and Wolff of the Oregon Aggies. If you are a West Point or Annapolis cadet try some of the men in the service with Kromer, Graves and Kackett and Bunker and Torrey not forgetting Tipton (all of the.

Army), or of Dague, Bert Waters, Dib-j get down in six. He missed his three. EL; "rr out tne cnampion ns look a nethy won. iu tu Talcou. the last half of the game Highs mittin nn thPf? half of the.

-pnt well below the -cun. and thpti uui. (Continued on Page 11.) this is likely to develop a feeling or favorite, was aeitaiyu coulJ Eer the solf mce any of the players Ea-Fai lavorites dux an mice m.fiDais before the semi" Jlc. PARKE DAVIS' FOOTBALL SELECTIONS ALL-EASTERN ELEVEN. ALL-WESTERN ELEVEN.

ALL-SOUTHERN ELEVEN. toen took three more coming back. And he was no exception to the rule. The Case of Chick Evans. Undoubtedly "the winning shot" in golf is the putt.

There can be no question about it. Take the case oi Charles Evans, of Chicago, and myself. Our game, our different styles of play, have been compared Irom one end of the country to the other for the past three or four years Put the Fates were kinder to me than they, were to Evans. They gave Evans a perfect driving style from the tee and almost always sure results. They gave liim control of the cramped pla'.

And by standing tair-ly erect there isn't the same tendency to jab or stab at the ball as there is when one is crouched with the putter held below. The good putter should swing, the club with a pendulum motion, using hands and wrists with the body perfectly still. And by all means he should look at the ball and NOT the hole, despite advice given to the contrary. If all golfers would practise looking at the ball, looking at the back of it, Just where the club should strike, they would soon find ah immediate improvement in this part of their game. But most of them, when they do practise, forget about this im-; portant feature.

Try this scheme cached0 and Bob Loughiin and WiUam JohnS Johlston. Then an Stamford defeated Habe 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 4-6, Griffln Stanford defeated Cence sted 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 ft San Fg. beaten by Anita Mers Cisco 0-6, 6-4, en by Yale at New tball j. and Yale was beaten tSQn, Virginia, Washington t(j gate and Drown. Then toa beaten by Yale blee, Wrightington, Bill Reid and Daly.

If you are a Yale man start him off with Baker, Bertron, Peters, Hull, Beecher, Ball; Corbin, McClung and McCormack, Heffelfinger and Hin-key. Ask the later ones of Jim Ho-gan, Bloomer and "tackles Back," Chadwick's run, Veeder's forward pass. Forbes, Biglow, Coy and Tad Jones. If you come from Pennsylvania get a wearer of the Red and Blue to tell you of Adams, Thayer and of the days of Qsgood, Brooke and Williams, Bull Torey, Knipe and Bob Fol-well and Minds and Hare and Wharton. Ask a Lafayette man about Barclay and Walbridge or Bray.

If you are a Middle West player try a Michi End Shelton, Cornell. Tackle Abell, Colgate. Guard Spears, Dartmouth Center Peck, Pittsburg Guard White, Syracuse Tackle Gilman Harvard End Higgins, Penn State. Quarterback Barrett, CornelL Hariard Halfback Shiverick. Cornell Fyllback-Driggs, Princeton End Chamberlin, Nebraska.

Tackle Buck, Wisconsin. Guard Fitzgerald, Notre Dame. Center Watson, Illinois. Guard Dunnigan, Minnesota. Tackle Shull, Chicago.

End Batson, Minnesota. Quarterback Russell, Chicago. Halfback Rutherford, Nebraska. Halfback Macomber, Illinois, "ullback Lewis, Washington. End Homewood, Carolina.

Tackle VandeGraaf; Alabama. Guard Taylor, Auburn. Center Tandy, Carolina. Guard Dobbins, Scwanee. Tackle Schultz, W.

and L. End Thompson, Georgia, Quarterback Paddock, Georgia. Halfback Mayer, Virginia. Halfback Curry, Vanderbilt. Fullback Young, W.

and L. miu-iruu ami iue uc my opinion he. is unexcelled by any amateur I have ever seen. They toos him In triumph from the tee up to tie sreen and then, right at the 11) Continued on Page 14.) Page (Continued on gan marf with Snow, Curtis, Norcross,.

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